VOTES
| Bill Title | Description | Support/Oppose Chamber Position |
|---|---|---|
| HB 1302: Education and Workforce Strategy Act; enact | House Bill 1302 reorganizes Georgia’s educational and workforce development infrastructure by reconstituting the Office of Student Achievement as the Office of Education and Workforce Strategy. It consolidates workforce and education data governance, enhances coordination of apprenticeship programs, and establishes comprehensive planning and reporting mechanisms to align education outcomes with high-demand workforce needs. The bill also designates the Technical College System of Georgia as the state apprenticeship agency, repeals the Alliance of Education Agency Heads, and enacts data sharing and accountability enhancements to improve workforce readiness and educational efficacy statewide. |
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| HB 136: Income tax; contributions to foster child support organizations; expand tax credit | House Bill 136 (with the original support position on language from SB 89) revises and creates several Georgia state tax credits related to child care and support, including increasing credits for child and dependent care expenses, establishing new credits for taxpayers with children under six, employers paying child care costs for employees, and insurance companies contributing to organizations supporting foster children and justice-involved youth. The bill also expands qualifying organizations, adds new expenditure categories like mentorship and wraparound services, and sets limits, certification, reporting, and enforcement protocols for these credits. |
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| SB 69: “Georgia Courts Access and Consumer Protection Act”; enact | The Georgia Courts Access and Consumer Protection Act establishes a regulatory framework for third-party litigation financing in Georgia. It requires litigation financiers to register with the state, prohibits foreign and certain affiliated entities from providing financing, mandates detailed contract disclosures and consumer protections, and imposes limitations on litigation financiers’ control and financial interactions with consumers and attorneys. The Act also permits discovery of litigation financing agreements in civil actions and adjusts admissibility of seatbelt evidence in motor vehicle cases. |
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| SB 68: Civil Practice; substantive and comprehensive revision of provisions regarding civil practice, evidentiary matters, damages, and liability in tort actions; provide | Senate Bill 68 makes comprehensive amendments to Georgia’s civil practice, tort, and motor vehicle statutes, focusing on revising rules on civil procedure, evidence admissibility, attorney’s fees, negligent security liability, and damage recoveries in personal injury and wrongful death cases. It limits arguments about noneconomic damages, sets procedural timelines, establishes an exclusive remedy framework for negligent security claims, and clarifies recoverable medical damages and trial procedures including bifurcation of fault and damages. |
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| SB 12: Inspection of Public Records; documents and records in the possession of private persons or entities; revise provisions | Senate Bill 12 revises Georgia’s public records laws to clarify the definition of custodians responsible for records and to establish that custodians must obtain public records even if those records are held by private entities acting on behalf of an agency. The bill mandates that private entities storing or managing public records cooperate by producing those records to custodians upon request within specified retention periods. |
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| HB 579: Professions and businesses; licensure to engage in trade; provisions | A BILL to be entitled an Act to amend Title 43 of the O.C.G.A., relating to professions and businesses, so as to revise provisions relating to licensure to engage in the practice of a profession, business, or trade in this state; to amend Title 49 of the O.C.G.A., relating to social services, so as to conform a cross-reference; to provide for an effective date; to provide for related matters; to repeal conflicting laws; and for other purposes. |
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| HB 111: Income tax; reduce rate of tax | House Bill 111 proposes a graduated reduction in Georgia’s individual income tax rate starting in 2025, lowering it from 5.39% to 4.99% over several years. The rate reduction is subject to annual fiscal conditions including revenue growth, prior tax collections, and reserve fund levels, which may delay reductions to ensure state fiscal stability. |

