State PSC signs off on Georgia Power turbines

ATLANTA – State energy regulators gave final approval Tuesday to Georgia Power’s plan to build three new “dual-fuel” turbines at Plant Yates near Newnan.

The Georgia Public Service Commission (PSC) signed off on the proposal unanimously after officials with the Atlanta-based utility pitched the plan as necessary to meet the growing need for energy generating capacity prompted by an unanticipated demand for power. Much of that increased demand stems from an influx of power-hungry data centers cropping up across the state.

Environmental groups opposed the project as an unwelcome continuation of Georgia Power’s reliance on fossil fuels for power generation at a time utilities are moving away from coal and gas toward renewable sources of electricity.

The new turbines will run mostly on natural gas but switch to ultra low-sulfur diesel fuel when gas is unavailable.

The project’s opponents asked the PSC in recent weeks to hold off on certifying the turbines until an all-source request for proposals (RFP) Georgia Power is pursuing determines whether other less costly, lower-polluting options might be available.

But Georgia Power officials argued that any alternative sources of electricity the RFP produces wouldn’t be ready in time to meet the capacity needs of customers starting in the winter of 2026.

During negotiations that led to the commission’s staff endorsing the project, Georgia Power agreed to submit semi-annual construction monitoring reports updating the status of the work. However, unlike the monitoring process that took place during construction of the nuclear expansion at the utility’s Plant Vogtle, the PSC doesn’t anticipate holding hearings on each report.

The turbines project generated extensive back-and-forth during last week’s meeting of the commission’s Energy Committee. As a result, Tuesday’s vote took place with little discussion.

Legislators hear pros, cons of semesters vs. quarters in university system

ATLANTA – Georgia lawmakers heard the pros and cons Tuesday of the University System of Georgia’s current semester system compared to the quarter system the state’s public colleges and universities used until 1999.

The university system made the switch from quarters to semesters primarily to align Georgia schools with most universities across the country, Dana Nichols, the system’s vice chancellor for academic affairs and student success, told members of a House study committee meeting on the campus of Georgia Southern University in Statesboro.

Besides making transferring to a Georgia university easier for the growing number of out-of-state students, the switch helped graduating students looking to enter the workforce, Nichols said. While students in other states were graduating in May, Georgia students under the quarter system typically weren’t completing their degrees until June, she said.

“The semester (system) graduates were getting to the job market before our graduates were,” she said.

Nichols said converting to the semester system also allowed students to spend more time on each course, increasing the depth of their learning.

On the other hand, the quarter system lets students take more courses during an academic year, making it easier for double majors. Three terms of 10 weeks rather than two terms of 15 weeks also meant fewer breaks, Nichols said.

“There’s no lengthy breaks to disrupt the learning,” she said.

On the con side, the quarter system can make students feel rushed to meet more frequent deadlines, Nichols said.

Another advantage to the semester system is it allows universities to offer “mini-mesters” to students with courses that offer longer instructional periods over fewer weeks. It’s an option that is becoming increasingly popular, particularly among non-traditional students looking to complete two or more courses within a semester, Nichols said. All 26 institutions in the university system offer mini-mesters, she said.

House Speaker Jon Burns urged members of the study committee to keep an open mind when weighing the advantages and disadvantages of the two systems.

“The semester system has served us well,” said Burns, R-Newington. “(But) we need to be open to new solutions, new ideas.”

Rep. Shaw Blackmon, R-Bonaire, the committee’s chairman, said the panel will focus on the schools that make up the Technical College System of Georgia at its next meeting in September.

Fresh-meals delivery company expanding in rural Georgia

ATLANTA – A national leader in delivering fresh meals will invest $6.3 million to expand its footprint in the rural community of Montezuma, creating more than 300 new jobs, Gov. Brian Kemp announced Tuesday.

FreshRealm’s expansion in Macon County will allow the company to add several new lines, including ready-to-heat and ready-to-cook meals and meal kits.

Kemp said the company fits in well with Georgia’s No.-1 industry – agriculture.

“Food and fiber production contributed $83.6 billion and 323,300 jobs to our economy this past year,” he said. “We’re thankful for the 300 new positions that will join that growing number of opportunities thanks to FreshRealm.”

“Montezuma is an excellent location for us strategically to reach the entire U.S., especially the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast,” added Snow Le, president of Texas-based FreshRealm. “We are proud to be expanding our operations in Georgia.”

FreshRealm will be hiring for positions across a range of roles, including entry-level assemblers, technical, and maintenance staff, as well as managerial positions. Interested individuals can learn more about those job opportunities at boards.greenhouse.io/freshrealm.

The state Department of Economic Development’s Global Commerce team worked on the project in partnership with the Development Authority of Macon County, Georgia Power, and the Technical College System of Georgia’s Quick Start program.

State Election Board doubles down on rules changes

ATLANTA – For the second time this month, the Republican-controlled State Election Board approved a change to Georgia’s election rules critics say could make it easier to delay the official vote count this fall.

The change, which passed 3-2, requires local election officials to submit to the secretary of state a report reconciling the total number of ballots cast in each precinct with the total number of voters who received credit for voting before election results can be certified.

The rules change’s supporters on the board argued local election officials should have the right to a hand recount of votes before they sign a legal affidavit certifying an election. The board’s three Republican members made the same argument earlier this month when the board voted 3-2 to require election officials to conduct a “reasonable inquiry” into whether votes have been counted accurately before they certify election results.

Board member Janice Johnston described the rules changes as a way to strengthen the integrity of the elections process by encouraging accuracy and fairness.

But opponents warned the rules changes could set the stage for Republicans in Georgia to sow chaos following the November presidential election if former President Donald Trump fails to carry the state’s 16 electoral votes.

“Trump and his MAGA allies have taken over the Georgia State Election Board to try and give a veneer of legality to their illegal scheme to disrupt the certification of Georgia’s 2024 election results,” said Lauren Groh-Wargo, CEO of Fair Fight, a voting-rights organization founded by two-time Democratic gubernatorial nominee Stacey Abrams. “It’s all with the goal of helping Trump win the Peach State, even if he doesn’t earn a majority of Georgians’ votes.”

Board member Sara Tindall Ghazal, the only Democratic appointee on the board, said it’s too late in the 2024 election cycle for the board to be considering changing the rules. County election offices already have begun accepting applications for absentee ballots, she said.

Others questioned the legal authority of the board to make such changes without the approval of the General Assembly.

“To safeguard our elections, we urge the State Election Board to operate with full transparency and in accordance with Georgia law,” wrote the Democracy Defense Project, a bipartisan group formed recently by former Govs. Nathan Deal and Roy Barnes, former U.S. Sen. Saxby Chambliss, and former Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin.

“Making substantive changes to the way votes are counted and certified without legislative action will undoubtedly foster chaos and undermine the confidence that Georgians have in the democratic process. Integrity and foresight must supersede partisanship and haste in the weeks ahead.”

But board member Janelle King, who voted for the rules changes, said most of the opposition has come from those who have warned about potential negative consequences that have yet to occur. She said she’s concerned about discrepancies in vote totals that she said did occur during the 2020 election cycle.

“There were issues. There are (local election) boards that are not confident,” King said. “It’s important that we address what we know occurred.”

Kemp touts ‘state-based’ approach to health insurance

ATLANTA – The federal government has given Georgia the go-ahead to launch a state-based health insurance exchange proponents say will give Georgians better health coverage and offer health-care providers higher reimbursements.

The new exchange, Georgia Access, will launch Nov. 1, Gov. Brian Kemp said Monday during a roundtable discussion updating the state’s health-insurance initiatives.

“This platform will enable hardworking Georgians to compare their health-insurance options more easily so they can make the decision that best fits their family’s needs,” Kemp said.

Kemp made creating a “Georgia-centric” alternative to the federal version of health coverage provided through the Affordable Care Act (ACA) a priority of his administration when he took office in 2019. The General Assembly passed legislation that year that gave birth to two initiatives – Georgia Access, the state-based health-insurance exchange, and Georgia Pathways, a limited expansion of the state’s Medicaid program.

On Monday, Kemp said the two initiatives are providing coverage to more than 714,000 Georgians with incomes below 138% of the federal poverty level. Of that number, 400,000 who were previously on Medicaid are now enrolled in a commercial insurance plan through Georgia Access, he said.

Enrollment growth in Georgia Access is outpacing the national average by 30%, state Commissioner of Insurance John King said.

“We are restoring control over our health coverage to the people of Georgia,” he said.

Russel Carlson, commissioner of the Georgia Department of Community Health, which runs the Georgia Pathways program, said the agency launched a public outreach website Aug. 1 to provide information on the initiative. The site has generated 68,000 visits in just its initial weeks, he said.

“I’m very optimistic about the months ahead,” he said.

Republican Kemp’s efforts in the health-insurance space have long gotten pushback from Democrats advocating a full-blown expansion of Medicaid under the ACA, as 40 other states have done.

But Kemp said his state-based approach has proven the better choice.

“We have covered more Georgians with better insurance at lower costs,” he said. “Those facts are clear and undeniable.”