Across Georgia, GA|News|
Georgia Jobless Rate Lowest In Decades, But Workers Quitting Clouds Good News
Fewer Georgians filed initial unemployment insurance claims last month than in the weeks leading up to the pandemic last year.
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Fewer Georgians filed initial unemployment insurance claims last month than in the weeks leading up to the pandemic last year.
The lawsuit is criticized by Democrats as a "dangerous stunt;" the majority of Americans support the president's action, the report says.
The federal agency responsible for licensing Spaceport Camden again wants more time to evaluate plans.
A large manufacturer is cranking out solar panels in Dalton. A leading manufacturer of school buses based in Fort Valley eyes all electric.
Arbery's reported brushes with the law, mental health history ruled inadmissible; reports indicate some potential jurors accessed these.
Naomi Williams of Evans said the beginning of the pandemic was especially tough on her family, including her 12-year-old son.
When Killingsworth noticed troubling election plans for the Edison citywide election, she checked in with the secretary of state's office.
A judge dismissed a lawsuit Wednesday that aimed to discredit Fulton County absentee ballots, a request brought forth by Trump supporters.
The national media and "a crush of out-of-towners," including the Transformative Justice Coalition, were expected to descend upon Brunswick.
About two-thirds of Georgians who participated in a new survey said they had trouble paying for health care in the last year.
Candidates jockeying to lead Georgia's capital city clashed over crime and ethics at a debate, as voters across the state went to the polls.
When KSU environmental science student Ryland McGreevy is not studying, he's exploring Georgia's wild spaces, taking photos of insects.
The Georgia Board of Regents, which oversees the state's 26 public universities, voted to make significant changes to professors' tenure.
Georgia's tenured public college professors could soon face more scrutiny if they want to keep their titles.
At 656 feet long and big enough to haul more than 4,000 automobiles, the hulking Golden Ray ship has been hard to miss.
"Potential election mismanagement" is eyed, as two election workers were fired for allegedly shredding voter registration applications.
The report indicates Trump forced a top federal prosecutor in Atlanta to step down because he wouldn't help Trump overturn his Georgia loss.
A group of more than 100 faith leaders in Georgia have come out in opposition to a proposal to mine near the Okefenokee Swamp.
The battle over masks in Georgia's college classrooms simmers; another issue is pitting professors against the appointed university system.
Georgia Democrats are expressing outrage over a pilot program they claim unfairly burdens efforts to assist those seeking benefits.