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Airport begins major expansion project, first of many to come

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www.wsav.com – Genevieve Lund – 2025-03-24 05:48:00

SUMMARY: Savannah Hilton Head International Airport is undergoing its first major expansion since 2008, driven by an increasing number of passengers and flights. Official construction began on August 14, 2024, to add a 25,000-square-foot facility featuring four new departure gates, enhancing capacity by 21% to accommodate an additional 10,000 passengers daily. The $26.8 million project aims to ease congestion and introduce new dining and retail options, with completion expected by May 2026. Future expansions are planned in the next 5 to 10 years, including a new concourse to support the growing demand for air travel in the Coastal Empire.

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BREAKING: Pope Leo XIV, first U.S. pope in the history of the Catholic Church

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www.wsav.com – Eric Dorsch – 2025-05-08 11:18:00

SUMMARY: Cardinal Robert Prevost, an American missionary with a long career in Peru and head of the Vatican’s office of bishops, has been elected the 267th pope, becoming the first U.S. pope in the 2,000-year history of the Catholic Church. The conclave of 133 cardinals chose him as the successor to the late Pope Francis on May 8, 2025. Taking the name Pope Leo XIV, he appeared at St. Peter’s Basilica balcony to greet the faithful. The election was marked by the traditional white smoke from the Sistine Chapel chimney, signaling the new pope’s selection.

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Georgia U.S. senators warn Trump’s proposed budget threatens to gut state’s growing EV manufacturing

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georgiarecorder.com – Stanley Dunlap – 2025-05-08 02:00:00

by Stanley Dunlap, Georgia Recorder
May 8, 2025

Georgia’s U.S. senators say they are outraged at the prospect of large job losses for clean energy workers if the Republican Congress implements its proposed cuts to the Inflation Reduction Act.

Georgia Democratic U.S. Sens. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff are opposing Republican members of Congress backing the Trump administration’s budget spending plans that could lead to the  repeal of federal manufacturing incentives fueling Georgia’s clean energy projects, including solar energy projects and the state’s growing battery storage and electrified vehicle industries.

Georgia Republican Gov. Brian Kemp has championed the state’s emergence as a leader in electric vehicle production, vowing to make the state the country’s EV capital.

Ossoff and Warnock are joined by a number of clean energy groups that claim Congressional cuts to the Biden-era Inflation Reduction Act could result in the loss of 42,000 jobs in Georgia. Investing in more than 50 clean energy projects worth more than $28 billion has made the state a national leader in clean energy.

In 2022, Congress passed the Biden-era Inflation Reduction Act tax credits that supported hundreds of billions of dollars nationwide in funding and loans to various industries such as solar and electric vehicle manufacturing.

Georgia’s clean energy economy has led the nation since former President Joe Biden signed the IRA in 2022.

On Tuesday, Warnock released an analysis of the “clean energy boom in Georgia.”

The progressive nonprofit Climate Power released a report this year detailing Georgia’s $31 billion in clean energy investments, only behind New York’s $115 billion job-creating projects.

On April 30, Ossoff and Climate Power said a loss of federal support for clean energy projects will inflict economic pain in Georgia.

“If Republicans repeal these manufacturing incentives, it could be catastrophic for Georgia’s economic development,” Ossoff said. “The manufacturing incentives that we passed into law have driven more private investment into new industrial plants in Georgia than just about any other state in the country.”

Congressional Republicans adopted a budget spending plan in April that lacks $1.5 trillion in savings to offset the new spending.

The budget slashes $21 billion from funding for renewable energy, electric vehicle charging infrastructure, and other efforts to reduce climate-warming carbon dioxide emissions. The request also targets climate research spending and initiatives meant to promote diversity.

Four Senate Republicans and 21 House Republicans have urged their leadership to preserve the clean energy tax credit.

The president’s budget request is a wish list for Congress, which controls federal spending, to consider. Even with both chambers of Congress controlled by Republicans sympathetic to Trump’s policies, it is just a starting point for negotiations between the administration and Congress.

The Warnock report found that during the last three years of the Inflation Reduction Act, nearly all new investments and jobs in Georgia are outside of the Atlanta region.

The majority of new jobs and investments are in counties with lower bachelor’s degree rates, according to Warnock.

Trump began his presidency by pausing grants and distributions in Biden’s energy legislation, including investments intended to expand renewable energy and clean energy manufacturing. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has begun the process to reverse federal greenhouse pollution limits for cars.

Warnock says Trump’s taking aim at the electric vehicle industry by pushing for a repeal of a $7,500 tax credit on electric vehicles is counterproductive.

“In a political era defined by gridlock, everyone can agree that we should protect investments that are spurring good-paying manufacturing jobs,” Warnock said.

“There is bipartisan support for protecting the clean energy investments which support Georgia jobs, Georgia manufacturing, and Georgia innovation,” Warnock said. “These investments are bringing real change to communities and families across the state, but those good-paying clean energy jobs are under threat.

Georgia is leading the nation in new clean energy jobs and private investment, including a projected 43,000 new jobs created since August 2022, according to a Jan. 16 report from environmental watchdog Climate Power.

Georgia is a major reason why the Southeast is the national leader for EV and battery-related jobs and private sector investments, according to a 2024 report from the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy. Georgia earned the group’s top spots in the region for its projected 27,394 new jobs and investments exceeding $24 billion.

Gov. Brian Kemp steps out of a Rivian truck at December 2021 press event announcing the the electric vehicle maker will build a factory in Georgia. Jill Nolin/Georgia Recorder (file photo)

Tax incentives offered by the state with the strong backing of Kemp were used to secure commitments from Hyundai and Rivian to build electric powered vehicles at massive new plants projected to employ thousands of people

Stan Cross, electric transportation director for the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy, said that current political instability could undermine progress made by state leaders who promoted investments in workforce new electric vehicle manufacturing sites like Hyundai.

Cross said it’s tough to predict what Congress will or won’t do to support electric vehicles in Georgia. But there’s no doubt a transition to EVs will certainly reduce tailpipe emissions, which significantly impacts air pollution, Cross said.

“Georgia is No. 1 in the private sector for EV and battery manufacturing investments and jobs, making Georgia number one in having the most to lose if the financial incentive rug gets pulled out from under the state,” Cross said.

This story was updated with a correction regarding Rep. Buddy Carter’s stance on the IRA rollbacks. 

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Georgia Recorder is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Georgia Recorder maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor John McCosh for questions: info@georgiarecorder.com.

The post Georgia U.S. senators warn Trump’s proposed budget threatens to gut state’s growing EV manufacturing appeared first on georgiarecorder.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Left

The content primarily highlights concerns raised by Democratic senators and clean energy advocates about the potential negative consequences of Republican-led budget cuts on clean energy jobs and investments in Georgia. It emphasizes the positive impact of Biden-era policies like the Inflation Reduction Act on the state’s clean energy sector while criticizing Republican proposals that could undermine these gains. Although it acknowledges Republican support for electric vehicle manufacturing in Georgia, the overall tone favors clean energy investments and critiques efforts to reduce funding. This combination points to a center-left bias.

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Civil rights official off job after charges surface | FOX 5 News

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www.youtube.com – FOX 5 Atlanta – 2025-05-07 21:37:44

SUMMARY: DeAndre Picket, a US civil rights official, was charged with vehicular homicide and hit-and-run in August last year after fatally striking Joseph Banks III in College Park. Despite the charges, Picket continued serving on the Georgia Committee of the US Commission on Civil Rights until recently, when the victim’s family discovered his role. Banks, 53, died instantly after being hit while crossing the street. Picket was arrested but released on bond and remained free for eight months. Following public scrutiny, Picket resigned from the commission. His attorney expressed remorse, while the Fulton County DA’s investigation remains ongoing. The victim’s family awaits justice.

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A U.S. civil rights official is off the job after serious felony charges have surfaced. Deandre Pickett was charged with vehicular homicide in august of last year after a hit and run crash in College Park. But he continued in his official role until this week when the victim’s family started asking questions.

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