News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Morning Forecast for Monday, July 7th
SUMMARY: On Monday and Tuesday, temperatures will reach the mid to upper 90s with high humidity making it feel near 100°F, but no heat advisories are expected. Mornings start mild in the 60s-70s, warming rapidly by afternoon. Isolated afternoon showers and thunderstorms may develop, increasing to around a 30% chance through midweek. By Thursday and Friday, rain chances rise to 50%, bringing slight cooling. Tropical Depression Chantal is weakening as it moves northeast, expected to impact the Mid-Atlantic states but not the Southeast. The weekend will see lower rain chances and highs in the low 90s, continuing the summer heat pattern.
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News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Early voting starts as Waites, Hubbard vie for Democratic nod for seat on Georgia regulatory board
by Amber Roldan, Georgia Recorder
July 7, 2025
Two Georgia Democrats are facing off to secure the party’s nomination for the District 3 seat on Georgia’s Public Service Commission. Keisha Sean Waites, a former state representative and Atlanta City Councilwoman, is competing against Peter Hubbard, a clean energy advocate, on the July 15 ballot.
The runoff election comes after last month’s statewide special primary where no candidate received 50% of the vote, although Waites came close. With 58,022 votes, Waites won over about 46% of voters in the primary, and Hubbard trailed 16,110 votes behind her with about 33% of the vote. Robert Jones, a third challenger, accounted for the remainder of votes. Daniel Blackman also campaigned as a District 3 Democratic candidate but was disqualified last month for failing to meet residency requirements, and any votes cast in his favor were not counted.
District 3 includes Clayton, Fulton and DeKalb counties, but commissioners are elected statewide and must live within the district for 12 months to be eligible.
Despite being the frontrunner in last month’s primary, Waites is a newcomer to the realm of utility rates and energy demands. But the Georgia native argues her experience at the statehouse and city hall would help her if elected to the commission. Waites left the council in 2024 for an unsuccessful run for the Fulton County Clerk of Superior Court last year. She is also a former candidate for the Fulton County Commission and U.S. Congress.
“I think when you look at my legislative record, when you look at my history and work of community service, all of those things clearly set me aside from my opponent,” she said.
Hubbard, who has lived in Georgia for the past decade, has dedicated his career to energy policy and politics. He ran unsuccessfully for the Georgia House of Representatives in 2022.
In 2019, he founded the Georgia Center for Energy Solutions, a nonprofit aiming to fight for clean energy and lower power bills. On behalf of the nonprofit, Hubbard has provided testimony at numerous commission hearings over the years.
“I’ve presented increasingly detailed, sophisticated analysis, so I don’t have to learn on the job. I’m ready to hit the ground running,” Hubbard said.
Waites acknowledged Hubbard’s experience but questioned his effectiveness.
“I’m trying to figure out if Peter was so effective, then why are we even having the conversation we’re having right now?” Waites said, referring to the uptick in utility bills.
Rising utility bills and increased energy demands have emerged as top concerns for voters across the state. Democratic candidates have seized on that voter angst and are vowing to work to lower utility bills.
“Like the 10.8 million (other) Georgians, I’ve had one of these colossal skyrocketing bills, and so has my mom, and so has my dad and the people that I love and care about in the community that I live in,” Waites said.
Waites said she is concerned about Georgia Power’s profit margins over the last decade, and she has also proposed a tiered rate system to help combat rising rates that would provide relief to lower income Georgians. She also wants to ensure that the financial burden from data centers does not affect Georgia families.
Hubbard argued that commissioners cater to large corporations and has cast himself as the candidate who can best recenter the commission’s focus on Georgians.
“There’s a larger commitment to address the injustice and inequity that we’re seeing in how power prices are set,” Hubbard said. “In particular, I think there’s just a true lack of accountability and disregard for the public at the Public Service Commission and I think that that is truly what distinguishes me as the nominee, as someone who is going to go in and fight for Georgians.”
While both candidates support lowering utility bills, they both share concerns about the effectiveness of a recent rate freeze. Since 2023, the average Georgia Power customer is paying $43 more each month. Last week, current commissioners unanimously approved a plan from Georgia Power that will freeze current rates through 2028, though customers’ bills could still rise next year.
With storm clean-up fees and fuel cost adjustments likely awaiting Georgia Power ratepayers in the future, Waites compared the freeze to purchasing an airline ticket and still being stuck with additional baggage and seat charges.
“The fees, the riders and the fuel cost adjustments are still there and can fluctuate at any time,” Waites said. “So Georgia Power can come back and say, ‘hey’, they can submit a proposal and ask for it to be reviewed. So the rate freeze is really disingenuous.”
Hubbard says the freeze “locks in” six rate increases approved by commissioners over the past three years. He said the promise of at least $2.89 of monthly relief on power bills in previous long-term plans have since been abandoned.
“They’re saying, ‘hey, look, we’re going to freeze rates so there’s no downward pressure,’ which is really a fiction, from the point of view of the Republican policy,” Hubbard said. “They just have never delivered on downward pressure on rates.”
The future of nuclear energy in Georgia has also dominated campaign messages.
Worried about the potential health impacts of toxic coal ash ponds, Waites said she does not see a problem with nuclear energy. With confidence that the sun and wind are both constant renewable resources, she would like to see increased conversation surrounding wind and solar energy.
“When you look at the $296 million that we’ve given out of incentives to incentivize data centers to come to Georgia, I think that we can start to put some programs in place to introduce more families to solar,” Waites said.
While Hubbard’s nuclear support corresponds with its carbon-free nature, he said he is acutely aware of the costs associated with the energy source. He says that while Plant Vogtle helped reduce the state’s carbon footprint, this was not a cheap accomplishment. The expansion project was years behind schedule and billions of dollars over budget when it was completed last year.
“Once you have the nuclear plant, it’s cheap to dispatch, it’s cheap to run, but it’s very expensive to build,” Hubbard said. “So that’s the part that concerns me, is if we’re proposing to build any new nuclear (plants) there must be strict cost controls.”
Both candidates hope to advance to November’s general election for a chance to face appointed Republican Commissioner Fitz Johnson. Commissioners typically serve six-year staggered terms, but a long-running legal challenge targeting the system for electing commissioners means that the District 3 winner will serve a one-year term and be back up for election next year.
A lawsuit challenging the at-large voting method for the district-based commission seats is pending with the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. That case, originally filed in 2020, argues that the statewide elections dilute the voting strength of Black voters. Only one Black commissioner has ever been elected under the system. Johnson, who is Black, was appointed to the seat by Gov. Brian Kemp in 2021.
The District 3 race will be on the November ballot with the District 2 race between Republican Commission Tim Echols and Democratic challenger Alicia M. Johnson. District 2 represents a wide swath of southeast Georgia, stretching from Hart County to Savannah.
There will be one week of early voting that will start Monday, July 7. With only a 2.5% turnout in the June primary, the Democratic runoff is also projected to see low turnout. Some counties will only operate a single early voting location to accommodate an anticipated limited number of voters. Voters can check their registration status and polling place location at the Georgia Secretary of State’s My Voter Page.
If this year’s Georgia Public Service Commission election stays on track, it will be the first time since 2020 that voters have been able to elect members to the panel.
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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 Jill Nolin for questions: info@georgiarecorder.com.
The post Early voting starts as Waites, Hubbard vie for Democratic nod for seat on Georgia regulatory board 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
This article presents the runoff race between two Democratic candidates with a generally neutral and factual tone, yet it leans subtly toward a Center-Left perspective by emphasizing clean energy advocacy, concerns about rising utility bills, and equity in energy policy. It highlights progressive positions such as support for renewable energy, critiques of corporate profits, and attention to low-income relief. While the coverage includes voices from both candidates and facts about the election, the framing around energy justice, environmental concerns, and voter disenfranchisement aligns more with Center-Left priorities without overt partisanship.
News from the South - Georgia News Feed
TS Chantal is coming ashore, but what does it mean for the CSRA?
SUMMARY: Tropical Storm Chantal is expected to make landfall on the South Carolina coast early Sunday, bringing heavy rain, coastal flooding, and strong winds mainly to coastal areas, where Tropical Storm Watches and warnings are in effect. In the CSRA, impacts will be minimal, with scattered showers limited mostly to south and east of I-20 and breezy winds gusting up to 25 mph. Rain will taper off Sunday evening as the storm moves into North Carolina. By Monday, summer weather returns with hot, humid conditions and temperatures near 100°F, followed by an active pattern late week bringing showers and cooler highs in the low 90s.
The post TS Chantal is coming ashore, but what does it mean for the CSRA? appeared first on www.wjbf.com
News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Tracking the Tropics: Latest on Tropical Storm Chantal
SUMMARY: Tropical Storm Chantal is approaching the Carolinas, expected to make landfall around 8 a.m., moving slowly at 8 mph. The storm remains at tropical storm status without intensifying. North Carolina faces a risk of flash flooding from now through Monday, so travelers should stay updated on forecasts. South Carolina will also be affected, but Georgia is expected to remain mostly dry with only increased cloud cover and a slight chance of sprinkles. After landfall, Chantal will weaken into a low-pressure system with its heavier rain staying north, minimizing impacts in Georgia. Residents are urged to monitor updates closely.
Chantal will make landfall early Sunday.
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