News from the South - Georgia News Feed
New Peach Pass app coming to Georgia drivers in October
SUMMARY: A new Peach Pass Verify app, launching on October 31, will replace the current Peach Pass Go app. It requires drivers to confirm they have three or more passengers in their vehicle to qualify for free use of Georgia’s I-85 express lanes. Verification must be done before and after each trip, though specific details on the verification process remain unclear. The Peach Pass Go app will be fully replaced by the new app on December 2.
Here is what users need to know.
News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Bookman: Burt Jones’ pledge to eliminate Georgia’s income tax is wrong-headed
by Jay Bookman, Georgia Recorder
July 31, 2025
Lt. Gov. Burt Jones is asking Georgia voters for a big promotion, and the centerpiece of his campaign to become our next governor is a promise that many will find appealing, at least at first glance.
The fact that the promise is also highly impractical and deeply unfair is almost beside the point, given the state of American politics these days.
According to Jones, the “Number One” thing he wants to accomplish as governor is “to completely eliminate the state income tax.”
“Tennessee and Florida have already done it,” he says, “and I’ll get it done for Georgia.”
Let’s deal first with the question of practicality. In 2026, Georgia’s income tax is projected to generate almost $20 billion, accounting for roughly half of state tax revenue. How are you going to make up a shortfall that large?
The politically easy answer would be to cut spending, but Georgia is already a low-spending state with little fat in its budget. Furthermore, with billion-dollar cuts coming in federal aid to states, state budgets across the country are going to be under major strain over the next few years, and it will be impossible to make cuts of such significance without consequences so large that it would be unacceptable even to most conservatives.
In essence, eliminating the state income tax would require raising other types of taxes, most likely the state sales tax. Next year, the current sales tax is projected to raise roughly $10 billion. To raise the additional $20 billion needed to offset the loss of income tax revenue, you’d have to triple the state sales tax. That would be deeply disruptive.
As you may note from his campaign pitch, Jones claims “Tennessee and Florida have already done it,” making it sound like it’s a recent accomplishment for those states. That’s misleading. Florida eliminated its income tax a century ago, when the world was a very different place, and Tennessee has never taxed earned income. The last state to successfully eliminate its income tax did so 45 years ago, and Alaska was able to pull it off only after construction of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline, which opened up the state’s immense oil reserves.
Georgia has no oil reserves.
Now let’s address the question of fairness.
As a rule, a sales tax is a regressive form of taxation, meaning that it hits lower and middle-income households much harder than it hits the wealthy. An income tax helps to balance out that impact, which is why most states rely on both. That’s also why Florida, with a high state sales tax but no income tax, is ranked by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy as the most regressive tax system in the country. It’s a good place to live if you’re rich, but not so great for everybody else. (Tennessee is number three in the ITEP rankings of most regressive tax systems, while Georgia ranks 33rd.)
In Florida, families with income under $20,000 a year pay 13.2% of that income in state taxes. Those in the wealthiest 1%, with income above $735,000, pay just 2.7% of their income in state taxes. The poorest Floridians end up paying an effective tax rate that is almost five times higher than the richest Floridians. The middle class is hit hard as well, paying an effective tax rate that is three or four times that of the top 1%.
I know how shocked you must be at this point to see a Republican politician such as Jones, a wealthy heir to a petroleum company, pitching a tax plan that would overwhelmingly benefit the wealthy while increasing the tax burden on the rest of us in the state.
It’s particularly curious because median household income in Georgia is higher than in Florida and significantly higher than in Tennessee. We also have a higher GDP per capita than either of those neighboring states.
So why would we want to emulate states that are doing worse than we are?
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
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 Bookman: Burt Jones’ pledge to eliminate Georgia’s income tax is wrong-headed 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 critiques a Republican candidate’s tax policy proposal by emphasizing its impracticality and unfairness, particularly highlighting the regressive impact of eliminating income tax in favor of sales tax increases. The tone and language show skepticism toward the conservative fiscal plan, focusing on equity and socioeconomic consequences that align with a center-left perspective valuing progressive taxation and protecting lower-income groups. However, it maintains a fact-based approach with policy details and data, rather than overt partisan attacks, situating it in a moderate critique rather than strong ideological opposition.
News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Georgia man spends millions in illegally received money on mansion, luxury cars | FOX 5 News
SUMMARY: A Georgia man from Marietta fraudulently obtained $13 million from the federal government during the COVID-19 pandemic. He secured a $9.6 million Paycheck Protection Program loan by fabricating a company, Khrennikov Industries, which he claimed operated a gold mine in Ghana with hundreds of fake employees, including fictitious names like Keanu Reeves and John Snow. Additionally, he filed fraudulent tax returns, receiving a $3.4 million IRS refund. He spent the illicit funds on an East Cobb mansion, luxury cars, a $15,000 cosmetic procedure, and a yacht down payment. The money was meant to support struggling small businesses. He faces sentencing in November, with a maximum penalty of 170 months.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Atlanta said 49-year-old Carl Delano Torjagbo was convicted of several crimes after obtaining a fraudulent $9.6 million PPP loan and filing fraudulent tax returns that generated a $3.4 million IRS refund. Instead of using it for what he stated he would, prosecutors said he used the loan and the fraudulently obtained tax refund to pay personal debts and expenses.
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News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Storm Team 3: Hot & humid end of week, cooler, wetter weekend expected
SUMMARY: Wednesday in Savannah was hot and humid, with highs near 100°F and heat indexes reaching 105°-110°F. Isolated afternoon and evening showers brought some cooling relief. The heat will continue Thursday and Friday with highs in the mid to upper 90s and heat advisories in effect. A cold front moving through the central U.S. will arrive by the weekend, lowering temperatures to the mid-80s to around 90°F. This front will also increase Gulf moisture, causing heavy rain and storms Saturday and Sunday with totals of 2-3 inches and flood risks in poorly drained areas. Tropical activity remains quiet for now.
The post Storm Team 3: Hot & humid end of week, cooler, wetter weekend expected appeared first on www.wsav.com
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