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Georgia News Print E-mail
Tuesday, 30 October 2007

  • States' hottest laws take on new threats

    The mosaic of laws passed by state legislatures this year reveals a country grappling with threats, from a faltering economy and record-high gasoline prices to global warming and lead-tainted toys from China.

    For further analysis of the important developments in this year’s legislative sessions, see “Sour economy limits state options in ‘08” and Stateline.org’s exclusive state-by-state summaries of 2008 legislative actions.  

  • States avoid slashing higher ed money

    Despite a tough economic year, several states are attempting to hold the line on college tuition — or at least not let increases get out of control — by avoiding deep cuts to higher education, an area that states have been quick to slash in past years when funds were low.

  • Sour economy limits states' options in '08

    (Updated 5:38 p.m. EDT, July 17, 2008)

    For many states, 2008 will be remembered for record numbers of home foreclosures, $4-a-gallon gasoline and the beginning of a slide into new fiscal woes after two years of overflowing coffers.

    Stateline.org’s annual state-by-state look at legislative accomplishments, covering 39 states so far, discerns the trends and precedents emerging from state capitals this year.

  • 2008 state-by-state summary

    (Updated 2:26 p.m. EDT, July 18, 2008)

    Here’s Stateline.org's state-by-state rundown of significant legislative action in 2008.

  • Hispanics caught in language crackdown

    TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Federal law requires that anyone with a commercial drivers license speak English well enough to talk with police. Authorities last year issued 25,230 tickets nationwide for violations. Now the federal government is trying to tighten the English requirement, saying the change is needed for safety reasons.

  • CDC report -- South still fattest region in U.S.

    Mississippi, Alabama and Tennessee lead the nation when it comes to obesity, a new government survey reported Thursday.

  • DOT shrinks $1B deficit, demotes treasurer

    One month after state Department of Transportation Commissioner Gena Abraham said the agency had a $1 billion deficit, the DOT board demoted the department's longtime treasurer, and Abraham's staff told the board that they had brought the deficit down to just under $7 million.

  • Tribal leaders split on sex offender law

    A looming federal deadline that requires tribes to track and register sex offenders in their communities was both embraced and denounced by tribal leaders in a Senate hearing on Thursday. The Adam Walsh Act, a law to track the whereabouts of people who commit sex crimes, calls for tribes to comply with the federal law by next April or step aside so a state's attorney general can do the job. Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., chairman of the Senate Committee on Indian affairs, called on tribal leaders and national spokesmen to testify on Indian Country's success and failures in complying with the sex offender registration act.

  • Unemployment rate rises in Georgia

    Unemployment was up in Georgia from last June.

  • Weighing in on American obesity

    Hold the cheeseburger and fries. American adults are getting heavier, and numbers released from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention today prove it.

  • Georgians loom large on obesity list

    Think fried chicken, biscuits and gravy and pecan pie. What do these Southern classics add up to?

  • Nebraska gets $3.2M in settlement with drug company

    Nebraska will receive almost $3.2 million as part of a $515 million settlement with a drug company accused of misconduct.

  • South remains most obese region

    ATLANTA -- The South tips the scales again as the nation's fattest region, according to a new government survey.

  • McCain renews call for gas-tax holiday at Union Station campaign stop

    Sen. John McCain on Thursday renewed his call for a "brief" gas tax holiday - and quickly ran into a political fender-bender with his new Missouri campaign chairman, Sen. Kit Bond.

  • Tennessee ranks high in obesity

    The South still leads the nation in obesity rates, with Tennessee ranking in the top three for the heaviest population, according to the most recent government data.



Last Updated ( Tuesday, 30 October 2007 )
 

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