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2023 Capitol Update - Post Signing Period

2023 Capitol Update - Post Signing Period

The Governor's signing period has officially ended!

Under the Georgia Constitution, the Governor has 40 days from the end of the legislative session in which he must sign, veto, or allow to become law without his signature, all bills passed by the General Assembly. The Governor’s signing period for 2023 has officially ended, marking the end of the 2023 regular legislative session work. All told, the Governor took action on over 250 bills, 13 of which ACEC Georgia monitored, and three of which ACEC Georgia took a position of support on.  

 

Of particular note for our readers, the following bills ACEC Georgia monitored or supported were signed into law by the Governor: 

  • The budget, or HB 19, was our number one legislative initiative. Or, more specifically, the budget of the Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors (PELS Board). Despite ominous warnings of an economic downturn that threatened nearly all state-funded entities, appropriators allocated just over $1 million for the PELS Board, in addition to the $300,000 previously allocated in the amended budget, which will allow the Board to begin operations and hire staff.  
  • The truck weights proposal, HB 189 by Rep. Steven Meeks (R-Screven), has created an unlikely coalition of advocates for freight and logistics funding. The compromise legislation codifies a truck weight variance of 10% for agriculture and agricultural products (on state and local roads only) within 150 miles of the point of origin of the product and includes a sunset of two years (i.e., this variance will expire in 2 years and will not last in perpetuity like most legislation).   
  • ACEC Georgia supported HB 128 by freshman Representative Soo Hong (R- Lawrenceville) which aims to streamline minority business certifications by revising the onerous and often bureaucratic process of submitting documentation of certification of minority classifications received by the federal government. The new law also removes the certification process from the Georgia Department of Transportation and puts it under the purview of the Governor Department of Administrative Services, which is the agency responsible for procurement of all state contracts. HB 128 also expanded the definition of minority businesses to include women and veteran owned businesses.  

In addition to signed legislation the following of-interest bills were vetoed: 

  • HB 52, last year’s GDOT Housekeeping bill has been vetoed by the Governor. The Governor’s office released the following veto statement: “House Bill 52 is a housekeeping bill brought at the request of the Georgia Department of Transportation. A late amendment altered certain provisions of the bill.”  
  • HB 193 sought to increase the minimum dollar amount for bids for public works contracts that are required to go to a competitive bidding process from $100,000 to $250,000. The current $100,000 threshold was created in 2000 and has not been adjusted since its original passage. The Governor’s veto was related to concerns about the potential for differing bidding threshold amounts between state-issued contracts and local government contracts.   

Though the 2023 regular legislative session may have come to an official close, legislators will continue to work over the interim on the following study committees SR 85: The Senate Study Committee on Occupational Licensing & SR 275: The Senate Study Committee on Expanding Georgia’s Workforce. SR 85 aims to study requirements for obtaining occupational licenses and to eventually make recommendations to reduce onerous or unnecessary requirements for those licenses. SR 275 aims to study and examine pilot programs, public-private partnerships, and potential legislative initiatives to help alleviate Georgia’s workforce shortage.  

As representatives of Georgia’s engineering industry, our political advocacy team doesn’t just focus on state level government affairs; we also work on federal and local government issues year-round. If you or your firm have a problem with a local government, let us know so we can intervene, where appropriate, on your behalf. 

Our next capitol update, barring an unexpected special session, will be next year. See you in 2024! 

 

LEGISLATION ACEC GEORGIA IS FOLLOWING  

 

SIGNED & VETOED LEGISLATION  

 

Budget & Appropriations  

HB 18 by Representative Jon Burns (R-Newington): is the amended FY 2023 budget which modifies the state’s spending plan for the last 90 days of the current fiscal year ending on June 30th. It allocates $300,000 to the PELS Board for start-up costs.   

Status: Passed the House Appropriations Committee on February 1st. Passed the House by a vote of 170-1 on February 2nd. Passed the Senate Appropriations Committee on February 21st. Passed the Senate 54-1. A conference committee made up of three Senators and three Representatives created a report, that reconciled differences between the House and Senate versions of the amended budget. That report was adopted on March 6th by both chambers. The Governor has signed this legislation and allocation will begin April 1, 2023 or as soon as practical.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation 

 

HB 19 by Representative Jon Burns (R-Newington): is the full FY 2024 budget. The Governor originally recommended $1,027,895 for the PELS Board for the fiscal year beginning July 1. The House version of the budget recommended $1,078,040 for the PELS Board. The Senate version recommends $1,007,895. This bill is now being considered by a conference committee made up of three Senators and three Representatives.   

Status: Passed the House Appropriations Committee on March 8th. Passed the House 167-1. Passed the Senate Appropriations Committee. Passed the Senate 51-1. The final recommendation for the PELS Board is $1,032,895. The budget has passed both chambers. The Governor has signed this legislation and allocation will begin July 1, 2023 for the 2024 Fiscal year budget.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation 

 

Industry & Professions  

HB 128 by Representative Soo Hong (R-Lawrenceville): would revise provisions relating to minority, women owned, and veteran owned businesses procuring or involved in the procurement of state contracts. The bill defines these types of qualified “classified” businesses and would expand the 10% tax deductions for payments to these small business subcontractors to all classified businesses. This proposal also aims to standardize and expedite the process of obtaining minority, women, or veteran owned business credentials by allowing the state to accept credentials from the federal government. 

Status: Passed the House State Planning & Community Affairs Committee; passed the House 160-3. Passed the Senate Economic Development & Tourism Committee. Passed the Senate 44-1. The Governor has signed this legislation.  

ACEC Georgia supports this legislation  

 

HB 530 by Representative James Burchett (R-Waycross): is the House’s version of the Apex doctrine legislation. It aims to curtail the ability of a plaintiff to depose a c-suite executive who has no special or specific knowledge of the facts pertaining to a suit against his/her company.  

Status: Passed the House Judiciary Committee. Passed the House 156 to 8. Passed the Senate Regulated Industries & Utilities Committee. This bill has made the final Senate Rules Calendar, but was never called by the Senate for a vote. Similar language which reformed the Apex doctrine was added to SB 74, which passed the Senate 54 to 1 in its final vote – SB 74 was signed by the Governor.  

ACEC Georgia supports SB 74 legislation  

 

SB 3 by Senator John Albers (R-Roswell): "Reducing Barriers to State Employment Act of 2023". This proposal would direct all state entities to regularly assess the relevant academic background and experience requirements needed for each position within their agency, reduce those requirements which are arduous and unnecessary, and reduce the number of positions for which four-year college degrees are required as a condition of employment.  

Status: Passed the Senate Government Oversight Committee. Passed the Senate by a vote of 49 to 1. Passed the House Governmental Affairs Committee. Passed the House 168-0. The Governor has signed this legislation.  

ACEC Georgia supports this legislation  

 

Transportation  

HB 52 by Representative Brad Thomas (R-Woodstock): is last year’s annual GDOT housekeeping bill and proposes to revise meeting notice provisions for the election of board members for the Department of Transportation as well as clarify other provisions regarding public-private partnership negotiations and exempt some records from public disclosure requirements. This bill also includes a separate provision that relates to the duties of coroners and county medical examiners regarding major interstate highway deaths, as well as increase the modular home transportation square footage limit by 4 feet to align with neighboring states’ restrictions.  

Status: Passed the House Transportation Committee on January 30th. The House voted in favor of this bill, by a vote of 167 to 0. Passed the Senate Transportation Committee. Passed the Senate with an amendment by a vote of 53 to 1 on Feb 22. This bill was agreed to by the House; however, the Governor vetoed this legislation, noting the following: “House Bill 52 is a housekeeping bill brought at the request of the Georgia Department of Transportation. A late amendment altered certain provisions of the bill.” 

ACEC Georgia supports this legislation  

 

HB 189 by Representative Steven Meeks (R-Screven): this bill, after undergoing several (5) modifications, now proposes to add a 10% variance on top of the 80,000-pound truck weight limit and would only apply to trucks carrying agricultural products and other agricultural commodities, such as forestry outputs. The conference committee compromise sunsets this bill in two years, allows local law enforcement to enforce weight restrictions, includes fines for weight restriction violations, and trucks to utilize the variance only within 150 miles of the point of origin.  

Status: Passed the House Transportation Committee on February 9th by a vote of 18 to 11. This bill was recommitted to the House Transportation Committee by the House Rules Committee chairman. It was amended in committee to create a 12.5% variance exemption for trucks carrying agricultural products only and received a do pass recommendation from the committee by a vote of 12-7. Amended again to reduce the variance to 10% for agricultural products only. Passed the House by a vote of 93-81. Passed the Senate Transportation Committee. The committee added forestry products, turf, and other agricultural commodities. Passed the full Senate chamber with a sunset and metro-area exemption on March 23 by a vote of 44 to 5. The compromise legislation was agreed to in the House by a vote of 95 to 75 and in the Senate by a vote of 37 to 16. The Governor has signed this legislation.   

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation.  

 

HB 288 by Representative Butch Parrish (R-Swainsboro): proposes to create an East Georgia Regional Airport Authority Act for the expansion of airport facilities in the City of Swainsboro and Emanuel County.  

Status: Passed the House Intragovernmental Coordination Committee. Passed the House by a vote of 162-2. Passed the Senate Transportation Committee. Passed the Senate 49-0. The Governor has signed this legislation.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

SB 146 by Senator Steve Gooch (R-Dahlonega): is a proposal that combines four of the recommendations from the Joint Study Committee on the Electrification of Transportation. These recommendations include: vesting oversight and inspection powers over electric vehicle charging stations in the Agriculture Commissioner to ensure uniformity and proper maintenance; allowing the existing motor fuel excise tax to be levied on electricity used to charge vehicles (by creating a kilowatt “gallonage equivalent”); allows the sale of electricity by the kilowatt hour. This is the Senate companion to HB 406 (above) 

Status: Passed the Senate Regulated Industries & Utilities Committee; passed the Senate 55-1. Passed the House Technology & Infrastructure Innovation Committee. Passed the House 175-1. Senate agreed to the House substitute 51-4. The Governor has signed this legislation.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

Local Government  

HB 160 by Representative Gerald Greene (R-Cuthbert): proposes to create a community improvement district in the city of Albany.  

Status: Passed the House Intragovernmental Coordination Committee. The House passed this bill by a vote of 166 to 0. This bill passed the Senate 54-0. The Governor has signed this legislation.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

HB 193 by Representative Victor Anderson (R-Cornelia): proposes to raise the minimum dollar amount for bids for public works contracts which are required to go to a competitive bidding process from $100,000 to $250,000. This adjustment proposal is the result of inflation. The current $100,000 threshold was created in 2000 and has not been adjusted since its original passage.  

Status: Passed the House Governmental Affairs Committee. Passed the House by a vote of 164-4. Passed the Senate Government Oversight Committee. Passed the Senate with an amendment extending this exemption to MARTA for local government contracts only by a vote of 47 to 4. House agreed to the substitute. The Governor has vetoed this legislation.  

ACEC Georgia supports this legislation  

 

HB 230 by Representative Mark Newton (R-Augusta): proposes to create a special purpose local option sales tax for a “coliseum capital outlay project”. The capital outlay project’s definition is narrowly tailored, with operation and ownership provisions limited to a consolidated government or one or more local authorities, among other very specific provisions. The SPLOST would be referendum led and would include 0.5% sales tax on applicable goods defined in the bill and a 0.5% sales tax on motor fuel when price per gallon is less than $3.00. The narrow definition indicates that this would very likely only affect Augusta-Richmond projects.  

Status: Passed the House Ways & Means Committee; passed the House 165-7. Passed the Senate Finance Committee; passed the Senate 44 to 8. The Governor has signed this legislation.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

HB 374 by Representative Brad Thomas (R-Woodstock): proposes to create a process by which residents and property owners can deannex out of a city (as long as they are within reasonable boundaries of the city’s limits) and become part of an unincorporated area of a county, without the need for legislative approval. This bill was amended in the Senate State & Local Government Operations committee to include language prohibiting a local government from banning only gas powdered leaf blowers (a local government would have to ban both battery powered and gas powered, if they place a ban on leaf blowers); this bill also includes a restriction on local governments from banning natural gas appliances.  

Status: Passed the House Governmental Affairs Committee; passed the House 144-28. Passed the Senate State & Local Governmental Operations Committee. Passed by the Senate 32-20. The Senate changes were agreed to by the House. The Governor has signed this legislation.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

 

 

2023 STUDY COMMITTEES ACEC GEORGIA IS MONITORING  

 

SR 85 by Senator Larry Walker (R-Perry): would create a Senate study committee on occupational licenses. This study committee, during the session interim, would be tasked with reviewing occupational licenses and requirements for receiving these licenses.  

Status: Passed the Senate Rules Committee. Passed the Senate. This study committee will soon be appointed and will meet over the interim.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

SR 147 by Senator Derek Mallow (D-Savannah): is the bipartisan proposal for a Senate Local Option Sales Tax Study Committee. The study committee will consist of a group of Senate members who will meet over the summer and fall to discuss any potential pitfalls in local option sales taxes or opportunities to increase the overall value to the residents.  

Status: Passed the Senate Rules committee. Adopted by the Senate and awaiting appointments.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation   

 

SR 275 by Senator John Albers (R-Roswell) sponsored the Senate Study Committee on Expanding Georgia’s Workforce, which will examine current practices, pilot programs, private-public partnerships, and initiatives by industries across Georgia to increase workforce opportunities. 

Status: Assigned to the Senate Rules Committee. Passed the Senate. This study committee will soon be appointed and will meet over the interim.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

 

BILLS THAT ARE NOT ELIGIBLE FOR THE GOVERNOR’S CONSIDERATION 

 

Industry & Professions  

HB 267 by Representative Tyler Paul Smith (R-Bremen): would allow an individual to pursue a civil action and seek injunctive relief if an employer, other than a governmental entity, fails to withhold taxes properly from wages paid to an employee. 

Status: Passed the House Judiciary Committee; this bill did not make the Crossover deadline.  

ACEC Georgia is reviewing this legislation  

 

SB 157 by Senator Brian Strickland (R-McDonough): proposes several changes relating to the application process for occupational licenses in Georgia by individuals with criminal records. This bill clarifies what types of crimes would disqualify an individual from receiving a license, creates an appeals process for an individual who may have been denied a license based on their criminal record or other unknown or undisclosed reason, and creates a “preclearance” process for determining whether an individual's criminal record will disqualify them from obtaining a license before paying and completing required education and training for that license. This bill aims to decrease regulatory burdens and streamline burdensome and onerous licensing processes.  

Status: Passed the Senate Judiciary Committee. Passed the Senate by a vote of 55-0. Passed the House Judiciary Non-Civil Committee. This bill was never considered by the House and cannot be considered by the Governor.  

ACEC Georgia supports this legislation  

 

SB 195 by Senator Larry Walker (R-Perry): the original proposal would create a licensure by endorsement process for out-of-state applicants who possess a valid license for a profession and who apply for a Georgia license for that profession; however, this has been narrowed down to only active-duty military and their spouses. The provisions require that license applicants have a valid license that is in good standing, have no complaints or pending complaints, have had the license for at least one year, do not have a disqualifying criminal record, pass any required examination on state-specific rules & regs, and pays all applicable fees. This bill would also create a shot clock of 30 days for a board to issue an expedited license by endorsement.  

Status: Passed the Senate Veterans, Military, & Homeland Security Committee. This bill passed the Senate with a vote of 54-0. Passed the House Regulated Industries Committee. This legislation was stripped in the Rules Committee to strip it of all of its contents and a proposal to revise the shot clock on military spouses licensure review and applications from 90 days to 30 days was placed on the legislation. The bill passed the House 169 to 0; however, the Senate never agreed to the revision, and it is now considered dead. 

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

SB 186 by Senator Greg Dolezal (R-Cumming): would revise the premises liability law to limit the cause of action currently available for individuals injured by an unrelated third party on a landowner’s property. The bill would require a plaintiff to prove that the landowner compelled the third party’s action, had knowledge of a specific threat, or could have reasonably intervened in the situation that resulted in injuries to the plaintiff. This would also create a process for apportionment of damages between the third party and landowner.   

Status: Passed to the Senate Insurance & Labor Committee; this bill made the Senate Rules calendar but was never voted on by the Senate 

ACEC Georgia supports this legislation  

 

SB 196 by Senator Ben Watson (R-Savannah): under current law, while it is illegal to not wear a seatbelt in the front seat of a vehicle, evidence of non-use is not admissible in court during a preceding regarding a vehicle accident. SB 196 would allow the admissibility of that evidence so that a defendant may present it when making their case in court. An amendment was added to exempt ride share services.  

Status: Passed the Senate Transportation Committee. This bill failed on the floor of the Senate by a vote of 24 to 30.  

ACEC Georgia supports this legislation  

 

SB 200 by Senator Bill Cowsert (R-Athens): is what is known as the “Apex Doctrine”. It would create a process for which a c-suite or other high307 

level executive within a corporation can petition a court to show that a requested deposition is unnecessary or burdensome. Under current law, if a company is the defendant in a suit, the plaintiff may request a deposition of top-level executives, even when they are not involved in any capacity.  

Status: Passed the Senate Regulated Industries & Utilities Committee; this bill made the Senate Rules calendar but was not voted on by the Senate.  

ACEC Georgia supports this legislation 

 

Transportation  

HB 307 by Representative Alan Powell (R-Hartwell): deals with the regulation of electric vehicle charging broadly. It creates a framework which aims to allow for “competitively neutral policies” between electric suppliers (such as Georgia Power or EMCs) and non-providers to promote private sector investment. The proposal would require electric suppliers to create a separate subsidiary for electric vehicle charging infrastructure and provide the same rates, terms, and conditions of service for non-providers as the subsidiary receives. It would also prohibit electric providers from recovering costs for implementation and execution of EV charging from its ratepayers. The bill also allows for charging by the kilowatt hour (there are discrepancies as to whether kilowatt hour charging is allowed under current law) and endows the Public Service Commission with the authority to provide oversight of the industry and entities engaging in charging infrastructure. 

Status: Assigned to the House Technology and Infrastructure Innovation Committee. Did not make the Crossover Deadline 

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

HB 406 by Representative Rick Jasperse (R-Jasper): is a proposal that combines four of the recommendations from the Joint Study Committee on the Electrification of Transportation. These recommendations include: vesting oversight and inspection powers over electric vehicle charging stations in the Agriculture Commissioner to ensure uniformity and proper maintenance; allowing the existing motor fuel excise tax to be levied on electricity used to charge vehicles (by creating a kilowatt “gallonage equivalent”); allows the sale of electricity by the kilowatt hour. SB 146 by Senator Steve Gooch is the Senate companion bill. 

Status: Passed out of the House Technology and Infrastructure Innovation Committee. Passed the House, 161-0; passed the Senate Regulated Industries Committee. This bill is on the final Senate Rules Calendar.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

HB 617 by Representative Rick Jasperse (R-Jasper): is a freight & logistics planning bill, which would create a state-wide freight and logistics implementation plan which would be overseen by the planning director within the Planning Division of the Georgia Department of Transportation.  

Status: Passed out of the House Transportation Committee; did not make the Crossover Deadline. 

ACEC Georgia supports this legislation  

 

HR 140 by Representative Viola Davis (D-Stone Mountain): is an urging resolution asking MARTA to reaffirm its commitment to extending its rail system alongside Interstate 20 in south DeKalb County. Urging resolutions are nonbinding, but if passed, they do provide a powerful nudge towards specific state entities to conduct whatever the resolution encourages the entity to do.   

Status: Assigned to the House Transportation Committee. This resolution was introduced on February 8th, but has not yet received a hearing and will not be considered this session. 

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

SB 165 by Senator Russ Goodman (R-Cogdell): is the Senate version of HB 189, the truck weights bill, which would codify a 12.5% variance on top of the current legal limit for heavy duty trucks at 80,000 pounds. This bill has not been amended to be limited to trucks used for agricultural products only.  

Status: Did not pass the Senate Transportation Committee—this legislation is dead for the session 

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

SB 167 by Senator Randy Robertson (R-Cataula): is an EV bill and the Senate companion to Rep. Alan Powell’s HB 307 mentioned above.  

Status: Assigned to the Senate Regulated Industries & Utilities Committee; however, it failed to meet the Crossover deadline.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

SR 137 by Senator Randy Robertson (R-Cataula): urges EMCs and localities to develop competitively neutral tariffs for providing electricity for the use of charging vehicles. This legislation is no longer eligible for consideration this session.  

Status: Assigned to the Senate Regulated Industries & Utilities Committee 

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

Water & Environmental  

HB 206 by Representative Steven Sainz (R-St. Marys): would create Commercial Property Assessed Conservation, Energy, and Resiliency Development Authorities and would allow some qualifying entities to pay for qualifying energy efficiency and renewable energy improvements through commercial property-assessed clean energy (C-PACE) financing options.  

Status: Passed the House Governmental Affairs Committee; passed the House 134-38. Assigned to the Senate State & Local Governmental Operations Committee, which held a hearing on the bill on March 16th but no vote was taken. This legislation is no longer eligible for consideration this session.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

HB 306 by Representative Tim Fleming (R-Covington): the original version of this legislation would have allowed energy cost savings measures, which include facility alterations, retrofitting, renovation, or new construction that reduces energy or water consumption or is designed to generate revenue, to be excluded from competitive bidding processes. The problematic provision regarding the exemption from competitive bid processes has been removed.  

Status: Passed out of the House Governmental Affairs Committee by substitute (i.e, it was amended by the committee); passed the House 170-1. Passed the Senate Education & Youth Committee. Did not make the final Rules calendar and is no longer eligible for consideration this session.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

Local Government  

HB 146 by Representative Derek McCollum (R-Chestnut Mountain): proposes to expand the definition of “municipality” as it relates to water and sewer projects and costs tax (MOST) to include any municipality with a corporate boundary that extends into three or more counties.  

Status: This bill received a hearing in the House Ways & Means Committee, but has not yet been considered for a vote. No longer eligible for consideration this session.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

HB 220 by Representative Rob Leverett (R-Elberton): the original proposal would have allowed owners’ associations to pursue injunctive relief, without the need to first pursue or utilize other available or alternative remedies. This bill was amended to allow owners’ associations to pursue injunctive relief if a written notice is ignored for over 10 days.   

Status: Passed the House Judiciary Committee. Passed the House 144-22. Passed the Senate Judiciary Committee. This bill was placed on the final Senate Rules Calendar, but was never considered for a vote.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation   

 

HB 461 by Representative Brad Thomas (R-Woodstock): would clarify that the proceeds of regulatory fees charges by local governments be used only to fund the regulatory activity the fee is imposed for and prohibit local governments from utilizing these fees as a profit generator or to be utilized for general expenses.  

Status: Assigned to the House Ways & Means Committee. Did not receive a hearing; dead for the session.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

HB 514 by Representative Dale Washburn (R-Macon): places a shot clock of 180 or fewer days on moratoriums on new housing construction by local governments to eliminate the ability for local governments to conduct indefinite moratoriums, previously the bill only dealt with single family home construction, this bill was amended in the Senate Economic Development Committee to include multi-family homes. This bill also creates exemptions to the shot clock for natural disasters, feasibility planning, or state of emergencies.  

Status: Passed the House Governmental Affairs Committee; passed the House 127-43. Passed the Senate Economic Development & Tourism Committee with the multi-family home construction moratorium. Passed the Senate 42-12 with an amendment on waiving impact fees for workforce housing projects (SB 136). Due to the amendment, the bill was never agreed upon and is not eligible for the Governor’s consideration.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

HB 516 by Representative Derek McCollum (R-Chestnut Mountain): is the annual GDOT housekeeping bill. Currently, GDOT is prohibited from negotiating any contract for the construction or maintenance of a public road involving the expenditure of $200,000 or more. The bill proposes to increase that limit to $500,000. The bill also revises various provisions of the public-private-partnerships including eliminating duplicative public comment processes.  

Status: Passed out of the House Transportation Committee. Failed to make the Crossover Deadline.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

HB 517 by Representative Dale Washburn (R-Macon): proposes to prevent local governments from regulating various building design elements, such as the style of porches and the number of bedrooms in a housing unit. Proponents of this legislation say this would reduce the cost of regulation and therefore reduce the cost of building new homes. Opponents of the bill state this is an overreach on local control.  

Status: Assigned to the House Government Affairs Committee; has not yet passed the committee. Did not make the Crossover Deadline. 

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

SB 113 by Senator Randy Robertson (R-Cataula): is a proposal to allow for the transition of existing services in a municipality to another newly incorporated municipality and to allow a new city to purchase existing water or sewer systems from the existing city. This bill is complimentary to the City of Buckhead City proposal below.   

Status: Passed the Senate State & Local Governmental Operations Committee. Made it to the Senate Rules calendar, but the Senate “tabled” the bill (which means the vote was postponed and can be called off the table to be voted on by the Senate again, but it likely will not since the Buckhead City proposal failed). 

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation 

 

SB 114 by Senator Randy Robertson (R-Cataula): proposes to create the city of Buckhead City out of portions of Atlanta. If passed, the city would only be incorporated following a successful referendum.  

Status: Passed the Senate State & Local Governmental Operations Committee. Failed on the floor of the Senate by a vote of 23-33 (needs 29 to pass).   

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation 

 

SB 136 by Senator Mike Dugan (R-Carrollton): would allow local governments to waive impact fees for workforce housing projects. 

Status: This bill has passed the Senate Economic Development & Tourism Committee. Passed the Senate 49-4. Passed the House Governmental Affairs Committee. 

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

SB 156 by Senator Randy Robertson (R-Cataula): would revise county special purpose local option sales taxes (SPLOST), for consolidated governments only, to allow the proceeds of the SPLOST to be utilized to establish a maintenance reserve fund for newly approved projects. However, a limit of 5% of the annual proceeds of the SPLOST may be deposited into the reserve fund.  

Status: Assigned to the Senate Finance Committee; failed to make it out of committee in time. Dead for the session.  

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation  

 

SB 161 by Senator John Kennedy (R-Macon): creates cyber security requirements and an external data privacy program for contractors doing work with local governments. The external data privacy program would include quarterly scans for each of its employees’ personally identifiable information, an annual privacy risk assessment, annual privacy training, among other provisions. We are currently reviewing this legislation.  

Status: Assigned to the Senate Science & Technology Committee; did not make it out of committee in time. Is dead for the session.  

ACEC Georgia is reviewing this legislation  

 

SB 171 by Senator Max Burns (R-Sylvania): would provide lien rights for contactors who preform work for a development authority if the development authority does not pay for that work. Currently, there are no remedies for situations where development authorities do not pay their contactors, this bill aims to give contractors a remedy for unpaid payments.  

Status: Passed the Senate Economic Development & Tourism Committee. This bill made the Senate Rules calendar for Crossover, but was never voted on by the Senate.  

ACEC Georgia supports this legislation  

 

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