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2024 Capitol Update - Final Week

2024 Capitol Update - Final Week

April 1, 2024

Last week, the Georgia General Assembly adjourned Sine Die for the 2024 legislative session, ending the biennial session. The Senate adjourned at 12:48 am while the House took up two final measures before adjourning 11 minutes later at 12:59 am on Friday morning. As this is the final year of the biennial, any legislation that did not pass will have to be reintroduced next year.


The SAMSOG land surveyor bill, SB 374 by Senator Larry Walker (R-Perry), ended up passing as Senate Bill 195, without the amendment that would allow registered PEs to bypass the education requirements and sit for the land surveyor exam if they have the required experience. The proposal would decouple the exam and experience requirements, allowing aspiring surveyors to take their exam immediately upon completing their education, and decrease the proposed years of experience requirement by roughly 2 years, depending on the educational pathway an aspiring surveyor chooses. The legislation passed the Senate 47 to 3 and passed the House 137 to 27. This legislation is now eligible for the Governor’s consideration.   


In tort reform news, the premises liability legislation, HB 1371 by Representative James Burchett (R-Waycross) did not pass the Senate. This legislation underwent several iterations and aimed to clarify what fault can be assigned to a property owner if an individual or individuals are injured on their property by an unrelated third party. In the last iteration of the proposal, some language was added that would allow juries to assign “reasonable” fault to the landowner if a third party was injured on their property, even if they had no foresight or knowledge of the matter. In the end, it was ultimately for the best that this legislation did not move forward with that language. Further, Senate Bill 547 by Senator Brandon Beach which included an amendment to allow seat belt non-use permissibility in civil cases also did not pass. In response to some major tort reform legislation not passing the finish line, Senator Beach wrote a letter to the Governor before the session ended to urge him to call a special session specifically about tort reform. However, this is unlikely to happen this year.


HB 461 by Representative Brad Thomas (R-Holly Springs) was introduced last year and aims to clarify that local governments that charge regulatory fees may only use those fees to fund the regulatory activity for which they are charged and would prohibit local governments from utilizing those fees as a profit generator or to be utilized for general expenses. This legislation is now eligible for the Governor’s signature.


HB 1044 by Representative Victor Anderson, was the second attempt to increase the minimum dollar threshold amount for public works bidding. The proposal would increase the threshold from $100,000 to $250,000 for all local governments and state agencies. This legislation passed last year and was vetoed by the Governor because it did not include state agencies. Unfortunately, the second attempt at this legislation was the victim of the legislative clock and did not make it to the finish line this year.  


Late Thursday evening, both chambers signed off on the $36.1 billion FY 2025 budget. While the legislature primarily preserved much of the Governor’s proposed transportation budget, the conference committee report recommended an additional $500,000 of one-time funds for Chatham area transit infrastructure. Further, the FY 25 budget includes an increase of $43.6 million for GDOT capital programs, an additional $35.8 million for the Routine Maintenance Program, $407,000 increase for HERO vehicles, and a $2.4 million increase for the Georgia Transportation Infrastructure Bank (GTIB). For a complete list of the conference committee highlights for the FY 2025 budget, please visit this webpage.


Our next Capitol Update will be after the Governor’s signing period has ended in early May. It’s been a joy advocating for you all this year! See you soon!


LEGISLATION ACEC GEORGIA IS FOLLOWING:


Industry & Professions 

HB 880 by Representative Bethany Ballard (R-Warner Robins): proposes to allow military spouses with an existing occupational license in good standing from another state to bypass licensure board approval in order utilize their out-of-state license to work in Georgia. The committee substitute still allows military spouses to bypass the board if they have not received a decision from the board within 30 days and allows the board to revoke them exemption if the board finds that the individual is not in good standing or not qualified. A Senate amendment added a provision that would allow professional licensing boards to promulgate rules for this new provision.

Status: Assigned to the House Regulated Industries Committee; passed the Regulatory subcommittee of House Regulated Industries; passed out of the House Regulated Industries Committee; passed the House 168 to 0. Passed the Senate Veterans, Military, & Homeland Security Committee; passed the Senate 54 to 0. This bill is now eligible for the Governor’s signature.

ACEC Georgia opposes this legislation.


HB 982 by Representative Matt Gambill (R-Cartersville): would require the State Workforce Development Board to develop, approve, and annually publish a high-demand career list identifying careers that are experiencing the most critical workforce shortages.

Status: Assigned to the House Higher Education Committee; passed the House Higher Education Committee; passed the House 161 to 1. Passed out of the Senate Higher Education Committee; passed the Senate 53 to 1. This bill is now eligible for the Governor’s signature.

ACEC Georgia supports this legislation.


SB 374 (NOW SB 195) by Senator Larry Walker (R-Perry): this bill comes at the request of the Surveying and Mapping Society of Georgia (SAMSOG). The bill proposes to revise education requirements for land surveyors by reducing the number of years of experience required and would allow decoupling of the exam and experience so that new surveyors in training can take their professional examination after completing the required education requirements rather than after completing their experience after several years of being out of school. This bill was amended to include changes to work experience requirements for soil technicians and soil classifiers.

Status: Passed the Senate Regulated Industries & Utilities; passed the Senate unanimously. Passed to the House Regulated Industries Committee. Failed on the House floor 59 to 96. This proposal was added to SB 195 which passed both chambers and is eligible for the Governor’s signature.

ACEC Georgia supports this legislation


SB 426 by Senator Blake Tillery (R-Vidalia): aims to address “direct action”. The bill proposes limiting the number of ways in which an insurer can brought into a case involving a trucking accident. Currently, the state of Georgia allows a plaintiff to sue both a trucking company and their insurer, which has increased insurance premiums on businesses and consumers alike. The proposal would ban direct action except (1) when a trucking company enters/or is currently in bankruptcy or (2) when company officials are inaccessible after multiple attempts to serve them with the lawsuit.

Status: Passed the Senate Judiciary Committee; passed the Senate 46 to 2. Passed the House Judiciary Committee. Passed the House 172 to 0. Currently eligible for the Governor’s signature.

ACEC Georgia supports this legislation


Transportation 

HB 516 by Representative Derek McCollum (R-Chestnut Mountain): is the annual GDOT housekeeping bill. Currently, GDOT is not required to negotiate any contract for the construction or maintenance of a public road involving the expenditure of $200,000 or less. 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. This past week, the Senate Transportation Committee amended the bill to allow the City of Atlanta to utilize wayfinding kiosks on state roads ahead of the World Cup. This provision is set to sunset in 2026.

Status: Passed out of the House Transportation Committee; passed the House 167 to 2. Passed the Senate Transportation Committee. Passed the Senate 41 to 6 with an amendment that requires any city running radar on a state highway to have at least 5 miles of contiguous road within the city’s district in an effort to cut down on speed traps. This bill needed agrees in both chambers, which it received. This legislation is now eligible for the Governor’s signature.

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. It would also create a Georgia Freight 2050 Program to be administered by the Georgia Department of Transportation that is intended to provide a framework for future funding of freight & logistics infrastructure.

Status: Passed out of the House Transportation Committee on 2/1/2024. Passed the House 168 to 0. Passed the Senate Transportation Committee. Passed the Senate 45 to 1. Now eligible for the Governor’s consideration.  

ACEC Georgia supports this legislation


HB 946 by Representative Lee Hawkins (R-Gainesville): aims to increase TSPLOST availability. This proposal revises the current TSPLOST law to allow a county and the city(ies) within that county that make up 50% of the total county population to sign an intergovernmental agreement which would allow the proposed TSPLOST to be levied at 1%. Currently, if all of the cities within a county do not agree, the maximum amount that can be charged in a TSPLOST is 0.75 percent. Any cities that do not sign the agreement would be considered absent municipalities and will receive a share of the collected tax based on their proportionate share of the total municipal population within that county. Further, if all cities within the county sign the agreement, the tax may be levied up to six years, rather than five.

Status: Passed the Ways & Means committee; passed the House 173 to 1. Passed the Senate Finance Committee. Passed the Senate 42 to 1. This bill is now eligible for the Governor’s signature.

ACEC Georgia supports this bill


SB 353 by Senator Greg Dolezal (R-Cumming): is a combination of the last 3 years of GDOT annual housekeeping bills. The provisions include: updating GDOT board voting procedures (allowing for email notifications); a clean up of terms to all RFPs to allow for RFPVs, which would be a RFP with versions; a clean-up of terms for alternative contracting methods; conforms the length of modular housing units that can move on roadways with federal standards; allows a coroner to designate an individual in absentia to officially establish a death on Georgia’s roadways; and clarifies that open records or data cannot be used to determine personally identifiable information of individuals moving along Georgia’s roadways.

Status: Assigned to the Senate Transportation Committee. The committee passed the bill unanimously. This bill passed the Senate on Jan 29. This bill has passed the House Transportation Committee; passed the House 152 to 0 on 2/16. This bill has been signed by the Governor.

ACEC Georgia supports 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. Passed the Senate State & Local Governmental Operations Committee. Passed the Senate 43 to 9. Passed the House 142 to 22.

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation


Local Government 

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: Passed the House Ways & Means Committee; passed the House 163 to 0. Passed the Senate Finance committee. Passed the Senate 46 to 4. Currently pending an agree vote on the House side.

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation


HB 1330 by Representative Doug Stoner (D-Smyrna): would create the Mableton Development Authority, has passed the House and is awaiting final approval in the Senate, which will likely take the form of the “local consent calendar” which allows local bills (which are generally non-controversial and agreeable to all parties) to be considered in bulk fashion.

Status: Passed the House Intragovernmental Coordination Committee; passed the House. Passed the Senate State and Local Government Operations Committee; passed the Senate. Now eligible for the Governor’s signature.

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation


HB 1407 by Representative John LaHood (R-Valdosta) deals with service delivery strategies. This proposal would require written analysis from cities and counties on the services to be provided in any given area, would establish service delivery strategy mapping standards throughout the state, and would require mandatory mediation for local governments who are unable to compromise. Those governments unable to compromise will risk losing their local government status.

Status: Passed the House Government Affairs Committee; passed the House 167 to 0. Passed the Senate State & Local Governmental Operations Committee. Passed the Senate 46 to 3. Received an agree on the House side. Now eligible for the Governor’s signature.

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation


HB 1414 by Representative Scott Hilton (R-Peachtree Corners): would create the Peachtree Corners Community Improvement Development Districts.

Status: Assigned to the House Intragovernmental Coordination Committee. This bill passed the House through the local calendar (local bills are usually placed on a list of bills for bulk consideration called the local calendar). Passed the Senate State & Local Governmental Operations Committee; passed the Senate. Currently eligible for the Governor’s signature.

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation


SB 171 by Senator Max Burns (R-Sylvania): originally proposed to provide lien rights for contactors who preform work for a development authority if the development authority does not pay for that work. However, all mentions of lien rights have been stripped from this legislation. It currently only deals with development authority directors or members and their training requirements.

Status: Passed the Senate Economic Development & Tourism Committee; passed the Senate 50 to 2. Passed the House Governmental Affairs Committee; passed the House 174 to 1. Now eligible for the Governor’s consideration.

ACEC Georgia is monitoring legislation


SB 333 Senator Clint Dixon (R-Gwinnett): proposes to create the City of Mulberry. The city would be compromised of part of unincorporated Gwinnett County and would have a total population of 35,000. Proponents of the city state that there would not be property taxes, and that the proposal is about local control and comes as a response to crowded schools, traffic congestion, and apartment density. This bill would allow all individuals affected to vote to approve the city. SB 333 is the companion bill in the Senate.

Status: Passed the Senate 30 to 18. Passed the House 101 to 63. The Governor has signed this bill; a referendum will be held in November for voters in the affected area to approve the city’s charter.

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this bill



LEGISLATION THAT DID NOT PASS:


Industry & Professions 

HB 1190 by Representative J Collins (R-Villa Rica): would allow the division director of the Professional Licensing Board Division (PLBD) of the Secretary of State’s office to issue a license to an individual who has applied for licensure who has not received a response within 60 days from the board in which they applied. We don’t believe this legislation directly affects engineers or land surveyors, as the PELS Board is not under the PLBD’s jurisdiction, but we are monitoring.

Status: Passed the House Regulated Industries Committee; passed the House 167 to 0. Passed the Senate Regulated Industries Committee. Did not make it out of the Senate.

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation.


HB 1199 by Representative Clary Pirkle (R-Ashburn): proposes to streamline and simplify the process for which the state auditor reports statistics on architectural and engineering firms. The legislation would change the frequency with which reports are required (from monthly to annually) and states that the report shall include the percentage of the total work done by each such firm for any state entity.

Status: Passed the Government Affairs Committee; passed the House 166 to 0. Passed the Senate Government Oversight Committee. Currently pending in the Senate Rules Committee.

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation.


HB 1371 by Representative James Burchett (R-Waycross): deals with premises liability. Currently, if individuals come onto a property, regardless of whether that property is personal, commercial, or public, and they are injured by a third party that the owner is not privy to, the injured individual can sue the property owner. This legislation has undergone several iterations and aims to clarify what fault can be assigned to a property owner if an individual(s) is/are injured on their property by a third party. The current version of the bill states that an owner or occupier of property may not be held liable for injuries of a plaintiff if the injuries arise from 3rd party criminal activity when a plaintiff was trespassing or came onto the property with the intent to commit a severe crime, unless the victim is involuntarily trafficked. Further, the bill states that a reasonable percentage of fault shall be assigned to the third party that committed the damages/injuries.

Status: Passed the House Judiciary Committee. Passed the House 168 to 0. Passed the Senate Judiciary Committee.

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 in 2023. Passed out of the House Judiciary Non-Civil Committee. This legislation passed the House 149 to 16, but due to an amendment, this legislation needed an agree in the Senate, which is never received.

ACEC Georgia supports this legislation


Local Government 

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). The conference committee report failed 12 to 40 in the Senate.

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation


HB 1044 by Representative Victor Anderson (R-Cornelia): current state law requires all local governments to utilize a competitive selection process for any public works project estimated to be $100,000 or more. This proposal would raise the threshold for local governments and state agencies from $100,000 to $250,000. Last year, the Governor vetoed the bill because he wanted it to include state agencies. The new proposal addresses that concern; however, GDOT has requested to be removed from the bill.

Status: Passed the House Governmental Affairs Committee; passed the House 154 to 8. Passed the Senate Government Oversight committee. Currently pending in the Rules Committee.

ACEC Georgia supports this bill


HB 1443 by Representative Betsy Holland (D-Atlanta): would allow MARTA to enforce bus or transit only lanes and authorizes them to use monitoring devices to enforce civil monetary penalties for the illegal use or parking of vehicles in those lanes.

Status: Assigned to the House Intragovernmental Coordination Committee.

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation


HB 1472 by Representative Matthew Gambill (R-Cartersville): proposes to create the Bartow County Community Improvement Districts.

Status: Passed the House Intragovernmental Coordination Committee; passed the House. Currently pending in the Senate State and Local Governmental Operations Committee.

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—Dugan has resigned, but another Senator is rumored to be interested in picking this legislation up.

ACEC Georgia is monitoring this legislation


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