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Biden to tour flood-ravaged areas; Perdue’s in Panama

Friday, September 25th, 2009

World renowned party machine and joker Vice President Joe Biden today will tour metro counties hit hard by recent floods:Joe-Biden-001

Vice President Joe Biden will tour storm-ravaged parts of North Georgia on Friday as residents in five flooded counties begin to seek federal help for cleanup and recovery.

Biden, joined by FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, will brief state and local leaders on federal assistance and will meet with families suffering the storms’ aftermath. His visit comes a day after President Barack Obama declared a major disaster in Carroll, Cherokee, Cobb, Douglas and Paulding counties.

Meanwhile, where in the world is Sonny Perdue?

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Obama announces federal emergency aid for Georgia counties (Update)

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

federalaidfloodsObama-0183-WEBPresident Barack Obama today said federal assistance has been made available for Cobb, Paulding, Douglas Carroll and Cherokee County residents who suffered losses from the unprecedented floods that devastated metro Atlanta earlier this week. (UPDATE: Apparently there was some confusion about which counties were chosen to receive assistance. The AJC’s Gold Dome Live has a pretty hilarious summary of the “huh, what?”)

Left out of Obama’s declaration were 12 other metro countries, including DeKalb and Fulton County. Gov. Sonny Perdue says the state’s request for the remaining counties is still pending.

From Perdue’s office:

The federal declaration covers individual assistance and can include grants to help pay for temporary housing, home repairs and other serious disaster-related expenses. Low-interest loans from the U.S. Small Business Administration will also be available to cover residential and business losses not fully compensated by insurance.

Residents and business owners in the four counties declared by the President as a major disaster area who sustained losses can begin applying for assistance by registering online at http://www.fema.gov or by calling 1-800-621-FEMA (3362) or 1-800-462-7585 (TTY) for the hearing and speech impaired. The toll-free telephone numbers will operate from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. (local time) Monday through Sunday.

The Georgia Emergency Management Agency continues to coordinate state recovery efforts. Contact information for GEMA can be found on its website.

(File photo by Joeff Davis)

Perdue declares state of emergency for flooded counties

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Sonny-Pedue-Press017Gov. Sonny Perdue has declared a state of emergency for 17 counties impacted by recent storms and flooding in metro Atlanta. The counties are Carroll, Catoosa, Chattooga, Cherokee, Clayton, Cobb, Crawford, DeKalb, Douglas, Forsyth, Fulton, Gwinnett, Newton, Paulding, Rockdale, Stephens and Walker counties.

“Mary and I are saddened by the human cost the recent storms have wrought… We are currently focused on rescuing victims of the storms targeting Georgia and preventing further damage. State personnel and equipment are being deployed to assist effected communities. The Georgia Emergency Management Agency is coordinating our response and managing the State Operations Center, the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Division are deploying boats, high-water vehicles, and testing water. Other state agencies are deploying manpower and additional resources.”

Those other state agencies GEMA will help wrangle:

Georgia Forestry Commission- Manpower and debris clearance, water tanker for Douglas County Hospital, water tender strike teams for structural fire support
Georgia State Patrol – Law enforcement for traffic control, road closures, helicopters
Department of Transportation – Road closure signs, bridge inspection, detours
Department of Human Services- Hospital coordination, shelter coordination, boil water advisories

Perdue says the state Department of Agriculture will help evacuate large animals and find shelter for pets. If you can’t find your pet, the department might be able to connect you with a local missing animals contact.

(File photo by Joeff Davis)

You win, Sonny

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Enough already, Governor. You win. Now please just make it stop.

Perdue says ACORN, state agencies can’t do business

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Several state lawmakers with Glenn Beck posters in their Gold Dome lockers have convinced Gov. Sonny Perdue to cut ties with ACORN, the nonprofit organization that recently earned acclaim for its innovative approach to working with entrepreneurs and small businesses.

“I want to thank Sen. [Chip] Rogers and Reps. [Tom] Graves, [Mike] Keown and [Ed] Setlzer for bringing the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (“ACORN”) contract to my attention. In July, I directed my office to review all consulting contracts the state has with outside vendors to look for budget savings; that review did not identify the ACORN contract, because it does not involve state funds. The State of Georgia will not renew the contract, which expires in 13 days. Further, I have issued an Executive Order that prevents executive branch agencies from doing business with ACORN in the future and calls for a review of any existing contracts with ACORN.”

Perdue’s statement, on its own, is a little confusing. ACORN’s contract “does not involve state funds,” so it’s hard to tell how the state was paying the organization. Or what service it provided for the state. We’ve asked the governor’s office for some clarification.

The U.S. House and Senate have voted to cut funding to ACORN. On Sept. 11, the U.S. Census Bureau severed ties with the organization.

Perdue’s full statement and the executive order are pasted after the jump.

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Perdue pining for UGA president position after office?

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

President Sonny Perdue. It’s got a nice and rather frightening ring to it, dontcha think?

An Insider Advantage piece that says the governor’s rumored to be lining up a post-office position as  University of Georgia president recently caught the eyes of those rapscallions at the Marietta Daily Journal. Here’s some of what the MDJ cribbed from the IA article, which is now available only for subscribers:

As the storyline goes, Perdue — who is joined at the hip with UGA President Michael Adams — would consider being named by the Board of Regents as president of the University of Georgia at the end of his term. In exchange for the creation of an open seat via the resignation of Adams, Adams would then be in strong consideration to become the system’s new chancellor. Sound crazy? Well … so did borrowing $21 million in the middle of a world financial meltdown. But Perdue pulled that one off didn’t he?

A commenter at the AJC’s Political Insider column speculates that Perdue’s recent appointment of former House Majority Leader and Georgia Department of Transportation board member Larry Walker to the Board of Regents could help the governor transition from one mansion to another. The two are old buddies.

Perdue’s a UGA alum and would probably be delighted to be one of the few university graduates lucky enough to find a job in the Classic City after throwing his cap in the air. Even if it’s 40 years after the fact.

Perdue to sit down with enviromentalists tomorrow

Monday, August 24th, 2009

After noticeably excluding them from his July 23 closed-door meeting with business bigwigs and local and state government officials, Gov. Sonny Perdue will reach out to some of the state’s leading environmental advocates tomorrow to discuss Georgia’s water woes.

Perdue’s invited approximately 10 environmental advocates, including the executive directors of such organizations as the Upper Chattahoochee Riverkeeper, Georgia Conservation Voters and the Georgia Wildlife Federation, to join him in his office at 10 a.m.

Perdue, congressmen craft ‘water wars’ strategy

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Gov. Sonny Perdue sat down with Georgia’s Congressional delegation today to discuss how the state will iron out a water-sharing deal with Alabama and Florida now that a federal judge has ruled metro Atlanta’s use of Lake Lanier for drinking water is illegal.

While governors of the three states check their day planners, the Peach State’s congressmen will weigh whether they want to make the issue a national one or keep the focus on Lake Lanier.

At an Aug. 14 panel discussion with business leaders and other elected officials, Isakson said his office has discovered more than 45 federal reservoirs might be in the same predicament as Lake Lanier — essentially, they were never intended to be used for drinking water, but somewhere along the way local governments started dipping in straws.

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Perdue: ‘No’ to conservation legislation, ‘yes’ to ‘water wars’ appeal

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

Flanked by Mayor Shirley Franklin, Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, state lawmakers and business bigwigs, Gov. Sonny Perdue this morning told reporters the state would appeal a recent ruling that said metro Atlanta’s use of Lake Lanier for its primary water supply was illegal.

Perdue met behind closed doors with 130 officials at the Governor’s Mansion this morning to discuss Georgia’s next step in the ongoing water wars dispute with Florida and Alabama. (Jim Galloway has a list of those who attended.)

U.S. District Judge Paul Magnuson has given Georgia three years to seek Congressional approval for the use of Lake Lanier. If not, withdrawals would return to 1975 levels, when the metro region population was a third the size it is today. Perdue, who earlier this week said he’d “fight to the death” for Georgia’s water, said he hopes to bring other states on board because the federal management of reservoirs is a “national” issue.

For nearly 20 years, the three states have argued over water withdrawals from the lake, which was originally built by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in the 1950s for flood control, hydroelectric production and downstream barge navigation.

When asked by CL if he’d considered asking his floor leaders to introduce legislation that would encourage conservation or set mandates, Perdue bristled. He said the state had made strides over the last 18 months  simply by asking local governments and residents to reduce their use of water.

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Perdue responds to water ruling

Friday, July 17th, 2009


Gov. Sonny Perdue has released a statement on Judge Paul Magnuson’s ruling that metro Atlanta’s use of Lake Lanier as its water supply is illegal:

“Obviously, I am deeply disappointed by Judge Magnuson’s decision today. His conclusions rely on decades-old assumptions about the construction of federal reservoirs and the role those reservoirs play in providing water supply for growing states such as Georgia. Our country has changed substantially since the 1940s, when many of these reservoirs were constructed, and I will use this opportunity not only to appeal the judge’s decision but, most importantly, to urge Congress to address the realities of modern reservoir usage. The judge’s ruling allows a three-year window for either Congressional action or an agreement by the states and we will work diligently with Georgia’s delegation and members of Congress to re-establish the proper use of federal reservoirs throughout the country.”

Perdue’s always talking about how the country has changed. Regardless, the AJC’s Jim Galloway, who knows where the bodies are buried, writes that Georgia’s Congressional delegation has scheduled a rare meeting on Monday to get lawmakers on the same page. His post is worth a read if you’re wondering about the political dynamics at play on this issue.

(CL file photo Joeff Davis)

New Georgia IDs, driver’s licenses on the way

Thursday, July 9th, 2009
Benjamin Linus, aka "Ima Georgia Sample," lives in Fulton! We are all the Dharma Initiative.

Benjamin Linus, aka Ima Georgia Sample, lives in Fulton!

Fake-ID artists who pay the rent by supplying underage suburban urchins with illegal pieces of plastic, be on the lookout!

Governor Sonny Perdue today announced that Georgia Department of Driver Services (DDS) is preparing to issue new and improved driver’s licenses and identification cards by fall 2009. The new cards will combat document fraud and protect the identities of Georgia’s citizens by using the latest credentialing technology.

“Everyone knows all we have done to reduce lines and waits at driver’s license centers, but another key priority of the department is safeguarding the identities of Georgia citizens and preventing document fraud,” said Governor Perdue. “These new cards will be the most secure our state has ever issued.”

The new cards will be produced in Conyers, Covington and Locust Grove starting in September. Costs won’t increase and you can still choose between a five- and 10-year license, because we’re all a bunch of transients. They’ll be more difficult to duplicate, the governor’s office says, and will include:

…several security features including ghost photos, a laser-engraved signature over the primary photo to minimize alterations and a tamper resistant coating placed over the card. The cards will feature machine-readable barcodes that can be used by banks, retailers and other businesses to verify the information printed on the front.

Emphasis added. Big Brother Sonny is watching you! Full release is pasted after the jump. (H/T to Mara Shalhoup for spotting the lovable “Lost” character’s address.)

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Supreme Court rules on Voting Rights Act

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

The U.S. Supreme Court today exempted a small Texas governing authority from the Voting Rights Act, a law that requires 16 states — including Georgia — to get the federal green light before changing the way elections are conducted. Gov. Sonny Perdue, pointing to the civil rights advances made both nationally and in the state, has argued the part of the law that restricts Georgia is no longer necessary. The court did not address that issue today.

From the New York Times:

The court, with only one justice in dissent, avoided the major constitutional questions raised in the case over the federal government’s most powerful tool to prevent discriminatory voting changes since the mid-1960s.

Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for the court, said the larger issue of whether dramatic civil rights gains means the advance approval requirement is no longer necessary ”is a difficult constitutional question we do not answer today.”

The court’s avoidance of the larger issue explains the consensus among justices in the case rendered Monday, where they otherwise likely would have split along conservative-liberal lines.

Justice Clarence Thomas, alone among this colleagues, said he would have resolved the case and held that the provision, known as Section 5, is unconstitutional.

”The violence, intimidation and subterfuge that led Congress to pass Section 5 and this court to uphold it no longer remains,” Thomas said.

Pettys: Vance Smith to be named GDOT director on Thursday, but…

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

…that’s not the real story.

The veteran political reporter’s sources say the state agency wants to avoid ending the fiscal year with a deficit, possibly by tapping $75 million in federal funding. There’s also the question over what exactly Senate Bill 200, a piece of legislation that shakes up Georgia’s transportation power structure, means for GDOT.

At the same time – and this is where it gets interesting – talks have been underway between the DOT staff and the governor’s office over how to implement SB 200, the governance reform bill that gives the governor (through the new planning director) and the Legislature (through new budget authority) broader control over DOT. There are some loose ends that the bill does not address.

Some believe the two issues have become entangled in something of a quid pro quo, with the governor holding both a carrot (the bailout money) and a stick (the new rules which dissidents believe give the planning director – and through the planning director, Perdue – more power over issues like public-private partnerships and funding allocation formulas than the law stipulates.)

Others don’t see any such entanglement, but this week’s meeting should be interesting nonetheless. Even if there is no suspense about the new commissioner.

Perdue approves ARC’s $25 million lifeline to MARTA

Friday, June 12th, 2009

Straphangers and transit wonks can breathe easy, as Gov. Sonny Perdue today finalized a $25 million agreement between the Atlanta Regional Commission and MARTA that will help the transit agency avoid drastic service cuts.

Perdue’s action today was largely just red tape. As governor, Perdue must approve all projects paid for by federal stimulus dollars. The Georgia Regional Transportation Authority approved the ARC and MARTA’s agreement on Wednesday. Perdue had hinted he would do the same.

In exchange for funding to keep its trains and buses running, MARTA will spend $25 million on transit-related projects. ARC stepped up to help the cash-strapped transit agency after the Georgia General Assembly failed to pass a bill that would have allowed MARTA more control of its funding.

Perdue today also approved $121 million worth of other stimulus projects, including streetscape improvements in downtown Atlanta, park improvements in DeKalb County, and oodles of roads.

Screenshots of those are after the jump.

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Georgia drought ‘is over,’ water restrictions eased

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

State Environmental Protection Division Director Carol Couch announced today that Georgia’s drought — the headline-grabbing phenomenon that forced Georgians to take shorter showers and watch our lawns turn brown — was officially over.

That also means the watering restrictions, which irked lawn-doting residents and hamstrung metro Atlanta’s landscaping industry, have been eased. (Here’s Georgia’s new outdoor watering schedule.)

Couch said she hopes residents — who surpassed Gov. Sonny Perdue’s 10 percent conservation goal — will continue using less water. But Georgians have very short memories.

Keep in mind that a drought can — and will — happen again. And Georgia lawmakers, who were quick to jump on the crisis but hard pressed to create actual reforms, squandered several opportunities to make the state better prepared when the next one arrives.

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Perdue, judges avoid chaos over budget

Friday, June 5th, 2009

Ah, civility. It’s a beautiful thing, ya know?

Gov. Sonny Perdue and Georgia Chief Justice Leah Ward Sears headed off a legal battle today when the two sides reached a compromise about state judges’ funding.

The governor, pointing to revenue collections that have been less-than-positive thanks to a hellish economy, recently ordered state departments to cut 25 percent from their June budgets. He issued the same ultimatum to the judicial branch.

Not so fast, Sears said. She pointed to the Georgia Constitution, that dusty old document which clearly states that the judicial and executive branches are separate. The issue became a bone of contention between the two branches. Just yesterday, Perdue said he’d withhold the funds and warned the judges against filing a lawsuit.

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Freedom of information laws are not all created equal

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

Say what you will about the American system of government — the cozy relationships between lawmakers and lobbyists, ineffective campaign finance laws, politicians’ questionable perks, etc. — but, compared to other Western countries, our system is  surprisingly open (notwithstanding the executive obfuscations of the Bush Administration).

I was reminded of this on a vacation last week in England, where the media is ablaze with articles about the biggest political scandal in a generation. The Daily Telegraph, an otherwise conservative newspaper, got the scoop: Ministers of Parliament, or MPs, had been using their expense accounts — taxpayer money, mind you — to pay for such dubious items as a moat-cleaning for a country manse, an electrical massage chair and a $2,600 duck house for a private lake.

Apparently, MPs can get reimbursed for living expenses, such as rent on a flat in London if their district is elsewhere. But the media revelations have exposed a system that was consistently abused. Some of the improprieties involved extravagances that should not have put on the public tab. Others were clear instances of cheating — rent for property that had been sublet, hiring family members and claiming homes that had already been sold.

A number of MPs have already stepped down, including — for the first time in three centuries — the Speaker of the House of Commons. It’s all very amusing to read about. But the point is that British politicians were allowed to get away with all of this for years — the improper expenses are all at least four years old — because England doesn’t have the kind of sunshine laws we enjoy here.

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Biden to Perdue on rail funding: ‘Georgia gets nothing’

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

TIME magazine has a hilarious pool report of today’s D.C. sitdown between Vice President Joe Biden, U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray Lahood and several governors on the topic of high-speed rail. Gov. Sonny Perdue was among those in D.C. for the meeting:

Upon entering, VPOTUS ran into Perdue who appeared, to the VPOTUS at least, to be leaving before the meeting started. Banter and jokes followed.

VPOTUS: “Where you going?”
Perdue: “I was leaving.”
VPOTUS: “What the hell’s wrong with you?” (laughter)

VPOTUS shook hands around the table with several “Good to see you, man,” and “Good to see you, Ed [Rendell].” Said upon sitting: “…Georgia gets nothing. I’m only kidding, only kidding, only kidding.”

Biden knows, y’all. He knows.

Roy Barnes: Tanned, rested and ready

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

Actually, with bags under his eyes, the former governor didn’t look all that rested at his afternoon press conference today. Nor did he look like he’d been getting a lot of sun lately (although InsiderAdvantage chief Matt Towery, who was in the audience, was tan enough for everybody).

But Roy certainly seemed ready. Smiling, surrounded by his family, taking questions, cracking jokes — here was a guy who makes political campaigning look like fun. And the press corps was eating it up. Because now we’ve really got a race to cover.

Barnes’ entrance into the guv’s race will shake things up in a big way. Not immediately, mind you. All three announced Democratic candidates — state Attorney General Thurbert Baker, state House Minority Leader DuBose Porter and former this-and-that David Poythress — quickly sent out terse announcements saying they weren’t stepping aside. But come on. For months now, polls have shown that the front-runner’s slot was Barnes’ if he wanted it.

Now, after all the waiting, we know he wants it.

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Word: Perdue’s state capital gains tax veto irks GOP

Monday, May 18th, 2009

Gov. Sonny Perdue last week irked many fellow Republicans when he vetoed a bill that would have slashed the state capital gains tax. Critics warned the bill would have cost the cash-strapped state between $340 million and $1 billion in lost revenues.

“I’m scratching my head…If I were the governor, I would have said, ‘Where is that? Let me get my pen.’”

— House Rules Chairman Earl Ehrhart, R-Powder Springs, in the May 11 AJC

“Cutting capital gains taxes would have encouraged more investment into the state. It is a sad day when this type of legislation gets vetoed by a Republican governor.”

— State Insurance Commissioner and GOP gubernatorial candidate John Oxendine in a May 11 press release

“If Governor Perdue vetoes it, I hope legislators will consider overturning his veto. The JOBS Act could do a lot of good for Georgia.”

— David Raynor of the Georgia chapter of the National Federation of Independent Business

“Republicans I talked to in the legislature are angry and demoralized.”

— Pro-growth, anti-tax Wall Street Journal columnist Stephen Moore, writing about Perdue’s veto

Perdue’s 2009 signing statements and veto messages

Monday, May 11th, 2009

Gov. Sonny Perdue just now issued signing statements for three bills and vetoed 16 bills.

These are always fun to read. We’re literally just opening up the attachment, but if you’d like to read them as well, check ‘em out after the jump.

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State revenue figures down 20.6 percent compared to April 2008

Monday, May 11th, 2009

Earlier today, Gov. Sonny Perdue told reporters the soon-to-be-released April 2009 revenue figures were “not encouraging.”

He wasn’t fibbing. The revenue figures landed in our inboxes a few minutes ago. And to be honest, they’re rather terrible.

Net revenue collections of sales, personal income and corporate incomes taxes last month totaled $1.4 billion, down from $1.8 billion the same time last year. That’s a decrease of 20.6 percent. The year-to-date decrease in revenue collection is 9.6 percent.

According to figures released by the governor’s office, however, booze is still selling like it’s hot.

Perdue did note that last April’s figures were some of the highest the state had ever recorded. But man,  governor, you’ve made the right choice to veto the giant tax-cutting beast sitting on your desk. That thing might get you on Grover Norquist’s speed dial, but it’d just push the state deeper into the red.

If you’re a numbers lover, download the April 2009 revenue figures. (Warning: PDF)

(Photo by Joeff Davis)

Fulton Co. Taxpayers Foundation files lawsuit over nuke bill

Friday, May 1st, 2009
Plant Vogtle

Plant Vogtle

The Fulton County Taxpayers Foundation and its president John Sherman filed a lawsuit Wednesday in Fulton County Superior Court over Senate Bill 31, a controversial piece of legislation that allows Georgia Power to begin charging customers in advance for two new proposed nuclear reactors at Plant Vogtle.

The lawsuit names the Georgia Public Service Commission, the quasi-judicial state agency that decides how much you pay for your electricity, and Gov. Sonny Perdue, who signed the bill on April 21, as defendants.

During the legislative session, a diverse group of critics called the bill unfair because some industrial customers are exempt from the rate hike. They also said the issue belonged in the Georgia Public Service Commission, where a full-time staff examines and studies the complicated issue of nuclear financing. Georgia Power hired more than 70 lobbyists the push the bill.

In court documents, the foundation’s attorney John Woodham — the lone-wolf barrister who successfully fought the Beltline’s main funding mechanism all the way to Georgia Supreme Court — calls the bill unconstitutional on numerous grounds.

View the 53-page lawsuit here (PDF). It’s a long and complicated read for those not learned in the language of legalese. But it lays the groundwork of what’s sure to be an interesting battle over one of the past legislative session’s most controversial issues.

(Courtesy Nuclear Regulatory Commission)

Politico: Perdue changes name, wants another run as governor

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

Politico today rehashes an Insider Advantage article that reports U.S. Rep. Nathan Deal, R-Ga., plans to run for governor. The news site — famous for WINNING THE AFTERNOON! — included a picture of this “Nathan Deal” character, who looks eerily similar to … holy shit.

Gov. Sonny Perdue, you must respect the state Constitution and bow out at the end of your term, sir! The citizens of Georgia will not sit idly by as you try to hoodwink us into another eight years!

Thanks to Jason Pye, this egregious powergrab was caught before it gained momentum.

(Screenshot from Politico.com)

Perdue signs bill aimed to help stop genocide in Darfur

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

Effective immediately, companies wishing to do business with the state of Georgia — and be paid with your tax dollars — best not have ties with Sudan.

Gov. Sonny Perdue today signed a bill that prohibits the state from contracting with companies that conduct business or have ties to the African country’s oil, power, mineral and military sectors. Profits from the sectors are widely believed to help perpetrate genocide in the nation’s southern region of Darfur.

Since 2003, more than 400,000 people have been killed and 2.3 million displaced by genocide in the African nation’s southern region of Darfur. The atrocities, which have been condemned by the United States, are carried out by militias funded by the Sudanese government.

“What this says is very simple,” state Sen. David Adelman, D-Decatur, the bill’s sponsor, said after its signing. “If your business or any of its affiliates are engaged in any business activities with the government of Sudan, you cannot do business with the state of Georgia.”

Companies that plan to do business with Georgia state agencies are now required to disclose international business contracts during the Request for Proposal, or RFP, process. If a company falsifies or fails to accurately disclose its ties with Sudan, it could be fined $250,000 or double the bid it submitted to the state, whichever is greater. The company could also lose the contract and be ineligible to bid on state projects for three years.

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