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Here are the new laws that come into force on July 1st in Georgia

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Here are the new laws that come into force on July 1st in Georgia

Atlanta, Ga. (Atlanta News First) – A large number of new laws in Georgia will come into force on July 1st.

Here are some of the most interesting and remarkable.

SB 244: Creates a system for compensation for people who were wrongly convicted and imprisoned in the state. It also includes provisions that enable the accused to reclaim attorney fees and costs if they successfully disqualify a public prosecutor due to misconduct. The legislative template, which was originally inspired by the case of the electoral interference in Georgia, in which Donald Trump was involved, was later changed to compensated the law on illegal conviction.

HB 175: offers a more comprehensive background check for early nursing and educational programs and head start programs, including checking the fingerprint and the search for child abuse and sex offenders.

HB 208: Disabled veterans can now apply for two additional free license plates, while other Georgia drivers can purchase special license plates who honor the Shepherd Center. The Georgia Veterans Service Foundation; Southern University; Delta Sigma theta sisterhood; Alabama State University; The State Parks and Historic Department of the Ministry of Natural Resources; And a plate that promotes the preservation and improvement of black bass populations.

HB 131: Owners of self-storage service facilities that wanted to place a lien to the real estate of a unit, had to apply for two weeks for two weeks for two weeks for two weeks. From July 1st, you only have to do this once.

HB 85: Changes the salary provisions of the judges of the Supreme Court in Georgia.

SB 79: The law on extermination and removal of fentanyl increases prison conviction and fines for everyone who was convicted of fentanyl trade in Georgia.

HB 371: In their apparently endless efforts to improve nationally low public education statistics in Georgia, the legislature increased the annual capital expenditure of the state for the decades-old basic training law from $ 375 million.

The Quality Basic Education Act from 1985 stipulates that student-teacher relationships determine the financing.

SB 241: New standards and definitions for burial companies have been determined in order to classify organic human reduction as a means of disposal of deceased human body. Organic human reduction is a process that transforms human remains through aerobic decomposition into soil.

SB 55: The law on dignity and salary prohibits every employer, a person with a disability less than the minimum wage of the federal government.

SB 123: The law on mandatory presence prohibits the students from being excluded from school exclusively due to absenteeism. The sponsors of the law also said that they provide more localized approaches to review chronic cases of absenteeism and that the local school authorities obliged to adopt guidelines to help students who are chronically absent.

The students of the Metro Atlanta are chronically absent in school. Why?

SB17: The law “Ricky and Alyssa's Law” is prescribed and obliges all public K-12 schools to install mobile panic alarm systems that are directly connected to local and state emergency services. The 10th state for the implementation of the law – named after Alyssa Alhadeff, a victim of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas shooting in 2018, and Richard Aspinwall, who was killed in Wicker in Wicker in Wicker last year – Georgia's version.

HB 111: The income tax rate in Georgia gradually reduces 4.99 percent by January 2026.

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