The legislators Georgia run on the Sinus day against the clock with over 50 notes on the agenda against the clock

Sinus The day is the last day of the legislator, which means that the legislator will be in Capitol all day to adopt or refuse invoices.

The legislator had over 50 notes on her calendar on Friday.

Some important invoices include:

Open Records request-

A request from the open records is how regular citizens can request and examine state records. Senate Bill 12 would make changes to the Georgia Open Records Act.

It would make sure

Senator Frank Ginn, sponsor of the law, says that this draft law is a result of a legal procedure.

“They had an contractor who worked for Georgia Tech, but someone sent him an open recording application and he ignored him. It went through the court system, went through the state's highest court and the Supreme Court said well that the law is a little unclear so that this draft law should simply clarify,” said Ginn.

The invoice will be terminated in the House of Representatives from Friday evening.

Immigration law

The Senate 21's draft law aims to ensure that cities and districts of Georgia enforce immigration laws properly

One of the laws that it builds up requires a government agency to report the US customs and immigration authorities if they suspect that someone is illegal in the country.

Senator Blake Tilley, the sponsor of the legislation, gives the citizens the opportunity to sue if they believe a district or a city.

“If cities and counties do not enforce the immigration law of Georgia, they do without their sovereign immunity. This means that citizens could strive for reparation or demand damage from a city or a district that violate the immigration law of Georgia,” said Tillery.

From Friday evening, the invoice has not yet reached the house of the representative soil.

School speed zone cameras

House Bill 225 is sponsored by the representative of Macon, Dale Washburn. The calculation would completely ban the cameras.

“Over $ 50 million were put into the pockets of the camera bullets, so this is an abusive situation. In this session, I have no priority than trying to ban her in Georgia. I still think my calculation is the best bill,” said Washburn.

House Bill 651, sponsored by representative Alan Powell, would simply make changes to the cameras to rule them.

“I have inserted another version in which some serious guidelines are created to public security to stop these people legitum or slow them down,” said Powell.

Both legislative templates left the Senate and will go back into the house one last time. No vote took place in the house from Friday evening.

Library-

Senate Bill 74 would remove legal protection for librarians if they were caught with an inappropriate book

This means that librarians with the distribution are sexually explicitly explicit materials to minors.

Senator Max Burns, the sponsor of the law, says, although he supports libraries, he also believes that they should be held responsible for the books that they have.

“I have spent a lot of time in libraries and I really support it, but you have a sharp responsibility. We want you to make sure that children are not harmed by providing them with material,” said Burns.

The last time WGXA News was checked, the bill was still in the Senate. If it is adopted in the Senate, it would be left to the House of Representatives