
Meeting to educate taxpayers on budget cuts – The gathering is in response to Floyd County Schools’ recent RIF cut
GBPI Executive Director Alan Essig is mentioned in this article; read full story here.
GBPI Executive Director Alan Essig is mentioned in this article; read full story here.
This week the General Assembly began considering House Bill 138 (HB 138), legislation designed to discourage the misuse of cash benefits under the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program. Though seemingly well-intentioned, the bill could present a huge logistical
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie announced today he will expand Medicaid coverage in his state, becoming the eighth Republican governor to change course and embrace the expansion. Florida Gov. Rick Scott announced last week his state will expand Medicaid coverage,
State officials claim Medicaid expansion is unaffordable by overstating the real cost of covering newly eligible Georgians. State estimates claim it will cost $4.5 billion to expand Medicaid. But the official estimate includes more than $2 billion of future costs
GBPI Director of Health Policy Tim Sweeney is quoted in this article on Medicaid expansion; read full article here.
Senior Education Policy Analyst Claire Suggs in quoted in this article on HB 140; read full article here.
Senior Education Policy Analyst Claire Suggs in quoted in this article on proposed funding cuts to technical colleges; read full article here.
HB 164 proposes to eliminate the sunset, or expiration date, on the sales tax exemption for engines and parts used in the maintenance of aircraft not registered in Georgia. Created in 2007, the exemption allows companies that have airplanes serviced
Contrary to rumors that working families don’t pay their fair share of taxes, Georgia’s state and local taxes actually take a much larger share of income from low- and middle-income families than from the wealthy. That’s among the findings of
Championed as a quasi-voucher bill by its author, House Bill 140 would expand Georgia’s private school scholarship tax credit program from $50 million to $80 million, diverting an additional $30 million in potential state revenue from the general fund. The
The Georgia Budget & Policy Institute works to advance lasting solutions that expand economic opportunity and well-being for all Georgians.
Georgia Budget & Policy Institute
GBPI is committed to tracking how the state of Georgia raises and spends fiscal resources. As the federal government has promised and provided some of these, cuts to programs and funding on the federal level could have deep and lasting impacts on Georgians and on the state’s ability to meet the needs of all its residents.
Submit public comment on Georgia’s Pathways to Coverage program extension by February 20th – just complete this easily fillable form: