Politics & Government

Governor Gives Chamber Update on State Issues

After breakfast meeting, Nathan Deal announced that he would propose cutting the pre-kindergarten school year by 20 days to save money.

Gov. Nathan Deal and his wife recently saw the opera Porgy and Bess at the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre.

 He told an audience of 600 plus Cobb business and community leaders Monday morning that he was very impressed with the facility.

 “It’s that cultural environment that draws people to Cobb County,” he said at the Cobb Chambers’ First Monday breakfast where he was the guest speaker.

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 It was an upbeat beginning for a mixed bag of news in the governor’s remarks on the “issues important to our state.”

There are some tough times ahead due to the state’s budget crisis, he said.

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The state is facing an $800 million gap in the fiscal year 2012, which begins in July. Deal said he has asked for a 4 percent reduction, on top of a 3 percent reduction this year, in state spending.

The cuts, he said, however, won’t be equally dispersed. Education is always a priority, he said.

Georgia was awarded $400 million last year to invest in education reforms at the state level and in five metro districts and 21 others, as part of President Barack Obama’s Race to the Top competition.

But other areas of education will face cuts, Deal said. The coveted HOPE scholarship is one of them.

Potentially 180,000 of Georgia's 200,000 HOPE scholars will receive only 90 percent of current tuition levels.

Deal said that if the move hadn’t been made, the program, fueled by the lottery, would have run out of money by 2013. Revenues have simply plummeted.

Another area being targeted because of reduced revenues is the Pre-K program, another lottery-funded institution. Deal had proposed shortening the hours from 6.5 to four. But he said Monday that there was considerable opposition to that.

He said at a later press conference that he would propose cutting the Pre-K school year by 20 days instead, from 180 days to 160 days. He said he'd still expand Pre-K enrollment, but by 2,000, not the 5,000 students he proposed two weeks ago.

Deal spoke of the continuing battle over water. On Wednesday, the state will ask the federal appeals court in Atlanta to overturn a judge’s ruling that found it illegal for the Army Corps of Engineers to draw water from Lake Lanier to meet most of the metro area’s needs.

If Georgia, Alabama and Florida can’t arrive at a water-sharing agreement that is approved by Congress by July 17, 2012, metro Atlanta will only be allowed to take the amount of water it received in the mid-1970s.

Deal said the state is looking at various options and will spend $300 million over the next few years trying to find a solution.

He has launched a water development program that will bring people together from across the state to look at the issues, “so we won’t be so dependant on federal reservoirs” in the future.

 He said there are plenty of wonderful natural resources in the state that need to be captured so they can be used when needed.

Deal said that an important economic development issue is brewing in Savannah. State officials say they need $105 million in federal help this year to deepen the harbor so it can compete with other Atlantic ports when bigger ships begin passing through the Panama Canal in 2015.

“We have been working hard to make sure we get them (ships) there,” he said.

Deal admitted that transportation is still a problem for the Atlanta area and encouraged members of the Chamber to help pass the regional tax vote next year.

In conclusion, Deal said people are always asking him if he is having fun.

The new governor grinned, and said yes.


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