Rome News-Tribune

Ga. voters pass 3 ballot questions by big margins

♦ Floyd voters mirror the state, also voting in favor of all three ballot questions.

- By Dave Williams Rome News-tribune Executive Editor John Bailey contribute­d to this report.

ATLANTA — While high-profile races in Georgia remained uncertain on the morning after Election Day, voters have overwhelmi­ngly approved two constituti­onal amendments and one statute on this year’s statewide ballot.

A constituti­onal change requiring that state fees and taxes collected for a specific purpose are spent as intended passed with 81.4% of the vote.

Floyd County passed the change with 72.6% of the vote.

A second constituti­onal amendment prohibitin­g the state and local government­s from using the legal doctrine of “sovereign immunity” to avoid citizen lawsuits won approval from 74.3% of the voters.

More locals approved of that change, and it passed with 82.65% of the vote in Floyd County.

Georgia voters also authorized a tax exemption for property owned by charitable organizati­ons for the purpose of building or repairing single-family homes. House Bill 344 was endorsed with 73% of the vote.

Nearly mirroring the state, Floyd County passed the measure with 73.12% of the vote.

The General Assembly put Amendment 1 on the ballot in honor of the late state Rep. Jay Powell, RCamilla, a longtime leader of the effort to ensure that fees collected for Georgia’s Hazardous Waste and Solid Waste Trust funds are spent cleaning up hazardous waste sites and tire dumps.

Georgia governors and legislatur­es have a history of redirectin­g the revenue from those dedicated fees into the general fund during tight economic times.

The sovereign immunity amendment stems from a 2014 Georgia Supreme Court decision that essentiall­y granted the state blanket immunity from citizen lawsuits in a case brought by the Center for a Sustainabl­e Coast.

The group had filed suit alleging the state Department of Natural Resources was illegally allowing alteration­s to private property in fragile coastal wetland areas protected by state law.

To discourage the filing of frivolous lawsuits, the amendment prohibits plaintiffs from recovering monetary damages or attorney fees.

Supporters pushed House Bill 244 as a way to help grow the stock of affordable housing in Georgia, particular­ly in small cities and rural communitie­s.

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