Rome News-Tribune

Teacher tax credit signed into law

♦ The governor has not yet signed a bipartisan overhaul of Georgia’s citizen’s arrest law.

- By Beau Evans

Gov. Brian Kemp has signed into law several bills on taxes, time change and teacher retention that the General Assembly passed in the 2021 legislativ­e session.

Among the more highprofil­e measures Kemp signed at a ceremony in Savannah

Wednesday is an incometax credit to recruit and retain teachers for highneed subjects in underserve­d Georgia public schools.

Sponsored by Rep. Dave Belton, R-buckhead, the measure allows teachers in 100 rural or low-performing schools picked annually by the state to apply for a $3,000 credit on their income taxes for up to five years if they teach certain subjects that students struggle to learn.

The teacher credit figured as a priority for Kemp in this year’s session. He has also pushed for state budgets to include teacher pay raises and legislatio­n to cut down the number of yearend standardiz­ed tests that students must take.

Kemp also signed a bill aimed at putting Georgia on daylight saving time permanentl­y if Congress takes action permitting states to make that change. The measure was passed over separate legislatio­n that proposed establishi­ng standard time year-round.

Also signed into law were bills to levy a $5 per-night excise tax on short-term stays in vacation rentals and hotels booked by online vendors and allow district attorneys to access previously confidenti­al records on offenders seeking parole after serving prison time for a violent felony or sexual abuse of a minor.

The 2021 session wrapped up a few minutes after midnight April 1 amid heated debate over Republican-led legislatio­n on voting procedures and criminal justice issues.

Kemp signed a controvers­ial bill changing Georgia mail-in and early voting laws shortly after state lawmakers passed it on a party-line vote late last month.

The election changes have since become a national lightning rod with Republican­s calling them needed for voting integrity and Democrats condemning them as voter suppressio­n.

The governor has not yet signed a bipartisan bill to overhaul Georgia’s citizen’s arrest law.

The law, which dates back to the 19th century, drew criticism last year after the fatal shooting of Ahmaud Arbery outside of Brunswick.

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Kemp
Gov. Brian Kemp
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Kemp
Gov. Brian Kemp

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