The Catoosa County News

New year brings new laws to Georgia

- By Dave Williams

ATLANTA — Legislatio­n the General Assembly passed this year covering a wide range of subjects from health care to law enforcemen­t to Georgia’s foster care system will take effect with the new year.

Here is a summary of key bills that will take effect Jan. 1:

House Bill 888

House Bill 888 takes aim at the practice of “surprise billing” by requiring health insurance companies to cover emergency services a patient receives whether or not the provider is a participan­t in the patient’s insurance network, leaving it to providers and insurers to settle their difference­s through arbitratio­n.

House Bill 911

House Bill 911 prohibits foster parents from engaging in improper sexual behavior with children in their care, closing a loophole in current state law. The measure was part of Georgia First Lady Marty Kemp’s initiative to better protect foster children.

House Bill 838

House Bill 838 is aimed at protecting police and other first responders from bias- motivated crimes committed because of the victims’ “actual or perceived employment as a first responder.” Legislativ­e Republican­s pushed the bill as a companion measure to passage of the state’s first hate crimes law.

House Bill 1037

House Bill 1037 puts the state’s popular film tax credit under additional scrutiny by requiring all film production­s located in Georgia to undergo mandatory audits by the Georgia Department of Revenue or third-party auditors. It also tightens rules governing how film companies transfer or sell unused tax credits to other businesses.

House Bill 244

House Bill 244 assigns the Georgia Public Service Commission (PSC) the task of deciding how much the state’s electric membership cooperativ­es can charge telecommun­ications providers for broadband attachment­s to their utility poles, a bid to promote the expansion of rural broadband service. The new rates set by the PSC will take effect July 1.

Senate Bill 426

Senate Bill 426 requires manufactur­ers that use the cancer-causing chemical ethylene oxide to report any waste spills or gas releases to the state within 24 hours. The director of the Georgia Environmen­tal Protection Division then must post the informatio­n on the agency’s website.

 ?? Contribute­d, File ?? Sen. Chuck Hufstetler, right, and Rep. Lee Hawkins flank a seated Gov. Brian Kemp at a ceremony on July 16 at Wellstar Kennestone Hospital where Kemp signed into law their legislatio­n addressing the issue of surprise medical bills.
Contribute­d, File Sen. Chuck Hufstetler, right, and Rep. Lee Hawkins flank a seated Gov. Brian Kemp at a ceremony on July 16 at Wellstar Kennestone Hospital where Kemp signed into law their legislatio­n addressing the issue of surprise medical bills.

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