Walker County Messenger

University System of Georgia eyes studio complex in Savannah

- By Dave Williams

ATLANTA – Savannah may soon have a major film studio complex to boost its growing film and TV production industry.

The Georgia Film Academy is working with Georgia Tech to redevelop the Atlanta-based university’s Savannah campus at Jimmy DeLoach Parkway and Interstate 95 into a film production studio, Sandra Neuse, the University System of Georgia’s vice chancellor for real estate and facilities told members of the system’s Board of Regents Tuesday, Feb. 9.

The profession­al education courses now offered at Tech’s Savannah satellite campus would be moved to a more central location in the city.

Film and TV production has evolved into an important component of Savannah’s economy in recent years. In 2019, 129 projects – including eight feature films – filmed in Savannah generated $125.6 million in direct spending and $266.3 million in total economic impact, according to the Savannah Economic Developmen­t Authority.

But Neuse said the area lacks sufficient purpose- built soundstage­s and production facilities. A feasibilit­y study showed the 54-acre Georgia Tech Savannah campus would be a good location to build a studio, she said.

Georgia Tech owns an 18,000-squarefoot building on the site that would be repurposed for the studio complex. The project also would include two other adjacent buildings totaling 97,000 square feet.

Under the proposal Neuse presented Tuesday, Feb. 9, Georgia Advanced Technology Ventures ( GATV) – a nonprofit affiliated with Georgia Tech – would lead a request for proposals to select a developer for the project.

GATV also would guide the relocation of Tech’s profession­al education program.

The project and various lease and sublease agreements needed to redevelop the property will be subject to the board’s approval.

Georgia officials have launched a new website to pre-register for COVID-19 vaccine appointmen­ts and are poised to open four mass vaccinatio­n sites in different parts of the state, Gov. Brian Kemp announced Thursday, Feb. 18.

The governor’s update came as more than 1.6 million vaccines have been given to eligible Georgians so far, including roughly 500,000 second doses, according to state Department of Public Health data.

The new website, myvaccineg­eorgia.com, allows Georgians to pre-register for a vaccine appointmen­t even if they do not yet qualify under the governor’s eligibilit­y criteria. They will be notified once they qualify and scheduled for an appointmen­t.

Kemp said on Thursday, Feb. 18, he is not yet ready to expand who is eligible in Georgia for the vaccine beyond health-care workers, nursing home residents and staff, first responders and people age 65 and older – but that he may do so in the next couple of weeks.

The four mass vaccinatio­n sites in metro Atlanta, Clarkesvil­le, Macon and Albany will open Monday, Feb. 22, and initially administer around 22,000 vaccines per week between them, Kemp said. Those sites can gear up quickly to handle more doses once the federal government allocates more weekly shipments, he added.

“These four sites will serve as the first step in a vaccinatio­n effort that we hope will dramatical­ly ramp up in the coming months,” Kemp said at a news conference at the state Capitol.

Georgia is currently receiving shipments of 198,000 vaccine doses per week, up from 120,000 doses the state had been getting in recent weeks. While officials have made a dent in vaccinatin­g people, Kemp stressed demand for shots still lags far behind the state’s current and foreseeabl­e supply.

The supply limits have kept Kemp from adding Georgia school teachers and other staff to the list of vaccine-eligible people, despite loud cries from many teachers particular­ly in metro Atlanta who have pressed the governor to move them up the line.

On Thursday, Feb. 18, Kemp detailed results from a survey he said the state Department of Education recently conducted showing less than half of about 171,000 responding teachers and school staff would not take the vaccine. The governor said the survey will influence when he opens vaccines up for teachers.

“It certainly will factor into our decision,” Kemp said. “But it also shows that demand there was not as much as people thought.”

Dr. Kathleen Toomey, the state’s public-health commission­er, said staff in some hospitals and nursing homes outside of metro Atlanta – as well as many Georgians from predominan­tly Black and Latino communitie­s – are still reluctant or unwilling to take the vaccine.

“This is not a case of vaccine access,” Toomey said Thursday, Feb. 18. “It’s a case of vaccine hesitancy.”

She added state officials are “doing everything we can” to work with local leaders, churches and other groups to boost vaccine acceptance rates in under-served areas, while eying Georgia teachers for vaccines “soon.”

In the meantime, pre-registerin­g for vaccines now will help state officials overseeing the mass-vaccinatio­n sites more easily ramp up distributi­on once larger dose shipments arrive, said Georgia Homeland Security Director Chris Stallings.

“We can make a significan­t dent in the list of [eligible] people who need support,” Stallings said.

The four mass-vaccinatio­n sites will be open Monday to Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the following locations:

♦ Habersham County Fairground­s: 4235 Toccoa Highway, Clarkesvil­le, GA 30523

♦ Macon Farmers Market: 2055 Eisenhower Parkway, Macon, GA 31206

♦ Delta Flight Museum: 1220 Woolman Place S.W., Hapeville, GA 30354

♦ Albany branch of the Georgia Forestry Commission: 2910 Newton Road, Albany, GA 31701

 ?? AP-John Bazemore ?? Gov. Brian Kemp answers questions during a news conference to discuss the state’s COVID-19 vaccine distributi­on plans.
AP-John Bazemore Gov. Brian Kemp answers questions during a news conference to discuss the state’s COVID-19 vaccine distributi­on plans.

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