Many big Georgia firms support hate-crimes bill
ATLANTA — Many of Georgia’s most powerful corporations urged state lawmakers Monday to adopt a “comprehensive, specific and clear” hatecrimes law when they return to the legislative session next week.
The letter, signed by about 70 corporate executives, was the sharpest signal yet that the state’s business titans were forcefully rallying behind legislation that imposes additional penalties on crimes proven to have been motivated by bias.
“We must come together, engage in tough conversations, and find solutions to make our communities and our country a place of hope and not despair, where diversity is celebrated and justice is assured,” read the letter. “Georgia’s economic future and the dignity of our citizens depend on it.”
It was signed by executives from BlackRock, Coca-Cola Co., Delta Air Lines, The Home Depot, Georgia-Pacific, Georgia Power and UPS. In addition, the leaders of the Metro Atlanta Chamber and the Georgia Chamber of Commerce, who previously called for “swift” passage of the legislation, added their names.
The groups also launched a new website, www.passhatecrimesga.com, to further the initiative.
Georgia is one of four states in the nation without such a measure after a previous law was declared unconstitutional in 2004. Last year, the Georgia House narrowly passed a version of the measure, House Bill 426, that was bottled up in a Senate committee.
Sponsored by state Rep. Chuck Efstration, R-Dacula, the measure would allow stiffer sentences for anyone convicted of targeting a victim based on race, color, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, gender, mental disability or physical disability.
The calls for the bill’s passage gained new urgency amid outrage over the slaying of Ahmaud Arbery in coastal Georgia, who was gunned down in February while running outside Brunswick. Prosecutors say his suspected killer blurted out a racial epithet minutes after Arbery collapsed.
And they have intensified after civil unrest broke out in Atlanta and other cities across the nation following the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police officers.
House Speaker David Ralston has vowed to “challenge and implore” Senate lawmakers to pass the hate crimes law “with no delay and no amendments” when the session resumes next Monday. Gov. Brian Kemp has indicated he’s receptive to the legislation, but has not taken a firm stance.
First, though, the measure must emerge from the Senate, where some lawmakers have expressed a “philosophical concern” about requiring different punishments for similar crimes.