Sen. Jason Anavitarte Marks One Year Since Apalachee High School Shooting, Reaffirms Commitment to Protecting Georgia’s Children

ATLANTA (September 03, 2025) — Today, Senate Majority Leader Jason Anavitarte (R–Dallas) issued the following statement on the first anniversary of the tragic school shooting at Apalachee High School in Barrow County: 

“One year ago, our state was shaken to its core when lives were stolen in the halls of Apalachee High School. Families lost loved ones, and Georgia was reminded of the unthinkable pain that no parent, child teacher or community should ever have to endure. As we honor the memory of those we lost, we must recommit ourselves to the truth that protecting our children cannot be something we only do after tragedy strikes. It must be our constant duty. Georgia has taken bold, practical steps to protect our children, teachers and everyone who sets foot in a school setting. We will continue to listen, learn and legislate with the conviction that school should always be a place of safety, not fear.” 

Following the Apalachee tragedy, Sen. Anavitarte worked with victims’ families, school leaders and his colleagues in the General Assembly to advance one of the most significant school safety packages in state history. Earlier this year, Governor Brian Kemp signed House Bill 268, known in part as “Ricky and Alyssa’s Law,” named for Coach Ricky Aspinwall, who was killed that day, and 14-year-old Alyssa Alhadeff, who lost her life in the Parkland, Florida shooting in 2018. This legislation strengthens school safety and accountability while ensuring every district has the tools to respond before tragedy occurs. 

In addition to this landmark legislation, the state budget invests directly in the safety and well-being of Georgia’s students. Lawmakers dedicated $108.9 million in annual grants for K-12 public schools, providing an average of $47,000 per school to upgrade security infrastructure, improve campus safety, and protect students and staff. The budget also includes $47.9 million dedicated to student mental-health programs, recognizing that prevention must also include supporting the emotional and psychological well-being of Georgia’s young people. 

“I am so grateful the state of Georgia has taken this tragedy and continued to make positive changes to ensure our schools are safe for every teacher, student and employee on campus,” said Shayna Aspinwall. “I lost my husband. My daughters lost their dad at the ages of five and two. Students lost a teacher. Players lost a beloved coach. As a teacher myself, I am proud that Ricky and Alyssa’s Law successfully passed in Georgia this year. I am inspired to believe that it is only the beginning of progress and changes to come that ensure that no one suffers a loss like the one my family and I suffered last year. Every teacher and student should be able to walk in a school in the morning and safely walk out in the afternoon to go home to their loved ones.” 

Sen. Frank Ginn also spoke on the tragic shooting that impacted Northeast Georgia one year ago:  

“On September 4th, lives were changed forever in Georgia. All who call this state home were left grieving following an unimaginable school shooting.  

No sympathy or statute can bring a child back into a parent’s arms. As a parent who knows what it feels like to lose a child, I will spend my life both as a senator and a father fighting to ease the pain of every grieving community member impacted by that tragic day. I’m proud of the progress our legislature has made through actionable school safety legislation, and I know there will always be more conversations to have and ideas to put into action.” 

As Georgia reflects on this painful anniversary, Majority Leader Anavitarte reaffirmed his commitment to advancing policies that protect children and give educators and families the resources they need to keep schools safe. HB 268 officially took effect on July 1, 2025. You can find more information about it here

# # # # 

Sen. Jason Anavitarte serves as Senate Majority Leader. He represents the 31st Senate District, which includes Polk County and a portion of Paulding County. He may be reached via email at Jason.Anavitarte@senate.ga.gov

Sen. Frank Ginn represents the 47th Senate District which includes Madison County and portions of Barrow, Clarke, and Jackson County. He can be reached at (404) 656-4700 or by email at Frank.Ginn@senate.ga.gov.  For all media inquiries, please reach out to SenatePressInquiries@senate.ga.gov.

MEDIA ADVISORY: Senate Study Committee on Additional Services and Resources for Transition Age Youth in Foster Care to Hold Second Meeting

ATLANTA (September 3, 2025) — On Wednesday, September 10,at 10:00 a.m., the Senate Study Committee on Additional Services and Resources for Transition Age Youth in Foster Care, chaired by Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick (R–Marietta), will hold its second hearing.

EVENT DETAILS:                      

  • Date: Wednesday, September 10, 2025
  • Time: 10:00 a.m.
  • Location: Coverdell Legislative Office Building, Room 307, 18 Capitol Square, SW, Atlanta, GA, 30334
  • Open to the Public: This event is open to the public and will be live-streamed on the Georgia General Assembly website here.

ABOUT THE MEETING:         

The Senate Study Committee on Additional Services and Resources for Transition Age Youth in Foster Care, created through Senate Resolution 310, will survey what resources and services are currently being provided for Georgia’s transition-age youth. This bipartisan committee will continue exploring additional services and resources for transition-age youth, identify the most urgent needs, and decide how best to implement them to ensure youth success into adulthood.

MEDIA OPPORTUNITIES:
We kindly request that members of the media confirm their attendance in advance by contacting Zach Pishock at SenatePressInquiries@senate.ga.gov


# # # #


Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick serves as Chairwoman of the Senate Committee on Children and Families. She represents the 32nd Senate District, which includes portions of Cobb and Cherokee counties. She may be reached by phone at (404) 656-3932 or by email at
kay.kirkpatrick@senate.ga.gov

COLUMN: Walker: Cultivating Renewal – Helping Georgia Rebuild After Helene

By: Sen. Larry Walker, III (R–Perry)

When Hurricane Helene ripped across Georgia last September, the storm didn’t just topple trees and barns. It cut into the heart of rural communities, upending farms, families and a way of life built over generations.

In the following weeks, I visited with farmers, foresters and small business owners who were still knee-deep in debris, wondering how they would start again. For many, recovery wasn’t just about repairing buildings or replacing equipment. It was about saving a way of life passed down from grandparents to parents to children and protecting the economic foundation of our state.

From the fields of peanuts and cotton to the pine stands that cover our landscape, agriculture and forestry generate more than $70 billion annually. When storms like Helene devastate those sectors, it’s not just rural Georgia that suffers. Every family depends on affordable groceries, every factory depends on raw materials and every community relies on steady jobs.

That’s why, during the 2025 legislative session, the Georgia General Assembly made disaster recovery a top priority. We knew we couldn’t undo the damage but could deliver the tools to help families rebuild.

This spring, I stood alongside Governor Brian Kemp, Agriculture Commissioner Tyler Harper, Lt. Governor Burt Jones and fellow legislators as we signed into law three key bills: House Bill 223, Senate Bill 201, and House Bill 143. These aren’t abstract policies or political talking points. They are real, practical lifelines for farmers and foresters still picking up the pieces.

Carried in the Senate by my friend Sen. Russ Goodman, HB 223 is as comprehensive as it is compassionate. It exempts federal crop loss and disaster payments from state income tax because when a family is depending on relief dollars to survive, the government doesn’t need to take a cut. The bill also creates a reforestation tax credit to help timber landowners replant what was destroyed. Timber isn’t like corn or cotton. It takes decades to mature. If we don’t replant now, we risk losing a generation of growth in one of Georgia’s most valuable industries.

The bill also allows local governments to temporarily pause harvest tax collections on storm-damaged timber. That may sound technical, but it’s a lifeline in practice, giving landowners breathing room to clean up and replant without facing another bill in the mailbox. HB 223 expands the Georgia Agricultural Tax Exemption (GATE) to include building materials for storm repairs for poultry, livestock and greenhouse producers whose barns and housing were destroyed. That’s money back in the hands of producers, helping them get back online faster.

Second, SB 201. This one was personal for me, because I carried it. In the aftermath of a disaster, families are desperate to rebuild. That desperation too often attracts dishonest contractors, people who demand cash up front and then vanish, or who cut corners at the expense of safety. SB 201 strengthens consumer protections for homeowners signing contracts after a natural disaster.

Having spent decades in the insurance industry, I’ve seen what happens when families make quick decisions under pressure. SB 201 sets more explicit rules for legitimate contractors while protecting families from those who would take advantage of them at their most vulnerable. It’s a preventative measure that will save countless Georgians from heartbreak and financial ruin.

HB 143, carried in the Senate by Sen. Sam Watson, shifts the responsibility for installing and maintaining agricultural water meters back to the state. Farmers are already juggling crop losses, equipment damage, and skyrocketing costs. They don’t need another unfunded mandate on their backs. HB 143 makes sure the state shoulders that responsibility, not families who are already stretched to the breaking point. Georgia’s farmers and foresters are the backbone of our economy and deserve a government that fights just as hard as they do.

Gov. Kemp said it best at the bill signing: “Their commitment to moving forward after all they’ve faced is an inspiration to us all.” He’s right. Rural Georgia’s resilience is remarkable, but this doesn’t mean we go it alone. It means we stand shoulder to shoulder, neighbors helping neighbors and leaders stepping in when the storm is simply too big.

Recovery from Helene is far from over. Driving through parts of our state, you can still see twisted pines piled on the edges of fields, barns with tarps stretched across the roof, and communities working to piece life back together. Rebuilding after a storm like this takes time. With these new measures in place, we’ve taken meaningful steps to ease the burden, protect families and secure the future of Georgia agriculture.

I’m proud to represent a district that doesn’t wait around for someone else to fix things. We show up. We dig in. We rebuild. As long as I’m serving you under the Gold Dome, I’ll keep showing up for rural Georgia… because that’s what neighbors do.

# # # #

Sen. Larry Walker serves as Secretary of the Majority Caucus and Chairman of the Senate Committee on Insurance and Labor. He represents the 20th Senate District, which includes Bleckley, Dodge, Dooly, Laurens, Treutlen, Pulaski and Wilcox counties, as well as portions of Houston County.  He may be reached by phone at (404) 656-0095 or by email at Larry.Walker@senate.ga.gov.

For all media inquiries, please reach out to SenatePressInquiries@senate.ga.gov.

Wicks: We Can’t Build a Safer Georgia Without Mental Health at the Center

By: Sen. Kenya Wicks (D–Fayette)

Behind every statistic is a story: a child struggling in silence, a mother overwhelmed, a veteran left without support. Mental health affects all of us, whether directly or through someone we love. That’s why I’ve made it my mission to bring this conversation out of the shadows and into the center of Georgia’s policymaking. Our mental health shapes how we care for one another, how we perform on the job and how our children learn and grow. I think about the mother in Forest Park navigating postpartum depression, the teenager in Lovejoy facing anxiety and the veteran in North Fayette recovering from PTSD. Their stories remind me that supporting mental health strengthens every part of our state.

Thousands of Georgians utilize mental health resources each day. In 2024, more than 200,000 Georgians called the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. That’s more than the number of passengers who pass through Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on a typical day. These statistics are why I will keep advocating for Georgia’s Behavioral Health Crisis System, including our statewide Community Service Boards and Crisis Stabilization Units, which offer walk-in care when needed most. 

As we recognize Suicide Prevention Month and Addiction Awareness Month this September, I’m committed to making sure no one in Georgia faces their struggles alone. That is why I supported two House bills that expand access to mental health care across our state. 

House Bill 68, the Fiscal Year 2026 budget, includes critical youth and adult services funding. Beginning this past July, Georgia set aside more than $5 million to improve crisis stabilization centers in Macon and Savannah and nearly $58 million to support addiction recovery. These investments help people heal and build a healthier, more resilient Georgia. 

We didn’t stop there, however. Our state is also investing in mental health for Georgia students. We allocated $19.5 million to expand school-based mental health services and nearly $7 million to help schools hire student advocacy specialists. These investments prove Georgia understands that mental health today builds a stronger tomorrow. It supports parents in Jonesboro, reminds students at Riverdale High and Mundy’s Mill High School that someone is in their corner and gives young people across our state the tools they need to cope.

Mental health and public safety are connected, which is why I also supported House Bill 268. The bill funds student advocacy specialists who can spot problems early and support students before mental health concerns become emergencies. HB 268 also improves emergency response. Georgia schools from Fayetteville Elementary to Forest Park High must now implement mobile panic alert systems so staff can quickly notify local and state responders. Schools must also provide updated digital floor plans to law enforcement so that our children are as safe as possible from bell to bell each school day.

While the bill moves our schools in the right direction, leaders in our state’s majority party had the chance to address gun violence, and they didn’t. They refused to pass even the most basic gun safety reforms. As a mother and a veteran, I know we can’t talk seriously about safety without talking about the weapons that continue to end innocent lives. Georgia needs stronger gun laws.

Together, these bills reflect a bipartisan commitment to building systems that uplift, protect and heal. They are a promise to my constituents in the 34th Senate District and our state that their mental health matters. We are no longer waiting for a catastrophe to strike before we respond. Instead, we are building a system that meets people where they are and helps them move forward. Mental health is essential to every citizen, regardless of demographics or financial status, and I am honored to serve and fight for these priorities on your behalf. I will continue advocating for a Georgia that cares for every mind and every life.

# # # #

Sen. Kenya Wicks represents the 34th Senate District, which includes portions of Clayton and Fayette Counties. She may be reached by email at Kenya.Wicks@senate.ga.gov.

For all media inquiries, please reach out to SenatePressInquiries@senate.ga.gov.

Ginn: Preserving Fairness – Girls’ Sports Deserve Protection

By: Sen. Frank Ginn (R–Danielsville)

Nothing beats the energy of a Friday night in Georgia: stands full, a band playing and a community rallying behind its team. For generations, these moments have built character in our young people and pride in our hometowns. That same pride comes from knowing every athlete competes under fair rules, and that’s why I support making sure boys are not allowed to compete in girls’ sports.

Continue reading “Ginn: Preserving Fairness – Girls’ Sports Deserve Protection”