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Georgia House speaker calls for database to track troubled students, anonymous app to report threats • Georgia Recorder

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georgiarecorder.com – Stanley Dunlap – 2025-02-04 00:00:00

Georgia House speaker calls for database to track troubled students, anonymous app to report threats

by Stanley Dunlap, Georgia Recorder
February 4, 2025

House Speaker Jon Burns announced Monday legislation to enhance school safety following last year’s deadly school shooting in Barrow County.

Burns, a Newington Republican, stated that House leaders would introduce legislation Tuesday calling for a statewide database to track student mental health histories, development of an app for anonymously reporting threats to schools and a requirement for school districts to create safety management plans.

The school safety proposal also includes an additional $50 million in one-time school safety grants, which would give each public school in the state $68,000 for safety upgrades.

The legislation would also offer tax incentives for the purchase of firearm safes and other safety equipment and strengthen criminal penalties for students and other individuals who target schools with terroristic threats.

Burns stressed the seriousness of copycat threats that often follow tragedies like the Apalachee High School mass shooting on Sept. 4 that killed two students and two teachers and injured several others.

The Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency would help develop the system tracking student mental health history and reported threats that would be investigated by school personnel, mental health professionals and law enforcement agencies to determine the seriousness. Burns said the plan would also create mandatory suspensions of students from school while the extent of their threats are investigated.

On Feb. 4, Barrow County Sheriff Jud Smith praised the heroic actions of first responders, students, and staff during the deadly shooting at Apalachee High School on September 4, 2024. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder

School security and student resource officers have remained in the national spotlight since the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting that resulted in the deaths of 20 children and six adult staff members.

Since then, there have been several other deadly school shootings across the country, including last year’s Barrow County incident that resulted in the arrest of 14-year-old Apalachee High School student Colt Gray who faces multiple homicide charges for the shooting.

Burns said the school safety plan is intended to ensure the safety of young people, teachers and other school staff.

“That’s why the House is taking the following measures to ensure a tragedy like what we witnessed in Apalachee never happens again in this state,” he said. “We know that failure to transfer and share information regarding the student who is accused of these horrific acts played a role in the deaths that unfolded that day. Our school safety plan will mandate participation in a statewide student information sharing and tracking database that will allow for timely transfer of relevant student data between school systems, law enforcement and mental health care professionals.”

On Monday, Barrow County Sheriff Jud Smith and Richard and Rita Aspinwall, parents of Ricky Aspinwall, an Apalachee math teacher and football coach killed in the shooting, were guests at the school safety press conference held inside the state Capitol. Gray’s father, Colin Gray, also faces felony charges for purchasing the AR-15 rifle as a gift for his son that police say was used to kill 14-year-olds Mason Schermerhorn and Christian Angulo and teachers Aspinwall and Cristina Irimie.

Smith said he was proud of the heroic efforts of law enforcement and school staff during the tragic shooting and was supportive of the House safety plan.

“As human beings, we’re tasked with taking care of others who cannot take care of themselves,” Smith said. “Our kids are our future. As Speaker Burns said, we should do everything we can to protect them.”

Some of the proposals in the House Republican Majority Caucus plan have been championed by Democratic legislators, such as incentivizing the safe storage of firearms. Last year, both chambers passed their own version of a tax incentive with wide margins, but neither chamber approved the other’s plan. 

Democrats in the Senate and House have also re-filed legislation this year that would also punish adults who don’t properly store firearms away safely in a manner preventing minors from accessing them.

The prospective Burns’ legislation does not call for stronger gun control laws championed by Georgia Democratic lawmakers and organizations like Moms Demand Action. There are also questions about how well the House GOP measure will protect the confidentiality of students.

“I think school safety is something we’re going to come to the table on because we have to do everything we can to make sure that our students are safe at schools,” House Minority Leader Carolyn Hugley, a Columbus Democrat, said in an interview last week with the Georgia Recorder. “That’s going to require us to look at internal threats as well as external threats.”

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Georgia Recorder is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Georgia Recorder maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor John McCosh for questions: info@georgiarecorder.com.

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ONLY ON 3: Man convicted of voluntary manslaughter says he deserves new trial

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www.wsav.com – Andrew Davis – 2025-04-17 20:23:00

SUMMARY: Preston Oates, convicted of voluntary manslaughter and gun charges in the 2014 killing of Carlos Olivera, is seeking a new trial. Oates claims ineffective counsel, prosecutorial misconduct, and unexamined evidence during his trial. He continues to deny responsibility, arguing bias from law enforcement and improper handling of key evidence. Oates shot Olivera after a confrontation over a vehicle booting incident, with prosecutors stating he was the aggressor. Oates’ appeal was denied by the South Carolina Supreme Court, and his family and Olivera’s family were present at the hearing. The next hearing is scheduled for April 24.

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Loss of federal tax credits could doom green energy projects | Louisiana

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Op-Ed: In global hydrogen race, U.S. needs competitive policies | Opinion

www.thecentersquare.com – By Nolan McKendry | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-04-17 11:45:00

(The Center Square) − A $4 billion clean energy project in Louisiana — touted as the largest of its kind in North America — could face major financial headwinds if Congress ever repeals key provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act, according to documents from one of the project’s lead developers.

CF Industries, the world’s largest producer of ammonia, has staked its future on a low-carbon transition — anchored in part by the development of green and blue ammonia production facilities at its Donaldsonville and Blue Point complexes in Louisiana. Together, the projects represent one of the largest investments in carbon capture and clean hydrogen in the country.

At the heart of that strategy is Section 45Q, a federal tax credit that provides up to $85 per metric ton of CO₂ permanently stored through carbon capture and sequestration.

CF has already entered into a landmark agreement with ExxonMobil to permanently store up to 2 million metric tons of CO₂ annually from its Donaldsonville operations, starting in 2025. That alone could translate into $170 million per year in tax credits—provided the current IRA-backed rules remain intact.

But that is not a safe assumption.

“The new administration has indicated that they’re not the biggest fans of green energy tax credits under the Inflation Reduction Act,” said Shawn Daray, a New Orleans tax attorney, during a February hearing before the Clean Hydrogen Task Force. 

Section 45V relates to clean hydrogen production, another pillar of CF’s multi-billion-dollar expansion.

In its 2024 annual report, CF Industries warned investors that “changes to the IRA may impact our ability to receive anticipated tax credits for our low-carbon ammonia projects, which, in turn, could negatively affect the profitability of these projects.”

That warning resonates beyond the company’s bottom line. The Louisiana sites at Donaldsonville and the proposed Blue Point complex in Ascension Parish are projected to generate more than 1,200 construction jobs and over 100 permanent positions, according to Louisiana Economic Development records.

“These are the kinds of well-paying, future-forward jobs the IRA was designed to bring to places like Louisiana,” Mark Roberts, an advisor with EcoPolicy Advisors, told The Center Square. “Why the state’s own congressional delegation is working to repeal those benefits is baffling.”

More than $2.5 billion in direct IRA-related investments have been announced across the state since 2022, according to Roberts, potentially supporting thousands of jobs. 

The threat to clean hydrogen isn’t limited to ammonia. This week Plug Power’s new hydrogen liquefaction plant in St. Gabriel began operations. The facility, operated by the Hidrogenii JV, can liquefy up to 15 tons of hydrogen daily — about 5,475 tons annually — produced by Olin. Plug Power distributes the hydrogen across the country using a trailer network and its newly introduced spot pricing model.

The St. Gabriel facility pushes Plug’s total U.S. liquefied hydrogen production to 40 tons per day, including sites in Georgia and Tennessee.

The company has said the IRA’s clean hydrogen production credit — Section 45V, which can provide up to $3 per kilogram of clean hydrogen — is key to its long-term strategy. But Plug has also acknowledged in recent investor filings that uncertainty around implementation and potential political shifts could affect how, and whether, they receive those benefits.

“A prolonged U.S. government shutdown could cause uncertainty or delay… which could impact the timing of any benefits we anticipate receiving under the IRA,” the company warned in its 2023 annual report. “Several of these credits… have been subject to debate, and divergent views on potential implementation… some of which could be materially adverse to the Company.”

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International students file legal challenges over widespread US visa revocations

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www.wsav.com – The Associated Press – 2025-04-17 08:07:00

SUMMARY: Several international students whose visas were revoked in recent weeks have filed lawsuits against the Trump administration, claiming they were denied due process. Over 900 students across 128 U.S. colleges have had their legal status terminated, risking detention and deportation. Lawsuits argue the government lacked justification for these actions, often citing minor infractions. Colleges report that the terminations follow a nationwide policy, though the reasons for targeting students remain unclear. This action has raised concerns about discouraging future international students from studying in the U.S., with many colleges seeking answers from the government and offering reassurance to affected students.

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