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Legislative Update: Sine Die

LEGISLATIVE UPDATE: SINE DIE

Georgia State Capitol

FY2027 Budget: The Conference Committee’s Final Deal

In the final days of Georgia’s 2026 legislative session, a conference committee made up of three House and three Senate members negotiated the final Fiscal Year 2027 (FY27) state budget after the two chambers disagreed on spending priorities across health care, workforce, and rural infrastructure. Both chambers passed the conference committee’s final FY27 budget before Sine Die on the last day of the legislative session. The FY27 budget funds the state from July 1, 2026, to June 30, 2027.

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Legislative Update: Week 10

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WEEK 10: COMMUNITY HEALTH WORKER CERTIFICATION BILL AWAITS FINAL PUSH

Community Health Worker

As the 2026 legislative session enters its final days, one critical workforce bill remains stalled in the Senate Health and Human Services Committee.

HB 291, which would establish Georgia’s first certification process for Community Health Workers (CHWs), crossed over to the Senate last year but has yet to receive a committee vote. With just a few legislative days remaining before Sine Die on April 2, time is running short for this important workforce investment.

CHWs play a vital role in Georgia’s health care system by bridging gaps between communities, social services, and health care providers. They go by many titles, including Patient Navigator, Community Health Navigator, and Promotora de Salud. HB 291 would create a state-approved certification process with standard training and competencies, helping CHWs do their work more effectively and sustainably.

Community Health Workers deserve professional recognition and consistent training standards. With limited time remaining in the session, members of the Senate Health and Human Services Committee need to hear that Georgians support this workforce investment.

 
Tell the Senate HHS Committee to Vote on HB 291

Here’s what you need to know about HB 291 and where it stands:

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Legislative Update: Week 5

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Week 5: Strengthening Insurance Enforcement

The House is advancing legislation that would give Georgia’s Insurance Commissioner significantly stronger tools to hold insurance companies accountable when they break consumer protection laws. House Bill 1262 would increase fines for violations of mental health parity requirements, surprise billing protections, and other insurance consumer protection laws from $2,000/$5,000 to $10,000/$25,000 per violation.

For large insurance companies, current fines of $2,000 or $5,000 per violation may be too small to deter misconduct. Stronger enforcement tools help ensure that insurance companies actually follow existing consumer protection laws, including mental health parity requirements under HB 1013.

This week at a glance:

  • HB 1262 is on the agenda for the House Health Insurance subcommittee tomorrow (Wed., 02/18).
  • HB 1002, which would move Georgia’s foster children from Medicaid managed care to a Fee-for-Service Medicaid model, and HB 1192, which would increase budgetary oversight of the Department of Community Health (DCH) and the Department of Human Services, are scheduled to be heard in the House Health Committee tomorrow (Wed., 02/18).
  • SB 428, which would allow DCH to apply for a Home and Community Based Services Medicaid waiver for Georgians suffering from severe mental illness, is on the agenda in Senate Health and Human Services tomorrow.
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Legislative Update: Week 4

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Week 4: House passes Amended FY26 budget and signals priorities for health and human services

On February 5, the Georgia House of Representatives passed its version of the Amended Fiscal Year 2026 (AFY26) state budget. The amended budget adjusts current-year spending and reflects lawmakers’ priorities for any remaining state dollars.

Here is what the House version means for health care, human services, and the programs Georgians rely on:

The Big Picture

The House budget totals $42.3 billion, a significant increase over the original FY 2026 budget, thanks to $3.3 billion in one-time investments of surplus funds. Among its health-related priorities, the House makes notable investments in Georgia’s foster care system, the health care workforce pipeline, rural health access, and mental health infrastructure. The House largely aligns with the Governor on Medicaid and PeachCare funding, with a few targeted additions.

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