Gov. Kemp declares state of emergency following severe storms

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Storms that swept through Georgia during the night early Monday morning caused damage and led Gov. Brian Kemp to issue a state of emergency.

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  • A tree that fell in the Carnesville city limits damaged some signs. It was one of many trees felled during storms overnight Sunday into Monday. The northern part of the county, including the Gumlog area, was hit hard by high winds and a possible tornado.
    A tree that fell in the Carnesville city limits damaged some signs. It was one of many trees felled during storms overnight Sunday into Monday. The northern part of the county, including the Gumlog area, was hit hard by high winds and a possible tornado.
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By Shane Scoggins, Publisher

Franklin County Citizen Leader

and Dave Williams, Bureau Chief

Capitol Beat News Service
 
ATLANTA - Gov. Brian Kemp declared a state of emergency in Georgia Monday after a severe storm system ripped through the state Sunday night and early Monday, generating high winds, heavy rain and tornadoes.
At least six people were killed in Georgia, including five at two mobile home parks near Chatsworth. A sixth victim was killed in Cartersville when a tree fell on his house as he slept.
As of early Monday, 177,000 Georgians were without electricity, including thousands in Franklin, Hart, Stephens and Elbert counties served by Hart EMC and Georgia Power.

The northern part of Franklin County was hit hard by the storm, with possible tornadoes felling trees, damaging homes and knocking down power lines.
Kemp announced the new state of emergency will coexist with the statewide public health emergency he first declared last month and renewed last week related to the coronavirus pandemic.
“The responses by the state to this state of emergency for storm damage and the public health state of emergency should both proceed simultaneously, without one impeding the other,” an executive order the governor issued Monday stated.
Monday’s executive order will remain in effect for 10 days, until April 23. The order authorizes the Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency to bring “all “resources” of the state to bear to respond to the affected areas and help with recovery.
The order also suspended the federal rules limiting the hours commercial truck drivers can be on the roads in order to prevent disruptions in supplies of gasoline and diesel fuel, emergency supplies, food and other agricultural products and the removal of storm debris.
It also allows trucks to exceed the usual legal weight, height and length restrictions, subject to oversize permits issued by the Georgia Department of Public Safety.
"We are praying for those who lost loved ones overnight and the families dealing with severe storm damage." Kemp said. "In coordination with private-sector partners, multiple state agencies - including the Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency, Department of Public Safety, Department of Natural Resources, Department of Transportation, and Georgia Forestry Commission - are working hard to restore power, clear debris, and provide necessary assistance to families across the state."
Kemp said Pete Gaynor, administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, has offered the federal government's assistance in the recovery.