Georgia Power and the Georgia Department of Transportation were working to keep people safe during Tuesday’s winter storm. “We can’t plow through standstill traffic, so we need everyone off the roads,
ATLANTA — Wednesday came and went and brought with it sunshine and slightly higher temperatures, melting off some of the ice that made roads so tricky in the morning following Tuesday's snowfall around much of metro Atlanta -- but not all of it, and some roads in the more heavily-impacted parts of the region remain hazardous on Thursday morning.
The Georgia Department of Transportation spent Sunday protecting roadways by sending 31 bucket trucks out to brine interstates throughout Georgia, including I-95 in Glynn and Camden counties.
ATLANTA (WJBF) – As snow fall and icy conditions gripped much of Georgia, the Department of Transportation working overnight to treat roads in Atlanta, and Central, Southern and coastal parts of ...
Georgia officials have been urging drivers to steer clear of the roads as ice and snow continued to come down all across metro Atlanta and South Georgia.
From Sunday evening into Monday, crews with the Georgia Department of Transportation are treating roads ahead of winter weather. As of Sunday, brine was applied to more than 6,000 miles of interstate.
Georgia Department of Transportation will continue clearing highways in the region, although much of the ice from Tuesday’s snowstorm is gone.
The rare winter wonderland in Southeast Georgia continued Wednesday morning after snow began to fall Tuesday night in Waycross.
Former president George W. Bush took the internet by storm during the 2025 Inauguration of President Donald Trump, where the 43rd president seemed to have a playful moment during the proceedings. Probably the only reasonable response to such a speech.
The Georgia Department of Transportation said brine operations would begin 8 a.m. on Sunday in northwest Georgia.
Gov. Brian Kemp has asked lawmakers to approve nearly $615 million to cover costs associated with Hurricane Helene.
Sheriff Leroy Ravenell and the Orangeburg County Sheriff’s Office are mourning the passing of a retired longtime deputy.