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WABE's Week In Review

WABE

Each week, WABE's Managing Editor Alex Helmick takes a look at the work from his team of award-winning reporters, producers and hosts.

Location:

United States

Networks:

WABE

Description:

Each week, WABE's Managing Editor Alex Helmick takes a look at the work from his team of award-winning reporters, producers and hosts.

Language:

English


Episodes
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State eyes no income tax and Helene survivors rebuild in different ways

9/27/2025
The State Senate in Georgia is looking at ways to possibly incorporate a plan from several Republican state lawmakers and candidates who are pushing to eliminate the state income tax. Plus, it has been a year since Hurricane Helene ravaged parts of Georgia. We look at how some residents are rebuilding in ways that has them more prepared for the next storm. And Georgia will now have to do more to track food insecurity in the state following cuts to a federal program by the Trump administration. We also examine the local impact on the new fee for H-1B visa applicants. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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CDC goes back to in-person work and Hyundai raid fallout as Rivian breaks ground

9/20/2025
Federal officials ordered CDC workers back to in-person work this week about a month after a gunman shot hundreds of rounds at the buildings and killed a police officer. Plus, the Trump administration is pausing the reasonable accommodation for CDC workers with disabilities that allowed them to work remotely. Plus, the crowded race for Georgia governor gets more crowded. And we look at the electric vehicle sector post Hyundai immigration raid and just as Rivian broke (ceremonial) ground on its factory outside of Atlanta. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:28

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Fallout from the Hyundai raid and public safety training center opponents claim a victory

9/13/2025
Hundreds of South Koreans who were working on building an electric vehicle battery plant near Savannah are now back in South Korea, following last week's ICE raid. We look at what happened and the business and political implications of the raid. Plus, the latest in the case against people who were protesting Atlanta's public safety training center, an update on MARTA and new information about the state of DeKalb County's tree canopy. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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Calls for Kennedy to resign and the Marietta bookstore centering LGBTQ stories

9/6/2025
Two top officials who resigned last week from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are warning of grave threats to public health under the Trump Administration, as Georgia's two U.S. Senators call for U.S. Health and Human Services secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to resign. And we mark the one-year anniversary of the deadly shooting at Apalachee High School. Plus, a visit to a bookstore in Marietta that makes sure LGBTQ folks are the main characters of their stories, and we explain why state scientists are studying rusty fish hooks left behind in rivers and streams. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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CDC workers protest 'politicizing' of the agency and Big Easy influence on Atlanta 20 years after Katrina

8/30/2025
Dozens of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention former and current employees demonstrated this week in support of the agency's top leadership, several of whom resigned following the firing of CDC director Susan Monarez. Plus, we have more from Georgia lawmakers about the mobilization of the National Guard in an effort to assist at Immigration and Customs Enforcement facilities in the state. And the Atlanta City Council is caught in the middle of a fight over what to do about the deterioration of the Fulton County Jail, where some people held there are again sleeping on the floor. We'll also look at how those who fled Hurricane Katrina 20 years ago have made an impact in Atlanta. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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Some Fulton Commissioners defy judges order and CDC workers get termination notices

8/23/2025
Fulton County commissioners gave the green light to a new $1.1 billion jail project in na effort to replace the beleaguered current facility. Meantime, some of them could face jail or fines for refusing to appoint controversial Republicans to the election board. Plus, hundreds of workers at Atlanta's Centers for Disease Control and Prevention received permanent termination notices this week, according to the American Federation of Government Employees. And we look at why food banks here say they are seeing such an increase in need. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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CDC shooting highlights history of threats to health workers and a look at Georgia parks without federal funds

8/16/2025
A week after the shooting at the headquarters of the CDC in Atlanta we look at how anti-vaccine rhetoric and unfounded claims against health professionals has led to violence and threats toward them and their institutions. Plus, insurance on the ACA marketplace could spike if Congress fails to act. And what does the future look like for Georgia parks that rely on federal funding. Also, we track how well sea turtles are adapting to climate change. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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Exploring Delta's AI pricing plan and federal cuts on Georgia's refugees, health and parks

8/9/2025
Delta Air Lines officials say they will not use personal data in AI pricing after facing criticism from U.S. Senators. Plus we explore how federal cuts under the Trump administration could impact organizations helping refugees settled in Atlanta, aiding low income residents in need of healthcare and maintaining the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area. And we look at Georgia's impact in the Voting Rights Act which was passed 60 years ago this week. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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Atlanta VA braces as White House continues cutting staff

8/2/2025
As the Trump administration continues cutting tens of thousands of jobs at the Department of Veterans Affairs, staff and vets who rely on Atlanta's VA braces for changes. We also profile a program that helps those previously incarcerated find housing that is now struggling to stay intact after federal funds are drying up. And as a variety of industries in Georgia--from construction to tech--report they're struggling to find skilled workers, we look at a new trade school aiming to help bridge the gap between education and labor. Plus, we have a remembrance of philanthropist and developer Tom Cousins, who died this week. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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Doctors and patients say Georgia's abortion law is hindering reproductive health

7/26/2025
Georgia’s abortion law took effect three years ago this week. It limits allowing the procedure to roughly the first six weeks of pregnancy, and some Atlanta abortion rights advocates, doctors and patients say it continues to interfere with reproductive healthcare. Advocates and lawyers for a Spanish-language journalist fighting deportation from Georgia say they believe his plight is retaliation for his work. A new report from the University of Georgia says the state needs better coordination to prepare for worsening disasters like hurricanes and heat waves. Last month, a meteorite made a bit of a scene in metro Atlanta, streaking across the sky before shooting through the roof of a house in Henry County. We examine the space rock. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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MARTA boss out over immigration issues and a $140 million Ponzi scheme run by a prominent Georgia Republican

7/19/2025
MARTA's Board of Directors says CEO Collie Greenwood, who is Canadian, is taking early retirement after he stepped down abruptly this week over immigration issues. A prominent Georgia Republican is apologizing for an alleged Ponzi scheme that cost investors millions in the now defunct First Liberty Building and Loan. Georgia’s physician shortage could grow worse because of changes to medical student-loan programs under President Donald Trump's spending and tax bill that passed earlier this month. Georgia leaders and education advocates are calling on Governor Brian Kemp to push for the release of federal funds for after-school and summer programs after the Trump administration announced it would withhold $200 million in previously approved education funding for the state. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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Fulton residents brace for a tax spike and campaign cash may not be what it seems

7/12/2025
We review plans from Fulton officials that would see property owners in the county face a 12.5% tax rate increase. Plus, members of Georgia’s Africa legislative caucus are calling on U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio to stop the Trump Administration's plan to ban visitors from African and Caribbean countries. And we look at the big numbers being touted by candidates for Georgia's governor and where that money is coming from. (Here's a hint: Loans.) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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The impact of Trump's budget on Georgia and how clean is the Chattahoochee ?

7/5/2025
President Trump's spending plan could have big impact on Georgia. We look look at the thousands of solar jobs at stake as well as how it could affect Georgia's state budget. Plus, a local journalist who was arrested while covering a protest on Chamblee Tucker Road is now out on bond from an immigration detention center. Atlanta after-school and summer program providers are sounding the alarm after the Trump administration abruptly paused their federal funding. And as many folks "shoot the Hooch" over the holiday weekend, we look at how clean (or not) the Chattahoochee River actually is. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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More changes likely at the CDC and Atlanta small businesses pivot to deal with tariffs

6/28/2025
We look at the confirmation hearing for the proposed new head of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta as well as more funding and program cuts. Plus, a Salvadoran journalist is now fighting deportation after he was arrested in Georgia while covering a protest as he faces new criminal charges in Gwinnett County. And the future is uncertain for federal programs that help elderly and low income Georgians pay energy bills but there may be alternatives. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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Pregnant woman on life support gives birth and local journalist in ICE detention after protest coverage

6/21/2025
A Georgia woman declared brain dead but kept on life support because she was pregnant was removed from her ventilator this week, days after her baby was delivered by emergency C-section. Plus, a local journalist is awaiting a bond hearing from the Folkston ICE Processing Center in southeast Georgia after he was arrested while livestreaming police conduct at an Atlanta area protest. We also have more on Georgia politicians being rattled by the recent assassination of a Minnesota state lawmaker at her home. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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Georgia's AG threatens terrorism charges to protesters and some former CDC staff get their jobs back

6/14/2025
We have more on possible domestic terrorist charges for demonstrators deemed by authorities to have caused violence during anti-Trump administration protests. Plus, the fight is still over Head Start, the federally funded, free childcare and learning program for kids in low-income families. Also, the primary for voters to weigh in on utility regulars with the Public Service Commission starts next week and we preview the issues and the candidates. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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Emory 'brain dead' case sparks more debate over abortion and 'personhood'

6/7/2025
We have a deeper dive on the complex and controversial case at Emory Healthcare where a pregnant woman declared ‘brain dead’ is being kept on life support. Hospital officials say that’s because Georgia’s abortion law, but there’s disagreement among many, including conservatives. Plus, we take several looks at the economy: From what the Federal Reserve of Atlanta says about jobs to how to balance demands of data centers with their communities to high schoolers showing their personal finance skills. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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Trump cuts could affect millions of Georgians

5/31/2025
On this episode of WABE's Week In Review, we dive into several areas of possible or likely cuts in federal funding from the Trump administration. We dive into the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, where more than 1.4 million Georgians could see changes to the help they get from the nation's largest food-aid program. Plus, advocates for historic preservation initiatives in Georgia are raising concerns about delayed federal funding and possible cuts that they say the cuts threaten development and revitalization programs around the state. And we look at how cities are planning to deal with a loss in federal money. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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Pregnant woman on life support at Emory raises legal, ethical questions

5/24/2025
An Emory University Hospital patient declared "brain dead" remains on a ventilator to sustain her pregnancy, and Atlanta health providers and advocates are speaking out saying Georgia's six-week abortion law is forcing this decision. Plus, Governor Brian Kemp joined members of the Public Service Commission to advocate for a deal that would pause electricity rate increases right before the Commission’s long-awaited election. And Atlanta art organizations are reeling as the National Endowment for the Arts cancels funding. Also we look at Congress cutting billions in funding and how that could impact hundreds of thousands of Medicaid recipients in Georgia. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29

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Exploring the data center boom in metro Atlanta

5/17/2025
In our special series called "Server South: What's powering Atlanta's data center growth and what it means for you," we explore the controversial issue of these massive warehouse facilities. From the use of resources and land to the their importance to our everyday life, data centers are popping up across metro Atlanta. We hear about how artificial intelligence is forcing more and more centers. And we have a story about citizens in one metro Atlanta town fighting against a center in their backyard. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Duration:00:16:29