Changeflow GovPing Government & Legislation Kemp Declares State of Emergency for 91 Georgia...
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Kemp Declares State of Emergency for 91 Georgia Counties Amid South Georgia Wildfires

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Summary

Governor Brian P. Kemp declared a State of Emergency for 91 Georgia counties effective April 22, 2026, in response to ongoing South Georgia wildfires that have already exceeded the state's 5-year average. The declaration authorizes Georgia National Guard mobilization, prohibits price gouging, and runs concurrently with a 30-day burn ban covering prescribed burns, yard debris, and agricultural material burning. FEMA approved Fire Management Assistance Grant declarations for the Pineland Road Fire (Clinch and Echols Counties) and the Highway 82 Wildfire (Brantley County), while GFC, DNR, GSP, and the Department of Agriculture are deploying helicopters, dozers, water engines, and game wardens to assist response efforts.

“Governor Brian P. Kemp today declared a State of Emergency for 91 Georgia counties in response to the ongoing wildfires in South Georgia.”

Why this matters

Businesses operating in the 91 affected Georgia counties should immediately review pricing practices — the price gouging prohibition in this declaration carries enforcement risk under Georgia law during declared emergencies. Any increase in prices for goods or services that exceeds normal market rates could be subject to enforcement action. Agricultural operations, forestry interests, and construction firms should suspend all burning activities for the 30-day duration of the burn ban.

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What changed

Governor Brian P. Kemp signed a State of Emergency executive declaration covering 91 Georgia counties effective April 22, 2026, in response to South Georgia wildfires that have surpassed the state's 5-year average due to extreme drought conditions. The order authorizes the Georgia Department of Defense to mobilize Georgia National Guard troops and air assets, prohibits price gouging throughout the affected area, and runs concurrently with a separate 30-day burn ban order issued by the State Forester that covers the same 91 counties.

Affected county residents, businesses, and agricultural operations should be aware of the active burn ban prohibiting prescribed burns, yard debris burning, and agricultural material burning for 30 days. Businesses in the affected counties are prohibited from raising prices above pre-emergency levels, and FEMA has activated Fire Management Assistance Grants for two named wildfires. National Guard and multiple state agencies (DNR, GSP, Department of Agriculture) are actively deployed to affected areas with air assets, ground equipment, and personnel supporting evacuation, fire suppression, and livestock relocation efforts.

What to do next

  1. Residents are encouraged to heed directives and information from their local authorities and Emergency Management departments

Archived snapshot

Apr 22, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

ATLANTA – Governor Brian P. Kemp today declared a State of Emergency for 91 Georgia counties in response to the ongoing wildfires in South Georgia. The governor also directed the Georgia Forestry Commission (GFC) and other relevant state agencies to mobilize all necessary resources to assist with active response efforts in the southern region of the state. The State of Emergency, found here, will remain in effect for 30 days, unless otherwise renewed.

"With much of Georgia remaining in extreme drought conditions, wildfires have already surpassed the state's 5-year average and continue to spread," said Governor Brian Kemp. "My team and I are working closely with Georgia State Forester Johnny Sabo and his team, along with federal, state, and local officials, to ensure we are doing everything possible to combat the fires and provide assistance to affected communities. We are praying for the families who have lost their homes in these devastating conditions, as well as for the first responders working around the clock."

The State of Emergency is in addition to the State Forester's Burn Ban Order issued earlier today for the same 91 counties. The burn ban will remain in effect for 30 days, unless otherwise extended, and prohibits, among other activities, prescribed burns as well as the burning of yard debris and agricultural material in the affected area.

The State of Emergency allows for the Georgia Department of Defense to mobilize Georgia National Guard troops and resources for response and recovery efforts. Air assets and Guardsmen are being activated and deployed to the affected areas.

Among other provisions, the State of Emergency order also prohibits price gouging.

State Action and Response:

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has approved Fire Management Assistance Grant (FMAG) declarations for the Pineland Road Fire burning in Clinch and Echols Counties and the Highway 82 Wildfire burning in Brantley County. A federal Incident Management Team (IMT) is also being called up to assist with response.

All relevant state agencies are assisting with ongoing response efforts, including the Georgia Department of Natural Resources (DNR), which is providing three helicopters with fire suppression capabilities; a D6 Dozer and operator for debris removal; two Type 2 Water Engines and four team members; and ten Game Wardens to assist with evacuations, GFC investigations, and clearing burned structures and debris. The Georgia State Patrol (GSP) is providing three helicopters to support wildfire response efforts. Additionally, the Georgia Department of Agriculture is assisting with livestock relocation in impacted areas.

Wildfire Safety and Preparedness Guidance:

For current wildfire information and emergency updates, visit gatrees.org/current-wildfire-information-and-resources/.

A live-time map of the active fires and response can be found here.

GFC will provide ongoing updates via its website and social media accounts. Residents are encouraged to heed directives and information from their local authorities and Emergency Management departments.

[email protected] [email protected] [email protected]

Named provisions

Price Gouging Prohibition Burn Ban Order

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
GA Governor
Published
April 22nd, 2026
Instrument
Rule
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Agricultural firms Consumers
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Wildfire response Emergency declaration Burn ban enforcement
Geographic scope
US-GA US-GA

Taxonomy

Primary area
Environmental Protection
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Public Health Consumer Protection Disaster Response

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