It is no secret that our country faces aging (and, in some cases, crumbling) infrastructure along with fiscal restraints at all levels of government, to say nothing of the gridlock in Washington, which have collectively made procuring new projects and repairing existing facilities a much more difficult proposition.

In the face of such challenges, Georgia’s General Assembly and the State University System of Georgia have each recently taken important steps toward solving these issues by adopting measures to further the use of public-private partnerships (P3s) in the state, and more P3 projects are likely on the horizon.

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