Doyle, Presiding Judge. The appeal arises from a personal injury action filed by Matthew Ragsdale against the Georgia Department of Public Safety (“the State”) and other defendants after Ragsdale was injured in a motor vehicle accident that occurred when Ross Singleton fled from law enforcement on October 30, 2014.[1] The State moved to dismiss the claims against it based on Ragsdale’s failure to serve the State with a proper ante litem notice prior to October 30, 2015. The trial court denied the motion “for the reasons provided in [Ragsdale's] brief in opposition” to the motion — that OCGA § 9-3-99 tolled the period for presenting ante litem notice — and thereafter, this Court granted the State’s application for interlocutory appeal. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.We review the [denial] of any motion to dismiss de novo, [recalling that] a motion to dismiss should not be granted unless the allegations of the complaint disclose with certainty that the claimant would not be entitled to relief under any state of provable facts asserted in support thereof. We construe the pleadings in the light most favorable to the plaintiff with any doubts resolved in the plaintiff’s favor.[2] The limited and undisputed facts necessary to decide this appeal are that Ragsdale was injured by a fleeing criminal on October 30, 2014. Ragsdale sent an ante litem notice to the Department of Administrative Services (“DOAS”) on December 3, 2014; however, it is undisputed at this point that the notice provided on that date failed to include all the information required by OCGA § 50-21-26 (5). Ragsdale filed suit, but dismissed this initial filing based on the deficiency of his first ante litem notice. Thereafter, in March 2017, Ragsdale sent a second ante litem notice to DOAS. Ragsdale then renewed the action, and the State filed its motion to dismiss the appeal, contending that the March 2017 ante litem notice was untimely. In response, Ragsdale argued that because he was the victim of Singleton’s crime, the time for filing the ante litem notice had been tolled “from the date of the commission of the alleged crime or the act giving rise to such action in tort until the prosecution of such crime or act has become final or otherwise terminated” pursuant to OCGA § 9-3-99. The trial court agreed and denied the motion to dismiss in a single-sentence order, citing Ragsdale’s arguments in response to the motion to dismiss. The State appeals this order.Normally, “[n]o person . . . having a tort claim against the [S]tate under [the Georgia Tort Claims Act ("GTCA")] shall bring any action against the [S]tate upon such claim without first giving notice of the claim . . . in writing within 12 months of the date the loss was discovered or should have been discovered . . . .”[3] OCGA § 9-3-99 states, however, that [t]he running of the period of limitations with respect to any cause of action in tort that may be brought by the victim of an alleged crime which arises out of the facts and circumstances relating to the commission of such alleged crime committed in this [S]tate shall be tolled from the date of the commission of the alleged crime or the act giving rise to such action in tort until the prosecution of such crime or act has become final or otherwise terminated, provided that such time does not exceed six years, except as otherwise provided in Code Section 9333.1.The trial court denied the motion to dismiss, agreeing that OCGA § 9-3-99 tolled the ante litem notice time requirement, in part based on this Court’s recent decision in Harrison v. McAfee.[4] In Harrison, this Court re-examined previous cases to determine whether (in addition to tolling victims’ claims against criminal actors) OCGA § 9-3-99 tolled the limitation period for tort claims to be brought by crime victims against any non-criminal actors whose negligence may have caused the injury that the victim received during the criminal conduct.[5] This Court determined that the plain language of OCGA § 9-3-99 applies to the statute of limitation for tort claims alleged against non-criminal actors in addition to tort claims against criminal actors, and this Court overruled prior precedent holding otherwise.[6] One of the cases overruled by Harrison,[7] was Columbia County v. Blanton,[8] which addressed whether the plaintiff’s tort claims against a county were barred by his failure to file a timely ante litem notice or if the time for filing the notice was tolled by, inter alia, OCGA § 9-3-99.[9] Relying on Valades v. Uslu,[10] another case explicitly overruled by Harrison,[11] the Court in Blanton held that “[b]ecause the county defendants were not criminal defendants in a prior prosecution, OCGA § 9399 d[id] not toll the time for filing the ante litem notice against them in the instant suit.”[12] Thus, Blanton’s conclusion was based on the prohibition of applying the tolling provision to non-criminal joint tortfeasors rather than a determination of whether OCGA § 9-3-99 could toll an ante litem notice provision. The State argues that OCGA § 9-3-99 does not apply to the one-year ante litem notice requirement contained in OCGA § 50-21-26 (a) because the notice provision is not a statute of limitation, of which there is a separate two-year provision applicable in the GTCA pursuant to OCGA § 50-21-27 (c).In Foster v. Ga. Regional Transp. Auth.,[13] the Supreme Court of Georgia explained thatwhen we read statutory text, we must presume that the General Assembly meant what it said and said what it meant, and so, we must read the statutory text in its most natural and reasonable way, as an ordinary speaker of the English language would. According to OCGA § 502127 (e), all provisions relating to the tolling of limitations of actions, as provided elsewhere in this Code, shall apply to causes of action brought pursuant to the [GTCA]. The statute means just what it says: statutory tolling provisions apply to claims under the [GTCA] in the same way, in the same manner, and to the same extent that those provisions would apply to claims not brought under the [GTCA]. If a tolling provision otherwise would apply to a particular claim, it applies notwithstanding that the claim is subject to the [GTCA]. Thus, under Foster, OCGA § 9-3-99 applies to the two-year statute of limitation for tort claims brought under the GTCA pursuant to OCGA § 50-21-27 (e). In Foster, however, the plaintiff timely provided ante litem notice to the State under OCGA § 50-21-26 (a), so the Supreme Court did not address whether the tolling provision applied to the time period for providing notice, and the State contends that OCGA § 50-21-27 (e) applies only to the statute of limitation and not to the ante litem notice time period.[14] Nevertheless, in those cases in which this Court has addressed this issue, we have determined that limitation period tolling statutes apply to the period for filing ante litem notice as well as for filing suit.[15] This is also true of other ante litem notice provisions applying to municipalities.[16] Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s denial of the State’s motion to dismiss.Judgment affirmed. Dillard, C. J., and Mercier, J., concur.