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Study: Ports back 7K jobs in Liberty
Study: Ports back 7K jobs in Liberty
According to the latest study by the Selig Center for Economic Growth at UGA’s Terry College of Business, Georgia ports help sustain 12 percent of total state employment, based on Fiscal Year 2023 figures. Photo provided by the Georgia Ports Authority

SAVANNAH — Port activity in Georgia now supports 85,454 jobs in Coastal Georgia, and more than 600,000 full- and part-time jobs across the Peach State, according to an economic impact study by the University of Georgia’s Terry College of Business. The statewide number is up 48,000 jobs or 8.6% compared to Fiscal Year 2021, the period covered by the previous study.

“This study confirms that our ports are invaluable economic drivers for the entire state,” said Governor Brian Kemp. “Across industries and communities in every corner of Georgia, the Ports of Savannah and Brunswick – as well as our entire ports ecosystem – both directly and indirectly support tens of thousands of jobs and create opportunity all across the state while connecting manufacturers with markets all around the world.”

Nearly 7,000 jobs in Liberty County – 6,991 – rely on the ports, according to the study. There are 136 jobs in Long County that rely on the ports.

Chatham County has the most jobs tied to the ports – 55,753 – and Liberty is second in the number of jobs coming from the ports in a 10-county region. Glynn County has 6,278 jobs, Effingham has 5,702 and Bulloch has 5,632.

The region is home to a diverse economy spanning agriculture, advanced manufacturing, tourism and hospitality, port operations and logistics. The Port of Savannah is one of the nation’s busiest gateways for containerized trade, moving more than 5.5 million twenty-foot equivalent container units in 2024. The Port of Brunswick is the nation’s busiest port for autos and heavy equipment, handling nearly 902,000 units of autos and heavy equipment last year.

Port-supported employment across Coastal Georgia has increased by 8 percent or 6,238 jobs since the Fiscal Year 2021 study.

Georgia ports now help sustain 12% of total state employment, according to data announced by Georgia Ports Authority President and CEO Griff Lynch at the 2025 Savannah State of the Port event Feb. 25.

“Georgia’s deepwater ports support 609,197 full- and part-time jobs,” said Jeff Humphreys, director of the Selig Center for Economic Growth, who conducted the study. “This means that almost one job out of every eight is in some way dependent on the ports.”

Other statewide impacts include:

• $171 billion in sales for Georgia businesses (12% of state total)

• $72 billion in goods produced or services provided by port-supported industry each year (9 percent of total state GDP)

• $40 billion in income earned by Georgians annually (6% of Georgia’s total personal income) The portion of statewide sales and state gross domestic product related to port trade have both grown by 22% compared to FY2021. Personal income earned by Georgians through port-supported business is up by 21 percent over the same period.

“These economic impacts demonstrate that continued emphasis on imports and exports through Georgia’s deepwater ports translates into jobs, higher incomes, greater production of goods and services, and revenue collections for government,” Humphreys reported. “Port operations help to preserve and expand Georgia’s manufacturing base, support Georgia’s agricultural economy, the forestry and mining industries, and the state’s logistics, distribution, and warehousing cluster.”

Internal GPA data show the top three export commodity groups for the study period were food, forest products and automotive cargo. The top imports were machinery, retail goods and furniture.

“As a national gateway for American farm and factory exports, Georgia’s ports link every major ocean carrier calling the U.S. East Coast with superior connections to road and rail,” Lynch said. “Businesses are drawn to GPA’s market by its growing workforce and logistical advantages. These factors, combined with Georgia Ports’ customer- focused service, contribute to job growth across the Peach State.”

Trade through Georgia’s ports also helps to support government services, yielding $10 billion in federal taxes, $2.8 billion in state taxes, and $2.5 billion in local taxes annually.

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UPDATE: Divers locate missing vehicle, find a hoist point
Vehicle and its four-man crew have been missing since Tuesday
Lithuania search-Mass
U.S. Ambassador to Lithuania Kara McDonald, U.S. Army Maj. Gen. Curtis Taylor, commanding general 1st Armored Division, and Command Sgt. Maj. James Light, 1st Armored Division, pause for a moment of prayer during a special church service at the Vilnius cathedral in Lithuania for the U.S. soldiers who went missing at a military training site earlier this week.

U.S. Navy divers have attached a line to two of the hoist points on an M88A2 Hercules recovery vehicle that has been missing in Lithuania since Tuesday.

With a second line shackled, engineers can begin to anchor the Hercules and keep it from sinking further into the bog. The vehicle’s four-man crew are all soldiers in the 1st Brigade of the 3rd Infantry Division. The missing soldiers are on a nine-month deployment to eastern Europe.

Teams on site can begin winching operations to try to pull the vehicle out of the mud as additional hoist points are located and shackled. Officials from the U.S. Army’s Europe and Africa Command expect that process to take some time, as the amount of pressure and suction from the mud will take significant power to overcome.

A Mass was held Sunday morning in Lithuania at the Vilnius Cathedral Basilica for the four missing soldiers and the rescue and recovery teams.

Equipment, resources, and personnel have been flowing to the recovery site as operations are ongoing to find the four soldiers missing since the morning of March 25. The M88A2 Hercules they were operating has continued to sink into the bog, and was assessed to be around four meters below the water’s surface and encased in about two meters of mud.

Digging and pumping operations are continuing. A Rapidly Available Interface for Trans-loading (RAIL) system is expected to arrive this afternoon to enable the use of heavier equipment around the site.

The RAIL system is an expeditionary platform used to provide a rapidly constructed and scalable capability platform. Traditionally used to facilitate offloading and onloading railroad networks in challenging terrain, engineers requested the system to help stabilize the ground around the recovery site. Soldiers assigned to the U.S. Army 21st Theater Sustainment Command (TSC) are transporting the system from Kaiserslautern, Germany.

“It is highly complex trying to get to the vehicle itself with the terrain out here and where the M88 is sitting in a bog swamp-like area, below the waterline. So not only are we dealing with the terrain, a lot of mud that is over top of the vehicle, but also the fact that it's 70 tons that we're trying to recover out of a swamp or bog,” said Brig. Gen. John Lloyd, commander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers North Atlantic Division. “Last night, divers were in the water trying to get to the vehicle. We were unable to because of the amount of mud. We continue to work on the excavation and pumping all the water out of the bog and also using excavation equipment to try to get to the vehicle.”

U.S. Navy divers from Commander, Task Force 68 arrived on site Saturday, and made their initial dive in the early evening. They have continued diving operations as the recovery mission continues.

Rescue workers also attempted to locate the Hercules on sonar, and subject matter experts determined that a special device called a “subsurface profiler” was needed. Within one hour, the Lithuanian government had located a company that owned one, and sent the operator and equipment to the Vilnius airport to link up with a UH-60 Blackhawk from 1st Armored Division’s Combat Aviation Brigade for transport to the recovery site. Six hours after identifying the need, the device was in the water.

As hundreds of soldiers and other rescue workers continue to arrive, the 21st TSC is resourcing more warming tents, high power generators, and other life support to provide recovery space for the soldiers, engineers, and other rescue personnel.

“We cannot thank our Allies enough for everything they've done for us to help find our soldiers. They see our soldiers as their own soldiers, and we are absolutely in this together. They have been extremely supportive of our families as well, knowing that they're going through a tough time,” said Col. Jim Armstrong commander of 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division.

The 3rd ID is continuing to keep families of the soldiers informed on the status of recovery efforts.

 

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