ATLANTA - Georgia began its shelter-in-place order on Friday and had been under a Public Health State of Emergency back in mid-March. Both run until April 13.
One of the things those orders prohibit is the price gouging of necessary goods and services. Businesses are not allowed to mark up certain goods or services at a higher price than before the declarations.
The Georgia Department of Law’s Consumer Protection Division writes:
“Price increases on goods or services are permitted only if they accurately reflect an increase in the cost of new stock or the cost to transport it, plus the retailer's average markup percentage applied during the ten days immediately prior to the declaration of a state of emergency.”
To report potential price gouging in the state of Georgia, go to http://consumer.ga.gov/form/price-gouging/step1/price-gouging-form
OTHER RESOURCES:
- Shelter-in-place order for Georgia until April 13
- Who is considered an 'essential worker' during the coronavirus pandemic?
- If you violate Georgia's shelter-in-place order, then you are breaking the law
- Reporting potential price gouging in the state of Georgia
- Reporting business, organization violating statewide shelter-in-place order
- How to get unemployment benefits during the COVID-19 pandemic
- Fixing the PIN on the Georgia Department of Labor website to access unemployment claims