What’s happening in Glynn County?
Don’t let overdevelopment spoil Jekyll Island
Jekyll Island is the crown jewel of Georgia’s coast—a state park and the most accessible of our protected barrier islands. Unfortunately, the Jekyll Island Authority (JIA) is pushing through two major hotel projects with no public engagement or transparency—all while ignoring their own policies put in place to manage development on the island.
Sign the petition urging state leaders to reverse these bad decisions and rein in overdevelopment before Jekyll Island is spoiled for Georgians forever.
Glynn County’s Updated Zoning Ordinance
Zoning ordinances determine what can be built where and how land can be used. It may not always sound that exciting, but zoning governs many aspects our daily life of the community we call home.
The process stretched on for eight long years—over the last few months, theordinance draft underwent several revisions that have made it even worse for Glynn County.
Glynn Commissioners have finally passed the county zoning ordinance—without addressing dangerous rollbacks to sea turtle protections, a haphazard data center ordinance, and other regulations that fail to protect our landscapes and communities. Our take on the new ordinance coming soon.
East Beach Slough Fill Project
Glynn County plans to fill tide sloughs on Saint Simon’s Island’s East Beach, a slice of water above the high tide line at the Massengale Park beach entrance. These sloughs began naturally forming in 2022 from strong storms reshaping the shore. Now, the county is seeking to partially fill the slough, citing possible water contamination, drowning risk, and access for emergency vehicles. Their proposed project outlines dredging almost a foot of sand from below the low tide line to fill the southern portion of the slough.
We opposed this project, as filling the tidal slough could negatively impact overall beach health and endanger wildlife habitat while misusing taxpayer funds on a faulty project. A week before the project was due to be voted on by DNR’s Shore Protection Committee, the US Army Corps of Engineers identified jurisdictional “vegetated wetlands” in the project area. This changes the permitting process and took the project back to the drawing board. In April 2026, the County officially abandoned its plans to fill the slough and have committed to a boardwalk instead.
Chemical Exposure Study: Investigating Brunswick’s Toxic Legacy
Glynn County is home to four Superfund sites. Communities directly adjacent to these sites, and wider-spread around the Brunswick area, have been exposed to toxins for decades with consequences largely unknown—until now.
In 2023, scientists at Emory University School of Medicine partnered with Brunswick organizations to conduct a chemical exposure study. They tested the blood of 100 Glynn County residents to determine if local exposures to contaminants are higher than the general US population. The results found that local residents had higher than average levels of highly chlorinated PCBs, which are known contaminants in Brunswick’s rivers, fish, and marshes. A substantial number of participants have PCB levels above the 95th percentile. Their findings have been peer-reviewed and were published in April 2025.
This is a major public health and environmental justice issue that has disproportionately impacted our lower-income, Black neighborhoods in Brunswick. Emory and local partners are committed to continuing this study to substantiate these results, educating residents and healthcare providers, and working with community members to address and reverse this toxic legacy.
Local Partners & Community Organizations to Know
Glynn County in the News
Sea turtles and lighting ordinances • Toxics and superfund sites
The Current | 5/26/26
The Brunswick News | 4/9/26
The Brunswick News | 11/18/25
The Brunswick News | 11/12/25
The Brunswick News | 10/25/25
The Brunswick News | 10/22/25
The Brunswick News | 10/18/25
The Brunswick News | 9/19/25
The Brunswick News | 9/16/25
The Brunswick News | 8/29/25
The Current | 8/19/25
The Current | 8/15/25
The Current | 5/27/25
Atlantic Journal-Constitution | 5/15/25
The Brunswick News | 4/8/25
The Brunswick News | 4/4/25
The Brunswick News | 3/18/25
The Current | 3/11/25
The Current | 2/27/25
The Current | 2/25/25
SSLT Press Release | 2/22/25
The Brunswick News | 2/12/25
GA Ports Authority | 2/12/25
The Brunswick News | 1/16/25
The Brunswick News | 1/3/25
The Current | 12/13/24
The Current | 10/1/24
Associated Press | 10/1/24
The Current | 9/28/24
The Brunswick News | 9/4/24
The Brunswick News | 9/2/24
The Brunswick News | 8/19/24
The Brunswick News | 8/10/24
The Brunswick News | 8/2/24
The Brunswick News | 7/31/24
The Brunswick News | 7/29/24
The Brunswick News | 7/20/24
The Brunswick News | 7/19/24
The Brunswick News | 7/10/24
The Brunswick News | 7/5/24
The Brunswick News | 6/22/24
The Brunswick News | 5/23/24
The Brunswick News | 5/10/24
The Brunswick News | 1/25/24
Brunswick News | 1/17/24
News Wire (Press Release)| 1/15/24
Brunswick News | 1/10/24
Brunswick News | 1/9/24
“Glynn County’s people and environment have a voice and have been speaking up for years—it’s time our decision-makers listen.”
Contact Kat Montgomery for more information about our work in Glynn County.




























































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