While the groups pushed back on some coverage as "designed to generate clicks by sensationalizing issues," they acknowledged the problems are real and increasingly visible to residents, business owners and tourists.
Savannah Area Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Bert Brantley said the impact is felt daily across the business community.
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City officials have increasingly turned to enforcement measures.
In June 2025, WJCL reported on the city’s proposed urban camping ordinance, which city officials said would make it unlawful to camp, store personal property or get in the way of traffic.
Savannah passed an urban camping ordinance prohibiting camping, storing personal property in public spaces and obstructing sidewalks or traffic.
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Johnson described the ordinance as "another tool in the toolbox," adding that some individuals "regularly engaged in criminal activity" require a different response.
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Since the law took effect, the city says enforcement has led to 179 citations and 15 arrests.
Officials also report that 135 individuals have engaged with service providers, with roughly 30% entering shelters after contact with authorities.
Encampments in the historic district have been reduced by about half since 2023, according to figures provided by the city and partner organizations.
Those figures were not independently verified by Fox News Digital.
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A February 2026 News4Jax report on a DEA-led initiative, "Operation Fentanyl Free America," highlighted shifting trafficking patterns in Southeast Georgia, including methamphetamine being transported in liquid form before conversion.
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DEA Assistant Special Agent in Charge Drew Mayer said crystal meth remains "the most prevalent drug" in the region by volume.
"Drug smugglers are tough.
They’re not going without a fight.
We’ve seen an increase in methods to hide and disguise the loads of drugs with cover loads, transporting some of the drugs in a liquid form and other creative manners to avoid detention," Mayer told News4Jax.
While fentanyl-related mass overdoses have declined, the drug remains a concern, with officials noting the emergence of "purple fentanyl" in Savannah, Brunswick and along the Georgia-Florida corridor.
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Authorities say trafficking continues through the Ports of Savannah and Brunswick, with drugs moving through Atlanta and down the I-95 corridor into Southeast Georgia and Florida.
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