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White County names Amie Veater as new elections supervisor

White County Elections Supervisor Amie Veater (WRWH.com)

White County has named Amie Veater as the county’s new elections supervisor. The county promoted Veater from her job as chief registrar, for which she was recently hired.

Before joining the White County Elections Office, Veater worked as an administrative technician and deputy registrar in Forsyth County.

In a press release, White County Manager Billy Pittard said he was excited to welcome her to her new role.

“Amie came into the department during a time in which there was a vacancy in the supervisor’s role; it became apparent in a short period of time that she had the knowledge, skills, and abilities to lead this department,” Pittard said.

Veater succeeds former Elections Supervisor Jody Davis, who left in November after 15 months on the job. Pittard did not disclose details of Davis’ departure, saying only that it was a “personnel matter.”

The county manager thanked the staff who kept the elections office running during the transition, particularly Derek LaPerrier, who served as interim supervisor.

As elections supervisor, Veater will be responsible for administering and supervising the conduct of elections, primaries, and the registration of electors for the county. She will report directly to the county manager.

“Myself and the elections staff are dedicated to ensuring the continued integrity of the democratic process in White County. Our commitment is unwavering, and I look forward to fostering excellence and a community-oriented approach to elections,” Veater said.

She takes over the job effective immediately.

Free tax help available in Clarkesville

Tax return help

Tax season is just around the corner. If you need help filing, the Habersham County Extension Office may be able to help. The office offers free tax preparation services to eligible seniors and limited-income families.

The program is funded through the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program. VITA provides IRS-certified preparers who can prepare federal and state tax returns free of charge.

The process involves two appointments. First, clients meet with the tax preparer and give them the documentation and information needed to prepare the tax return. About a week later, the taxpayer returns for the second appointment during which the return will be reviewed, signed, and filed.

Appointments will begin February 1. The extension office will begin scheduling appointments on January 2, 2024.

To schedule an appointment, call (706) 677-6230 or email [email protected].

There are limits to the types of returns that can be prepared through VITA. Be sure to call ahead of time to find out if you’re eligible.

Tallulah Falls School set to join GIAA beginning in 2024-25

Tallulah Falls School has decided to leave the Georgia High School Association (GHSA) for the Georgia Independent Athletic Association (GIAA) beginning in the 2024-25 school year. This will place TFS in the 2024-26 reclassification cycle for GIAA.

“TFS has long been a member of the GHSA and has appreciated the association throughout our tenure, yet strongly feels the growing GIAA will best suit the needs of its student-athletes, coaches, and community,” says President and Head of School Larry A. Peevy.

GIAA (giaasports.org) provides a structure that aligns better with private education, allowing independent schools a more inclusive voice at the table and more input in enhancing the combined athletic and academic experience. While still providing competitive opportunities, both in simple team participation and for those who desire next-level options, GIAA provides a stronger allowance for attracting students locally and from around the globe.”

“Over and over, with the help of Athletic Director Scott Neal, we examined the pros and cons of both associations, sought continual input from our coaching staff, and discussed with other independent schools their reasons for staying in GHSA or for joining GIAA; we concluded that the GIAA would enrich the overall TFS student-athlete experience and more closely align with our mission,” states Peevy.

Tallulah Falls is a day and boarding school in northern Habersham County. The school attracts a large number of international students.

William Alvin “Al” Atkins

William Alvin “Al” Atkins, age 68, of Flowery Branch, entered heaven Thursday, December 14, 2023, at the Northeast Georgia Medical Center, Gainesville.

Al was born in Gainesville, GA, and attended Gainesville High School. Al was a devoted Papa who loved his family. He had a passion for woodworking and enjoyed being in his shop creating pieces for others. He loved spending time at the beach listening to the ocean while reading a book. Al bravely fought cancer for almost 7 years and defied all odds. He won the battle on December 14, 2023, and went home to be with Jesus. He was preceded in death by his parents, Clyde & Margie Smith Atkins.

Left to cherish sweet memories, wife, Patricia Atkins; daughter & son-in-law, Rachel (Gil) Cordle; granddaughter, Reagan Cordle; sisters, Gail Kelly & Cheryl Cagle; a number of nieces, nephews & other relatives also survive.

Services to celebrate Al’s life will be held at 3:00 p.m. Sunday, December 17, 2023, at 12Stone Church, 4256 Martin Road, Flowery Branch, with Rev. Frank Haynes officiating. Casual dress is requested.

In lieu of flowers, the family has asked to please make donations to the American Cancer Society Relay for Life, P.O. Box 2537 Gainesville, GA 30503.

You may sign the online guestbook or leave a condolence at www.wardsfh.com.
Ward’s Funeral Home & Cremation Services, Gainesville is honored to serve the family of William Alvin “Al” Atkins.

Maestro

“A work of art does not answer questions, it provokes them; and its essential meaning is in the tension between the contradictory answers.”

This quote from Leonard Bernstein opens Bradley Cooper’s biography of the inspired composer. Cooper’s treatment of Bernstein’s life is mesmerizing from a directing, writing, acting, and even a technical perspective. He succeeds in showcasing a man who was a virtuoso on stage composing music, and yet his personal life was riddled with contradictions.

As the movie opens, we’re introduced to a 70-year-old Bernstein taking part in an interview while playing the piano. It’s here that we get a keen sense of the makeup and the performance, becoming instrumental in fashioning the essence of the real Bernstein. Throughout the movie, Cooper is not merely doing an imitation of Bernstein from a physical point of view. He also tries to inhabit the soulfulness of a man who had such professional ambition while trying to reconcile with his personal demons.

We’re then transported to black-and-white in 1943 where Bernstein makes his debut as a composer with the Philharmonic orchestra. He receives high praise for his work, but an even bigger revelation awaits him when he encounters Felicia Montealegre (Carey Mulligan). The two of them fall in love, get married, and have three children. In the 1950s, the movie switches to color, and Bernstein’s career is skyrocketing. It is in this timeframe he gets the opportunity to compose operas and musicals, including “West Side Story,” with an up-and-coming lyricist named Stephen Sondheim.

However, in conventional biographical fashion, Bernstein starts to slip when he begins a series of extramarital affairs. He believes that Felicia is dominating him with an iron fist. Even his own daughter Jamie (Maya Hawke) begins to have suspicions about her parents’ potentially floundering marriage.

Cooper is front and center with his performance, but equally powerful is Mulligan’s Felicia. She occupies the character with an outstanding combination of a woman who deeply loves Bernstein and wants to hold on to her marriage, but she’s convinced that he has no love in his heart for her and is worried he is embracing his own self-destruction. Mulligan deserves just as much consideration as Cooper. I’ll consider it a cardinal sin not to see them as one of the five Oscar nominations for Best Actor and Actress, respectively.

Even with heavyweights like Martin Scorsese and Steven Spielberg serving as producers, Cooper wonderfully and beautifully recreates a series of music eras and the life of one man who wanted to transform music into something that resonates not only with the audiences who come and listen but also to the players and ultimately the man making the music. There’s a sequence in which Bernstein conducts Mahler’s Resurrection Symphony and during that sequence, I was totally hypnotized because I didn’t see Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein. I saw Leonard Bernstein as Leonard Bernstein. The amount of energy, intensity, and passion during that sequence is one that will leave you breathless.

This is Cooper’s second directorial effort after his remake of “A Star is Born.” It’s not quite in the same league as that film, but when it comes to his directorial styles and choices, Cooper is quickly climbing the ladder in being an actor like Clint Eastwood or Ben Affleck, who has an exceptional eye for telling stories with a flair, an engrossment and attention to detail that shines. I look forward to seeing his next effort.

The movie has been in a limited theatrical release since November but will be coming to Netflix on December 20th.

Grade: A-

(Rated R for some language and drug use.)

Congress sends massive defense bill to Biden

U.S. Army Soldiers assigned to the 4th Infantry Division walk onto a land navigation course in pursuit of the Expert Infantryman, Soldier or Field Medical Badge on Fort Carson, Colorado, Dec. 4, 2023. Land navigation prepares Ivy Soldiers for navigating unfamiliar territory in a combat situation. (Photo Courtesy of U.S. Army)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — The massive annual defense policy package cleared Congress ahead of the holiday recess, despite protests about attaching a foreign surveillance extension and criticism that the bill did not block a Pentagon abortion policy.

U.S. House lawmakers approved the package on Thursday 310-118, under a suspension of the chamber’s rules, meaning a two-thirds majority was required.

A bloc of the most far-right representatives voted against the legislation, as did members of the House’s most progressive wing.

If signed into law, which is expected, the roughly $884 billion legislation would authorize a 5.2% pay raise for troops, approve a nuclear submarine program for the Indo-Pacific region and carry the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, also known as FISA, until mid-April.

The National Defense Authorization Act, or NDAA, for fiscal year 2024 authorizes the dollar amounts that will be dedicated to continuing military and nuclear operations but does not directly provide the funds. Congress has yet to pass its annual funding bills.

Direct funding for Ukraine’s war effort is also knotted up in congressional infighting over immigration policy. The NDAA would direct $300 million to Ukraine in security assistance as well as support programs for Ukrainian troops suffering post-traumatic stress disorders and brain injuries.

House Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana praised the sweeping bill, saying it “will strengthen our national security against adversaries like China and Russia, and support our servicemembers by providing them with the tools necessary to continue to be the most lethal and effective fighting force in the world.”

In a nod to far-right priorities in the bill, including paring down the Pentagon’s diversity and inclusion initiatives, Johnson said, “Importantly, this legislation returns the Department of Defense’s focus back to the business of defending our nation and away from social experiments that hurt our military’s recruitment, morale, and readiness.”

Bipartisan Senate passage

The U.S. Senate passed the legislation in a bipartisan 87-13 vote Wednesday night.

“I am pleased that the Senate has come together to once again pass a strong, bipartisan defense bill. This is a dangerous moment in the world, and the NDAA makes critical progress toward meeting the threats we face,” Sen. Jack Reed, a Rhode Island Democrat who chairs the Senate Committee on Armed Services, said in a statement late Wednesday.

Sen. Roger Wicker, the committee’s ranking member, said the bill  “should signal to China, Russia, and others that we will not accept a world where America does not have the best fighting force.”

“While I would have preferred to send the President a substantially larger proposed investment in our industrial base, he now should approve the monumental investments Congress intends to make in our servicemembers, warships, submarines, aircraft, and technology,” the Mississippi Republican said in a statement after the vote.

The vote followed a failed attempt by GOP Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky to block a controversial decision to use the defense package as a vehicle to temporarily extend FISA, which would have expired Dec. 31.

Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle oppose the surveillance law’s ability to scoop up communications by U.S. citizens while spying on foreign targets.

‘Best shipbuilders in the world’

Several senators praised the bill for economic activity that will be brought to their states.

Sen. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania said $300 million was authorized for his state’s defense-related workforce and activities.

“Pennsylvania’s military installations and defense industry continue to play a key role in supporting allies like Taiwan, Ukraine, and Israel against attacks on democracy abroad,” Fetterman, a Democrat, said in a statement Thursday morning.

Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia also issued a morning statement lauding the legislation’s support of Virginia’s defense and shipbuilding industries.

“The legislation also bolsters our alliances, as it includes my bipartisan bill to prevent any U.S. President from withdrawing from NATO, as well as provisions I secured to support the Australia-U.K-U.S. (AUKUS) agreement.

“Our NATO and AUKUS alliances are critical to our national security and economic growth in Hampton Roads, which is home to the only operational NATO command in the U.S. and the best shipbuilders in the world,” the Virginia Democrat said, referring to an area in Virginia with a large military presence, including Langley Air Force Base and the Norfolk Naval Shipyard.

Senate Republican Whip John Thune of South Dakota on the floor Tuesday applauded the bill’s funding authorization for the B-21 bomber program, which will be located in his state at Ellsworth Air Force Base.

Senators who opposed the bill included New Jersey Democrat Cory Booker, Indiana Republican Mike Braun, Missouri Republican Josh Hawley, Utah Republican Mike Lee, Wyoming Republican Cynthia Lummis, Massachusetts Democrats Ed Markey and Elizabeth Warren, Oregon Democrats Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden, Kentucky’s Rand Paul, Vermont independent Bernie Sanders, Ohio Republican J.D. Vance and Vermont Democrat Peter Welch.

Hawley vehemently opposed the legislation after his amendment to compensate those exposed to residual radioactive waste from the Manhattan Project was removed from the final bill.

Hawley’s original amendment, which passed the Senate in July to be attached to the NDAA, would have opened the compensation program for St. Louis, Missouri residents and to those living in Colorado, Idaho, Guam, Montana and New Mexico, as well as expanded coverage areas in Arizona, Nevada and Utah.

Far-right opposition

While the bill followed a relatively smooth path among senators, the defense policy legislation hit opposition in the GOP-led House, where far-right lawmakers maintain their priorities were stripped from the compromise legislation.

“With this NDAA conference report, you almost feel like a parent who’s sent a child off to summer camp and they’ve come back a monster,” GOP Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida said on the floor Thursday morning.

Gaetz was among the no votes.

House Freedom Caucus members accused the bill’s negotiators of secretive, non-inclusive negotiations during which their amendments to block a Department of Defense abortion policy, ban certain transgender care for troops and completely eliminate any Pentagon diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, programs were nixed.

“The Swamp’s ‘compromise’ NDAA allows the DOD to use your tax dollars to fund abortion travel for servicemembers. As a proud pro-life conservative, I’ll be voting NO,” Rep. Andrew Clyde of Athens, Georgia posted Tuesday night on X after the Senate voted to advance the bill.

GOP Rep. Ralph Norman of South Carolina wrote on social media Wednesday that “The Backroom NDAA is a disaster for conservatives in so many ways.”

The Pentagon’s abortion policy gives time off and travel reimbursement for service members who seek abortions in states where it remains legal. The policy, instated after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade, fueled Alabama GOP Sen. Tommy Tuberville’s monthslong freeze on military promotions.

Clyde and Norman both opposed the NDAA Thursday morning, along with outgoing House Freedom Caucus Chair Rep. Scott Perry of Pennsylvania.

Policies on flags, DEI hiring remain

While some far-right House amendments are not in the final text, other conservative priorities remained, including a measure to prohibit, with some conditions negotiated by the Senate, the display of unapproved flags. Democrats protested the original language as a ban on LBGTQ+ flags.

Despite throwing out the amendment to eliminate all DEI programs and positions, negotiators landed on a hiring freeze and pay grade cap for employees on the initiatives.

The Senate receded during negotiations and also allowed a House-led amendment to remain that bans any funding for critical race theory at military service academies and during training.

Negotiators also kept a familiar conservative priority of codifying the rights of parents to review school curricula. The guarantee, usually already available to school parents, will now be codified in the NDAA for parents of schoolchildren enrolled in Department of Defense Education Activity programs.

The legislation heads to President Joe Biden’s desk. The administration had called on Congress for the bill’s “swift passage.”

Congress has passed the NDAA for 63 consecutive years. The annual defense policy package typically draws bipartisan support.

Crumpton named Hall County Media Specialist of the Year

Hall County Media Specialist of the Year Kristi Crumpton (Hall County Schools)

The Hall County School District named Kristi Crumpton Media Specialist of the Year. Crumpton works at Wauka Mountain Multiple Intelligences Academy and also serves as the district’s Media Services Coordinator.

“I am so proud of Kristi and the work she has done at our school. This is a well-deserved recognition. She pushes technology integration and supports literacy instruction for all kids, and we are so fortunate to call her one of our own,” said Wauka Mountain Principal Dean Devito.

“Media specialists provide key instructional support to teachers and students in a variety of different ways,” said Assistant Superintendent for Teaching and Learning Kevin Bales. “Ms. Crumpton, through her role as the Media Specialist at Wauka Mountain Elementary and as the district Media Services Coordinator, has certainly earned this recognition and we are grateful for her commitment to the students and teachers of Hall County.”

“I am truly honored to be chosen,” said Crumpton. “I absolutely love that my job as the media specialist at Wauka Mountain Academy and as the district media services coordinator allows me to work with students, staff and administrators to provide resources and experiences that challenge our students to be creative, critical thinkers and lifelong readers. Being a media specialist is hands down the best job in education!”

According to the school district, media specialists work to provide equitable access to a wide range of materials and information. They also promote transliteracy, instruct and collaborate with teachers and staff, and inspire students to become lifelong learners and readers.

Officials searching for people wanted for questioning after local fish hatchery damaged

Do you know these people? If so, contact Georgia DNR's Investigative Unit at 770-918-6408. (GA DNR Law Enforcement Division/Facebook)

The Georgia Department of Natural Resources is asking for the public’s help to identify multiple people in connection to criminal damage at the Burton Trout Hatchery. The hatchery is located off Highway 197 on Lake Burton, north of Clarkesville.

DNR’s Law Enforcement Division says the damage occurred on October 14.

Authorities said they would like to identify the individuals captured in surveillance images so they can question them. DNR released the surveillance photos on Thursday, along with a post on social media.

The Wildlife Resources Division of the Georgia DNR operates the hatchery, which raises trout to stock North Georgia streams. It is one of four trout hatcheries in the state, according to the DNR website.

Anyone with information regarding the identities or whereabouts of the individuals being sought is urged to call the DNR Investigative Unit at 770-918-6408.

Gainesville man charged with sexually assaulting 3 girls

Hall County Sheriff’s investigators have charged a 57-year-old Gainesville man with sexually assaulting three young girls. The alleged assaults occurred over a period of six years, according to officials.

Ricardo Paniagua faces felony charges of aggravated sodomy, aggravated child molestation, and child molestation in connection to the alleged assaults. He faces a single count for each charge on each victim for a total of nine (9) felony charges.

Investigators determined the assaults began in 2008 and continued until 2014. Each victim was under the age of 10 when she was first assaulted, the sheriff’s office says. Each girl suffered sexual assaults for approximately two years.

The crimes were first reported to the Hall County Sheriff’s Office on November 15, 2023. Paniagua and the victims are known to one another, officials say.

Deputies booked Paniagua into the Hall County Jail on Wednesday, December 13. He remains jailed with no bond.

Cleveland PD honors memory of Sgt. Kenny Thompson

Cleveland Police Chief Jeff Shoemaker comforts Sondra Thompson during a special presentation honoring her late husband, Kenny Thompson, at the Cleveland City Council meeting on December 11, 2023. (Dean Dyer/WRWH.com)

CLEVELAND, Ga. — The Cleveland Police Department has paid special recognition to the memory of one of their own.

During Monday’s City Council Meeting, Cleveland Police Chief Jeff Shoemaker presented a memory plaque to the family of Sgt. Kenny Thompson, who served for a short time as a patrol officer and Chaplain with the department.

In making the presentation, Chief Shoemaker said, “Kenny was just one of those guys that left his mark where he went.”

Thompson, who lived in Clarkesville, died on September 21, 2023, at the age of 56, following a battle with cancer. Chief Shoemaker said even in his sickness, he continued to serve and inspire.

Thompson had over 40 years of law enforcement service. His wife, Sondra, parents Donna and Ron, and brother Jason were on hand for the presentation.

Demorest opens new park pavilion

Demorest Mayor Jerry Harkness cuts the ribbon at the new pavilion with the assistance of his son Hunter (blue jacket) and Musselwhite's grandson Finn Durden (dark jacket). Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Demorest cut the ribbon on its latest capital improvement project. The new park pavilion at Demorest Springs Park took two years and nearly half a million dollars to complete. The facility includes a large open gathering space and public restrooms.

Approximately 50 people attended the ribbon-cutting on Wednesday evening, December 13.

Timeline

The pavilion, adjacent to the Demorest Police Department on Georgia Street, replaced an older structure the city used for storage. One year ago, Demorest tore down that old building, and in April, crews began site preparation for the pavilion.

This past July, the contractor began laying the block. They set the trusses in August and a brick mason finished laying 26,210 bricks at the end of November.

Those in attendance listen to City Manager Mark Musselwhite and Mayor Jerry Harkness as the explain the pavilion project. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Construction was completed on December 12 when the contractor installed handrails along the steps leading from the pavilion to the park.

Saving money

The city’s Park Committee began planning for the pavilion in March 2021. The original budget set by an engineer/contractor was estimated at just over $800,000, according to Demorest City Manager Mark Musselwhite.

In a bid to save money, the city took over the project last year. Musselwhite oversaw the project, and Utility Director Brian Popham served as project manager. They saved approximately $300,000 by having city employees do some of the work and sub-contracting certain phases of the project.

Currently, the pavilion and restroom have been expensed at $450,000, with just a few invoices remaining to be paid, says Musselwhite. He estimates the remaining cost will be paid by the end of this year.

Demorest used General Fund and SPLOST money to pay for the project. SPLOST covered $90,000 of it.

The new pavilion located on Georgia Street in Demorest. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Praise for employees

“Brian and I worked a heck of a job as a team,” Musselwhite says. He adds that the vendors and subcontractors were first quality, but, “better than that, the city employees who worked on this are better and their work quality is better. Brian leads an excellent crew!”

Musselwhite praises Popham and his crew for their diverse abilities.

“We are blessed to have Brian Popham and his skills and the skill sets (of his crew) being multi-taskers that work on other projects than (just) water and sewer.”

The pavilion, adorned with a cupola, is equipped with three bathroom facilities. The floor was prepped with a non-skid surface to prevent people from slipping and to allow for easier clean-up after events.

The facility is also equipped with multiple cameras inside the common area and outside, overlooking the park as a deterrent to vandalism at the facility and the park itself.

Phase II

The ceiling of the pavilion, including the cupola. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The pavilion will be available to the public for events on a first-come, first-serve basis. There is currently no charge to reserve the pavilion. According to Musselwhite, he and the city council will be working on that in 2024.

Wednesday night’s ribbon-cutting was the third such ceremony in Demorest in eight months. At the end of April, the city cut the ribbon on its new city hall, housed in the repurposed Historic Demorest Elementary School. In mid-September, the city opened its new Municipal Conference Center and Court in the school’s renovated auditorium.

During Wednesday’s ribbon-cutting, Musselwhite announced there will be a phase two of the project to further enhance amenities at Demorest Springs Park. Next year, the council and the park committee will discuss what to add. Nothing has been decided at this time.

Seeking nominations for 2024 Habersham Central Lifetime Achievement Award

USAF Lt. Col. Preston McConnell is presented with the Habersham Central Lifetime Achievement Award in May 2023. The award recognizes high school alumni who have made significant contributions in their communities and professions. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The Habersham County School System is accepting nominations for the 2024 Habersham Central Lifetime Achievement Award.

Nominees must have received a diploma from Habersham Central High School between 1970 and 1999.

The award will recognize an individual who has had a significant impact professionally at the local, state, and/or national levels while positively impacting others.

The recipient will be honored during the Class of 2024 graduation ceremony. A photo and professional biography of the recipient will be displayed at Habersham Central.

Nomination forms are available online at https://tinyurl.com/2u276ru2 or by contacting Dr. Martha Cantrell at 706-754-2110, ext 128. You may also request a nomination form by emailing [email protected].

The deadline for nominations is February 15.

Previous Habersham Central Lifetime Achievement Award recipients are: