Home Blog Page 1553

House committee advances bills aimed at curbing Georgia’s maternal deaths

ATLANTA (GA Recorder) — A pair of proposals designed to help curb maternal deaths in Georgia easily cleared a House panel Tuesday.

One popular measure would extend Medicaid coverage to one year after a woman’s pregnancy ends, up from six months of coverage. The other proposal, Senate Bill 496, would require autopsies when the woman’s cause of death is unclear, which may upset some grieving families.

The requirement would apply to women who have been pregnant in the last year. An autopsy would not be done when the cause of death is known or if the woman died in a car accident.

Sen. Dean Burke, a Bainbridge Republican and physician who is sponsoring both bills, said he hopes the public will embrace the mandatory autopsies when they learn the importance of identifying the cause of death in more cases.

“I think once we educate the public on the reason for this, from the standpoint of trying to save lives, that that won’t be a significant problem,” Burke said. “But I think it is realistic that it will come up and I think it will require some education and make sure people understand the why.”

Georgia routinely falls toward the bottom on national maternal mortality rankings.

Already, health care professionals must report the death of a woman when she dies within a year of the end of her pregnancy. Those deaths are then painstakingly reviewed by the Maternal Mortality Review Committee, which is expected to release a new report this year.

Georgia routinely falls toward the bottom on national maternal mortality rankings.

There were nearly 69 pregnancy-associated deaths per 100,000 live births from 2015 to 2017, according to the state Department of Public Health. And Black women are also 2.3 times more likely to die from pregnancy-related causes than white women in Georgia.

Burke estimated about 50 autopsies would likely be done a year at a cost of about $50,000 total. He said he is pushing to fund the initiative in next year’s $30.2 billion budget, which is pending in the Senate. The autopsy would be done at a regional perinatal center.

“That’s just my hope, that we’ll get this funded,” Burke said.

Both bills will go on now to the Rules Committee. The session is set to wrap up on April 4.

Ketanji Brown Jackson defends her record under grilling from U.S. Senate Republicans

Ketanji Brown Jackson defended her record in a handful of tense exchanges with Republican members, clearly disagreeing with accusations from Texas Sen. Ted Cruz that she was too lenient in the child pornography sentencing decisions. (Senate Judiciary screenshot)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) – Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday sharpened their criticisms of U.S. Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson, probing her work as a public defender on behalf of terrorism suspects, the judicial sentences she has handed down for child pornography offenses and her views of critical race theory.

Jackson defended her record in a handful of tense exchanges with Republican members, clearly disagreeing with accusations from Texas Sen. Ted Cruz that she was too lenient in the child pornography sentencing decisions.

Democrats on the evenly split panel said Jackson’s record as a federal trial judge and appeals judge on the D.C. Circuit Court showed she was an impartial jurist.

All but two of the 22 senators on the committee had 30 minutes to question Jackson during a lengthy session that began at 9 a.m. and appeared ready to stretch into the night. Committee Chairman Dick Durbin announced that two senators, Democrat Jon Ossoff of Georgia and Republican Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee, would take their turns on Wednesday.

The hearing opened with questions from Durbin, D-Ill., that gave Jackson an opportunity to preempt several lines of attack expected from Republican senators. Nearly all are expected to vote on the floor against her nomination.

Jackson described to Durbin her process for removing her own biases as a judge and articulated a vision of a constrained federal judiciary, a day after Republican senators complained that Jackson had not disclosed her judicial philosophy and said they feared she would be an activist justice. She repeated throughout the day her process and that she wanted to “stay in my lane” as a judge, not advocate for policy positions.

“I am not importing my personal views or policy preferences,” she said. “The entire exercise is about trying to understand what those who created this policy or this law intended.”

She also defended her sentencing record for people convicted of possessing child pornography after some Republicans, including Blackburn and Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri, argued on Monday she was too lenient.

Victims’ statements in such cases were powerful, Jackson said, and she in every case considered the views of the children affected. She did not subscribe to the idea that those convicted of possession — and not production — were only “lookers,” she said.

“I say to them that there is only a market for this kind of material because there are lookers, that you are contributing to child sex abuse,” she said. “And then I impose a significant sentence.”

She still has nightmares, she said, about a victim who developed agoraphobia — a fear of leaving the home — because the prospect that strangers had seen images of her sexual abuse was overwhelming.

Democrats on the panel touted endorsements Jackson had won from leading police groups to rebut the accusation Jackson is not tough enough on criminals.

Jackson, who grew up in Miami and would be the first person from Florida to sit on the court, said law enforcement had long been part of her family life. She had two uncles who were police officers, who, she remembered, would come to family gatherings straight after a shift and place their guns atop tall furniture to keep out of reach of children.

She also has a younger brother who worked as a police officer in Baltimore, she said.

GOP attack

South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, a former defense attorney in the U.S. Air Force, said he would not hold against Jackson her work as a public defender on behalf of terrorism suspects held at a U.S. Naval Base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. Graham said he understood that public defenders don’t choose their clients and that defense attorneys are an important part of the legal system.

But Graham, who voted to confirm Jackson for her current role as a judge on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, did take issue with arguments Jackson raised as a public defender, including that the United States committed war crimes against Guantánamo Bay detainees, an apparent reference to a case when Jackson represented a detainee tortured by military handlers at the detention facility.

Jackson said she was preserving legal arguments on behalf of her clients.

Republican Sen. John Cornyn of Texas also objected to Jackson’s use of the term war criminal in cases that named then-President George W. Bush and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld in their official capacities.

Graham criticized a legal brief Jackson filed after joining a private practice that argued so-called enemy combatants at Guantánamo Bay should be tried or freed, not held indefinitely.

 

“I hope that they all die in jail if they’re going to go back and kill Americans,” he said. “It won’t bother me one bit if 39 of them die in prison. That’s a better outcome than letting them go.”

Jackson said she was representing her clients’ views, not her own.

Graham also spent much of his 30 minutes complaining about Democratic senators’ treatment of past Supreme Court nominees picked by Republican presidents.

Graham probed Jackson about her religious beliefs and to place on a scale of 1-10 her level of faith. When Jackson objected to providing details about her beliefs, Graham said he asked because Democrats raised the issue about Justice Amy Coney Barrett, who was nominated by President Donald Trump, during her confirmation hearings.

“There’s two standards here,” Graham said.

Cruz, who overlapped with Jackson for two years at Harvard Law School, accused Jackson of endorsing the teaching of critical race theory. It is a legal theory, taught in higher education and much maligned by conservatives, that argues race is a prevailing factor in all parts of American life.

Cruz brought and displayed blown-up posters showing pages in books taught at Georgetown Day School, a private school in Washington, D.C., where Jackson sits on the board.

Cruz argued that such books taught that “babies are racist” and asked if Jackson endorsed that view.

“Senator,” Jackson began to respond before pausing for more than six seconds. “I do not believe that any child should be made to feel as though they are racist or though they are not valued or though they are less than, that they are victims, that they are oppressors. I don’t believe in any of that.”

The board does not oversee curriculum at the school, Jackson said.

‘Opportunity for role models’

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., noted Jackson would be the fourth woman on the nine-justice Supreme Court, the closest to gender parity the court had reached.

Jackson, who would be the first Black woman on the court, said that kind of milestone was important to young people who may not see people of their backgrounds reflected in elite institutions like the Supreme Court.

“One of the things that having diverse members of the court does is it provides for the opportunity for role models,” Jackson told Feinstein. “Having meaningful numbers of women and people of color, I think matters.”

Jackson also told Feinstein that she considered Supreme Court decisions upholding the right to abortion “settled.”

Clarkesville Dunkin’ and Baskin Robbins to open in June

Construction crews are hard at work, transforming the Yakimono Express into Clarkesville's first Dunkin' Donuts and Baskin Robbins. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

Four months after the City of Clarkesville announced that plans were in the works for bringing a Dunkin’ Donuts and Baskin Robbins to the city, construction has begun on the chain.

The city has cleared the renovations the builder will need to do to set up shop, as well as plans for signage.

Located in the old Yakimono Express, renovations will include interior and exterior updates, and new signs for the storefront. Clarkesville Planning and Zoning Director Caleb Gaines tells Now Habersham that the business may have recently received health department approval, too.

According to Clarkesville Dunkin’ owner James Laskaris, construction is moving along and the storefront should open early-to-mid June.

In Cornelia, after a brief hiatus in construction, Cornelia Community Development Director Jessie Owensby says that construction on their Dunkin’ should resume April 1.

Drivers charged in related wrecks on GA 365 in Alto

This pickup collided with another truck Monday afternoon on GA 365 near the Duncan Bridge Road intersection. At least one person was injured. (photo by Red Bird Media)

The Georgia State Patrol has cited two drivers in connection with related collisions that happened on GA 365 Monday in Alto.

According to the GSP report, troopers cited Stanley Summers, age 70, of Dahlonega, with failure to yield. 21-year-old Layna Parson of Homer was charged with making an improper lane change.

Troopers say Summers was southbound on GA 365 in a black Dodge Ram pickup truck when he attempted to turn left onto LC Turner Road. The front of the Dodge struck the driver side of a red Ford Ranger driven by Don Chastain, 66, of Toccoa. The impact caused the Ford to rotate counterclockwise off the right shoulder of the highway. It then traveled back onto GA 365 where it came to an uncontrolled stop in the right northbound lane.

The Dodge wound up on LC Turner Road facing east.

A few moments later, troopers say Parson sideswiped another vehicle while attempting to avoid the collision, setting off a chain reaction wreck.

(Red Bird Media)

According to GSP, Parson was northbound on GA 365 in a white Dodge Ram pickup truck when she changed lanes to avoid the earlier crash. Troopers say she struck the side of a Toyota 4 Runner driven by Jim Mein, age 47, of Newport, Tennessee. The Toyota struck a Buick Verano driven by Helen Ramsey, 54, of Clarkesville, which then struck a blue Dodge Ram driven by 46-year-old Harold Smith of Baldwin.

Chastain was briefly trapped in his truck before Baldwin firefighters freed him. Habersham EMS transported him to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville with non-life-threatening injuries. According to officials, Summers refused treatment. No one else was injured.

The crash happened around 4 p.m. just south of the Duncan Bridge intersection and temporarily stalled traffic on GA 365.

 

SEE ALSO: Motorcyclist sent to trauma unit after crash with SUV in Cornelia

White County Manager resigns after just 5 months on the job

Joseph "Joey" Cason resigned as White County Manager effective March 21, 2022. (file photo)

White County is again searching for a new county manager. Just five months into the job, Joey Cason has resigned.

Cason took over the job as county manager in September of 2021. Over the weekend, he submitted his resignation to the White County Board of Commissioners. Monday, March 21, was his last day on the job.

White County Commission Chairman Travis Turner told WRWH News that Cason cited compelling personal and family matters as a reason for his stepping down. According to Turner, Cason will be returning to Camden County where he previously served as Executive Director of the Camden County Public Service Authority.

“We are not aware of any job opportunities that he may possibly be looking into, outside of returning to his home in south Georgia,” says Turner.

Cason’s decision to leave took commissioners by complete surprise.

“We were disappointed to have received Joey’s resignation over the weekend. While Joey was with us only for a short period, we appreciate Joey’s work and accomplishments for our White County community and pray the best for him and his wife Shelia going forward.”

Turner adds that commissioners will do what is necessary to fill the position.

“I anticipate the board, hopefully, being able to appoint an interim county manager, hopefully, soon and then reopen our process of a full-time county manager in the coming weeks,” he says.

Cason is the second White County manager to quit in a year. He succeeded Jason Cobb who left last June after one year on the job.

White County commissioners have scheduled a called meeting for Thursday morning, March 24, to discuss filling the vacancy.

This article has been updated

Lady Indians shut out Habersham; Indians drop 4-1 decision

The TFS tennis teams played a second straight evening, this time in a road non-region matchup with Habersham Central. The Lady Indians earned a 5-0 win, while the Indians fell 4-1.

The Lady Indians are now 4-3 overall, while the Indians move to 4-3 as well.

BOYS L 1-4

#1 Singles: Josh Jackson (3-4) L 2-6, 3-6
#2 Singles: Tanner Davis (6-1) W 6-4, 6-0
#3 Singles: TJ Cox (3-3) L in 2 sets
#1 Doubles: Zach Carringer & Jake Owensby (4-3) L 1-6, 2-6
#2 Doubles: Aiden & Everett VanOrman (2-4) L 0-6, 3-6

GIRLS W 5-0

#1 Maggie Peacock (3-4) W 6-3, 4-6, 10-7
#2 Ashli Webb (5-2) W 6-0, 6-2
#3 Evette Corwin (5-1) W 6-0, 6-1
#1 Cassidy Hayes & Christy Hulsey (3-3) W 6-3, 6-1
#2 Sophie Herrera & Annabelle Jackson (1-0) W in 2 sets
Exhibition: Ellesen Eubank & Landry Carnes (1-0) W 8-0

Lady Indians take fifth in a row and shut out Rabun Gap 1-0

The Lady Indians made program history with their first-ever 5-match win streak in a 1-0 win over an old rival, Rabun Gap.

Gemma Farris (photo by Austin Poffenberger)

After last playing in 2019, the teams squared up at Rabun Gap on Tuesday evening. The defense played spectacularly, and the lone goal came off the foot of Gemma Farris, who finished on a great cross from the right side by Honora Kahwach.

“It was a tough fought match by both teams,” says coach Travis Mullis. “Everyone on the roster received playing time.”

TFS is now 7-4 overall on the season, which is one win shy of last year’s school record 8 wins.

 

GOALS
Gemma Farris (4)

ASSISTS
Honora Kahwach (7)

Marlan Wilbanks to receive HCHS Lifetime Achievement Award

Marlan Wilbanks

Attorney Marlan Wilbanks has been selected to receive the 2022 HCHS Lifetime Achievement Award. Wilbanks is a member of Habersham Central High School’s 1979 graduating class. He earned his undergrad and law degrees at the University of Georgia.

As an attorney practicing in Atlanta, Wilbanks’ cases have resulted in a number of record-breaking recoveries, according to the HCHS nominating committee. For over 25 years, he has specialized in representing whistleblowers who file lawsuits when taxpayers have been defrauded by individuals or large corporations. His whistleblower cases have resulted in over $2 billion being obtained for his clients as well as the United States Taxpayers.

Wilbanks has previously been named the National Lawyer of the Year by the Taxpayers Against Fraud organization – the largest organization of its kind in the United States. He and his cases have been featured in the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, New York Times, Atlanta Business Chronicle, CNN, NBC, ABC, Fox News, and dozens of other media outlets across the country.

In addition to his legal work, Wilbanks actively supports organizations dedicated to protecting and educating children. In conjunction with the UGA School of Law, he founded the Wilbanks Child Endangerment and Sexual Exploitation (CEASE) Clinic. This first-of-its-kind clinic in the nation provides free legal representation to the survivors of child sex abuse and their families in Georgia. It also gives law students an opportunity to participate in the legal process.

Wilbanks provided funding for an orphanage and school in the Guntar Region of India and helped establish six literacy teaching locations in the tribal regions of India.

The HCHS alum currently serves as Chairman for the UGA Law School Board of Visitors. He is an Executive Committee member and Trustee at Young Harris College. Wilbanks also serves as Chairman of the Board for Hope Thrives – a Christ-centered organization that assists victims of child sex abuse in Georgia and seven other states.

Locally, Wilbanks supports various organizations including FAITH, the Family Resource Center of Northeast Georgia, and Freedom Hill.

In support of his nomination, it was stated that Wilbanks “demonstrates the highest values and impeccable ethics in both personal and professional areas. His generosity and commitment to making the world a better place for those less fortunate or those who just need a hand has impacted, not only his immediate and extended family, but many families in the Habersham and surrounding counties, the state, nation, and world.”

Habersham County Schools Superintendent Matthew Cooper calls Wilabnks an “excellent choice” for the HCHS Lifetime Achievement Award.

“We are grateful for his contributions to our community and to the children of Habersham County. We are very proud that Mr. Wilbanks is a product of Habersham County and a graduate of Habersham Central High School,” Cooper says.

HCHS Principal Jonathan Stribling says Wilbanks’ professional and personal accomplishments “embody bold ethics and a spirit of service, making him an excellent role model for our current students.”

Marlan Wilbanks is married to Diane and is the father of Madie Wilbanks and Lauren Crites. He is the son of Marilyn and Aubrey Motz of Clarkesville, Georgia.

Wilbanks will be the featured guest speaker during Habersham Central High School’s graduation ceremony on May 27 at Raider Stadium in Mt. Airy. He is the third person to receive the HCHS Lifetime Achievement Award since its inception in 2020. Previous recipients include Dr. Stacy Nicholson (Class of ’77) and Dr. Emily Foster Howell (Class of ’96).

Habersham hires design team for animal shelter, emergency services facilities

The Habersham County Commission has hired an engineering firm from Lawrenceville to begin work on two highly-anticipated SPLOST projects: a new animal shelter and centralized emergency services headquarters.

The board of commissioners unanimously voted during their Monday night meeting to award Croft and Associates contracts for the new Habersham County Animal Care and Control and Habersham County Emergency Services buildings. The firm will provide building design, construction documents and construction management services.

Croft beat out four other firms for the emergency services project including Place Services, Inc., Precision Planning, Hussey Gay Bell, and Lyman, Davidson, Dooley. Lyman and Place also bid on the animal shelter, as did JMA Architecture. Commissioners decided to go with Croft because they said the company has experience building emergency services and animal care facilities.

“This company has built these kinds of facilities before,” said Habersham County Commission Chair Bruce Palmer. “It’s not just a general engineering company.”

Croft’s services for the emergency services facility is estimated to cost $440,000 dollars: For the HCACC facility, it is estimated to cost $181,000.

The county says that the company could break ground on the facilities following the completion of the architectural services phase, which is projected to wrap up within four to six months of starting.

Tennis court resurfacing on hold

The commission was also slated to vote on awarding a proposal for resurfacing two tennis courts at the Ruby C. Fulbright Aquatic Center into pickleball courts, but after a heated discussion and public comments from citizens, the county commission decided to hold off on accepting that proposal.

Tennis players voiced their concerns once again that repaving those two tennis courts would negatively affect tennis players and court availability in the county, and at least seven individuals urged the commission to reconsider their plans during public comment.

READ MORE: Pickleball and tennis players react to county’s decision on resurfacing courts

The bid the county was advised to move forward with was one from Woodstock-based company Signature Tennis Courts, which would cost the county a total of $88,738. After reviewing three total proposals, Signature Tennis Courts was the lowest bidder for the project.

Following the comments the commission heard, though, they decided to table the decision until their next meeting to further investigate their options for the courts. They will make a decision by their next meeting, with the current bid for the courts expiring in 60 days.

Oconee County hires Hall; Flowery Branch promotes Tester

Oconee County is set to hire Flowery Branch coach Ben Hall as football coach, the school announced Tuesday morning.

Flowery Branch also announced that it had promoted defensive coordinator Jason Tester to take Hall’s place.

Hall is taking over for Travis Noland, who left last month to take the Jefferson job. Hall’s first head-coaching job coincidentally was at Jefferson, where his teams were 44-7 with two region titles from 2013 to 2016. Hall was the offensive coordinator on Jefferson’s 2012 state championship team.

Hall came to Flowery Branch in 2017. His five-year record with the Falcons is 41-17.

Oconee County under Noland was 74-27 and reached state finals in 2019 and 2020. The 2021 team was 10-2.

Produced by Georgia High School Football Daily. To sign up for GHSF’s free email newsletter click here.

Cleveland City Council approves curbside alcohol sales

The Cleveland City Council has amended its Alcohol and Beverage Ordinance to allow for curbside service. The council approved the change after a second reading during a called meeting Monday night.

Under the revised ordinance, customers will be allowed to place orders online and pick up their alcohol at the store curbside. Businesses that possess alcohol licenses for the package sale of beer and wine will be eligible to offer the service and will operate under strict guidelines. Currently, only two stores in Cleveland, Ingles and Walmart, have indicated they want to offer online curbside pickup.

The State of Georgia recently updated state law to allow for this type of sale, except where prohibited by local ordinance. The new rules are in response to COVID- 19 and shifts in consumer shopping patterns to online purchases.

Brenda M. White Heath

Brenda M. White Heath, age 80, of Gainesville, went to be with the Lord peacefully on Thursday, March 17, 2022, after an extended illness.

Born on August 24, 1941, in Greenville, South Carolina, she was a daughter of the late James Arnold White and Mae Dean White Ellison.

Brenda grew up in Habersham County, and it was there that she was saved by God’s grace as a young girl while attending bible school. This salvation led Brenda to serve others throughout her life. She was a member of the first graduating class of the Hall School of Nursing in 1963. She was devoted to helping others and impacted thousands of lives over her forty-plus years of nursing.

In her personal life, she was a dedicated mother, a grandmother of three whom she loved and enjoyed dearly, a loving sister, and always cherished the many other relationships with her family and friends.

In addition to her parents, she was also preceded in death by her stepfather, Rothell Ellison and a brother, Jerry G. Ellison.

She is survived by her daughter and son-in-law, Sherry and Cliff Cape of Gainesville; sisters and brothers-in-law, Delories and Marshall Cash of Demorest and Cathy and Mitchell Parker of Gainesville; three grandchildren, Caroline Cape, Victoria Cape and Cutler Cape all of Gainesville; uncle and aunt, David and Barbara Dean; several nieces, nephews and cousins.

Funeral services are 11 am on Thursday, March 24, 2022, at New Hope Baptist Church with Rev. Steve Baker and Mrs. Cathy Parker officiating. Interment will follow in the church cemetery.

The family will receive friends from 10 am until the service hour on Thursday, March 24, 2022, at New Hope Baptist Church.

Those in attendance are asked to please adhere to the public health and social distancing guidelines regarding COVID-19.

An online guest register is available and may be viewed at www.mcgaheegriffinandstewart.com.

McGahee-Griffin & Stewart Funeral Home of Cornelia, Georgia (706/778-8668) is in charge of arrangements.