Home Blog Page 1554

Motorcyclist sent to trauma unit after crash with SUV in Cornelia

Two people were injured in a crash Monday afternoon, March 21, at the intersection of Carpenters Cove Lane and US 441 in Cornelia. (photo by Red Bird Media)

A midday wreck in Cornelia involving a Jeep Liberty and Harley Davidson motorcycle sent two people to the hospital Monday.

(Red Bird Media)

The crash happened around 12:40 p.m. at the intersection of Carpenters Cove Lane and US Business 441/GA 385.

According to the Georgia State Patrol, Margerette Weeks, 87 of Alto, was attempting to turn left from Carpenter’s Cove Lane in her Jeep when she was struck in the front bumper and hood by the motorcycle, driven by Jarred Dover, 23 of Cornelia.

The GSP says Weeks was transported to Habersham County Medical Center with unknown injuries. They say that Dover was transported to the trauma center at Northeast Georgia Medical Center with suspected serious injuries.

Habersham County Emergency Services and the Georgia State Patrol responded to the scene along with Cornelia police officers and firefighters.

(Red Bird Media)

This wreck happened on the same stretch of road, about a half-mile south of where a crash on Friday injured three people.

GSP says that Weeks has been charged with failure to yield while turning left and failure to yield to a motorcyclist causing serious injury. Dover has been charged with placing a tag with the intent to conceal and no insurance.

(photo by John Quackenbush)
(photo by John Quackenbush)

TFS Equestrian team earns national awards

Brooke Hayes (photo by Sassy Hayes)

This week, the TFS Equestrian team received All-Star Awards for 2021 from both the American Miniature Horse Registry and The American Shetland Pony Club.

These awards recognize the top-10 point earners for each recognized class in the pony shows. TFS sophomore Brooke Hayes earned three All-Star Awards. Hayes’ showing of ‘Blues’ won the Champion Award Showing in Classic Youth Halter Gelding. Hayes also earned 8th place in Youth Country Pleasure Driving and 10th place in Youth Jumper, showing ‘Willie.’

These are national awards based on points accumulated during this show season at nationally-rated shows.

Regina Louise Coursey Massey

Regina Louise Coursey Massey, age 78, of Murrayville, entered rest March 21, 2022, at her residence with her husband by her side.

Regina was born in Atlanta to the late Fred & Adelia Elliott Coursey. She retired from the grocery industry having last worked with Bruno’s. She will be greatly missed by her family and friends who loved her dearly.

Left to cherish her memory, husband, Andrew Thomas (Tommy) Massey; daughters, Angela Sherry Able & Bridget Denise Bates; sister, Deloris Langford; 8 grandchildren & 8 great-grandchildren also survive as well as a host of other family.

Private family services will be held at a later date.

Please share online condolences & memories with the family at www.wardsfh.com. Ward’s Funeral Home is honored to serve the family of Regina Louise Coursey Massey.

Murphy James Waters

Murphy James Waters, age 91, of Gainesville, entered heaven Sunday, March 20, 2022, at his residence surrounded by his loving family.

Murphy was born October 25, 1930, in Gainesville to the late Paul & Beulah Hulsey Waters. He retired from the General Motors Company where he worked as a welder. Murphy served his country in the United States Army in the Korean War. He was a member of South Bend United Methodist Church and was preceded in death by a grandson, Ronn Justin Smith, a brother, Wendell Waters & a sister, Elizabeth Richardson.

Survivors include his wife of 66 years, Carolyn Chandler Waters; daughters, Pam (Gary) Smith & Sheri (Louie) Griffin; Grandchildren; Ryan (Brandi) Smith, Rustin (Jessica) Smith, Nicole Griffin; Great Grandchildren, Layla, Easton, Avelyn, Eden, Conner, Emersyn, Eleanor; special niece, Lynn (Greg) Syfan & a host of other relatives also survive.

Funeral services honoring Murphy will be held at 2:00 p.m. Friday, March 25, 2022, at the Ward’s Funeral Home Chapel with Pastor Mike Pinson officiating. Burial will be in Lebanon United Methodist Church Cemetery. The family will receive friends from 5-8 p.m. on Thursday evening at the funeral home.

Flowers are accepted or donations may be made to the Humane Society of Northeast Georgia, 845 West Ridge Rd, Gainesville, GA 30501.

The family would like to say a special thanks to the Homestead Hospice team for the excellent care they gave to their family. A special thank you to Michelle & Ted.

Please share online condolences with the family at www.wardsfh.com. Ward’s Funeral Home is honored to serve the family of Murphy James Waters.

Patricia Bell Bartlett Fuller

Patricia Bell Bartlett Fuller died peacefully March 15, 2022.

She was born December 9, 1928, in Miami, FL. She was a graduate of Atlanta Girl’s High School and completed two years at North Georgia College where she met her husband Lennard. She was preceded in death by her husband of 20 years Lennard Lewis Bartlett and her second husband of 27 years Virgil Eugene “Gene” Fuller; her parents Robert Bryan Bell and Marion Bell; siblings Gloria Bell DuRant and Marian “Bud” Bell McCann.

She is survived and will be sorely missed in so many ways, by her daughters Ann Talbott and husband David Talbott, Lynn Walker and husband Jeff Walker, and son Jimmy Bartlett and wife Karen Bartlett; step-sons Robert “Skipper” McLean Fuller and Lawrence Eugene Fuller; grandchildren Shannon Talbott Alberts and husband Mike, Cody Walker and family – Taylor, Bryce & James Corey, Jeremiah and Joshua Bartlett; and great grandson Owen Alberts, all of whom had deeply loving relationships with Mom Pat/Gama. She was also a grandmother and great-grandmother to Gene’s granddaughter Whitney Fuller Wideman and husband Thomas Rutledge Wideman, and to grandson Clayton McLean Fuller and wife Kate Patricia Joy Fuller – and to their combined 5 great grandchildren. She is also survived by her many nieces and nephews who will miss their sweet Aunt Pat as the thoughtful woman she has been to so many.

She spent most of her early adult life as a homemaker and later worked outside the home for the Georgia Society of Association Executives and the DeKalb Medical Society as an executive assistant in Decatur, GA before retiring to live in Helen and Clarkesville GA for many of these last 20 years.

She was a faithful Christian and a long-time member of The Episcopal Church of the Resurrection in Sautee-Nacoochee, Ga. She was a lifelong Braves baseball and UGA football fan and might have just been waiting around until they could both win their respective championships to finally leave us all.

The family wishes to extend our sincere thanks to the many caretakers and owners of Graceful Care assisted living and her final home for the last 3+ years, the medical staff of Habersham Medical Center for their compassionate end-of-life care, as well as the attention and care provided by Jody Tomas during these last several years of her life.

An intimate immediate family celebration of life is planned and we appreciate everyone’s prayers.

An online guest registry is available for the Fuller family at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

Arrangements by Hillside Memorial Chapel, Clarkesville, Georgia. (706) 754-6256.

Christopher Gene Chandler

Christopher Gene Chandler, age 37 of Baldwin, Georgia, passed away on Saturday, March 19, 2022.

Born in Texarkana, Texas on February 14, 1985, he was the son of the late Billy Gene & Donna Brumley Chandler. Chris was a contractor with McClendon Soil Services. In his spare time, he enjoyed camping & spending time with his family. He also loved his faithful dog companion, Zor.

Survivors include his loving wife, Talitha Griggs Chandler of Baldwin, GA; stepchildren, Cody & Laura Howard of Chatsworth, GA; Tyler Ridings, Faith Anderson both of Baldwin, GA; grandchildren, Kayden Howard, Nathaniel Perry, Khloe Perry, Grace Howard, Dawson Ridings, Dakota Baker, Micah Anderson, & Kainen Blackburn; aunts, Debbie Chandler, Freida & Glen of Missouri; Uncles, Kenny & Kay McClendon of the Hollywood Community, Clarkesville, GA; Joe Chandler of Missouri; several cousins, other relatives, & friends.

Chris’ wishes were to be cremated following the service and interred at a later time with his parents in Missouri.

Funeral services are scheduled for 11:00 a.m. Monday, March 28, 2022 at Life Church of Baldwin with Rev. Cody Howard & Rev. Frankie Wilson officiating.

The family will receive friends at Hillside Memorial Chapel in Clarkesville, Georgia from 2:00 p.m. until 4:00 p.m. & from 6:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. on Sunday, March 27, 2022.

An online guest registry is available for the Chandler family at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

Arrangements by Hillside Memorial Chapel, Clarkesville, Georgia. (706) 754-6256

Dwane Heaton, Jr.

Mr. Dwane Heaton, Jr., 80, of Baldwin, Ga, passed away on March 8, 2022.

Mr. Heaton was born on January 31, 1942, to the late Dwane Heaton, Sr. and Minnie Heaton Payne. One of Mr. Heaton’s favorite things to do was restore old cars to be sold. Dwane is preceded in death by his wife of 27 years Diane Heaton; sister Helen Howell; son Tracy Cross and his parents.

Survivors include his daughters Tilynn Ivester, of Baldwin and Missy Galloway(Mac), of Demorest; Sherry Barrin, of Batesville; 8 grandchildren; 6 great-grandchildren; sisters Maryann Jordan, of Baldwin; Carolyn Helton, of Baldwin and Vivian Hicks, of Mt. Airy.

Services are to be announced at a later date.

Funeral arrangements have been entrusted to Whitfield Funeral Home South Chapel, 1370 Industrial Blvd. Baldwin, GA 30511 706-778-7123

John Kimsey “Kim” Lawson

John Kimsey “Kim” Lawson, age 61, of Cornelia, passed away on Tuesday, December 14, 2021.

Born in Gainesville, Georgia on July 25, 1960, he was a son of the late Claude Eugene and Margie Kimsey Lawson. Kim was employed by Habersham Metal Products for 21 years and then opened and operated a very successful local business (Chattahoochee Professional Door) with business partner, Jeff Gerrin, for the last 25 years. As a child, he was a member of Cornelia United Methodist Church. He has been a dedicated member of Mt. Zion United Methodist Church for the last 31 years where he and his wife, Cathy, helped lead the youth program for many years. Kim loved his family deeply and treasured spending time with his four grandchildren. He had a lifelong passion for music, cooking and loved being in the great outdoors.

Surviving are his loving wife of 43 years, Cathy Hurt Lawson of Cornelia; daughters and sons-in-law, Mandy and Stacy Gunn of Baldwin, Stephanie and Daron LaBruyere of South Carolina, and Ashley and Dylan James of Cornelia; grandchildren, Eden & Arlo LaBruyere of South Carolina, and Lawson and Wren James of Cornelia; sister and brother-in-law, Debbe and John Mize of Cumming; brother and sister-in-law, Greg and Pam Lawson of South Carolina; father-in-law and mother-in-law, Jimmy and Janice Hurt of Cornelia; sister-in-law and brother-in-law, Elaine and Wayne Higgins of Cornelia; sister-in-law, Myra Osborn of Cornelia, numerous cousins, nephews and nieces; and lifelong family friend, Barry Davis of Cornelia.

A Celebration of Life Service (drop-in) will be held on Saturday, April 2, 2022, from 2 – 4 pm at Mt. Zion United Methodist Church, Alto, in the fellowship hall. Cathy and the girls are taking donations for the church playground in loving honor and memory of Kim. It was one of his greatest wishes for the children to have a safe, fun place to play and spend time together. Donations can be sent and checks made out to Mt. Zion United Methodist Church, c/o Jackie Scroggs, 516 Alto Mud Creek Road, Alto, GA 30510.

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.

Latest election overhaul on state Senate agenda as poll supervisors fret more change

Georgia Republican legislators are pushing another comprehensive voting bill for 2022 that will allow the GBI to investigate election fraud and tighten the process for handling paper ballots. House Bill 1464 builds upon the controversial overhaul of voting law in 2021. (John McCosh/Georgia Recorder)

(GA Recorder) — A Georgia Senate panel could take up as early as Monday a sweeping voting bill that’s raising alarms over concerns its provisions could intimidate election workers and voters and hamper a county’s ability to run local elections.

County election office directors, Democratic lawmakers, and a coalition of voting rights groups say the most troubling aspect of House Bill 1464 is that it gives the Georgia Bureau of Investigation the ability to initiate election investigations, a significant change that would divert jurisdiction from the Secretary of State’s Office and State Election Board to the crime fighting agency.

Republican Gov. Brian Kemp’s proposed budget for the upcoming year includes $504,000 to pay four GBI staff members plus expenses to investigate election complaints.

The plan endorsed by Blue Ridge Republican House Speaker David Ralston would give the state’s top law enforcement agency the ability to handle complex election cases and quell the rash of voting fraud allegations in the aftermath of the 2020 presidential election.

Despite election results holding up under several counts and assurances from the FBI and other federal and state agencies that President Joe Biden fairly beat former President Donald Trump in 2020, unfounded charges of fraud continue to swirl among a large block of voters and elected officials.

Last year, Republican lawmakers pushed through an election overhaul instituting a laundry list of new restrictions reversing some of the accommodations created to ease voting during the pandemic in 2020.

This year’s election overhaul will likely undergo changes in the Ethics Committee before it could head to a Senate floor vote.

Douglas County Election Director Milton Kidd said allowing the GBI to be the first agency to look into election cases could have a ‘chilling effect’ on poll workers and voters who might fear becoming targets of unfounded fraud accusations. Or minor mistakes being treated more seriously than innocent administrative mistakes.

Paulding County Election Supervisor Deidre Holden said she believes the GBI shouldn’t become involved unless there is strong evidence of criminal activity. A better use of resources would be to provide enough funding to the Secretary of State for investigators to handle the caseload, said Holden, the immediate past-president of Georgia Association of Voter Registration and Election Officials.

“I feel that election investigations should only be prompted if there is good reason to have an investigation, not for hearsay or media-driven accusations. Solid evidence,” Holden said. “ I believe that the (secretary of state’s) Investigation Division is doing a great job.”

Under the bill, the GBI can also subpoena election records and electronic devices with the approval of the state attorney general.

Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger reversed his opposition to the involvement of the GBI unit last month, saying he now supports it and suggested putting state troopers at polling places and election offices to keep order.

Raffensperger’s refusal to overturn the results of the 2020 election angered Trump and many of his allies. Public criticism of Georgia’s elections prompted Republican lawmakers to overhaul the law and strip power from the state’s top elections chief.

Texas and Florida Republican lawmakers have also tried to expand the scope of election investigations.

Despite spending $2.2 million last year on an election fraud task force established by Texas Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton, a fervent Trump supporter, only three cases were resolved in 2021, The largest involved a person who illegally assisted with 10 mail-in ballot applications in 2020 and the other two concerned three illegal votes cast in the 2018 and 2020 elections, according to the Houston Chronicle.

Meanwhile, lawmakers in Florida are considering allocating $3.7 million to create an elections police force and elections crime division backed by Gov. Ron DeSantis.

Election year changes stress system

The proposed new overhaul would layer new rules onto 2021’s Georgia election overhaul, Senate Bill 202, which added a government ID requirement for absentee voting, placed strict limits on absentee drop boxes and allowed the state to take over troubled local election boards.

Kemp and some other high-ranking GOP officials said early this year that sweeping changes to election law were unnecessary this legislative session after creation of the so-called Election Integrity Act 2021.

While not as extensive as the 2021 law, this year’s proposed directives include provisions for making sure ballots are stored in sealed containers, requiring documentation of each time a ballot is handled, and requiring the State Election Board to distribute private donations to local election offices.

The measure also makes it a felony to threaten, intimidate, or prevent election workers from completing their duties.

Some critics say proposed methodical chain of custody requirements for ballots are not necessary, that longer lines at polls could result from the changes, and that restricting outside groups from directly donating gifts to local election offices would likely cost $43 million, or the bulk of donations made in 2020 to supplement cash-strapped county election budgets.

Although the Association County Commissioners of Georgia has not taken an official position on the House bill, Deputy Legislative Director Todd Edward said election officials are hoping to have more time to implement last year’s changes as they gear up for 2020’s busy statewide election cycle.

The constant retraining of poll workers can be especially challenging for smaller or medium-sized communities that are struggling to find enough poll workers, Edwards said.

“The ink is still drying on Senate Bill 202 and we’re still struggling to implement all of those requirements,” he said. “We were hoping this year to step back and take a breath while implementing Senate Bill 202 rather than adding responsibilities in the midst of a primary and general election year.”

“They’re all well-intentioned, but what is the impact going to be on medium and smaller communities,”he said.

Kemp said in January he would not support changes to election law that undermine SB 202.

That likely spells trouble for plans from Sen. Burt Jones to end no- excuse absentee voting and his Republican primary opponents for lieutenant governor, Gainesville Sen. Butch Miller’s legislation calling for a ban on drop boxes.

Aspects of this year’s sweeping bill do have broad support across party lines and among election directors for easing the deadline for completing election night reports and giving employees time off to vote.

Holden said she supports more stringent chain of custody protocols, which include measures her office already follows. The funneling of the donations through the state board can better ensure that gifts are spread out based on the county needs, she said.

Holden also agrees that it’ll be challenging to get poll workers ready if the Legislature approves HB 1464, which would go into effect on July 1.

“It seems like when we get a good slate of poll workers trained and they are conducting elections in their polling locations successfully, we have to re-train them,” Holden said.

“It is our job to conduct all elections with integrity and transparency to the very best of our ability,” she added.

NGTC Spring Job Fairs Open to the Community

North Georgia Technical College will host job fairs at its Blairsville, Clarkesville, and Currahee campuses next month, and the public is invited to attend.

The job fairs will be held from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. as follows:

  • April 11 – Blairsville campus (Great Hall)
  • April 13 – Clarkesville campus (Industrial Technology Center)
  • April 19 – Currahee campus (Conference Center)

Each job fair will feature local companies offering on-site interviews for part-time and full-time positions.

For more information or to reserve a company booth, contact Emily Sullens, student affairs specialist, at [email protected] or 706-754-7728.

Ankle

Caregiving is a calling. There is a huge need for caregivers – honest, reliable caregivers. Sometimes it’s a matter of the patients themselves making their needs known.

When we first got together, Katherine had developed an infection in her ankle and she was in the hospital on IV antibiotics trying to keep it from going systemic. Her recent caregiver had developed health issues of her own and was no longer able to assist. Katherine needed someone immediately and God knew it.

Katherine needed assistance with many things – bathing, traveling, paying bills, shopping – but the immediate need was to get her home. Fortunately, a friend was able to bring his vehicle so she could recoup at home instead of in the nursing home. That’s where I came in.

The infection in Katherine’s leg was severe. Dressings needed to be changed every day, and I had to be most careful not to pick up the infection myself or contaminate her further. The wound was deep and required specific topical antibiotics as well as wound dressings to prevent the bandages from sticking. It was challenging and a painful process for her.

Because of diabetes, it took several months for us to get the leg healed. However, God was faithful to help her wound close and not let the infection spread. We were so grateful.

In the weeks that followed, we worked on getting the fluid buildup in her legs to abate. This has been an ongoing issue since her injury. Although compression hose are difficult to put on, they are necessary as they provide strength for her walking. The stress on her legs with the compression hose causes pressure wounds. No matter how careful we are, they seem to reoccur. We pad the ankle with gauze and use sterile cloths or rolled washcloths. Taking the compression hose off at night is key to keeping them away, but it’s a difficult and painful process for her at the end of an already long day.

Caregivers, we’re struggling together in our calling. If you would like to contact me, you may reach me at [email protected].

MORE: Continuing on

U.S. Senate hearings for Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson to start

WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 28: Ketanji Brown Jackson, nominee to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the District of Columbia Circuit, testifies during her Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing in Dirksen Senate Office Building on April 28, 2021 in Washington, DC. The committee is holding the hearing on pending judicial nominations. (Photo by Tom Williams-Pool/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON DC (GA Recorder) — After more than two weeks of private meetings with nearly half the U.S. Senate, Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, President Joe Biden’s pick for the U.S. Supreme Court, will field questions from the Senate Judiciary Committee in highly anticipated public hearings set to begin Monday.

Members of the panel will question Jackson for two full days, following opening statements by the nominee and senators Monday. Each member of the committee will have 30 minutes to question Jackson on Tuesday and another 20 minutes on Wednesday — though they may not use all that time.

Jackson would make history as the first Black woman to sit on the Supreme Court. She’s been a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, considered the nation’s second-highest court, since last year.

Originally from Miami, she graduated from Harvard Law School, worked as a public defender — another potential first for the Supreme Court — was a federal district court and vice chair of the U.S. Sentencing Commission.

Former U.S. Sen. Doug Jones, a Democrat from Alabama who is coordinating Jackson’s meetings with senators, said in a Thursday tweet Jackson had met with 44 senators, including all 22 members of the Judiciary Committee. She began those visits shortly after Biden announced his intent to nominate her to replace the retiring Justice Stephen Breyer late last month.

Before the committee hears from Jackson, she will be introduced by supporters Monday morning. Those supporters have yet to be announced. Home-state senators often appear in that role; Justice Amy Coney Barrett was introduced by both Indiana’s senators at her confirmation hearing in 2020. But Jackson, of the District of Columbia, has no representation in the Senate.

The hearings will close Thursday, with the American Bar Association and “other outside witnesses,” testifying, according to a scheduling notice from the committee.

The hearings will stream live here; on Twitter here; and on Facebook here.

GOP points of attack

The White House and Jackson’s supporters have said they hope for bipartisan Senate approval, but that would mean only a handful of GOP yes votes at best.

If no Republicans vote for Jackson, Vice President Kamala Harris, the first Black woman elected to that position, would break a 50-50 tie.

Only three Republicans — Maine’s Susan Collins, South Carolina’s Lindsey Graham and Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski — voted to confirm Jackson for her current role on the D.C. Circuit. None has publicly committed to voting for her for the Supreme Court.

 

Another three Republican senators — Judiciary Committee member Ben Sasse of Nebraska, Marco Rubio of Florida, and Roy Blunt of Missouri —  did not vote on her D.C. Circuit confirmation.

Republicans have been relatively quiet in their criticism of Jackson directly, though they have found reasons to complain about a process they have called unnecessarily rushed and about some groups that support her.

Iowa’s Chuck Grassley, who is the top Republican on the Judiciary Committee, said the administration was withholding records from Jackson’s time on the U.S. Sentencing Commission.

“By her supporters’ own accounts, Judge Jackson’s service on the sentencing commission is an important part of her experience, so her records there must be part of a thorough review,” Grassley said. “This request falls squarely within the committee’s normal practices.”

Although he called her “clearly a sharp lawyer with an impressive resume,” Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky has criticized Jackson’s support from “radical” liberal groups that endorse adding seats to the Supreme Court to balance its ideology.

Missouri’s Josh Hawley, a member of the Judiciary Committee, accused Jackson in a Wednesday Twitter thread of being too lenient on child sex offenders.

The White House dismissed Hawley’s claims. Press secretary Jen Psaki said some of Hawley’s research was taken out of context and that, as a trial judge, Jackson had largely stayed within sentencing guidelines or issued stronger sentences.

“Attempts to smear or discredit her history and her work are not borne out in facts,” she said.

Psaki also attacked Hawley’s credibility on child sex crimes, noting that when he was Missouri attorney general, he hedged when asked if he would vote for Senate candidate Roy Moore. Moore was credibly accused during the campaign of pursuing, and assaulting, teenage girls when he was in his 30s.

“I’m not sure that someone who refused to tell people whether or not he would vote for Roy Moore is an effective and credible messenger on this,” Psaki said Thursday.

Police endorsement

Jackson has received endorsements from several groups and influential people in the legal community, spanning political affiliations.

Groups representing law enforcement and victims’ families recommended Jackson, including Patrick Yoes, president of the Fraternal Order of Police, a group which is often aligned against Democrats’ efforts at police reform. Yoes said Jackson had shown herself to be fair and consistent.

A group of self-described conservatives, who had worked as prosecutors or in elected roles, endorsed her.

Ninety-one former state attorneys general sent the committee a letter endorsing Jackson. Democrats made up most of that slate, though a few Republicans also signed on.

Groups of female law professorsBlack law school deans, the National Council of Jewish Women and others also offered their endorsements.

Throughout United States history, white men have been writing, enforcing and interpreting laws, more than 200 Black women law professors wrote.

“Representation matters,” they said. “It is essential to fairness, justice, and the Court’s legitimacy. All of these are weakened when its justices neither look like the rest of the United States nor reflect the values of a segment of society.”

Jackson, they added, “is one of the brightest legal minds in the country,” and “is eminently qualified” to sit on the bench.

The Senate Judiciary chairman is Democrat Dick Durbin of Illinois. Other Democrats on the committee are Patrick Leahy of Vermont, Dianne Feinstein of California, Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island, Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, Chris Coons of Delaware, Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, Mazie Hirono of Hawaii, Cory Booker of New Jersey, Alex Padilla of California and Jon Ossoff of Georgia.

The Republicans are Grassley, Sasse, Hawley, Graham, John Cornyn of Texas, Mike Lee of Utah, Ted Cruz of Texas, Tom Cotton of Arkansas, John Kennedy of Louisiana, Thom Tillis of North Carolina and Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee.