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Daniel Charriez

Daniel Charriez, age 46 of Jefferson, passed away February 23, 2022.

Born in Orange County, New York on February 27, 1975, Daniel was the son of George L. Charriez, Jr. and Gloria Velazquez Charriez. Daniel was the owner and operator of Mr. Sooty’s Chimney Sweep Company and he was also an electrician.

In addition to his parents, Daniel is survived by daughter Adelena Daniel Charriez of Helen, brother Mark Charriez of Jefferson and George L. Charriez, III (Lauren) of Blairsville, sisters Michelle Harris (Roger) of Cleveland and Marisa Sheffield of Dahlonega, nieces Rory E. Charriez and Mallory R. Sheffield, and nephews Skyler A. Sheffield, Landon C. Sheffield and Max Charriez.

A memorial service will be held at a later date.

An online guest book is available for the family at HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

Arrangements by Hillside Memorial Chapel & Gardens, Clarkesville. 706-754-6256

Dean to challenge Tench in upcoming election, Mealor to run for re-election

Jimmy Dean is running against incumbent Jimmy Tench in the Republican primary for Habersham County Commission.

The ballot on May 24 won’t be sparse in terms of items for Habersham citizens to vote on. With the gubernatorial election primaries, three seats on the school board, two county commission seats and the E-SPLOST on the ballot, the election will have a big impact on the county.

RELATED: Habersham ESPLOST to be decided in May primary

Jimmy Dean, who ran for District 10 representative in 2020, announced Wednesday that he would run against longtime Commissioner Jimmy Tench.

“I plan to work with all the county’s elected officials and organizations for the betterment of Habersham County,” Dean said in a press release. “I also want to make sure we maintain our county’s serenity and beauty we all enjoy.”

Now Habersham reached out to Tench, who says he plans to run for re-election. He didn’t have further comment to provide, but says he thinks “the voters know how I stand on just about everything.”

Commissioner Dustin Mealor also announced his plans to run for re-election. He ended the January county commission meeting by sharing that he planned to qualify for the election later this month.

“I still do have children [here], and I still do think that we need to direct our community and our county the right way,” Mealor said. “I honestly feel there is some unfinished business, and I do, of course, if the citizens agree, wish to continue for another four years.”

The City of Clarkesville will also hold a municipal election to fill the seat of the late Councilman Steven Ward on May 24. Board of Education members Russ Nelson, Kristie Dover and Joey Duncan will all also be up for re-election.

The qualifying period for both the county commission and BOE will begin March 7 at 9 a.m. and end March 11 at noon. For information on qualifying and fees, view the appropriate documents below.

Demorest looking into solar energy provided by Councilman Hendrix

(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

In the City of Demorests’s executive session Tuesday night, the council heard a proposal to enter into a licensing agreement with Councilman John Hendrix, who has patented solar energy technology that he wants to share with the city.

In a 3-0 vote, with Hendrix recusing himself, the council unanimously approved the agreement.

“Dr. Hendrx and Mei Hendrix [have] a patent on a solar product that generates electricity, that product is similar to solar panels but a little bit different,” said Demorest Mayor Jerry Harkness. “What we’re doing is [we] approved to allow the city to enter into a licensing agreement with the Hendrixes to utilize that patent that they’re so graciously allowing us to utilize.”

CLICK HERE TO VIEW THE PATENT

The city plans to consult with engineers to see how viable the project would be for the city, and apply for federal and state grants that would help them look further into funding options for bringing the power source to the city.

“Our next step is working with engineers on the project,” Harkness said. “Then they will give us a quick timeline on what we will be looking at to get something ready to apply for grants.”

Harkness says that in time, the city could start to generate enough solar power to sell as an energy source to the city’s power grid, power municipality buildings, and perhaps, in the future, look into a partnership with Piedmont University.

“We’d love some kind of partnership with the college, especially with them being right here with us, that we could share some of that with them,” Harkness said. With a lawsuit up in the air between the city and university, though, that day might not be as soon as the city might like it to be.

“I look forward to the day that we move past that and work on our relationship with Piedmont University,” Harkness said.

Cleveland man arrested on drug charges

Paul Christian Horner (Source: White County Sheriff's Office)

A Cleveland man was arrested following a traffic stop where authorities say a K9 unit alerted deputies to several drugs, including meth and cocaine, taped underneath his car.

White County Sheriff’s Deputies conducted a traffic stop on Westmoreland Road Tuesday, when they say a vehicle failed to stop at a stop sign. That’s when a WCSO K9 unit alerted them to the underside of the vehicle, the sheriff’s office says.

The deputies conducted a search of the underside of the vehicle, where they say they located two small plastic containers wrapped in dark-colored tape, containing methamphetamine, cocaine, oxycodone, Alprazolam (Xanax) and marijuana.

Seized items included drugs and cash. (Source: White County Sheriff’s Office)

The driver of the vehicle, Paul Christian Horner, 48 of Cleveland, was arrested and charged with possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, possession of methamphetamine with the intent to distribute, possession of a schedule 2 drug, possession of a schedule 4 drug, possession of marijuana, drugs not in original container, and failure to stop for a stop sign.

He is currently booked at the White County Jail. No bond has been set.

Biden in State of the Union urges ‘unmistakable’ support for democracy in Ukraine

WASHINGTON D.C. — President Joe Biden used his first State of the Union address on Tuesday night to reassert America as a leading global voice for democracy and condemn Russian President Vladimir Putin for starting an “unprovoked” war in Ukraine.

“Throughout our history we’ve learned this lesson – when dictators do not pay a price for their aggression, they cause more chaos,” Biden told a joint session of Congress meeting in the U.S. House chamber. “They keep moving. And the costs and threats to America and to the world keep rising.”

Biden called on Congress to “send an unmistakable signal to Ukraine and to the world,” as he pointed to the gallery above the House floor where the Ukrainian Ambassador to the United States Oksana Markarova joined first lady Jill Biden as one of her nine guests.

In a moment of unity, lawmakers rose, waved small Ukrainian flags and cheered on Markarova and the people of Ukraine as they battle the Russian invasion.

“From President Zelenskyy to every Ukrainian, their fearlessness, their courage, their determination, inspires the world,” Biden said.

But Biden also spent a significant amount of time on issues challenging Americans every day, including inflation, gun violence and the country’s path out of a two-year-long pandemic that’s claimed the lives of nearly 1 million Americans.

“We meet tonight in an America that has lived through two of the hardest years this nation has ever faced. The pandemic has been punishing,” he said.

The event also saw a sharp reminder of the tensions and extreme partisanship that have marked Congress in recent years, particularly in the aftermath of the 2020 presidential election.

As Biden spoke about burn pits that have caused illnesses among Iraqi war veterans and mentioned the death of his son, Beau, Republican Rep. Lauren Boebert of Colorado interrupted. She shouted from the floor of the chamber that he is to blame for the deaths of 13 soldiers who died in August during the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan.

“You put them in (coffins), 13 of them,” Boebert yelled.

Democrats booed her. One lawmaker said, “Someone kick her out.”

Boebert and Georgia Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene also were both seen standing and yelling for Biden to “build the wall” during a portion of his speech that focused on immigration policy.

MORE: SOTU full transcript

U.S. air space closed to Russian airlines

In a major policy announcement on Ukraine, Biden used the speech to say that U.S. airspace will no longer be open to Russian aircraft. He received a standing ovation.

The new restriction, on top of several rounds of economic sanctions announced last week, shows ongoing unity among Western democracies. The European Union and Canada have already blocked Russian planes from their airspace.

Concern over the war in Ukraine was reflected throughout the audience, with members of Congress wearing the bright blue and yellow colors of Ukraine’s flag, or displaying sunflowers, the national flower. Jill Biden’s violet dress had a sunflower added to the sleeve just above her wrist.

During the speech, Biden laid out his view of American foreign policy and defense strategy amid a renewed drive from Putin to expand Russia’s borders. Biden said that he and American allies are working to secure oil barrels and announced that the U.S. would be “releasing 30 million barrels from our own Strategic Petroleum Reserve” to “help blunt gas prices here at home.”

“A Russian dictator, invading a foreign country, has costs around the world,” he said.

The speech could be Biden’s last to a Congress controlled by Democrats, and he sought to use it to speak directly to Americans — and seemingly reluctant members of his own party — about domestic policies he believes could improve daily life and the economy.

Some of those policies, which he’s pushed for in his social and climate spending package known as Build Back Better, include providing universal pre-K and child care, capping the cost of insulin at $35 a month and investing in community colleges.

He also called on the Senate to pass the Freedom to Vote Act, which would prevent gerrymandering, protect poll workers and require all states to offer at least two weeks of early voting, as well as establish a national voting day, among other provisions. That legislation has stalled in the chamber amid opposition from members of Biden’s own party.

Guests in the crowd

The first lady’s other eight guests, many of whom advocate for policy changes backed by the Biden administration, came from throughout the country.

Joshua Davis, a 7th-grade student from Midlothian, Virginia, began trying to make school better for children with Type 1 diabetes when he was 4 years old, including lowering prescription drug costs.

Biden has repeatedly called on Congress to lower prescription drug costs, including for insulin. So far the proposals have stalled, though he redoubled his efforts during Tuesday night’s speech.

“Insulin costs about $10 a vial to make… But drug companies charge families like Joshua and his dad up to 30 times that amount,” Biden said. “For Joshua, and for the 200,000 other young people with Type 1 diabetes, let’s cap the cost of insulin at $35 a month so everyone can afford it.”

Patrick Gelsinger, the chief executive officer at Intel, has become a leading voice on semiconductor manufacturing after announcing in January the company would build a $20 billion factory in Ohio with union labor.

Biden said Tuesday night that Intel would increase that investment to $100 billion if House and Senate lawmakers are able to work out the differences between dueling bills that would boost U.S. competitiveness with China and semiconductor manufacturing.

“If you travel 20 miles east of Columbus, Ohio, you’ll find 1,000 empty acres of land. It won’t look like much, but if you stop and look closely, you’ll see a field of dreams, the ground on which America’s future will be built,” Biden said.

Danielle Robinson, from Columbus, Ohio, advocates for soldiers and veterans who have become sick following exposure to burn pits while deployed overseas. Her spouse, Sergeant First Class Heath Robinson, was diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer while on active duty as a combat engineer in the Ohio National Guard. He later died in May 2020.

The issue of providing health care for military members exposed to burn pits is particularly important to Biden, who has said he believes his son Beau’s death was caused by his exposure to burn pits while deployed to Iraq.

The Senate passed its version of a bill last month that would provide $1 billion to provide VA health care for veterans exposed to toxic substances since 9/11. The House is set to vote on its version of the legislation Wednesday, though the two bills are significantly different.

“When they came home, many of the world’s fittest and best trained warriors in the world were never the same. Headaches. Numbness. Dizziness,” Biden said. “A cancer that would put them in a flag-draped coffin.”

‘Defund the police’ pushback

The president pushed back on progressive Democrats’ call to “defund the police” and instead shift money meant for a police budget to other local agencies. Biden, as he has before, said that “the answer is not to defund the police, the answer is to fund the police with the resources and training they need to protect our communities.”

The president highlighted his administration’s commitment to reducing gun violence by investing in crime prevention measures and helping local communities hire more law enforcement.

Biden has also directed the Justice Department to focus on reducing ghost guns, which are homemade guns that lack a serial number, making them difficult for law enforcement to trace, as well as supply model “red flag” legislation that allows courts to temporarily remove a firearm from an individual who is distressed.

In a reminder of the continuing pandemic, despite declining infection levels, a handful of members did not attend the speech because they tested positive for COVID-19. A majority of lawmakers, both Democrats and Republicans, Cabinet officials and Supreme Court justices, did not wear masks.

Rep. Jamie Raskin, a Maryland Democrat, said in a statement that he tested positive for COVID-19 and was disappointed he would not be able to attend the address.

“I will be cheering for President Biden’s powerful call to the world to continue to reject in every way possible Vladimir Putin’s illegal war of aggression against the people of Ukraine,” he said. “All of us must stand strong against authoritarianism and for democracy.”

Democratic Rep. Suzan DelBene of Washington and Democratic Sen. Alex Padilla of California also announced they tested positive.

The lawmakers who did attend were spaced out throughout the House chamber, instead of seated directly next to each other the way they were before the COVID-19 pandemic began.

Some of those members were seated in the gallery overlooking the House floor, an area that pre-COVID-19 was generally reserved for special guests.

U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo was nowhere near the Capitol building Tuesday night after being named this year’s so-called designated survivor. The somewhat morbid tradition requires at least one person in the line of succession, typically a Cabinet member, to be in a separate location in case everyone else in the line of succession dies while at the State of the Union.

After Biden’s State of the Union Address, Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds delivered the Republican response from Des Moines. 

Reynolds rebuked Biden and Democrats for sending the country back to the late 1970s and early 1980s when “runaway inflation was hammering families, a violent crime wave was crashing on our cities, and the Soviet army was trying to redraw the world map.”

 

This article is published through a partnership with States Newsroom. Danielle E. Gaines contributed to this report. 

Demorest talks Independence Day plans— and a possible landmark concert

(NowHabersham.com)

The Demorest City Council began discussing their Independence Day celebration for 2022 at their work session Tuesday night. While no plans have been set in stone, the council is discussing several new ideas, from changing the event’s start time to including more music and events.

Fireworks, parades and vendors

The city discussed starting their celebration later in the day this year to make Demorest the place to be from the late afternoon until nightfall when the city’s firework display would take off.

Demorest Mayor Jerry Harkness brought up the possibility of starting the parade in the late afternoon so that people could stay in the Demorest area for dinner, followed by the concert and fireworks. The council seemed to be on board.

Harkness also brought up offering a childrens’ parade, where children could make their own “floats” to show off to the community in their own mini-parade, chaparoned by the Demorest Police Department.

“I think that’s what community is about,” Harkness said. “We need to focus on that.”

The council discussed potential plans and ideas for this year’s Independence Day celebration. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

Councilmen John Hendrix and Nathan Davis encouraged the council to look into bringing more food vendors in, especially food trucks, to serve people between the parade and evening events.

The council still has plenty of decisions to make about fireworks, but from their discussion Tuesday, fireworks are likely going to be shot off in the parking lot next to the Demorest Women’s Club as opposed to last year, when they were fired off from Concord Baptist Church.

“It was kind of limited viewing, where you could actually see [the fireworks] really well,” Councilman Shawn Allen said. “I think we kind of want to move things closer to the city, the center of where everything is.”

A community member asked the council to consider looking into noiseless fireworks for this year’s celebration to accommodate area veterans and public safety workers whose PTSD could be triggered by explosions, as well as wildlife and pets who may be upset by the sounds.

City Manager Kim Simonds said the city would look into noiseless options for the firework display.

An impressive lineup

The city is discussing changes to entertainment for the concert, too. While Demorest is no stranger to having a star-studded stage for their Independece Day celebration, this year’s act might look a little different.

Davis suggested bringing in bluegrass and gospel groups for opening acts for the concert, which the city hasn’t featured in years. The council expressed interest in asking rising country music star and Demorest native, John King, to return for yet another concert in his hometown.

Country music recording artist John King returned home to Demorest in 2019 to wow the crowd from the stage at Demorest Springs Park. (Daniel Purcell/Now Habersham)

The conversation took a turn, though, when a community member made a suggestion that took the council by surprise.

Gail Moore spoke up at the meeting, who says her niece, Kimberly Schlapman of the award-winning country music group Little Big Town, would happily perform at the city’s Fourth of July concert.

The council was interested in having the band preform, but weren’t sure that they could fit their act within the city’s event budget. Councilman Davis said that while he’d like to have the band at the city’s celebration, he wasn’t sure they could afford it on their $40,000 overall budget. But Moore said the band would do it at no cost.

“I’m sure they would come … they’ll do it for free,” Moore said. “They will, they do stuff free all the time.”

Schlapman is a northeast Georgia native and graduate of Habersham Central High School. Moore was reportedly on the phone with Schlapman after the meeting— but nothing is official at this time.

The city says they will have a plan in place for the event following their March 12 retreat.

Georgia House Speaker calls for ‘responsible’ $1 billion income tax cut

House Speaker David Ralston pledged in January to pursue “responsible tax relief” even as some statewide GOP candidates are campaigning on a pledge to completely eliminate the state’s income tax, which funds nearly half the state budget. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

Georgia House Republicans unveiled a $1 billion tax cut package Tuesday on the same day their GOP colleagues approved the governor’s proposed $1.6 billion plan to send some of the state’s surplus revenues back to taxpayers.

Speaker David Ralston and the bill’s sponsor, state Rep. Shaw Blackmon, who chairs the Ways and Means Committee, announced the plan at a press conference hours after they backed Gov. Brian Kemp’s one-time refund plan. The proposal faces a tight deadline to pass before a key deadline two weeks away.

Ralston pledged in January to pursue “responsible tax relief” even as some statewide GOP candidates are campaigning on a pledge to completely eliminate the state’s income tax, which funds nearly half the state budget. He said Tuesday such proposals would “blow a catastrophic hole in the budget.”

“I know it doesn’t fit on a bumper sticker quite as well, but I think it is the responsible way to do that,” Ralston said of the House GOP’s plan.

Blackmon’s bill would, however, toss out the graduated six-step income tax rate the state currently uses – and which now tops out at 5.75% – and replace it with a lowered and flattened 5.25% rate on all income.

The Bonaire Republican also said his proposal wraps many of the state’s existing exemptions into a higher $12,000-single and $24,000-married couple standard exemption. The higher exemption, he said, is intended to offset any tax increase on lower-income Georgians caused by the proposed flat tax.

“We believe this tax cut will make us more competitive for wage earners at every income level,” Blackmon said. “This plan lowers the rate and significantly raises the standard exemption. It’s simple, it’s fair, and it allows Georgians to keep more of their money.”

State revenues have jumped in Georgia after an initial dip early in the pandemic when the economy was brought to a sudden standstill, leading lawmakers to pass budget cuts last summer.

Collections were up nearly 18% for the fiscal year as of last month. Last year, the state was left with billions in surplus revenues when the fiscal year ended June 30.

Gov. Brian Kemp has responded to those surging revenues with growing budgets, including a $30.2 billion spending plan for next year that is about $3 billion larger than this year’s budget as originally passed. The governor has packed into the budget costly salary hikes for teachers and state workers.

If passed, the proposed tax cuts announced Tuesday would not take effect until 2024.

Ralston touted the proposal as the largest income tax cut in Georgia history. Lawmakers reduced the top rate from 6% to 5.75% in 2018 with plans to reduce it again in 2020 before the pandemic upended the economy.

Lawmakers came back last year and raised the standard deduction, resulting in a small tax break.

“We believe as a core principle the government must live within its means, that there is no such thing as government money, but that it belongs to Georgia taxpayers,” Ralston said.

Revenues have so far shown no sign of slowing, although the state economist did forecast in January that the growth could soon slow to “more normal pace.”

Kyle Wingfield, president and CEO of the conservative Georgia Public Policy Foundation, called the proposal a “good next step” toward lowering the income tax rate enough to compete regionally. He also called the state’s current six-bracket system “needlessly complicated.”

“We’re in a tough neighborhood when it comes to tax rates,” Wingfield said Tuesday. “I think from a competitiveness standpoint, there’s definitely a need to do something here.”

Georgia is sandwiched between two states – Tennessee and Florida – with no income tax. North Carolina recently approved a gradual reduction of its rate, and South Carolina lawmakers are currently debating tax cut proposals.

“We do believe they’re in a position to take another step, go farther than they originally planned to in 2018, and hopefully set the stage for some further cuts. It makes sense in a lot of ways to take a series of smaller bites rather than one huge bite all at once,” Wingfield said.

But critics are already urging lawmakers to reconsider the proposed move to a flat tax. Danny Kanso, senior policy analyst with the Georgia Budget and Policy Institute, called the flat tax “dangerous” and warned it could dull the potential benefits of the rest of the proposal.

“The recent volatility in Georgia’s revenue collections that only months ago forced billions in budget cuts demonstrates the necessity of preserving our state’s ability to fund health care and public education without overtaxing low- and middle-income families, who are disproportionately people of color,” Kanso said.

“Lawmakers can improve the proposal and rebalance the tax code by rejecting the flat tax, eliminating and capping wasteful corporate subsidies offered through the tax code, such as the costly Film Tax Credit, pursuing commonsense revenue raisers — like lifting the tobacco tax to the national average — and adding a refundable Earned Income Tax Credit.”

$1.6 billion tax refund plan passes

The tax cut plan will also likely encounter pushback from those who would like to see the state spend more of the money on services.

Rep. Josh McLaurin, a Sandy Springs Democrat, questioned why the state was returning $1.6 billion of revenue to taxpayers when state agencies are combating high employee turnover rates and other challenges.

“Would you agree with me that currently our government does not have the money it needs to operate at a basic level and that this type of measure is giving away money that actually the government does need to function?” said McLaurin, who voted against the bill.

That proposal, sponsored by the governor’s floor leader, Rep. John Bonner, a Fayetteville Republican, would send back $250 for single filers, $375 for head of household, and $500 for married couples filing jointly.

“I would submit (that) the government would spend every dollar that they take out of the taxpayer’s hands,” Bonner said in response. “I think it’s important that when opportunities are available to us to return that money, we do that.”

The bill cleared the House with a 148-18 vote Tuesday and goes to the Senate for consideration. This week, the House also unanimously approved a bill that would exempt up to $35,000 a year of military retirement income from the state income tax.

Coquilla Welborn Bryan

Coquilla Welborn Bryan, age 83 of Hull, Georgia, went home to be with the Lord on Thursday, February 17, 2022.

Born in Clarkesville, Georgia, on June 26, 1938, she was a daughter of the late Andrew and Fannie Jones Welborn. Coquilla was a secretary for the Department of Public Health where she retired with over 35 years of dedicated service. In her spare time, she enjoyed flower gardening, working in her yard, and spending time with her family, especially her grandbabies. Coquilla was an avid fan of NASCAR racing, the Georgia Bulldogs, and the Atlanta Braves. She was of the Baptist faith.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her son, Keith Bryan and granddaughter, Morgan Bryan.

Survivors include her granddaughters, Whitney Bryan of Hartwell, GA, and Katie Bryan of Hull, GA; great-grandchildren, Piper Bryan, Mia, Lilah, and Zaiden Hudson; sister, Janet Franklin of McDonough, GA; niece, Tammie Franklin and great-niece, Tiffany Franklin of Stockbridge, GA; former daughter-in-law, Wendy Bryan Miller of Hartwell, GA; as well as other extended relatives and friends.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 3:00 p.m. until 3:45 p.m. on Friday, March 04, 2022.

Graveside services are scheduled for 4:00 p.m. Friday, March 04, 2022, at Bethlehem Baptist Church Cemetery with Rev. Terry Rice officiating.

An online guest registry is available for Coquilla’s family at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

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

Sonny Perdue officially gets University System chancellor job

U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue is set to become the next leader of the University System of Georgia. (Jill Nolin/Georgia Recorder)

(GA Recorder) — Former U.S. Secretary of Agriculture and two-term Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue Tuesday was officially tapped to be the next leader of the University System of Georgia’s 26 public colleges and universities.

In a controversial but widely expected move, the Georgia Board of Regents approved Perdue with a unanimous vote at a virtual meeting in which Perdue did not participate. Perdue’s own appointees to the board spoke in his favor.

“I appreciate the Board’s confidence in me and look forward to working together with them, our campus leadership and faculties, our elected representatives and most importantly, our students, to provide opportunities for students, faculty and staff to be successful and to produce even more outstanding results,” Perdue said in a statement after the vote. “This may be the most important job yet. I can’t think of a better way to make a difference than to help prepare the next generation – educating them for prosperity, themselves, their families and ultimately our state. I’m excited to get started.”

Perdue is set to get started April 1, replacing acting Chancellor Teresa MacCartney, who has been serving since former Chancellor Steve Wrigley’s retirement in July. MacCartney will return to her previous role as executive vice chancellor for administration.

The decision caps off a long and fraught process that saw a search firm tasked with finding a candidate quit and a warning from the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges on undue political interference.

Perdue was reportedly the top choice of Gov. Brian Kemp, in spite of Perdue’s cousin former Sen. David Perdue’s GOP primary challenge for Kemp’s job. Sonny Perdue reportedly helped Kemp secure the endorsement of then-President Donald Trump in 2018, helping him win the Republican nomination for governor, but the relationship goes back even further, said University of Georgia political science professor Charles Bullock.

“Sonny and Brian go back quite a ways,” he said. “The way that Brian originally became secretary of state was Sonny appointed him. There was a vacancy there. So when Brian first met the electorate, he was running as the incumbent rather than one of several people looking for an open seat.”

Kemp may also believe he is removing a powerful piece from David Perdue’s chessboard, Bullock added.

“By having Sonny (at) the Board of Regents, it probably takes him out of the mix for the gubernatorial election,” he said. “He’ll have his hands full, I assume setting policy, overseeing activities for the Board of Regents, therefore less likely to be out campaigning with his cousin, and Sonny is a far, far better retail politician than David is.”

Kemp congratulated Perdue with a tweet after the vote.

 

“He has a long track record of success working for the people of our state and its students. He will bring the benefit of his decades of leadership to our top-ranked university system.”

Regents at the meeting were similarly effusive in their praise for the former governor, some praising their past experience working with him.

“Previously, as you all know, I worked for Gov. Perdue as services policy director, and I specifically advised him on education policy issues,” said Regent Erin Hames. “Over four and a half years in that role, I really saw firsthand his character, his work ethic and his deep love for the state of Georgia. I saw his passion for the future of Georgia.”

The Georgia Board of Regents votes to confirm former Gov. Sonny Perdue as the next chancellor of the University System of Georgia during a virtual hearing. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder. 

“Sonny appointed me in 2010, and my service on the Board of Regents for the last 12 years has been one of the highlights of the things I’ve done in state,” said Regent C. Thomas Hopkins. “I deeply appreciate what he did putting me on this board, and I look forward to working with him for the future and moving the university system forward.”

Multiple regents praised Perdue’s executive and professional experience. In addition to his public service, he holds a doctorate in veterinary medicine from the University of Georgia. He lives in Bonaire, where he has found success in agribusiness, trucking and land development.

But Perdue might not receive such a sunny reception from all students or faculty.

His nomination triggered charges of political patronage as well as student protests.

The university system saw bitter divides over mask rules during the pandemic, and some professors are raising alarms over proposed changes to the post-tenure review process, which they say will harm their academic freedom and job security.

Perdue critics say he lacks experience in the higher education system.

“Perdue obviously has a great resume for being a governor, but he has zero resume for being the head of universities and colleges,” said Matthew Boedy, Georgia chapter president of the American Association of University Professors. “I don’t know what academic means to them, but four out of the five last chancellors have had experience working in the university system, working in university administration. So, either they’re knocking those people or telling us the job has radically changed.”

Some also worry that his past conservative positions will clash with a more left-leaning campus culture.

Perdue campaigned for governor on restoring the old state flag which included a Confederate symbol, and his tenure in the agriculture department brought charges that he dismissed climate change and suppressing research that demonstrated its effects.

“The chancellor historically has not been a personal political officer,” Boedy said. “We just don’t know what he’s going to do. And his record on funding higher education and supporting higher education is not there, outside of his love for the University of Georgia sports teams. So, the chancellor’s job isn’t to kill research or to promote one issue over the other, so if he starts to do that, that would be very bad for the university system.”

Boedy said he has concerns about the transparency of the selection process, but for now, students and faculty will just have to wait and see what happens.

“That’s where we are now. We have a new chancellor, and we’ll just have to see what he does.”

Motorcyclist killed after crashing into trailer

fatal accident

A motorcycle crash in Athens claimed the life of a 23-year-old man. Police say the man was thrown from his motorcycle after crashing into a trailer being towed by a pickup truck. He is the second person to die on Athens area roads in three days.

This most recent fatal crash happened around 6:36 p.m. on March 1 at College Station Road and University Circle, just south of the downtown district.

According to Athens-Clarke County police, the initial investigation indicates that a Ford F250 towing a landscape trailer was in the process of turning onto University Circle. The motorcycle was traveling south on College Station Road when it collided with the trailer. The motorcycle operator was ejected from the bike and died as a result of his injuries. Officials are withholding his name pending notification of next of kin.

This is the third fatal motor vehicle crash in Athens-Clarke County this year.

Legislation to ban mail-order abortion pills in Georgia clears state Senate

From left, Sen. Jen Jordan and Sen. Bruce Thompson debate his bill that would ban mail-order abortion pills. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder.)

(GA Recorder) — The Georgia Senate passed a bill Tuesday aimed at preventing Georgia women from accessing abortion pills by mail.

If the bill passes the House and receives Gov. Brian Kemp’s signature, doctors will be required to conduct an in-person exam before they can prescribe the drugs as well as schedule a follow-up appointment one to two weeks afterward. The bill applies to medicine taken after conception to end a pregnancy, but not contraceptive pills like Plan B designed to prevent pregnancy.

The bill’s sponsor, Sen. Bruce Thompson, a Republican from White who is running for state labor commissioner, says it will undo a rule change by the Biden administration that loosened restricted access to the pills during the pandemic. Democrats called the measure a backhanded means to restrict abortion access ahead of an expected overhaul to Roe v. Wade this summer.

Thompson characterized the drugs as potentially dangerous, pointing to guidelines posted by one of the companies that make the drugs, warning of side effects and requiring that they be administered by a medical professional.

“The manufacturers of these drugs understand the risks associated with taking these pills, and they also outline the importance of a post-treatment assessment between day seven and 14,” he said. “So you can see that their prescriber agreement form is very, very clear.”

Thompson said 26 deaths have been reported in connection with the pills. He did not specify the time frame for the deaths or the size of the population in which they occurred.

Savannah Republican Sen. Ben Watson, a physician who chairs the Senate Health and Human Services Committee, said drugs for treating ailments ranging from acne to rheumatoid arthritis require in-person visits, which makes good medical sense.

“During the pandemic, the rules were suspended, and patients were allowed to get this medicine via telemedicine,” he said. “The FDA’s website has not changed, the medicine has not changed, and the need to see a physician has not changed. Other aspects relating to a follow-up visit is very important when you’re prescribing medicines. Does the patient need to have a birth control discussion? Is there follow-up with any complications related to the medicine? And their initial visit also, do you need an ultrasound to see if this is an ectopic pregnancy? Is it a cervical pregnancy? Is there already some type of miscarriage going on? There are many things that need to be evaluated. Simply put, this puts it back to the pre-pandemic situation that we were in before and I think encourages good health care.”

Another physician lawmaker, Sen. Michele Au, a Johns Creek Democrat, disagreed.

Seeing patients face-to-face is always best, Au said, but many women do not have the ability, including those who cannot afford to see a doctor or who live in rural counties unlikely to have a practicing OB/GYN.

A Supreme Court ruling out of Mississippi expected this summer could limit abortions to the first 15 weeks of pregnancy, and Au said Thompson’s bill would further strip away access to what she characterized as a safe medical procedure.

“This is why this bill matters in this current environment,” she said. “And because of how narrow this window is about to become, you need to leave healthcare providers as many options as possible in order to allow us to care for the patients who need us. The Legislature should not be in the practice of dictating how we can, and should, safely practice medicine.”

Sen. Jen Jordan, an Atlanta Democrat running for attorney general, accused the bill’s Republican sponsors of playing politics.

“Y’all know that term gaslighting?” she said. “You’re going to gaslight women up and down. You’re gonna come up here and you’re gonna tell me that the only reason you want to pass this law is because you want to protect vulnerable women. You’re going to do everything you can to protect women. ‘Highest standard of care that women deserve.’ And yet you won’t even expand Medicaid. Y’all talk about protecting the cherished doctor-patient relationship. And you know what you do? You basically take that away, and you tell the doctor what to do.”

Jordan characterized the requirements for doctors to prescribe the pills as overburdensome and intended to make it harder to obtain an abortion. She expressed particular disgust with a portion of the bill requiring a doctor to inform a patient that “she may see the remains of her unborn child in the process of completing the abortion.”

The bill also states that doctors may, but are not required to, inform women that it might be possible to reverse the abortion process if they change their mind, a claim medical experts described as dubious during a committee hearing.

“Let’s be clear, this has nothing to do (with) protecting women,” Jordan said. “Nothing. It’s about an agenda that’s being pushed. It is about the fact that the Supreme Court of the United States is about to overturn Roe v. Wade. It is about narrowing whatever access actually may be available, especially to women that are poor, that live in rural areas and that are women of color.”

Electrical fire forces Clarkesville family from home

A small fire broke out inside this mobile home on Diamond Avenue in Clarkesville Tuesday evening, March 1, 2022. (Red Bird Media)

An electrical fire forced a Clarkesville family from their mobile home Tuesday night. The fire was called into Habersham 911 shortly after 7 p.m. on March 1.

Firefighters found flames around a bedroom outlet and extinguished them, saving the mobile home from serious damage. (Red Bird Media)

Firefighters from Clarkesville, Habersham County and Lee Arrendale fire departments responded to the scene at 355 Diamond Avenue off Wall Bridge Road.

Units arrived on the scene within ten minutes to find the 1500 square foot structure with light smoke showing.

“Upon investigation, crews found a burned spot on the exterior of the home,” says Habersham County Fire Capt. Matt Ruark.

Firefighters disconnected the electricity, checked inside, and found a fire around a bedroom outlet. Crews extinguished the flames and checked the rest of the home for any signs of burning.

They advised the homeowners to keep the power off until an electrician could inspect the wiring in the home, Ruark says. Fire units cleared the scene shortly before 8 p.m.