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Rabun Gap Middle School presents ‘Peter Pan Jr.’

The cast of “Peter Pan Jr.” at Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School. This Middle School musical included more than 30 students in grades 6-8. (photo courtesy Rabun Gap Nacoochee School)

Middle School students at Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School brought the magic of Neverland to the Rearden Stage in their production of the musical “Peter Pan Jr.” on Feb. 18-19.

Abby Hartridge of Clayton starred as Peter Pan, with Makenna Bilbrey of Otto, North Carolina, as Wendy, and Hannah Demmler of Rabun Gap as Captain Hook.

Abby Hartridge of Clayton as Peter Pan, top, poses after a musical number with the Lost Boys. Pictured, front row from left, are Mya Burnett of Franklin, NC as Slightly, Porter Mulholland of Franklin, NC as Michael, and Andrew Tench of Clarkesville as John; back row, Eleanor McArthur of Otto, NC as Twin #1, Abby Grace Head of Clarkesville, GA as Lost Boy, Bailey Demmler of Rabun Gap as Lost Boy, and Jada Tiger of Franklin, NC as Nibs. (photo courtesy Rabun Gap Nacoochee School)

More than 30 students in grades 6-8 were involved in the musical both on stage and behind the scenes. In addition to the musical numbers, there were two Cirque acts in the show.

Amber Miller directed and choreographed the show, with Beth Loveland as technical director and Qui Antoine.

 

Best Picture Oscar nominee: Belfast

Like The Power of the Dog, Belfast is a movie that’s been in release since last year and it has scored seven Oscar nominations. Don’t let anyone sell this movie short. It deserves every bit of acclaim it’s gotten.

Kenneth Branagh directs this beautifully made film in stark black-and-white and he tells a story that encompasses a turbulent time in world history that is simultaneously lighthearted and surprisingly violent.

As the movie opens, it’s 1969 in Belfast, Northern Ireland and Branagh sets his story during the time of The Troubles which was an ethnographic conflict between Protestants and Catholics.

A family is caught in the middle of the war and they’re never quite named except they go by the youngest son, Buddy (Jude Hill); his mother “Ma” (Catriona Balfe); his father “Pa” (Jamie Dornan); his older brother, Will (Lewis McAskie); and his grandparents, “Pop” (Ciaran Hinds) and “Granny” (Judi Dench).

Buddy and his family do their best to stay out of the conflict by going about their everyday lives: His dad travels frequently on business to England while his mother stays home to take of their children and his grandparents provide the necessary solace and occasional pearl of wisdom Buddy needs every now and then.

The conflict grows increasingly worse and it leads the family to contemplate leaving Belfast for either Sydney or Vancouver. Buddy is dead set against it as he prefers living in the only home he’s ever known and possibly abandoning his first crush (Olive Tennant).

Branagh tells this story in such a fashion that we forget we’re seeing a movie. In its basic framework, it feels much more like a documentary of who these people are and the traditions and beliefs that they live by.

The look and feel of this movie are absolutely exhilarating. It’s a triumph of production design and cinematography that brings Ireland to spectacular yet humble life. The streets in which Buddy and his family live deserve recognition for their clarity and realism.

Branagh directs and writes this film with a voyeuristic perspective that we know these characters innately and we understand their fears, hopes, and desires in such a way that feels very much like an authentic experience.

Belfast is a film that is perceptive and evocative from start to finish.

Grade: A

(Rated PG-13 for some violence and strong language.)

United Way of White County awards funding to 14 agencies

Representatives from 14 non-profits in and around White County received funding checks from the local agency. (wrwh.com)

The goal of  United Way of White County is to help neighbors in need. On February 24, the organization handed out checks totaling $75-thousand dollars to 14 agencies that serve residents of White County.

Wayne Hardy, United Way board chairman, said they are proud to assist so many organizations.

“That’s one thing that we are proud of in United Way of White County, that we are able to take almost every penny given and return back into these originations that are serving our community and we have been very blessed to have a lot of generosity that’s allowed us to carry this out. A lot of hard work, it doesn’t happen without the volunteers making it happen and a very dedicated board,” commented Hardy.

During the allocation ceremony, Attorney Carl Free was recognized for his two decades of service to United Way.

United Way Board Chair Wayne Hardy presents a certificate of appreciation to Cleveland attorney Carl Free for his many years of volunteer service. (wrwh.com)

Darrel Chaney shared with the group about the upcoming Darrel Chaney Invitational Golf Tournament that will benefit United Way.  That event will be held on April 11th and 12th and will feature 23 celebrity-led teams who will participate.

Agencies receiving funds from United Way of White County:
Catalyst Christian Learning Center
Circle of Hope
Cleveland Care Center
Community Helping Hands Clinic
Enotah CASA
Family Promise of White Habersham
Habersham Homeless
Habit for Humanity
Rape Response
South Enotah Child Advocacy Center
White County 4-H Club
White County Backpack Buddies
White County Caring and Sharing
White County Food Pantry

Prescription drugs: Another potential legislative change that Medicaid insurers face

One House bill would make Georgia’s Medicaid managed care insurers face stricter requirements on how they spend their government dollars.

There’s a second bill that has also captured their attention – an attempt to wrest control of patients’ prescription drugs from those health plans.

Knight

House Bill 1351 would remove the function of the three managed care companies — Peach State, Amerigroup and CareSource — to oversee the dispensing of medication, instead placing it under state supervision. The goal of the bill is to improve care for patients and save the state money, said its lead sponsor, Rep. David Knight, a Griffin Republican.

The bill was approved unanimously this week by the House Special Committee on Access to Quality Health Care. The legislation now goes to the House Rules Committee.

The three managed care companies, which oversee the care of more than 1 million Medicaid members in Georgia, use what are called pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs. These entities basically serve as middlemen between health insurers or large employers and drugmakers in handling pharmaceutical benefits.

These benefit management groups make decisions on which medications will be placed on an insurer’s list of covered drugs, and how much the insurer will pay for them.

Knight has been a dogged critic of PBMs. He told lawmakers on the health care panel Wednesday that people with cancer or HIV, and chronically ill patients, are being steered to distant PBM pharmacies instead of to local drugstores, many of which are in underserved areas.

Stephanie Wells, a Stage 4 cancer patient, said she is battling with a PBM for better access to her chemotherapy medication. She told lawmakers via Zoom that she has had problems getting her cancer drug delivered. Wells said she would greatly prefer getting the medication locally.

“I’m a very stubborn person, so I will continue to battle them,’’ she said.

Despite state laws against some PBM practices, Knight said, “the games persist.”

Wells speaking to House committee Wednesday via Zoom

Each year, Georgia pays CareSource, Peach State and Amerigroup a total of more than $4 billion to run the federal-state health insurance program for low-income residents and people with disabilities.

The Georgia Pharmacy Association backs the “carve-out” proposal, saying the current set-up jeopardizes independent drugstores.

Phillip Howell, owner of a drugstore in Calhoun, told the House panel Wednesday that his pharmacy has lost more than $100,000 in each of the past five years, mainly because of low payments on the Medicaid prescriptions he fills.

Howell’s pharmacy in Calhoun

Howell cited a recent case in which he filled an EpiPen prescription for a child. It cost him $300. The managed care company paid him $207 but then charged him a retroactive fee of $150, he said. So he wound up receiving a total of about $57 in reimbursement, taking a big loss.

“I’m on the verge of going out of business,” he told lawmakers.

According to a consulting firm’s study, Knight said, the most likely scenario under a drug carve-out would save the Georgia Medicaid program $3.9 million.

Jesse Weathington, executive director of the Georgia Quality Healthcare Association, which represents the Medicaid insurers, said he doubts that a switch in the drug program will save the state money.

Pharmacy dispensing fees will rise dramatically if the prescription drug benefit is carved out of the health plans, said Weathington, whose group opposes the legislation.

Such a carve-out has already occurred in California’s Medicaid program, called Medi-Cal.

Leanne Gassaway, vice president of state government affairs at CVS Health, which has a PBM that serves Peach State, said in a statement that House Bill 1351 “would force Georgia’s Medicaid beneficiaries into an inferior pharmacy benefit and leave taxpayers on the hook for hundreds of millions of dollars in avoidable health care costs. “

“California’s shift to fee-for-service has disrupted care for millions of beneficiaries and jeopardized timely access to needed drugs” Gassaway said.

From The Commonwealth Fund

Georgia, she added, “should reject a scheme that will only hurt patients and lead to higher prescription drug costs.”

In his presentation to the committee, Knight noted that Centene, the parent company of Peach State, has reached multimillion-dollar settlements in Ohio, Mississippi and other states over lawsuits alleging the company overcharged the states’ Medicaid programs for pharmacy services.

Meanwhile, the three managed care insurers are also confronting medical spending requirements in provisions contained in a proposed mental health parity bill. The high-profile House Bill 1013 would set up a minimum level of medical spending of at least 85 percent of the dollars that Medicaid insurers receive from the program.

GHN and Kaiser Health News reported in September that Georgia is one of only a few states that don’t mandate a minimum level of medical spending and quality improvements for Medicaid insurers.

Weathington told Georgia Health News recently that the insurers won’t oppose the 85 percent threshold.

Another House proposal would require more public disclosure about Georgia health plans that serve Medicaid patients, state employees and teachers.

House Bill 1276, if it becomes law, would require the main state health agency to post reports showing how many primary care providers an insurance plan offers in a specific county, along with data on the insurer’s hospital costs and prescription drug spending.

The main sponsor of the proposal, Rep. Lee Hawkins (R-Gainesville), said Weathington had agreed to the bill’s provisions.

6 arrested in Lumpkin County drug raid

Drugs, weapons, and cash agents say they seized during a February 23 drug raid in Lumpkin County. (LCSO Facebook)

North Georgia drug agents broke up an alleged drug trafficking operation during a recent raid in Lumpkin County. They arrested six people and seized large quantities of illegal drugs and firearms, the Lumpkin County Sheriff’s Office says.

Deputies executed a search warrant on February 23 at a residence off Dublin Court. During the search, they say they found approximately 2,000 grams of methamphetamine, 347 grams of marijuana, approximately 1,800 oxycodone pills, and guns.

Members of the Appalachian Regional Drug Enforcement Office task force and Department of Corrections K9 assisted with the search which followed a multi-month investigation, officials say.

(LCSO)

Deputies arrested four Lumpkin County residents: Brandon Joshua Roberts, age 31; Amanda Victoria Brannon, 24; Anthony Dustin Wehunt, 34; and Angela Samantha Jett, 49. They also took into custody 29-year-old Christopher Gage Lee of Dawson County 35-year-old Michael Carlton Rider of Hall County.

SEE ALSO

Couple arrested for trafficking meth after traffic stop in Cornelia

 

Teri Lee Whitney

Teri Lee Whitney, age 39 of Danielsville, passed away Friday, February 25, 2022.

Born in Kissimmee, Florida on November 18, 1982, Teri was the daughter of the late Alan Edgar Hayward and Cindy Lee Miniagio. Teri was a self-employed massage therapist and owner of Zen Massage, LLC. Teri was an avid hiker and loved the outdoors as well as camping. She was a true servant and would oftentimes prepare food and feed the homeless and those less fortunate. Teri was a very independent woman and was an adrenalin junkie.

Survivors include brother Steven Hayward of Clarkesville, brother and sister-in-law Ben and Samantha Hayward of DeLand, Florida, fiancé David Pruitt of Danielsville, and special friend Marie Theibert (Eric) of Clarkesville.

A private memorial service will be held at a later date.

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

Couple arrested for trafficking meth after traffic stop in Cornelia

A traffic stop outside a Cornelia hotel led to a couple’s arrest for alleged drug trafficking. Habersham County deputies arrested Crystal Dawn Tellez of Mt. Airy and Joseph Skimehorn of Woodbury, Tennessee, on Wednesday, February 23.

According to the incident report, Deputy Brandon Holcomb pulled over the Dodge Challenger they were in after he said Skimehorn made an illegal turn onto GA 385/US 441 Business while leaving the Baymont Hotel in Cornelia. While interviewing the driver, Holcomb said he smelled marijuana coming from the car. That prompted a search which officials say led to the discovery of drugs and items commonly used to distribute illegal narcotics.

During the search, deputies found what appeared to be a jar of marijuana, several Ziplock bags of suspected methamphetamine, digital scales with residue, and a bag of new Ziplock baggies. According to the arrest warrants, officers seized more than 28 grams of suspected meth.

A 12-year old boy and a 4-year-old girl were in the backseat of the car where the marijuana was found. They were turned over to the custody of their grandmother.

Deputies arrested Skimehorn and Tellez and charged both with trafficking meth and possession of drugs with intent to distribute. As of Friday, February 25, they remained in the Habersham County jail without bond.

The sheriff’s office turned over the case to the Appalachian Regional Drug Enforcement Office task force in Cleveland.

Athens-Clarke police arrest gang members, seize guns, drugs and cash

(Photo: ACCPD)

The Athens-Clarke County Police Department arrested three gang members and seized seven guns after a search on Wednesday, police say.

Damari Jones, 21 of Athens, Javaris Barnes, 33 of Athens and Jakiyah Brown, 20 of Athens, were all arrested after the search, which seized over nine pounds of marijuana and $52,000 in US currency in addition to the firearms.

Jones, who was out on bond for the violation of the Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act and possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime, was arrested on five charges. Those charges include violation of the Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, possession of marijuana with intent to distribute and reckless conduct. The ACCPD says that Jones is currently on probation for aggravated assault and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony.

Barnes was arrested for possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and is currently on probation for four counts of the same crime, as well as possession of marijuana.

Brown was arrested for possession of marijuana with intent to distribute.

Over the past two months, the ACCPD says they’ve made 28 arrests of known gang members or associates, seized 23 firearms, drugs and stolen property.

The ACCPD says these arrests are part of their ongoing goal to protect the Athens community against gang activity, and that they “will continue to focus [their] efforts on violent criminal street gangs.”

Fort Stewart sending thousands of troops to Europe in response to Russia’s Ukraine invasion

Soldiers assigned to the Army’s 3rd Infantry Division conducted armorer’s refresher training at the Fort Stewart military installation Southeast of Savannah in mid-February. It’s the only unit on Fort Stewart capable of servicing units that are not part of the brigade combat team on the base. (Photo: Sgt. Laurissa Hodges)

(GA Recorder) — The United States response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will include troops stationed at Georgia’s Fort Stewart, according to the Pentagon.

President Joe Biden announced during a Thursday press conference that 7,000 troops will be moved to Germany in response to the attack. A Pentagon press officer confirmed to States Newsroom that the majority of the troops deploying will be from Fort Stewart’s 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division.

Biden said the troops will help defend NATO territory, not fight in Ukraine.

“Our forces are not and will not be engaged in a conflict with Russia in Ukraine. Our forces are not going to Europe to fight in Ukraine, but to defend our NATO allies and reassure those allies in the east. As I’ve made crystal clear, the United States will defend every inch of NATO territory with the full force of American power.”

Details on the timing of the deployment have not yet been made public.

According to 11Alive, members of the Georgia Air National Guard’s 165th Airlift Wing in Savannah deployed to Europe Feb. 16 on a mission that includes supplying logistical support and military aid.

Fort Stewart is located in Hinesville, southwest of Savannah, and is the largest Army installation east of the Mississippi River, according to the USO, employing about 21,000 service members, 29,500 military family members and 3,500 civilians.

According to Military Times, the troops of the combat team will be joined by supporting fires and transportation units, and once they arrive, there will be 14,000 U.S. troops mobilized in Europe in response to the attacks on Ukraine, in addition to 80,000 already based there.

Armored Brigade Combat Teams include three infantry battalions, an armed reconnaissance cavalry squadron, a field artillery battalion, a brigade engineer battalion and a logistics support battalion. It is unlikely they will bring heavy armored vehicles to Europe, the Military Times reports. As of November, the Army had 12 active and 5 National Reserve Armored Brigade Combat Teams.

The 3rd Infantry Division was activated in 1917 during World War I, where it earned the nickname “Rock of the Marne” for holding a defensive position along the Marne River in France against German forces.

The division has since deployed to conflict zones around the world, including Europe in World War II, Korea, Vietnam, Afghanistan and Iraq. According to the USO, the 3rd Infantry Division is the most decorated infantry division in the Army with 56 Medal of Honor recipients among its ranks.

New CDC guidance relaxes indoor public masking in a majority of U.S. counties

Dropping face masks among vaccinated Americans will be one of the most visible steps toward resuming pre-pandemic activities. (Alyssa Hall/Piedmont Photojournalism)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday unveiled updated guidance for wearing masks indoors in public places, a move that means 70% of Americans likely will be able to ditch their masks.

The new guidance will divvy counties into low, medium or high transmission categories based on new hospitalizations for COVID-19, the number of hospital beds filled with patients with coronavirus and new cases.

“This updated approach focuses on directing our prevention efforts towards protecting people at high risk for severe ailments and preventing hospitals and health care systems from being overwhelmed,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said.

The new metrics are a significant departure from the previous CDC masking guidance, which recommended anyone in an area of high or sustained transmission, about 95% of the country, wear masks inside in public places.

Based on the new metrics, about 30% of Americans are in low transmission counties, where no indoor public masking is recommended.

Another 42% of the population is in medium spread counties, where people with underlying health conditions may want to wear masks and talk with their doctors about prevention measures. The remaining 28% of Americans live in high transmission counties and should continue wearing well-fitted masks covering their nose and mouth in public indoor spaces.

The guidance extends to schools, where the CDC is now only recommending universal masking for students and teachers in the high transmission regions.

U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona said in a statement the new guidance means officials “can continue to keep schools safely open while allowing for educators and parents to get back to focusing on what is most important: our students’ futures.”

“Moving forward, districts should continue to work with local health experts, parents, and educators to identify what works best for their communities and consider the appropriate mitigation strategies needed to keep students and staff safe,” he said.

Walensky did, however, stress that anyone who tests positive for COVID-19 or who has been exposed to the virus should wear a mask to avoid infecting others with the virus, which has killed more than 940,000 Americans.

She added that nothing in the CDC’s new recommendations prevents anyone who wants to wear a mask from wearing one.

She also sought to remind Americans that they may need to be flexible about putting masks back on if a new variant or surge occurs.

“None of us know what the future may hold for us and for this virus. And we need to be prepared and we need to be ready for whatever comes next,” she said. “We want to give people a break from things like mask wearing when the levels are low, and then have the ability to reach for them again should things get worse in the future.”

The new guidance doesn’t extend to public transportation systems, where travelers must continue wearing masks. The CDC, Walensky said, will be looking at that guidance ahead of the March 18 expiration date for buses, trains and planes.

High School Football Hall of Fame in the works

High school football in Georgia is getting a Hall of Fame, with its first induction class slated for this fall.

Score Atlanta, a sports marketing group, announced the creation of the Georgia High School Football Hall of Fame on Thursday.

The first class, honoring only players and not coaches, could have as many as 35 inductees, said I.J. Rosenberg, the Hall’s founder.

“I have been lucky to follow sports in Atlanta and around the state for almost 40 years, and now I have an opportunity to help honor these great athletes and also tell the history and impact high school football has in Georgia,” said Rosenberg, a former Atlanta Journal-Constitution sportswriter who started Score Atlanta in 2004. “The induction ceremony, the plaques, the coats and the big names are all exciting. But what’s great about Hall of Fames are the stories that come out of them.”

Rosenberg sat on two committees for the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown during his time covering the Braves for the AJC in the 1990s. He founded and runs the athletics Hall of Fame at Lakeside High, his alma mater. He’s modeling his latest venture after the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame.

“The key here will be making sure we do a good job with the entire state and don’t focus on just the names we all know.”

The Georgia High School Football Hall of Fame won’t have a physical structure initially, but Rosenberg said he intends to find a public space to display Hall of Fame plaques in the meantime.

The Hall of Fame will take nominations, but the selection process and eligibility requirements won’t be ironed out until the initial board meetings. In addition to players, Rosenberg said he planned to induct one team each season and give out a distinguished service award.

The board will be co-chaired by Dave Hunter, the retired former Brookwood athletic director and coach, and Rusty Mansell, a recruiting analyst for 247Sports and a former Georgia high school football player.

Board members will include GHSA executive director Robin Hines, former high school coaches Lynn Hunnicutt, Ed Pilcher, Jimmy Dorsey, Raymond “Tweet” Williams and Earl Etheridge, current coaches Maurice Freeman, Tim McFarlin, Bryan Lamar and Eric Parker, county athletic directors Jasper Jewell and Ed Shaddix, GHSA media relations director Steve Figueroa, McEachern principal Regina Montgomery, Atlanta businessman Randy Beal and sports media members Bill Hartman, Buck Belue, Craig Sager Jr. and Matt Stewart.

The reason the Georgia Hall of Fame is for players only, Rosenberg said, is that coaches already have a Hall of Fame in Dalton. Three of Rosenberg’s board members – Hunter, Pilcher and Dorsey – are members of the Georgia Athletic Coaches Association Hall of Fame.

To be settled is how much to weigh a player’s high school career against his entire career.

There are nine former Georgia high school football players in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, the most recent being Sandy Creek’s Calvin Johnson, inducted last year. Four Heisman Trophy winners, including Johnson County’s Herschel Walker and Westlake’s Cam Newton, played high school football in Georgia.

There also are Georgia high school football legends such as Commerce’s Monte Williams, whose post-high school career wasn’t especially outstanding but whose Georgia career rushing record has stood more than 20 years.

Rosenberg said the tentative plan is to break the state into regions and the state’s history into eras, with board members assigned to them so that each region and era get fair representation in the Hall of Fame.

“The key here will be making sure we do a good job with the entire state and don’t focus on just the names we all know,” Rosenberg said. “An example is one of the buckets we will pick from is the African-American schools before the GHSA was fully integrated. Their history before integration is really incredible but not well-known. What I learned from the Baseball Hall of Fame is to make sure to uncover every stone and don’t assume anything. Our board is very diverse and has a big job in front of them, but they all are excited about it.”

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

White County elections board holds final public hearing on precinct consolidation

White County Election Board, left to right, Louise Nix, Todd Marks, Dwayne Turner, Russell Mobley, and Mike Mays. (wrwh.com)

The White County Elections and Voter Registration board held a second public hearing Thursday to accept public input about their plans to combine the Helen and Roberstown precincts and polling places. During the hearing two people made comments.

Dwayne Turner, chairman of the board, said they were looking for ways to help protect the votes and keep the equipment safe, as well as make the voting process more efficient for the county.  Turner said in November 2020 the combined in-person voting at Helen and Roberstown was 587, that’s just a little more than the next smallest voting precinct.

At the end of the hearing, Turner said, “On March 7th we will meet, we’ll have our regular meeting and have a discussion and take a vote at that time to see if we will consolidate it.”

Current White County Voting Precinct Map