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Jo Ann Parson Davidson

Jo Ann Parson Davidson, age 78, of Gillsville, passed away on Saturday, January 15, 2022.

Born on January 2, 1944, in Banks County, she was the daughter of the late Travis William and Hazel Louise Payne Parson.

Mrs. Davidson was retired from Ethicon after 25 years of service. She greatly enjoyed her retirement, spending time with her family, especially her granddaughters. She was very involved in their activities and was always there for them. She was not an extravagant person, enjoying the simple things of life, such as being involved in the Red Hat Society, listening to Elvis and the Drum and Bugle Corps, and eating ice cream. She was a member of the Order of the Eastern Star.

In addition to her parents, she was also preceded in death by a sister-in-law, Rebecca Parsons.

Survivors include daughter and son-in-law, Lisa and Marty Phillips of Alto; son and daughter-in-law, Christopher and April Davidson of Commerce; granddaughters, Victoria Phillips, Samantha Davidson, Kara Davidson, and Lexi Davidson; brother, Rev. Samuel Parsons of Gainesville; nephews, Matthew Parsons and Gregory Parsons; niece, Kimberly Cope; numerous other relatives and friends.

Funeral services are 2 pm, Wednesday, January 19, 2022, in the Chapel of McGahee-Griffin & Stewart with Rev. Samuel Parsons and Pastor Chad Hope officiating. Interment will follow in Silver Shoals Baptist Church Cemetery.

The family will receive friends from 4-8 pm on Tuesday at the funeral home.
Those in attendance are asked to please adhere to 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.

Northeast Georgia’s connection to MLK and the civil rights movement

Martin Luther King Jr., civil rights activist, painted by Betsy Graves Reyneau.

Georgia holds a central place in the story of the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., a man who fought for social justice and civil rights for America’s Black citizens and continues to inspire change today. While his impact may be seen most obviously in Atlanta, from his birthplace to his legacy at Ebenezer Baptist Church, his impact was also evident in Northeast Georgia.

Smith, an alumna of Piedmont University and a Northeast Georgian, was a friend to MLK.

Lilian E. Smith, a white woman who operated a girls’ camp in Clayton, was a voice for desegregation, gender and racial equality and an open supporter of the civil rights movement. Smith taught these ideas of racial equality at her camp and would go on to write “Strange Fruit,” the best-selling novel surrounding an interracial relationship that challenged racist norms.

Smith and King began corresponding in 1956, building a friendship as they fought together for King’s dream: an America without racism.

“King respected Smith, not just as a fellow anti-racist and Civil Rights activist,” Piedmont University Lillian E. Smith Center Director Matthew Teutsch wrote in an essay for the African American Intellectual History Society. “He respected her as a friend, and she respected him as a friend.”

They both noted each other in key speeches and letters that fueled the civil rights movement, like in King’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” he writes that Smith has “written about our struggle in eloquent, prophetic, and understanding terms.”

“To my dear friend, Lillian Smith,” King writes in an inscription. “In appreciation for your genuine goodwill, your great humanitarian concern, and your unmoving devotion to the cause of freedom and justice.” (Photo: Piedmont University)

When King was arrested in Atlanta before he was pardoned by President John. F. Kennedy, a piece of the story gets left out: he was in the car with Smith.

“We do not get that he was pulled over, before the cop even knew who he was, for having Lillian Smith, a white woman and his friend, in the front seat with him,” Teutsch writes for AAIHS. “We do not get that he was taking her to the hospital after they ate dinner together. We do not get that the two had a correspondence and relationship. We need that part of the story. We need to see the work that King and Smith did together, the thoughts they shared, the words they wrote to one another. We need their relationship in our memory.”

As we reflect today on the legacy King left the United States and the world, remembering his impact in all the corners of the country, Teutsch says we must remember the change he fought for and how it was received.

“We need to recall the backlash King faced during his lifetime,” Teutsch tells Now Habersham. “I came across articles in my hometown newspaper, The Shreveport Times, about the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom where writers said that the march and the movement ignored the laws, laws that, as we know, subjected Black men, women, and children to noncitizenship and oppression.”

Teutsch tells Now Habersham to achieve King’s dream, which he, Smith and so many other activists fought for, we must also acknowledge that the issues they pushed against aren’t ones that vanish overnight.

“Ultimately, we need [to] remember that in order to achieve the Beloved Community that King fought for, and I’d say that Lillian Smith fought for, we must remember that the issues that King and Smith fought against do not go away so easily,” Teutsch says. “As King put it at the end of ‘A Testament of Hope’ when he links Civil Rights Activists to the Founders of the United States, ‘Today’s dissenters tell the complacent majority that the time has come when further evasion of social responsibility in a turbulent world will court disaster and death. America has not yet changed because so many think it need not change, but this is the illusion of the damned.'”

Timothy Edward Haynes

Timothy Edward Haynes, age 61, of Lula, passed away peacefully to be with the Lord on Saturday, January 15, 2022.

Funeral services are scheduled for 2:00 pm on Thursday, January 20, 2022, in the Chapel of McGahee-Griffin & Stewart. Interment will follow in Westview Cemetery in Lula.

The family will receive friends from 12-8 pm on Wednesday, January 19, 2022, and from 10 am until the service hour on Thursday, at the funeral home.

Those in attendance are asked to please adhere to 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.

What the Kemp budget has for health care — and what it doesn’t

Gov. Brian Kemp gives his annual State of the State address to House and Senate lawmakers on Jan. 13, during the first week of the 2022 legislative session. (Riley Bunch/GPB)

Extending Medicaid coverage for women who have given birth. Higher pay for physicians serving Georgia’s poor. More money for rural health care.

In many ways, health care is getting a boost in Gov. Brian Kemp’s budget.

Kemp’s proposed budget envisions a record $30.2 billion in state spending next year. The highest-profile items include $5,000 pay raises for state employees, $2,000 bonuses for teachers, and a $1.6 billion tax refund for Georgians.

State tax collections — boosted by federal pandemic relief funds sent to Georgians — have increased since mid-2020, and those revenues have further soared as the economy recovered, the AJC reported. The state has piled up a record surplus.

Democrats would like to see more of the surplus spent on state programs than Kemp is proposing. They point out that amid the health care features in his budget, there is no sign of extending coverage to hundreds of thousands of uninsured Georgians through Medicaid.

In his State of the State speech Thursday, the governor made no mention of Georgia’s federal Medicaid waiver proposal, which the feds recently approved in general while rejecting its work requirement.

He also said nothing in the address about Medicaid expansion, which is outlined in the federal Affordable Care Act (ACA) and has been adopted by most states over the past decade. Expansion adds more low-income individuals to Medicaid rolls.

Kemp and his fellow Republicans who control Georgia’s government have repeatedly rejected Medicaid expansion, citing its cost. Last year, Congress approved new financial incentives for states to pursue expansion, but that has not softened the resistance here.

Georgia’s rate of people without health coverage is 13 percent, third-highest in the United States.

“The governor failed our health, our state and our economy. The money is on the table to expand health care to 500,000 Georgians and it’s been there for years,” said state House Minority Leader James Beverly (D-Macon) after the governor’s address.

State Sen. Gloria Butler (D-Stone Mountain) said of Georgia’s surplus: “The first thing that would be on my list is to expand Medicaid.”

A health care proposal expected to draw support from both political parties is Kemp’s request to extend Medicaid coverage from six months to 12 months for women on the program after they give birth.

The lengthening of coverage could help reduce Georgia’s high rate of maternal mortality. The rates of pregnancy-related deaths for Black women in Georgia are three to four times higher than for White women, the Georgia Budget and Policy Institute noted.

Hearings on Kemp’s budget will be held this week in the General Assembly.

Beverly comments on budget. (Photo credit: Georgia Recorder)

Reinsurance and ‘attestations’

In his Thursday address, Kemp touted the competition and lower prices in Georgia’s health insurance exchange, which was created by the ACA – a law, ironically, that Republican leaders have consistently condemned.

A Georgia waiver pushed by the Kemp administration includes creating a reinsurance program that caps the costs for health insurers in the exchange that have a large number of expensive medical cases. Reinsurance has been shown to lower exchange premiums in other states. Other factors, including enhanced discounts pushed by the Biden administration for exchange customers, have been cited in premium reductions.

The Kemp fiscal blueprint includes $15 million to create a new Georgia exchange set-up, which would be run by private insurers and brokers. This apparatus, which for Georgia consumers would replace the federally run healthcare.gov website, has so far not been approved by federal health officials, who question its efficacy and cost.

The budget also proposes additional spending on mental health and developmental disabilities services, though experts say this money won’t fill the major funding gaps in these care systems.

To bolster Georgia’s health care workforce, Kemp asked for $1 million for the University System of Georgia to expand nursing programs to support up to 500 students a year for five years, and funds for the Technical College System of Georgia to add up to 700 nursing students.

His plan also would invest $2.5 million for 136 residency slots and allocate $1 million to Mercer University to address rural physician shortages.

“Physicians and nurses are in short supply across the country, but especially in rural Georgia,” Kemp said.

The FY 2023 budget includes an additional $85 million for physicians through improved Medicaid provider rates and the elimination of an unusual “attestation” requirement.

That rule “has been a huge issue for us,’’ said Dr. Hugo Scornik, a Conyers pediatrician who’s president of the Georgia chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

The roots of the problem date back to when the ACA raised the pay rates nationwide for primary care doctors treating Medicaid patients. To get the pay bump, physicians had to “attest’’ in the years 2013 and 2014 that they practiced in pediatrics, family medicine or internal medicine and were board-certified. The reimbursement boost was funded entirely with federal dollars.

Scornik

The ACA pay hikes were phased out at the end of 2014. Starting in 2015, the Georgia Medicaid program, with state funding, restored higher pay rates for some medical visit reimbursement codes, then added more the following year. But doctors who had not attested during 2013 and 2014 were not eligible for that new pay bump.

As a result, some providers “have been paid less than they should be,’’ Scornik said last week. “They have like a scarlet letter on their chest.”

The ending of the attestation rule, if enacted, “will put all the providers on an even playing field,” Scornik said.

Black ice causing treacherous road conditions, National Weather Service says

Black ice is causing treacherous road conditions in North Georgia and the western Carolinas this morning and it’s expected to continue through tonight.

A special weather statement from the National Weather Service says roads that became wet and slushy as temperatures warmed Sunday afternoon have become icy again this morning. Slick driving conditions will persist before temperatures rise above freezing between 10 am and noon Monday.

Although some melting is expected this afternoon under abundant sunshine, some secondary or shaded roads may remain treacherous throughout the day. Areas of black ice will develop again tonight and make for hazardous driving conditions for the Tuesday morning commute, forecasters say.

Transportation agencies are advising the public to stay off roads this morning unless absolutely necessary. Any motorists that do venture out are urged to use extreme caution. If a road looks wet, it likely is covered in a thin sheet of ice.

“All snow and slush residue on the roads has now turned to dangerous ice,” said Habersham County Public Works Director Jerry Baggett. “We highly recommend only traveling if absolutely necessary, at least until tomorrow.”

The Habersham County Sheriff’s Office is warning drivers of black ice conditions as they respond to black ice-related wrecks in the county.

“Patrol units are warning drivers that black ice is causing unsafe conditions,” the HCSO says. “Please safe home unless you absolutely must travel.”

Life in Motion: Feeding first responders

Pictured, left to right: Habersham County Commissioner Bruce Harkness, Sheriff's deputy Eric Luders and Wolf Creek BBQ owner, Mike Roberson. (Facebook)

Amid the wrecks, fire calls, and tree chopping Sunday, first responders in Habersham County got to enjoy a free hot meal.

Clarkesville-based Wolf Creek BBQ, owned by Mike Roberson, provided lunch for the county’s road crews, law enforcement, fire, EMS, and 911 dispatchers.

The hot lunch gave crews a chance to refuel after a long morning of clearing roads and answering calls. Around 5 a.m. Sunday, the county reported that trees were down on 90% of the county’s roads.

Habersham County Emergency Services responded to several wrecks and fire calls: One wreck involved a snowplow that rolled over on Old Cleveland Road in Cornelia. There were numerous reports of trees down on powerlines and a tree fell on the Demorest police station. There were no reports of any serious injuries.

Winter Storm blankets Northeast Georgia in snow, ice

Snow is tapering off across North Georgia. 1-4″ fell across most of the region this morning, with some sleet and freezing rain then impacting through the afternoon. After the low pressure pulled through, more snow filled in across North Georgia bringing accumulating snowfall even to the city of Atlanta.

Locally storm totals of 3-6″ are being reported. Around 4″ fell across most of White and Habersham Counties.

Parts of Rabun County saw 8-9″, particularly around Sky Valley where at least 9″ has been measured.

(Michael Kline)

The snow made driving dangerous but also added some fun to an otherwise laid-back Sunday as people built snowmen and went sledding.

Roads remain treacherous this evening and will get worse overnight as any untreated roadways that melted during the afternoon refreeze. Widespread black ice is expected through mid-morning on Monday. Highs will only reach into the upper-30s on Monday afternoon so more black ice could become a problem on Tuesday morning on untreated secondary roads.

(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

The entire northern half of Georgia remains under a State of Emergency.

RELATED:

Stay with Now Habersham for the latest.

Last updated 1/16/22 @5pm

Piedmont campus “roaring” with snow day fun

Joseph and Itedjere braved the cold and snowy weather to build their second snowman of the day, the first getting destroyed by another Piedmont student. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

Winter Storm Izzy hit Northeast Georgia hard– but even in a state of emergency, Piedmont University students found a silver lining: making memories in the rarity of Georgia snow.

Even with roads covered in snow and ice, power outages and freezing temperatures, Piedmont students enjoyed their snowy Sunday on campus. Students spent the day sledding down hills, starting snowball fights, building snowmen and taking photos with friends in the first snowfall of the year.

Piedmont music student Kristy Lightly, who lives near Savannah, was excited to play in the snow in Demorest Springs Park with fiance Marcus Shockley.

“The last time that I got snow was during the snowpocalypse,” Lightly said. “There was snow on the beach, it was really crazy. I love being in the snow.”

Lightly says the campus has been active today when on usual weekends, the campus is like a ghost town.

Mahalia Joseph (left), a Piedmont junior, and friend Victoria Itedjere (right), a Piedmont freshman, build a snowman on the volleyball court. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

 

 

 

Piedmont students Mahalia Joseph and Victoria Itedjere took their creativity outside to the volleyball court as they built their second snowman of the day on Piedmont’s campus. They braved the cold and wet weather to build the snowman, who they have named “Felix.”

Joseph and Itedjere say Felix is the younger brother of their other snowman, Glen, who “unfortunately died” when another student knocked it down earlier today.

“I’m the only one with [decent] winter wear,” Joseph says, talking about building snowmen with students on campus. She’s lived in Maryland in the past, and brought her snow-know-how to Piedmont.

Piedmont students went sledding down the hill outside of Purcell Hall, enjoying the wintery weather on their long weekend. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

 

Students went sledding down the steep snow-covered hill outside of Purcell Hall, where nearly every sledding endeavor ended with a student being ejected from their sled. Still, between bouts of laughter, they were at the top of the hill, ready to go again.

Even with power outages and unpredictable weather, students are saying the Piedmont community is making it through the storm.

“Everyone’s being very respectful of staff,” Lightly said of students utilizing the Piedmont cafeteria. She says staff has been working hard to keep students fed with hot meals during the storm, and that the Piedmont community has been more alive than ever with their excitement for snow.

sNOWhabersham: Wintry scenes from around Northeast Georgia

A pickup truck loaded with firewood sits parked on the downtown Clarkesville Square. People across Georgia are lighting their fireplaces and wood stoves to stay warm as Winter Storm Izzy knocks out power to thousands. (nowhabersham.com)

Share your snow pics and videos with us on Now Habersham’s Facebook page tagged #sNOWhabersham. Be sure to include your location.

We’ll add more images to this photo gallery throughout the storm. Check back here for updates.

Public safety, GDOT urge drivers to stay off roads

A few vehicles braved the snowy roads to travel in the pre-dawn hours Sunday in Habersham. Officials urge drivers to stay off the roads as road conditions are becoming increasingly hazardous. (nowhabersham.com)

As Winter Storm Izzy blankets Northeast Georgia in snow and ice, area public safety departments are urging citizens to stay off the roads as conditions grow more hazardous.

With ice accumulating, as well as trees and powerlines down, it’s more important than ever that Northeast Georgians stay home and off the roads.

Habersham County Emergency Services is experiencing high call volume as they respond to powerlines and trees falling on homes, damaged powerlines arcing and medical emergencies. HCES Director Chad Black urges drivers to stay off the roads and says that the department is struggling with getting 4×4 trucks down roads with ice accumulation.

Powerlines in Demorest sag under the weight of the snow. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

The Habersham County Sheriff’s Office echoes those sentiments, asking drivers to stay off the roads unless “absolutely necessary.”

“Unless absolutely necessary, please stay off the roads,” HCSO says. “We are seeing a steady increase in call volume for disabled motorists and roadway obstructions. Roadway clearing operations are underway, with more snow expected.”

Habersham County Public Works Director Jerry Baggett is asking drivers to stay off the roads as the public works department continues clearing them. With traffic trying to make its way through the area and ice accumulating, it’s becoming increasingly harder for public works to do their jobs.

“We are begging folks to stay off [the roads],” Public Information Officer Carolyn Gibson says as the county departments struggle to manage road safety with drivers on them.

It’s not just Habersham officials that are telling drivers to stay home. The Gainesville Police Department is warning drivers of unsafe road conditions, too, as more freezing rain affects the region.

“We cannot say it enough – please stay home and off the roads,” the Gainesville Police Department says. “Another round of freezing rain and snow is expected to start around 11 a.m. or noon, so it won’t be safe to travel for an extended period of time.”

Georgia DOT operations

Since the start of emergency operations Friday, Georgia Department of Transportation crews have spread 1.5 million gallons of brine on state roads and will put out another 80,000 gallons of brine today in an effort to combat the freezing rain and ice accumulations. They’ve also spread 2,600 tons of salt.

More than 600 Georgia DOT employees are working to clear interstates and critical state routes near hospitals and other essential services and facilities, GDOT officials say.

Winter Storm Izzy is predicted to continue and worsen in many areas of Georgia throughout today. As the air temperature drops, so will the pavement temperature, which increases the chances that moisture will freeze – particularly later in the day and into the overnight hours.

Power outages have knocked out traffic signals in certain areas. In these situations, officials say it is critical that motorists approach the intersection as a four-way stop, look all ways and proceed only through the intersection when it is clear of traffic.

If you must travel and encounter a traffic signal outage, a downed tree or other debris in the road, officials advise you to stay in your vehicle and call 511 or your local non-emergency public safety number.

Never try to remove debris from the roadway due to the possibility of downed power lines entangled in the debris, which could be deadly.

Generator and heating use increase risk of Carbon Monoxide poisoning

(Santeri Viinamäki/Wikimedia)

Generators are selling out around Habersham County, temperatures are dropping, and the community is hunkering down to weather the coming winter storm. But while citizens are focusing on the potential dangers outside, they may not be paying close attention to those that could be developing inside.

Carbon Monoxide (CO) is an odorless, colorless, poisonous gas often known as the “invisible killer,” and claims many lives during cold weather and storms when people turn to generators for power sources and different methods to heat their homes.

(Source: Center for Disease Control)

CO poisoning is deadly. According to the Consumer Product Safety Commission, more than 150 people in the United States die every year from accidental non-fire-related CO poisoning associated with consumer products. Data from the Center for Disease Control shows that in 2017, 399 people died of unintentional, non-fire-related CO poisoning.

Generators, ovens, fireplaces, water heaters, stoves, dryers and faulty heating equipment can bring CO into the home, and depending on the amount of CO in the air, can kill a person over the course of days or in a matter of hours.

One of the best ways to keep yourself and your family safe from CO poisoning is to make sure your CO detector is working properly. You should test your detector once a month, and change the batteries in it every 6 months.

You should also be sure to keep CO-emitting products out of the home. The CDC, CPSC, National Fire Protection Associaton and Federal Emergency Management Association recommend the following:

  • Generators should always be used outside, far away from open windows and doors at a minimum of 20 feet away
  • Heating sources should be inspected by a professional annually
  • Open the flue when using a fireplace
  • After winter weather, make sure vents for the dryer, furnace, stove, and fireplace are clear of snow build-up
  • If warming up a car, remove it from the garage immediately after starting it
  • Never use a gas or charcoal grill inside or in the garage
  • Do not heat your home with an oven or gas range

Symptoms of CO poisoning include headache, fatigue, shortness of breath, vomiting, dizziness, confusion, loss of coordination, fainting and death. If your CO alarm goes off, or suspect you may have been exposed to CO, get to fresh air immediately and call 911.

CO poisoning isn’t the only threat to people heating their homes during winter weather— space heaters pose a significant fire risk and local families have lost their homes and lives in space heater fires. Read more about space heater fires here.

The Sky this Week: Clouds! Part 2

Last week we began a look at different cloud types. We covered “high” clouds last week, those that form above 16,500ft.

Watch the Skies: Clouds!

This week we’re going to move a little lower in the atmosphere and look at by far the most common types of clouds: mid-level clouds.

Mid-level clouds are generally associated with precipitation and generally develop between 6,500ft and 23,000ft. They are generally made up of rain droplets rather than ice crystals during summer.

The first of these is the Altostratus clouds. These clouds usually form between 7,000 and 23,000ft. They are generally associated with warm fronts since they are caused by the gradual lifting of stable air. They are common in our region well ahead of cold fronts and generally signal incoming rainfall. Altostratus clouds are featureless and what you probably think of when you imagine a grey, cloudy day.

By The Great Cloudwatcher – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=17465322

Not all altostratus clouds are featureless, though. They can develop “waves” like you see in the ocean due to a number of things. Wind shear is the most common cause of wavy (or undulating) altostratus. We see these clouds a lot locally due to the mountains causing the air to be lifted higher over the peaks and lower over the valleys. This often occurs to the southeast of the mountains as well due to gravity waves over the mountains. Historically these were considered a sub-type of altostratus although in 2017 particularly impressive displays of these clouds were given their own name: Asperitas.

Another common type of mid-level cloud are altocumulus. Much like the cirrocumulus clouds we looked at last week, these clouds form individually rather than as a sheet. These clouds are common during the summer and often indicate that storms will form later in the day. Altocumulus clouds are divided into several sub-categories depending on their appearance. They almost never produce precipitation though like their featureless cousin altostratus they often occur before precipitation begins.

CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=101274

Then, there’s the nimbostratus. Nimbostratus clouds actually cover multiple levels of the atmosphere, occurring between 3,000ft and 18,000ft. They generally begin development in the mid-level range, though. They develop most often along warm fronts where the atmosphere is undergoing slow lifting. They almost always produce rainfall and are generally featureless. If you step outside on a day when the wedge is dominating our weather you will almost certainly see some nimbostratus clouds. While they don’t generally produce thunder, they can occur alongside cumulonimbus (thunderstorm) clouds.

Ns1.jpg
CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=74402

Mid-level clouds occur commonly, and we will see plenty of them this weekend as a low pressure system brings rain and wintry precipitation to our area.

Stay warm and safe in this weather and, as always, watch the skies!