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Jacquelyn “Jackie” Macken Andrews

Jacquelyn “Jackie” Macken Andrews, age 88, of Homer, passed away on Wednesday, December 29, 2021.

Born in Sparta, Georgia on July 10, 1933, she was a daughter of the late James Edward and Julia Smith Macken. Mrs. Andrews was a homemaker and enjoyed gardening, cooking, photography, and most of all spending time with her family, especially her grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and great-great-grandchildren. She was a member of Level Grove Baptist Church.

In addition to her parents, she was also preceded in death by her husband, Rev. William Donald Andrews; son-in-law, Keith Wilson; and sisters, Jeannine Watkins and Julia Eiland.

Survivors include her son, Roy Andrews of Bremen, GA; daughters and son-in-law, Donna Wilson of Homer, GA and Julie and Chris Cook of Milledgeville, GA; five grandchildren; seven great-grandchildren; and two great-great-grandchildren.

A private service will be held with Dr. Brian James officiating. Burial will follow in Harmony Baptist Church Cemetery.

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

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

Georgia’s been through a lot in 2021. Here’s a look back at the year’s biggest stories

Georgia witnessed major news events throughout 2021 — beginning with an infamous phone call from President Donald Trump seeking to overturn the election and ending with a continued COVID-19 surge.

In other words, we’ve been through a lot.

As we seek to embrace 2022 and everything the new year has to offer, here’s a look back at this year’s big stories around the Peach State.

Trump presses elections officials to “find 11,780 votes”

An enraged Trump pushed Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to overturn the state’s presidential results, which tipped in Joe Biden’s favor, the first time a Democratic president carried Georgia since 1992.

In a recorded Jan. 2 phone call, Trump urged Raffensperger to “find 11,780 votes” that would have pushed him past Biden to win the state’s electoral votes.

Throughout the hourlong conversation, the secretary of state’s office pushed against Trump’s demands, setting up a new political battle in Georgia between Trump and GOP state leaders who refused to overturn the election results.

Ossoff, Warnock win U.S. Senate runoffs

A splitscreen image of Reverend Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff.
Following a close runoff election on Jan. 5, 2021, the Rev. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff, both Democrats, will represent Georgia in the U.S. Senate. (Credit: Riley Bunch, CNHI News)

Georgia Democrats saw historic statewide wins in the November 2020 election, crediting shifting voting demographics in Atlanta’s suburbs.

Democrats Jon Ossoff and Rev. Raphael Warnock clinched the state’s two U.S. Senate seats in narrow runoff wins on Jan. 5 against former U.S. Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler.

Both candidates also made history of their own: Warnock became Georgia’s first Black U.S. senator and Ossoff the state’s first Jewish senator. The pair solidified Democratic control over the upper chamber in Congress, giving their party unified control in Washington, D.C.

8 dead in Atlanta spa shootings

Love comes in all colors
Members of Georgia’s Asian American and Pacific Islander community rally at the State Capitol in solidarity with the victims of the Atlanta spa shootings. (Credit: Riley Bunch/CNHI News)

A shooting rampage March 16 by a gunman in three Atlanta-area massage parlors killed eight people — six of whom were Asian Americans. Seven of the victims were women.

The killings devastated the Asian American community, which advocates said, was already under increased attack throughout the pandemic. Across the country, Asian Americans had suffered a documented surge in harassment, many citing President Trump’s use of xenophobic language and blame of China for the COVID-19 pandemic.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has said that prosecutors are seeking to enhance the gunman’s charges with the state’s new hate crimes law.

Legislature approves sweeping voting changes

Voting rights protest
Protesters at the Georgia State Capitol demonstrate against the sweeping voting changes proposed by GOP lawmakers in the wake of the 2020 election. (Credit: Riley Bunch/CNHI News)

In the wake of the November 2020 election, Georgia lawmakers passed a new 98-page voting law in March that made a number of controversial changes to how elections are run in the state.

Proponents for the changes cited the pandemic’s impact on the state’s voting system. But critics decried the effort as an attack on minority voters after Georgia backed a Democratic president and voted in two Democratic U.S. senators.

Additional pushes for change to the state’s voting system are likely to appear during the 2022 legislative session, although both House Speaker David Ralston and Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan have warned GOP members against “relitigating” the 2020 election.

Ahmaud Arbery’s killers found guilty of murder 

A young boy joins rally goers outside Glynn County Courthouse
Zyon Thorpe is surrounded by signs in support of Ahmaud Arbery outside of the Glynn County Courthouse during a rally on Oct. 16. (Credit: Riley Bunch/GPB News)

Just before Thanksgiving, more than 20 months after Ahmaud Arbery was brutally shot while jogging down Satilla Shores Drive in Brunswick, a jury rendered three guilty verdicts for the three white men charged with his murder.

The February 2020 vigilante-style shooting death of the 25-year-old jogger garnered national attention when a video of his final moments went viral and shocked the country.

His murder sparked a wave of change within his hometown and across the Peach State — from a new hate crimes law to the abolishment of the state’s Civil War-era citizen’s arrest statute.

On Nov. 24, after the highly anticipated verdict, Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones said her son “will now rest in peace.”

Lawmakers draw new political maps

While Georgia’s voting population may be leaning more blue, the once-in-a-decade redistricting process gave Republicans the opportunity to keep the political tides in their favor.

This fall, the Georgia General Assembly convened for a special session to tackle the required redistricting process: redrawing the state’s political maps to reflect the growing population.

The Republican-controlled legislature approved redistricting maps with strategic moves including an overhaul of a suburban congressional seat held by a Democrat to favor conservative voters in Atlanta’s northern exurbs.

The maps are likely to be challenged in court, but, barring successful legal challenges, the new boundaries will influence Georgia’s politics for the next 10 years.

Braves win World Series

Braves celebrate
Atlanta Braves players celebrate the teams’ World Series victory during a celebration at Truist Park. (Credit: Riley Bunch/GPB News)

Tens of thousands of Braves fans lined the streets in Atlanta and Cobb County alike to celebrate the team’s World Series championship.

The Braves defeated the Houston Astros in six games to finish off an improbable season that began with their best player suffering a season-ending injury and the team struggling to be above .500 for much of the season.

The team’s first title since 1995 was celebrated with a massive parade that trekked from downtown Atlanta to Truist Park and culminated in a massive celebration inside the stadium with special appearances from Billye Aaron to Ludacris.

Feds, state battle over vaccine requirements

The pandemic not only upended everyday life for Georgians but brought with it bitter battles over public health decisions between federal, state and local officials.

Early on, as COVID-19 threatened businesses, Gov. Brian Kemp sparred with local leaders who instituted mask mandates when the Republican governor refused a statewide requirement. Most notably, the battle played out between Kemp and Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms in court.

Well over a year into the public health crisis, Kemp is waging a new war against President Biden’s nationwide vaccine requirements, which are aimed at curbing further spread.

Kemp and a handful of Republican leadership in other states have challenged Biden’s authority to implement the sweeping vaccine mandates and have seen success — including a judge in Georgia temporarily halting Biden’s shot requirement for federal contractors.

2022 gubernatorial race heats up

Stacey Abrams
Stacey Abrams, 2018 gubernatorial candidate and founder of Fair Fight Action, speaks at a Joe Biden campaign event in Decatur on Oct. 12, 2020. The star Democrat is running for governor again in 2022. (Credit: Riley Bunch/GPB News)

In 2021, the Peach State found itself in the center of national politics and Georgians shouldn’t expect that to change anytime soon. Next year’s elections hold high stakes: a U.S. Senate seat back up for grabs and a potential gubernatorial rematch between Kemp and high-profile Democrat Stacey Abrams.

But Georgia’s Republican governor also faces a bitter primary challenge from former U.S. Sen. David Perdue, who has emerged as the Trump-favored candidate in the race. U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock is also likely to have a contest against Trump-backed football legend Herschel Walker.

Voters will cast ballots in numerous state elections that will determine Georgia’s path forward. While Republicans still handily control the state legislature, Democrats — fired up from big wins last election — see a growing chance of winning statewide offices next year.

This article appears on Now Habersham through a news partnership with GPB News

White County awarded mini-grant to purchase child passenger seats

White County will be able to use the mini-grant to purchase car seats similar to these distributed by law enforcement in Habersham in September 2021. (HCSO Facebook)

White County is in line to receive a grant from the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety that will be used to purchase child passenger seats.

The Georgia Department of Public Health announced Friday the county would receive one of the mini-grants that will be used to help reduce the number of injuries and deaths among children on Georgia roads.

Since 2007, car seats and booster seats provided through the Mini-Grant program, and education on how to properly use them, have prevented serious injury and saved the lives of more than 425 Georgia children involved in crashes.

Dr. Kathleen Toomey, commissioner of the Georgia Department of Public Health said, “Motor vehicle crashes are a leading cause of death for children and it’s up to all of us to do everything we can to protect young Georgians on the road.”

County health departments will be working with community partners to educate parents and caregivers on how to properly install and use car seats, offer car seat inspections and provide car seats and booster seats to financially eligible families.

Nightmare Alley

Nightmare Alley marks director Guillermo Del Toro’s newest film since winning the Oscar for The Shape of Water. Just like his previous efforts, it has a lot of his signature visual trappings and characters who are completely bizarre and unorthodox, but it also has a myriad of components that make it endlessly mesmerizing.

I occasionally use the term Audacious Rorschach Test to describe a movie that dares to be unconventional and leaves us picking apart sequences and making of them what we will. Nightmare Alley fits the bill this year in the hands of a virtuoso like Del Toro.

Based on the 1946 novel by William Lindsey Gresham which was made into a film in 1947, this remake stars Bradley Cooper as Stanton Carlisle, a man who takes a job at a carnival run by Clem (Willem Dafoe). The carnival has a lot of oddities including a man who savagely devours a live chicken and a half-woman/spider. These gimmicks would be right at home in Ripley’s Believe It or Not.

Stanton receives lessons on how to perfect his craft from husband and wife fortune tellers (David Strathairn and Toni Collete).

Stan also becomes attracted to Molly, (Rooney Mara) and he creates his own act involving putting her in an electric chair and leaving customers baffled as to how she survived.

Stan and Molly decide to leave the carnies and take his act on the road and they eventually wind up in Chicago with audiences spellbound by his psychic abilities. However, one person doesn’t buy the act and that is psychologist Lilith Ritter (Cate Blanchett). She’s determined to prove his act is an elaborate deception despite Stan’s supposed insistence that it’s genuine.

Del Toro knows a thing or two about how to make the macabre look beautiful and empathetic and this film is no exception. He manages to combine a noir atmosphere with the aforementioned macabre creatures and then shifts his attention to the real inner demons that eventually come out of these characters that are just as animalistic as their carnie counterparts.

Granted, each character is very much depicted as amoral for one reason or another, but Del Toro’s structuring of the screenplay that he co-wrote with Kim Morgan takes its time with giving us the hows and whys of how these people end up like they are and why they see no problems with their actions. It’s a multilayered portrayal pulled off beautifully by Del Toro and his star-powered cast.

“You don’t fool people, Stanton,” says Blanchett. “They fool themselves.”

One thing that didn’t fool me is how Del Toro marries his visual aesthetics with a complex, borderline Hitchcockian vibe as well as shady characters with soupy morality and puts it all together in a package that is confident, intriguing and even disturbing from beginning to end.

Grade: A

(Rated R for strong/bloody violence, some sexual content, nudity and language.)

Annie Mae Nelms Burrell

Mrs. Annie Mae Nelms Burrell of Flowery Branch, formerly of Demorest, Georgia, went to be with her heavenly Father on Tuesday, December 28, 2021.

Annie was born in the Leaf Community of White County on April 3rd, 1927 to the late James Richard Nelms and Florence Mindy Nelms.

She married Henry (Bee) Burns Burrell on May 11th, 1942 and they enjoyed 42 years of a happy marriage together. She was a loving wife, mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother.

Annie was employed with Johnson & Johnson, Ethicon for many years where she eventually retired. She was a great caregiver, not only to her immediate family but also to many extended family members throughout her life.

Annie was a member of Mount Carmel Baptist Church in Demorest, Georgia, and was one of the oldest living members before her passing.

Annie was affectionately known as “Mema” to her grandchildren. Everyone loved her cooking; especially her biscuits, sweet potato pie, potato salad, and banana pudding.

In addition to her parents, she is preceded in death by her husband, Henry B. Burrell; Surviving are her children, son and daughter-in-law, James and Judie Burrell, of Cornelia; daughter and son-in-law, Betty Burrell Barrett and Larry Barrett, of Flowery Branch. She is also survived by her grandchildren and spouses along with great-grand-children, Adam and Angie Burrell Murphy, parents of Merritt, Taylor, and Maggie of Peachtree Corners; Nathan and Amber Barrett, parents of Mattie Grace, Jaxon, and Asher of Braselton; and Jai and Brittany Barrett Means, parents of Miken, Maeleigh Kate, and Jaiden of Flowery Branch.

Funeral Services will be held at 2:00 p.m., Friday, January 7, 2022, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, North Chapel with Dr. Charles Holland, Mr. Doug Burrell, and Mr. Nathan Barrett officiating. Interment will follow in the Yonah Memorial Gardens

The family will receive friends from 12:00 p.m. to 1:45 p.m., Friday, January 7, 2022, at the funeral home prior to the service.

Due to concerns around COVID-19, the family respectfully request that social distancing be kept in mind and if you are experiencing symptoms of sickness please refrain from attending.

Flowers will be accepted or memorials may be made in Mrs. Burrell’s Memory to the charity of one’s choice.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, North Chapel at 245 Central Avenue, Demorest, Georgia 30535. Telephone: 706-778-1700.

Robert “Bob” Dean Fausett

Robert “Bob” Dean Fausett, age 79 of Clarkesville, passed away on December 30, 2021.

Born in Gainesville, Georgia on December 28, 1942, Bob was the son of the late R.J. and Janette Crane Fausett. He graduated from Dawson County High School and later attended Georgia Tech and graduated from Southern Tech with a degree in Technical Engineering. While in college, Bob had accepted and internship with Georgia Power, which led to a career for over 38 years. Bob was a volunteer firefighter with Tallulah Falls and he also served one term as mayor. After retirement, Bob owned and operated Tallulah Satellite. He was a jack of all trades and loved to tinker. Bob was a member of the Citizens of Georgia Power as well as the Lions Club and had served on the board of directors at Victory Home. Bob had a servant’s heart and was always doing for those in need. Bob was a deacon and member of Tallulah Falls Baptist Church. In addition to his parents, Bob was preceded in death by brother Mike Fausett and sister Judy Fossett Coffee.

Survivors include his wife Patsy DuPree Fausett, daughter and son in law Jeannie and Danny Clouatre of Clarkesville, son and daughter in law Benjamin and Haley Fausett of Winder, and grandchildren Elijah and Maddie Clouatre, Duncan, Eion, Jesse and Daniel Fausett.

A celebration of life service will be held at 2:00 PM, Thursday, January 6, 2022, at Hillside Memorial Chapel with Dr. Kenneth Franklin, officiating. The family will receive friends at the funeral home prior to the service from 1:00 PM until 2:00 PM.

Flowers are accepted or memorials can be made to the Grant Reeves Honor Guard, 174 Cornelia Crossing Center, Cornelia, GA 30531.

An online guestbook is available for the family at HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

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

COVID-19 cases are surging, but HMC is operating as usual

(NowHabersham.com)

With the current surge in COVID-19 cases across the state, local hospitals and emergency services are feeling the brunt of that surge as emergency rooms (ER) and intensive care units (ICU) fill up.

While many hospitals, such as the Northeast Georgia Medical Centers in Braselton and Gainesville are severely overcrowded, and Northside Forsyth is on total diversion, Habersham Medical Center is busy, but still operating as usual.

RELATED: Area health systems issue joint statement on COVID-19 surge

There are currently 9 COVID-19 positive patients at Habersham Medical Center, with two patients in the hospital’s ICU and seven in the medical-surgical unit. The hospital is still accepting patients, but their ICU is full as the hospital continues to treat patients having other emergencies. Ambulances are diverting ICU traffic to other area hospitals.

“Habersham was on total diversion all day Wednesday until 7:00 p.m.,” says Habersham County Emergency Services Director Chad Black. “Then was only in critical care ICU diversion. My understanding was this was not related to COVID, just [an] increase in medical patients overall.”

Area hospitals, like the Union County General Hospital, Northeast Georgia Medical Center hospitals in Braselton and Gainesville and Northside Forsyth are severely overcrowded. (Source: Georgia Coordinating Center)

“We have been managing our way through this pandemic for nearly two years,” Habersham Medical Center Vice President of Culture and Wellness Kesha Clinkscale says. “As we learn more about the virus, we also learn new ways to better protect ourselves from contracting the virus and spreading it to others.”

Clinkscale encourages getting a COVID-19 vaccine and a booster, wearing a face mask, social distancing and practicing healthy hand hygiene. She also encourages testing for COVID-19 if you may have been exposed.

“According to the CDC, testing can provide information about your risk of spreading the virus,” Clinkscale says. “There are a number of testing options available in the community and some local drug stores sell over-the-counter home testing kits. These tests are reliable and can confirm if you have a COVID-19 infection. More information about testing options can be found on the CDC’s website.”

Clinkscale says that while everyone is tired of the virus impacting their lives, the community needs to remain vigilant in protecting one another.

“While we all are experiencing COVID-fatigue and want to wish this pandemic away, we must be mindful that COVID-19 is still a very serious public health threat and the most current variant is more contagious than previous strains,” she says. “So, despite our fatigue, we all must continue to do all that we can to protect ourselves and our loved ones.”

Public safety officials respond to concerns about emergency response times

(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

Habersham citizens have shared their frustrations and concerns with slow response times from the county’s emergency services online, and citizens brought those concerns forward at Tuesday night’s public safety town hall meeting.

At Habersham County Commissioner Bruce Palmer’s public safety town hall meeting, county public safety officials attended to answer questions and respond to concerns citizens had. One of the biggest concerns, and topics of discussion, was public safety response times.

Public Safety officials addressed those concerns, and nearly every official noted that their departments are facing understaffed crews.

“None of the city departments, or the county, has adequate personnel,” Emergency Services Director Chad Black said. “We rely heavily on a working relationship [with each other].”

Of the 11 county fire stations in Habersham, three are unstaffed. There are currently 19 24-hour employees in the Habersham County Fire and Emergency Services department, 2 10-hour Monday through Friday employees, and a total of 57 HCES personnel to serve the entirety of Habersham County.

“Response times aren’t just when the [fire] trucks start, or that patrol car,” Black says. “Response time starts when that citizen calls in and when they [E-911] answer that phone, that is when it starts.”

Habersham E-911 has to dispatch those calls, which Black says usually take two minutes or less, but after that dispatch call goes out, someone has to respond. If the only staffed fire engine available is on the other side of the county, it could take longer for those first responders to make it to the site of an emergency.

E-911 Director Lynn Smith is operating with three employees on average, with five dispatching stations that need to be operated. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

E-911 Director Lynn Smith says that right now, E-911 is operating with an average of three employees per shift, with five dispatching stations. And they’re not just dispatching calls for Habersham County, sometimes they get cellphone calls from other counties that need to be rerouted, or they need to dispatch for Georgia State Patrol.

“A lot of times we get asked the question ‘why is it taking so long?'” Smith said. “Typically, when somebody calls 911, we have two people pick up at one time. One person is asking questions . . . the second person is dispatching the call so there is no delay in service of any type, no matter what the call is. They’re going to keep you on the line just to get more information.”

E-911 isn’t just getting calls from around the region to dispatch, either. They’re getting non-emergency calls, which doesn’t just affect their efficiency, it affects other public safety departments.

 

Animal Care and Control Director Madi Nix says that response times for animal control aren’t as fast as some residents would like to see, because animal control isn’t able to run lights on their vehicles to get to a scene as fast as possible like other public safety departments. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

“The problem that we run into a lot in our department is that people overutilize the 911 system,” Animal Care and Control Director Madi Nix says. “We get calls for stray animals to 911. . . 911 needs to be reserved for emergencies.”

Nix says those non-emergency calls and dispatches often cause animal control staff to work overtime after working 8-hour days.

With animal control emergencies, citizens are frustrated that emergency calls can take up to 25 minutes for an animal control officer to respond to the emergency. Nix says the officers are doing the best they can to get there as quickly as possible with the resources they have.

“We also don’t run codes, so people need to keep that in mind,” Nix says. “When they are calling us and they are upset that it’s taking us 20-25 minutes to get somewhere, these guys [animal control officers] are not considered to be response vehicles. And I know an aggressive dog is an emergency to most people, but that’s where we have to rely on our sheriff’s office and EMS to be able to get there before we can because these guys are not running lights.”

What’s the solution?

Palmer says public safety in Habersham is underfunded, causing many of the issues surrounding understaffing and slow response times.

According to Palmer’s presentation, to fully staff the county fire department, the current staff would need to double in size. It would cost about $2.69 million dollars to do that. Taxes pay for the salaries of those officers, and he says that bringing business and industry to the county could help offset those taxes. But other than that, he says a tax increase on county residents is the only other option.

Commissioner Palmer says that while raising taxes isn’t something he wants to do, improving public safety in the county is “a real need,” that needs to be addressed. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

“Where do we draw the line on not only employee safety but on the safety of our citizens?” Palmer asks. “What would it be worth if your loved one perished because somebody couldn’t get to them in time? There’s not a price tag for that.”

He encourages citizens with ideas on how to fund improving county public safety to reach out to him, Chad Black or Interim County Manager Alicia Vaughn.

“This is a real need, this is just one of the real needs that we have,” Palmer said.

Athens police arrest three more gang members

The Athens-Clarke County Police Department arrested three more known gang members this week, adding to a growing list of more than 50 gang-related arrests since their November street gang operation alongside the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

This week, the ACCPD arrested Malcolm Martin, 24, of Athens, Miquan Pittard, 22, of Athens and Santino Luke, 27, of Athens. All three men arrested had criminal histories and were out on bond.

RELATED: Athens-Clarke police continue crackdown on street gangs

Martin was arrested for obstruction of law enforcement and for existing arrest warrants for burglary and felony probation violation on Tuesday.

At the time of his arrest, Martin was out on bond for two counts of burglary, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, three counts of obstruction of law enforcement, three counts of entering auto, theft by receiving stolen property, three counts of financial transaction card theft, five counts of financial transaction card fraud and three counts of identity theft.

Martin is currently on probation for robbery and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. According to the ACCPD, Martin has violated the terms of his probation a total of 17 times.

Pittard was arrested Wednesday for violation of the Georgia Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act, possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime, obstruction of law enforcement and criminal trespass.

The ACCPD reported that Pittard was out on bond for the violation of the Georgia Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act, possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime and theft by receiving stolen property when he was arrested.

Luke was arrested for obstruction of law enforcement and for an existing warrant for felony probation violation on Thursday. Luke was out on bond for obstruction of law enforcement, possession of marijuana, possession of drug-related objects and multiple traffic offenses at the time of his arrest on Dec. 30.

Luke is on felony probation for possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and violation of the Georgia Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act. The ACCPD says that he has violated the terms of his probation numerous times.

The ACCPD encourages anyone with information about criminal street gang activity to use their Crime Tip Line at 706-705-4775, email the Gang Unit at [email protected] or contact their Gang Unit through their anonymous online tip website.

Tax breaks, physician abuse training among new Georgia laws

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, seated, hands a pen to Georgia House Speaker David Ralston on Monday, March 22, 2021, at the state capitol in Atlanta after signing a tax cut bill. Tax breaks for many Georgians, new requirements for physicians to be trained about avoiding sexual assault, and pay raises for some judges are among new legal provisions taking effect Saturday, Jan. 1, 2022 in Georgia. (AP Photo/Jeff Amy)

Income tax breaks for many Georgians, new requirements for physicians to be trained about avoiding sexual assault, and pay raises for some judges are among new legal provisions taking effect Saturday in Georgia.

Most Georgia laws took effect on July 1, but the General Assembly delayed some, or parts of some, until Jan. 1, including provisions for annual taxes.

Among measures that took effect earlier this year were Georgia’s restrictive new election law, a ban on cities and counties sharply cutting police spending, three weeks of paid parental leave for nearly 250,000 state, public university and public school employees and a law that makes it a felony to steal packages from three or more different addresses.

Here’s a look at some new laws and provisions that begin Jan. 1:

INCOME TAX BREAKS: House Bill 593 increases the amount people can earn before they start paying state taxes. The standard deduction for an individual will rise from $4,600 to $5,400, while the standard deduction for a married couple filing jointly will rise from $6,000 to $7,100.

The tax cut will save individual tax filers up to $43 a year, and married couples filing jointly up to $63. The cut will reduce Georgia’s overall income tax collections by an estimated $140 million. Georgians may not notice it until 2023, when they file income tax returns for 2022.

TEACHER TAX BREAKS: House Bill 32 gives some Georgia teachers who agree to work in certain rural and low performing schools as much as $3,000 a year off their state income taxes for five years. The break is limited to 1,000 teachers.

Those who don’t incur $3,000 in state income tax liability in a year can carry the credits forward for up to three years. However, the state won’t pay any remaining amount in cash, as had been proposed in a previous version of the bill.

JUDICIAL PAY: House Bill 488 raises pay for chief magistrates, judges in each county who handle evictions, county ordinance violations, bad check cases, warrants and some preliminary hearings. The chief magistrate in the state’s least populous counties will make at least $36,288 up from $29,832, with pay rising in steps according to a county’s population.

At the top step, in the four counties with more than 500,000 people, judges will make at least $133,107, up from $109,426. The bill also provides pay raises for part-time judges and probate judges who also handle magistrate judge duties.

PHYSICIAN SEXUAL ABUSE: House Bill 458 requires physicians, medical students, dentists and members of the state medical board to be trained about professional boundaries and avoiding sexual misconduct. Parts of the law that took effect earlier allow the Georgia Composite Medical Board to revoke or suspend a physician’s license if they are convicted of sexually assaulting a patient and requires doctors to report fellow doctors who have sexually abused patients.

Jan. 1 is also the deadline for the medical board to begin reporting on its handling of abuse cases. The law followed an Atlanta Journal-Constitution investigation chronicling doctors who abused patients but were allowed to continue practicing.

JUVENILE COURT: Senate Bill 28 allows juvenile courts to consider hearsay evidence in what Gov. Brian Kemp has said is an effort to make sure all reliable information is available to the court to decide a child’s best interests.

The measure also requires juvenile court intake officers to get annual training. It explicitly outlaws a caregiver from placing a child in “sexual servitude,” outlaws emotional abuse, strengthens temporary foster care arrangements, and redefines neglect and abandonment.

HEALTH INSURANCE: Senate Bill 80 sets new standards for how health insurers decide in advance on whether to pay for medical procedures. The law says prior authorization isn’t allowed for emergency services or emergency ambulance transport. Insurers must decide on authorizing urgent services within 72 hours after a claim is submitted.

For other services, in 2022 they will have 15 days to decide on claims, while in 2023 that falls to seven days. The law also requires insurers to publish their prior authorization requirements and to give the clinical reason a service is being denied. They also must publish yearly statistics about authorization approvals and denials, including reasons for denials and outcomes of appeals.

This article appears on Now Habersham through a partnership with GPB News

COVID rages at record levels and hospitals are inundated. Here’s the governor’s plan of attack

COVID-19 Response representative Hadja Bah administers a test to a child in Marietta, Ga. (Credit: AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

As the omicron variant of COVID-19 rages and depletes hospital space, Gov. Brian Kemp said Wednesday he does not plan to implement any new pandemic restrictions to curb the spread, saying he trusts Georgians to “do what is right for themselves and for their families.”

Instead, the Republican governor will deploy National Guard troops to support response efforts across the state and dedicate $100 million toward additional contracted health care staff.

Hospitals across Georgia — especially in metro Atlanta — have been inundated with COVID patients as the highly contagious omicron variant spreads rapidly throughout the population.

Statewide, more than 30% of COVID tests are positive and, in some areas, up to 40%. Recorded cases are hitting peak levels since the beginning of the pandemic.

Wednesday, the state reported 19,124 new cases. That’s greater than the population of 67 of Georgia’s 159 counties.

The sudden increase in Georgians seeking tests has overwhelmed the state’s testing resources, with many residents unable to either schedule appointments or find at-home testing kits.

I just want to continue to reassure my fellow Georgians: we’ve gotten through this before — we will absolutely do it again,” Kemp said during a news conference. “We’re all in this together. We will work diligently to provide aid and cut down on people’s wait times at testing locations. But we want to urge Georgians to be patient.”

Kemp also pleaded with Georgians who are looking for a test to stay away from emergency rooms to keep from clogging up health care facilities for severe patients who need urgent care.

Don’t come to the emergency room to get tested,” the governor said on behalf of hospitals.

Hospitals across the state are facing a staffing crisis as COVID-19 both increases their patient loads and sends health care workers home who are infected.

“This will be a challenge, really across the country, over the next two or three weeks,” Kemp said. “But as fast as this is moving, hopefully, this will be a shorter lifespan than what we’ve seen in the past.”

The trend is being seen nationwide and has pushed the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to reduce the number of days an individual who tests positive for the virus must quarantine.

The $100 million will cover up to 1,000 additional health care staff to help bolster Georgia hospitals that are being crushed by another wave of COVID patients, Kemp said. Hospitals can count on the extra support for 13 weeks.

As of Wednesday, Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital in Albany —  one of the country’s first COVID hotspots — was the only major hospital in the state not diverting patients away from its intensive care unit.

Kemp pushed back against the idea of implementing safety measures to curb spread like early in the pandemic and said he “trusts” Georgians to get vaccinated and take safety precautions.

I will not be implementing any measures to shutter businesses or divide the vaccinated from the unvaccinated or the masked from the unmasked,” he said.

Georgia’s vaccination rate has hovered at 50% for months, with only 27% of the state’s population having received the booster shot.

Kemp is one of a coalition of Republican leaders across the country who have filed lawsuits against President Joe Biden’s vaccine requirements — part of a sweeping federal effort to increase vaccination rates.

This article appears on Now Habersham through a partnership with GPB News

Top 10 Georgia health care stories of 2021

Close to 20,000 new Covid cases (including positives from antigen tests) were reported in Georgia on the last Wednesday of 2021, as new daily state records are being set. On the state virus map, metro Atlanta was covered by a deep, dangerous red color, signifying high rates of infection. People were scrambling to get Covid tests, and many were forced to reconsider their New Year’s plans. Six hospital systems in the metro Atlanta area jointly announced Wednesday that have experienced 100 to 200 percent increases in Covid hospitalizations in the past eight days, with the vast majority of inpatients being unvaccinated.

Almost two years into the pandemic, Covid continued to dominate headlines . . . and it dominates our list of the Top 10 Georgia health care stories of 2021.

State map of Covid cases Dec. 29.

Vaccines became a key weapon. Matching the startling speed of Covid vaccine development, drug makers produced and shipped millions of doses to the nation in 2021. Georgians from the outset began getting in line for shots, and research showed that vaccinated people had a much better chance of escaping hospitalization and death. Yet at the end of the year, just barely over 50 percent of Georgians were fully vaccinated, even as booster shots were being given to increase immunity.

The virus adapted. After the first months of the pandemic, variants of Covid began to emerge, highlighting the disease’s complexity. Georgia suffered this year through a deadly surge driven by the Delta variant. As that subsided, a new variant, Omicron, emerged toward the end of the year. Omicron helped fuel a daily record of Covid cases being reported, both in the U.S. and in Georgia. Hospitals again were seeing their number of virus patients increase.

Covid created more health worker shortages. Nursing staffs in hospitals shrank as RNs left for less perilous work environments and even retired. Hospitals began offering unprecedented bonuses to attract nurses. Covid also forced shortages of caregivers for people with disabilities getting home care. And state-run psychiatric hospitals faced alarming shortages of employees.

Kemp waivers ran into trouble. After the Biden administration took office, the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services began questioning the work requirements in Gov. Brian Kemp’s proposal for increasing Medicaid enrollment in Georgia. Then, shortly before Christmas, the agency rejected those eligibility restrictions. Meanwhile, CMS also asked tough questions about the GOP governor’s other waiver request, to replace healthcare.gov with an insurance portal privately run by insurers and brokers.

ACA marketplace enrollment soared. Federal health officials announced record enrollment in government-affiliated marketplaces that let people buy health coverage. That high mark that was partly fueled by jumps in sign-ups in Georgia and the 11 other states that had not expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. Georgia reported a record 653,000 enrollees, as the number of insurance options increased, buttressed by more help from ACA counselors (“navigators”) and enhanced discounts for some marketplace customers.

Abrams entered gubernatorial race. Democrat Stacey Abrams, who narrowly lost to Republican Brian Kemp in 2018, announced she was running for governor again in 2022. With Abrams’ advocacy of Medicaid expansion and other policies that Gov. Kemp and his GOP allies have rejected, this signaled that health care could be a pivotal issue in the contest.

Expired contracts and frustrated customers. More contracts between giant insurers and hospital systems nationally were being severed without a renewal agreement, and those disruptions played out in Georgia as well. Wellstar’s contract with UnitedHealthcare ended in October, and Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield was heading for a Jan. 1 breakup with Northside Hospital.

The former Stewart Webster Hospital

Rural health problems persisted. Extra Covid funding helped stave off closures of rural hospitals across the nation, but there were many pockets in Georgia where medical services remained scarce. Some communities began looking to establish stand-alone rural emergency hospitals to fill the holes left by shuttered hospitals.

Hospital consolidation resumed. Piedmont Healthcare added four Georgia hospitals, buying them from HCA. Piedmont also began closing in on University Hospital in Augusta. Meanwhile, in Rome, Atrium Health took over Floyd Medical Center, while AdventHealth acquired Redmond Regional Medical Center. Such moves added bargaining clout to hospital systems seeking higher reimbursements from health insurers.

Pieces of slag containing lead in westside Atlanta yard

EPA widened probe of lead in Atlanta soil. The federal EPA expanded its investigation of a large swath of the low-income English Avenue neighborhood for lead in the soil. Meanwhile, a Georgia House study committee produced a series of recommendations to beef up state law aimed at protecting people from lead poisoning.

Monkeypox scare hit Georgia. Public Health officials reported that 43 people in Georgia were monitored in July for monkeypox. They had been exposed to an air traveler infected with the rare disease while the person was flying from Nigeria to Atlanta and then to Dallas. None of the Georgians turned out to be infected. Monkeypox originates in various wild animals, not only monkeys, and can be transmitted if a person comes into contact with the virus from an infected animal, an infected person or contaminated materials.