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Georgia helps drive record enrollment in ACA health insurance

A record 13.6 million Americans have signed up for health coverage for 2022 on the Affordable Care Act marketplaces, with nearly a month remaining to enroll in most states, the Biden administration announced Wednesday.

President Joe Biden’s top health advisers credited the increased government subsidies, which lowered out-of-pocket costs, for the surge in enrollment. They also said enhanced personal assistance and outreach helped connect more people to health insurance plans.

Some of the largest increases are in Florida, Texas, Georgia and nine other states that have not expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act.

The previous marketplace enrollment record was 12.7 million in 2016, the final year of President Barack Obama’s administration. Enrollment largely stagnated under President Donald Trump, who cut tens of millions of dollars in funding for navigators, who help people sign up for coverage.

Open enrollment for the marketplace or exchange began Nov. 1 and ends Jan. 15.

Through Dec. 15, enrollment in Florida had soared to 2.6 million people, up from 2.1 million in the same period a year earlier.

“This is a very big deal as it means we have made a dent in the uninsured pool and we are not only insuring people but keeping people signed up,” said Jodi Ray, program director for Florida Covering Kids & Families.

Ray has used federal grants to help Floridians sign up for private coverage on the marketplace for several years. During the Trump presidency, she said, she could help people in only half the counties in the state because of funding constraints. “You cannot overlook the impact that one-on-one assistance has in getting people through the process,” Ray said.

Enrollment has jumped more in states that have not expanded Medicaid because they have more uninsured residents than expansion states. In expansion states, people with incomes from 100% to 138% of the federal poverty level — about $12,880 and $17,770 for an individual — can enroll in Medicaid. In states that haven’t expanded the program, they can get subsidies to enroll in private plans through the Affordable Care Act marketplaces.

Georgia enrollment jumped to 653,990 from about 514,000 the previous year.

“That’s the most we’ve ever had enrolled,’’ said Laura Colbert, executive director of the consumer advocacy group Georgians for a Healthy Future. She said the enrollment spike helps show that Republican Gov. Brian Kemp’s plan to scrap healthcare.gov and replace it with a privately run portal isn’t needed.

The Biden administration is reviewing that proposal.

“Hundreds of thousands of Georgians still opt to remain uninsured rather than shop on the federal platform,” Kemp spokesperson Katie Byrd said Wednesday. “This means that the one-size-fits-all approach by the federal government is not working for Georgia.”

The 13.6 million enrollment number includes people who used state-run marketplaces, in addition to those who enrolled through the federally run healthcare.gov portal that handles sign-ups for more than 30 states.

Texas’ enrollment rose to 1.7 million from 1.3 million.

Texas, Georgia and South Dakota each showed gains of at least 20%, said Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. None of those states has expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act.

In non-expansion states, “our outreach efforts have been so robust this year,’’ Brooks-LaSure told reporters during a press call. The federal government is using four times the number of navigators, or insurance counselors, to help people sign up for insurance, said Xavier Becerra, secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

The big driver behind the enrollment gains is new discounts on premiums.

As part of a Covid-19 relief bill passed this year, Congress increased the subsidies consumers receive when they enroll in health insurance via the marketplace. CMS said 92% of people in healthcare.gov states will get the tax credits for 2022 coverage. Becerra said that for 4 in 5 enrollees, monthly premiums cost $10 or less, which he said is “less than going to a movie.”

But conservatives chafe at the idea of higher subsidies. Brian Blase, a former Trump adviser and president of the conservative think tank Paragon Health Institute, stressed that the federal government is paying 85% of people’s monthly insurance premiums.

Becerra

“People will buy something that provides them with little value if the after-subsidy price is zero or close to zero, and that’s what is generally happening here,” Blase said. “Ultimately, the big winners are the health insurance companies that are getting billions of dollars in additional government subsidies.”

Another driver of enrollment is that some people may have lost job-based coverage during the pandemic and are seeking insurance on their own.

The marketplaces also offer consumers more choices than in previous years. The average consumer now has between six and seven insurers to choose from, up from four to five in 2021, federal officials said.

Phil Galewitz, reporter for Kaiser Health News, also contributed to this report 

The Matrix Resurrections

“Nothing comforts anxiety like a little nostalgia.” -Morpheus to Neo.

This quote pretty much sums up the majority of The Matrix Resurrections. Back in 2003, it looked like the Wachowskis had closed the door on Neo, Morpheus, Trinity and the other characters at the end of The Matrix Revolutions. Well, almost.

Now Lana Wachowski is flying solo directing and cowriting this fourth installment without her sister, Lilly and the result is mostly successful enough to warrant another trip down the rabbit hole.

I was initially skeptical of a fourth Matrix film being made. After all, Revolutions pretty much said and did everything that needed to be said and done with these characters and their fates, but I guess Wachowski was waxing nostalgic to bring them back. I don’t have too many complaints about that.

What I want from a Matrix movie: Lots of sensational action and special effects, intriguing characters, philosophical debates about the nature of reality, and hopefully, a coherent plot to make it all worthwhile. Resurrections succeeds where it shouldn’t.

It should come as no surprise that Keanu Reeves and Carrie-Anne Moss return as Neo and Trinity despite the fact that they died at the end of Revolutions. How they return, I won’t give away, except to say that the answer is one that features complicated expository dialogue that only Lana Wachowski could deliver.

Neo a.k.a Thomas Anderson now has returned to life in The Matrix. He lives in San Francisco and works as a video game developer. His most successful game is creating a trilogy of games based on his experiences inside the Matrix.

Jonathan Graff costars as his business partner who informs Thomas that “Warner Brothers wants a fourth Matrix game.” If this sounds meta, you’re not alone. There’s a lot of fourth-wall-breaking going on in Resurrections and it comes across one of two ways: Hilariously self-aware or dangerously close to self-parody.

It isn’t long before Thomas reunites with Trinity who now goes by Tiffany. She’s married and has two kids. Both suspect a connection, but they can’t quite put the pieces of the puzzle together yet.

In the meantime, Thomas has regular therapy sessions with the Analyst (Neil Patrick Harris) in which he describes his experiences. All the Analyst does is prescribe him blue pills to suppress his condition.

Thomas also encounters two rebels searching for him in the form of Bugs (Jessica Harwick) and the return of Morpheus only this time it’s not Laurence Fishburne, but Yahya Abdul-Mateen II. He’s an alternate version of the character who again discovers Thomas’ true identity as Neo and gives him the choice of the Red Pill or the Blue Pill. I’ll let you figure out which one Neo takes.

The first Matrix back in 1999 was a groundbreaking piece of sci-fi filmmaking. It featured a mind-blowing premise and stunning visuals that supported the story. It still remains the best, largely due to its sense of originality and inventiveness. The subsequent sequels, Reloaded and Revolutions let down both critics and audiences by being convoluted and pretentious with a less-than-satisfying conclusion. Thankfully, Resurrections redeems the franchise by introducing enough fresh elements to keep it afloat instead of feeling completely redundant.

At times, the plot can feel a bit meandering. The nostalgia is on full display with a lot of scenes echoing the trilogy. You might find yourself wondering if this is more of a greatest hits album instead of new material.

Nevertheless, Lana Wachowski expands the universe of the Matrix in some unexpected ways that hold our attention, and Reeves and Moss at 57 and 54 respectively still have the same amount of energy that they did back in 1999. They’re not phoning it in.

If you liked the first three Matrix movies, you’ll like this one. If you didn’t, there’s no use in convincing you to see this one.

Grade: A-

(Rated R for violence and some language.)

Habersham County tops 200 COVID deaths

As the Omicron variant surges across Georgia and the United States, Habersham County this week hit a sobering milestone.

On December 21, Habersham recorded its 200th COVID-related death, according to data from the Georgia Department of Public Health. COVID has now directly caused or contributed to the deaths of at least 201 Habersham County residents since the pandemic began. That is the third-highest death toll in Northeast Georgia behind Jackson County (217) and Hall County (653).

Clarke County, which has a population nearly three times the size of Habersham, has recorded 180 deaths since the pandemic began in March 2020.

Habersham County’s statistical death rate per 100,000 is among the highest in the region at 438.9. Only Towns and Union counties have higher per capita rates at 573.4 and 473.7, respectively. Jackson County has had 290.5 deaths per 100,000 and Hall County 316.5.

MORE: Kemp, Carr file another lawsuit challenging vaccine mandates

On Wednesday, Dec. 22, Georgia saw the highest level of new cases since early October with the state reporting nearly 5,800 cases. Statewide, the seven-day case average has more than doubled in the last week.

Public health officials confirm that at least 26,179 Georgians have died with COVID since the pandemic began. DPH lists another 4,945 deaths as probable COVID deaths.

In the U.S., COVID has claimed at least 810,924 lives. Globally, the death toll exceeds 276.8 million, according to Johns Hopkins University.

SEE ALSO

FDA authorizes first pill to treat COVID-19

This article has been updated to reflect data released on Dec. 22, 2021

FDA authorizes first pill to treat COVID-19

The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday issued an emergency use authorization for Pfizer’s COVID-19 pill, Paxlovid.

The pill is authorized to treat mild-to-moderate COVID-19 in people aged 12 and older who have tested positive for the viral infection and who are at high-risk of severe disease from the virus.

“Today’s authorization introduces the first treatment for COVID-19 that is in the form of a pill that is taken orally — a major step forward in the fight against this global pandemic,” said Patrizia Cavazzoni, M.D., director of the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. “This authorization provides a new tool to combat COVID-19 at a crucial time in the pandemic as new variants emerge and promises to make antiviral treatment more accessible to patients who are at high risk for progression to severe COVID-19.”

Paxlovid is available by prescription only. It consists of nirmatrelvir, which inhibits a SARS-CoV-2 protein to stop the virus from replicating, and ritonavir, which slows down nirmatrelvir’s breakdown to help it remain in the body for a longer period at higher concentrations. According to the FDA, the five-day, thirty pill regimen should be started “as soon as possible” after diagnosis of COVID-19 and within five days of symptom onset.

Health officials stress the pill is not a substitute for vaccination in individuals for whom COVID-19 vaccination and a booster dose are recommended.

READ MORE ABOUT IT: FDA website

Athens-Clarke police continue crackdown on street gangs

The crackdown is part of the Athens-Clarke County Police Department’s continued effort to target criminal street gang activity. The FBI Safe Streets Gang Task Force, Northeast Georgia Regional Drug Task Force, and Georgia Bureau of Investigation are assisting them in that effort.

The most recent arrests include Kaderrick Atkinson and Taveon Stevens, both 24 of Athens, and Jakwon Mapp, 23, of Nicholson.

Stevens was arrested for obstruction of law enforcement and existing arrest warrants for felony probation violation, trafficking heroin, and various other drug charges. At the time of his arrest, Stevens was out of jail on bond for weapons, trafficking, and drug possession charges. Police say he was also on probation for six counts of violating the street gang and terrorism prevention act.

Atkinson was arrested for obstruction of law enforcement, according to ACCPD. At the time of his arrest, he was out on bond for various charges including aggravated assault, battery, criminal trespass, and cruelty to children in the 3rd degree.

Officers arrested Mapp for allegedly violating federal pretrial release conditions. He was on pretrial release after being charged with three counts of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.

“Over the past several weeks, ACCPD has arrested 13 known gang members and seized 10 firearms, as well as drugs and stolen property,” says the department’s public information officer Lt. Shaun Barnett. “ACCPD is committed to protecting the community and will continue to focus our efforts on violent criminal street gangs.”

Earlier this month, Athens-Clarke County Police Chief Cleveland Spruill defended their efforts when some city leaders opposed renewing a grant to fund the regional drug task force.

Chief Cleveland Spruill

“The Athens-Clarke County minority community continues to be disproportionately impacted by crime, gangs, shootings, violence and deaths, all fueled by the ongoing regional drug trade. The Northeast Georgia Regional Drug Task Force plays a critical role in combating this violence and the negative impacts of the illegal drug trade on our community.”

The Athens-Clarke County Commission voted to renew the Byrne Justice Assistance Grant, 7-2, with Commissioners Mariah Parker and Jesse Houle voting against it.

When explaining their vote against the grant, Parker (who prefers the pronouns they/them) said they felt the task force disproportionately impacts Black communities, the Athens Banner-Herald reports.

“Data from the ACC Manager’s Office reveals that 76% of those arrested by the task force this year were African-American, despite studies that have indicated that white and Black people use and sell drugs at similar rates,” said Parker.

Before the vote, Spruill urged commissioners to approve the grant, calling the drug task force “a critical element of ACCPD’s crime reduction strategy.”

The grant is up for renewal again next year.

READ MORE ABOUT IT: Athens-Clarke commissioners renew grant for drug task force, but call for future changes

Gainesville High student missing for days found safe

A 16-year-old Gainesville High School student who was missing for days has been found safe, police say.

Vanessa Ashley, who also goes by Sid or Sidney, was safely located late Tuesday, Dec. 21. She had been missing since Dec. 17 when she failed to come home after school.

Police did not say where or how the teen was located. They extended their thanks to the public for their help in finding her.

Gov. Brian Kemp backs Juneteenth as Georgia state holiday

Gov. Brian Kemp, center, is flanked by House Speaker David Ralston, R-Blue Ridge, right, and Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan as he speaks during the State of the State address before a joint session of the Georgia General Assembly Thursday, Jan. 16, 2020, in Atlanta.(AP Photo/John Bazemore)

Gov. Brian Kemp is supporting a plan to add Juneteenth as a mandatory 13th holiday for Georgia state employees.

Georgia law now mandates the observance of the 10 federal holidays set in 1984, when Martin Luther King Jr. Day was first observed. But a new federal law signed by President Joe Biden added Juneteenth as an 11th federal holiday, marking the 1865 date that some enslaved Black people in Texas became among the last in Confederacy to learn that Abraham Lincoln had ordered them freed through 1863’s Emancipation Proclamation.

“The legislation that was prefiled is in keeping with the state’s traditional protocol — last updated in 1984 with the addition of MLK holiday — to recognize all federal holidays,” said Katie Byrd, a spokesperson for Kemp.

State Rep. Lauren McDonald III, a Cumming Republican, introduced a bill on Monday that would mandate Georgia observe all federal holidays including Juneteenth, adding the 13th paid day off. McDonald, a Kemp floor leader, told The Associated Press on Tuesday that the governor asked him to put the measure forward in the House. Lawmakers are likely to consider it after they convene in January.

Kemp already has the power to shift the observance of two unnamed state holidays. Those days used to specifically commemorate Confederate Memorial Day on April 26 and Robert E. Lee’s birthday on Jan 19. In 2015, after Dylann Roof shot and killed nine people during a bible study at a Black church in Charleston, South Carolina, then-Gov. Nathan Deal stopped designating Lee’s Birthday and Confederate Memorial Day as holidays.

This year, what is now the unnamed Jan. 19 state holiday was taken on the Friday after Thanksgiving, while the unnamed April 26 state holiday was observed on Good Friday before Easter.

Kemp is overdue in designating what days will be observed in 2022, an apparent consequence of deciding what to do about Juneteenth. He fixed the 2021 holidays in an a memo on Aug. 17, 2020 and fixed the 2020 holidays in a July 15, 2019 memo. But 2022’s holidays still haven’t been posted to a state employee website.

Although some federal agencies closed in June days after the Juneteenth bill was signed, Georgia state government remained open. Kemp signed a proclamation  recognizing Juneteenth, but that didn’t make it a holiday.

House Bill 444 was introduced last year in the state House by Rep. Miriam Paris of Macon and other Democrats to mandate that Juneteenth be a state holiday, but saw no action. It was the third time Paris had introduced the bill.

Paris said the holiday marks the liberation of both those who were enslaved and those who were oppressing the slaves.

“Juneteenth is a day for all Americans,” Paris said Tuesday. “The end of slavery is something that everyone should be happy and jubilant over.”

The Georgia chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union had called for Kemp to drop the Columbus Day holiday on Oct. 11 and instead designate Juneteenth, saying Columbus Day commemorates the shameful dispossession and killing of the native peoples of the Americas.

So far, at least 11 states have designated Juneteenth as an official paid state holiday — Illinois, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Texas, Virginia and Washington. All but Texas, where the events of the original Juneteenth took place, acted after the killing of George Floyd last year.

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

 

Kemp, Carr sue Biden administration over Head Start vaccine mandate

(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

As the COVID-19 Omicron variant surges in Georgia, Governor Brian Kemp and Attorney General Chris Carr announced Tuesday that the state has filed a lawsuit challenging the Biden administration’s Head Start vaccine and masking mandate.

The mandate, issued Nov. 29 by the Administration for Children and Families, outlines new performance standards for the Head Start program. It would require all Head Start staff, contractors working directly with children and volunteers to be fully vaccinated by Jan. 31, 2022.

“This is just the latest and most egregious in a growing list of overreaches by this President,” Kemp said in a press release. “It is all the more troubling and inexcusable, given this mandate directly impacts and impairs our children. As with our prior lawsuits against the administration’s unwarranted and inappropriate decisions, we will not rest in this fight to protect the rights and choices of Georgia’s families, especially when it comes to our youngest citizens. We will not allow these policies to invade our classrooms, teaching the wrong lessons about the role of government to growing minds.”

This is the fourth lawsuit Kemp has filed against the Biden administration concerning vaccine mandates. The governor also sued Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and the Atlanta City Council in July over their city-wide mask mandate; he dropped the suit in August.

“After taking unprecedented action to impose three reckless mandates on our nation’s workforce, the Biden administration has doubled down on its efforts and is now targeting our state’s youngest learners,” Attorney General Carr said. “The federal government is attempting to force Georgia families to choose between two equally problematic outcomes – either give up their right to make their own healthcare decisions or risk their child’s education. This unlawful power grab is merely the latest example of a disturbing pattern emerging in this administration, and we will continue to fight back to protect our state and our citizens.”

Georgia is one of 24 states that have joined the suit led by Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry.

Cara Wade Dodd

Cara Wade Dodd, loving mother and grandmother, passed away at age 93 on Sunday, December 19, 2021.

Cara was born May 12, 1928, in Homer, Georgia, to Warren and Maggie Bonds. She married Crawford L. C. Wade, Jr. and together they had seven children. She worked in cotton mills for 66 years, starting at New Holland Mill in Gainesville, Georgia, and retiring from Mount Vernon Mills in Alto, Georgia. Most of that time was spent weaving, and she was proud of hard work well done.

Cara loved going to gospel singings as often as she could, and especially enjoyed traveling to the mountains. She knew her way around a kitchen and kept everyone in jelly and chow chow. She was the master of cat-head biscuits. Cara loved her family and friends and cherished time spent together. She was known for her sweet smile. She is greatly missed.

Cara was preceded in death by her parents, Warren and Maggie; husbands Junior Wade and Billy Dodd; siblings Myles Bonds, Charlie Bonds, Grace Davidson, J.B. Bonds, and Ruby Simmons; children Gail Strickland, Doug Wade, and Phillip Wade; grandchild Calvin Turner; great-grandchild Jessa Tomlin; and son-in-law Douglas Gulley. She is survived by her sisters, Ruth Acrey of Cornelia, Georgia, and Bonnie Bagwell of Buford, Georgia; her children Jackie Wade (Gloria), Jan Gulley, Judy Turner, and Danny Wade (Lela); and many grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

Visitation with the family will be held Monday, December 27, from 2:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. at Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel.

A memorial gathering will be held at a later date.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel at 1370 Industrial Boulevard, Baldwin, Georgia 30511. Telephone: 706-778-7123

Mary Frances Eberhardt Patterson

Mary Frances Eberhardt Patterson, age 94 of Gainesville entered heaven Tuesday December 21, 2021 at the Northeast Georgia Medical Center, Gainesville.

Mary Frances was born September 2, 1927 in Gainesville to the late Earnest Paul & Sarah Elizabeth Thompson Eberhardt. She was a homemaker & an avid gardener. Mary Frances was a member of St. Paul United Methodist Church where she was very active. She was preceded in death by her husband, George Cleburn Patterson; sister, Charlotte Banks; brother, Dave Eberhardt.

Left to cherish her memory, son, Tommy (Lillie) Patterson; daughters, Marsha Knight & Celeste (Drew) Sayre; grandchildren, Erin (Adam) Sullivan, Libby (Matt) Pope & Molly Sayre; great-grandchild, Junior Sullivan.

Memorial services honoring Mary Frances will be announced later.

In lieu of flowers contributions may be given to the St. Paul United Methodist Church, 404 Washington St NW, Gainesville, GA 30501 or to the Hospice of Northeast Georgia, 2150 Limestone Parkway, Gainesville, GA 30501.

Please share online condolences with the family at www.wardsfh.com. Ward’s Funeral Home is honored to serve the family of Mary Frances Eberhardt Patterson.

Marvin Leroy Phillips

Marvin Leroy Phillips, age 93, of Rabun Gap, passed away on Wednesday, December 15, 2021.

Born on December 24, 1927, in West Union, West Virginia, he was a son of the late Glenwood and Mary Agnes McIntosh Phillips. Mr. Phillips was a United States Navy Veteran. He loved his family, heavy equipment operating, and playing ping pong. Mr. Phillips was one of Jehovah’s Witness’.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by three brothers and one sister.

Survivors include his sons and daughters-in-law, Lanny and Penny Phillips of Clayton and Lyle and Robin Phillips of Rabun Gap; daughter, Shawnee Thomas of Tiger; six grandchildren; twelve great-grandchildren; one great-great-grandchild; and several nieces, nephews, and cousins.

An online memorial service will be held at 5pm on January 5.

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.

Peach State FCU members and staff donate to Toys For Tots

Peach State staff members Deborah Fancher and Will Claiborne posing with the Toys for Tots gifts generously donated by members and staff.

Peach State Federal Credit Union recently held its annual toy drive in support of the Toys For Tots organization. Every year, members and staff graciously donate new, unwrapped toys, helping spread holiday cheer to children of all ages in need.

This effort is one of many that aligns with the credit union’s C.A.R.E.S Foundation, says Kristen Patton, Peach State’s Senior Vice President of Marketing. The Foundation was created to support local charities and food banks, provide scholarships to area students and members, as well as helping to make the communities they serve better and brighter places.

“The C.A.R.E.S Foundation was established in 2021 to help improve the lives of all of our neighbors and beyond. We’re proud to support the efforts of the Toys For Tots organization because of our shared vision of bringing hope to those in need,” says Peach State’s President and CEO Marshall Boutwell.

To learn more about Peach State Federal Credit Union’s C.A.R.E.S program and how you can help support your local communities, please visit https://www.peachstatefcu.org/Stories/CARES-Foundation.