Home Blog Page 1638

Cable barrier project on GA 365 continues

(Photo/GDOT)

Construction crews are extending cable barriers along GA 365 in Habersham County.  They’re currently working in the median between Duncan Bridge and Level Grove Roads on the south end of the county.

“This is an active work zone and as such speeding penalties and fines increase,” the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office warns. “As much as 1 mph over in a work zone can get you pulled over.”

The three-strand cable barrier system is being installed in the grass median to enhance safety, according to the Georgia Department of Transportation.

Cornelia-based Higgins Construction Co. won the contract for the $1.5 million project. The project will extend the barriers from Hall into Habersham County ensuring “the latest safety barrier equipment is present down the entire corridor,” GDOT says.

Cable barriers are softer than guardrails, resulting in less impact force and redirection, experts say. They are also more adaptable to slopes typically found in medians and can be installed through less invasive construction methods.

Drivers should watch out for single-lane closures between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. and 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. Monday through Friday.

The sheriff’s office asks drivers to “Please obey the speed limit, watch for construction vehicles and personnel, and for possible lane/shoulder closures.”

The work is expected to be completed by April 2022.

John Robert Briggs

John Robert Briggs, age 79 of Mt. Airy, Georgia is healed and in the arms of Jesus. John passed away December 20th due to an extended illness. Just like he dealt with all experiences in life, John managed his illness with strength, dignity, and grace, and wanted to spend as much time with his loved ones as possible. On his last days, John was surrounded by his loving wife, daughters, sons-in-law, grandsons, identical twin brother, and grand dogs who adored him more than anything else in the world.

Born in Cornelia, Georgia on August 25, 1942, he was the son of the late PY and Catherine Briggs. For much of his life, John grew up in Habersham County. Johnny, as his friends and family called him, was a Veteran of the United States Navy and served aboard the USS Enterprise during the Vietnam War. He retired from the United States Postal Service in Gainesville, Georgia after over 32 years of service, where he was loved by everyone on his mail route.

Johnny enjoyed sharing his love for Jesus Christ with others as well as spending time with his family and watching the Atlanta Braves and The University of Georgia Football with his grandsons. He loved fishing and spending time at the beach with his beloved wife Sandra. Johnny was a deacon and member of Mt. Carmel Baptist Church of Demorest Georgia. Everyone who knew Johnny knew that in addition to always being on top of things, he was extremely kind and generous.

John is survived by his wife of 53 years, Sandra Loudermilk Briggs, and their two daughters and sons-in-law; Kelly and Mitch Williams, Cleveland, GA, Michelle and Keith Howell, Braselton, GA; mother in law Elizabeth Loudermilk of Mt. Airy, grandchildren Matthew Chitwood, Cleveland, Jonathan & Peyton Howell, Braselton; identical twin brother Jimmy Briggs (Brenda), Waterloo, SC, sisters in law; Barbara Dalton of Mt. Airy, Joy Wilbanks (Marshal) of Toccoa and Gail Asato of Aiea, HI, brother in law Jerry Loudermilk (Shirley) of Cornelia, grand dogs, Sophie and Georgia, as well as a large extended family and friends. He was preceded in death by his parents, PY and Catherine Briggs as well as his brother, Glenn Briggs.

The family would like to thank the hospice team who became like family while Johnny was under hospice care. The team included Beth, Alan, Bobbie, Judy, Heather, and Selena.

Join us in celebrating a life well lived. A visitation is planned for Wednesday, December 22, 2021, from 6:00 PM until 8:00 PM at Hillside Memorial Chapel. A celebration of life service will be held at 11:00 AM Thursday, December 23, 2021, at Mt. Carmel Baptist Church. Rev. Josh Taylor, Rev. Terry Rice and Dr. Charles Holland will officiate with interment to follow the service in Yonah Memorial Gardens.

An online guest book is available for the family by visiting www.hillsidememorialchapel.com.

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

Melvin Stephens

Funeral services for Melvin Stephens, age 75 of Mt. Airy, will be held at 3:00 PM, Thursday, December 23, 2021 at Hollywood Baptist Church. Dr. Don Samples will officiate with interment to follow the service in the church cemetery. The family will receive friends at the funeral home prior to the service from 1:00 PM to 2:30 PM.

Mr. Stephens passed away Sunday, December 19, 2021.

Born in Toccoa, Georgia on October 1, 1946, Mr. Stephens was the son of the late Lamon Joseph Stephens and Beryl Kinney Whitener. He was a self-employed businessman as the owner of Stephens and Sons Farms. A lifelong resident of Habersham County, Mr. Stephens was a member of Hollywood Baptist Church and was a true family man that dearly loved his children and grandchildren. Mr. Stephens also enjoyed hunting, fishing, and car racing. In addition to his parents, Mr. Stephens is preceded in death by his son Shane Stephens, and stepbrothers Joseph Stephens and Bobby Stephens and sister Susan Stephens Thomas.

Survivors include son Matthew (Amber) Stephens of Bowling Green, Kentucky, daughters Kellie Stephens of Mt. Airy and Contessa Stephens of Hollywood, life partner and mother of his children, Barbara Alexander Stephens of Hollywood, sisters Linda Stephens Williams of Mt. Airy and Ann Stephens Church of Clarkesville. In addition, he is survived by grandchildren Kirsten Stephens (Haven Allen), Keaton Stephens (Ivey Sosebee), Chelsey Stephens, Cody Wade, Megan (Joe) Chastain, McKenzie Moore, Chandler Allen, Chaselin Allen, Coler Allen, and Caitlin Plant, as well as great-grandchildren Isabella Allen, Paisley Allen, Addalynn Stephens, Breelynn Wade, Saylor Chastain, and Scout Chastain as well as numerous extended family and many friends.

An online guest book is available for the Stephens family by visiting www.hillsidememorialchapel.com.

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

Jamey Randall Foster

Funeral services for Jamey Randall Foster, age 47 of Baldwin, will be held at 11:00 AM, Wednesday, December 22, 2021, at Hillside Memorial Chapel. Pastor David Sharpton will officiate with interment to follow the service in Yonah Memorial Gardens. The family will receive friends at the funeral home on Tuesday, December 21, 2021, from 6:00 to 9:00 pm.

Mr. Foster passed away Sunday, December 19, 2021.

Born in Gainesville, Georgia on August 12, 1974, Mr. Foster was the son of Vicki Sue Bramlett Foster and the late James Randall Foster. He graduated from Habersham Central High School in 1992 and was employed at Titan Steel Doors as an Inventory Controller. Mr. Foster was also an archery coach with Banks County 4-H, the Refuge Archery and the Banks County Archery Team, as well as a member of the Banks County FFA Alumni Association. An avid hunter and fisherman, he and his son Tanner not only enjoyed archery together but enjoyed farming together as well. They took great pleasure in raising commercial Angus cattle, Angus show heifers, and show pigs. In addition to his father, Mr. Foster is preceded in death by his grandfathers J.C. Bramlett and James B. Foster and grandmother Imogene Wade Stancil.

Survivors include wife Connie Hyde Foster and son Tanner James Foster of Baldwin, mother Vicki Sue Bramlett Foster of Alto, grandmother and grandpa Steve and Joan Bailey of Alto, sister Marcie (Jason) Foster King of Alto, and numerous nieces, nephews, cousins, aunts, uncles, and extended family.

An online guest book is available for the Foster family by visiting www.hillsidememorialchapel.com.

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

Driver injured in single-vehicle wreck in Mt. Airy

(NowHabersham.com)

A driver was injured when she ran off the road and struck a tree in Mt. Airy Monday afternoon.

The driver, which emergency personnel describes as a 30-year-old woman, was traveling on Dicks Hill Parkway near the Ivy Hills subdivision when she reportedly ran off the road and overcorrected before striking the tree.

She suffered lacerations to her face and forehead, as well as abrasions.

Habersham County Emergency Services transported her in stable condition to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville for treatment.

Three finalists named in Habersham county manager search

The Habersham County Commission met in called session Monday morning to interview candidates for the county manager position.

The county hired the Carl Vinson Institute of Government (CVI/CVIOG) at the University of Georgia to assist with the search for a permanent county manager in July. According to the board of commissioners, during the application process, 13 people applied for the job. Only four made it to the interviewing process, one of which withdrew from consideration.

“I was a little late to the process but from what I can tell and what I’ve heard so far, the CVI let us down on this one particular project,” newly-elected Commissioner Ty Akins told Now Habersham. “Maybe not their best work, although it was still helpful in narrowing down the candidates.”

Habersham County Interim County Manager Alicia Vaughn

The commission interviewed three finalists, which included former Fitchburg, Wisconsin City Administrator Patrick Marsh, former Baldwin City Administrator Jerry Neace and interim manager Alicia Vaughn. Interim County Manager Vaughn has served in the manager’s position since July, filling the vacancy left by Phil Sutton who resigned. Sutton held the position for nearly eight years.

Patrick Marsh was placed on administrative leave from his last government position in Fitchburg following his arrest last year in Myrtle Beach. Marsh was charged with third-degree assault and battery, disorderly conduct and public intoxication after an alleged fight in a restaurant.

Neace served as Baldwin City Administrator from 2018 to 2020. He resigned as mayor to take the job. The city council unanimously voted to fire him last summer. City Council officials signed a Non-Disclosure Agreement at the time of his termination, and say they cannot elaborate on why he was fired. It was reported at the time that the council agreed to pay Neace more than $100,000 as part of the separation agreement.

The commission won’t make a decision on their pick for county manager for another two weeks.

Jerry Neace (now habersham.com)

“I want everyone to take the next two weeks or so and mull over it,” Commission Chairman Dustin Mealor said. “[And] consider who they think would be the best fit for the county, and we’ll go from there.”

The commission plans to hold a special called meeting as soon as they can after their 14-day waiting period to vote on who the county manager will be. After that vote, the county will enter into contract negotiations with that finalist.

“This is a really important decision for the county,” Mealor said. “We want to get it taken care of as quickly as possible.”

This article has been updated with new information.

More than 100 Northeast Georgia animals transported to rescues

(Gail Connor/Facebook)

Habersham County Animal Care and Control participated in a transport Friday that sent more than 100 animals to rescue groups up north to find their forever homes.

The transport was part of a rescue initiative called the Georgia Transport Alliance, which is organized by volunteer coordinators and Northeast Georgia animal shelter teams. Since the organization was founded by Gail Connor of Metro Atlanta in 2018, more than 10,000 Northeast Georgia animals have gone to northern rescue organizations to find their forever homes.

Transport coordinator Gail Connor gives transport kittens a little love before sending them up north. (Mitchell Simcoe/Facebook)

Connor, a native New Yorker, spent more than 15 years in animal rescue. One of the things she’s seen during her time in Georgia is that the number of homeless animals far outweighs the number of adopters, something that isn’t the case up north.

“In the north, they have more adopters than they have animals, which is something that we can only dream about Georgia,” Connor says. “I have about 115 rescues in the Northeast and Midwest that we transport to.”

The Habersham County Animal Shelter, led by Animal Care and Control Director Madi Nix, has participated in 77 animal transports and sent around 806 animals to rescue organizations with the Georgia Transport Alliance.

“For a lot of animal control [groups], their job is to rid the town of unwanted or lost animals . . . I’m so thankful that some of the shelters do take on a rescue mentality so that they are looking for answers to save lives,” Connor says. “In Georgia, we just don’t have enough adopters for all the homeless animals. Many [animal control groups] from my experience don’t even try hard to find solutions for their animals, whereas Madi will do whatever it takes.”

A group effort

Northeast Georgia animal shelters, from Madison-Oglethorpe Animal Shelter in Danielsville to Forsyth County Animal Shelter in Cumming, come together to make these transports happen. Through the cooperation of these shelters, transports happen almost weekly, but not always of the magnitude of Friday’s transport.

Habersham County sent 37 animals on the transport, while Madison-Oglethorpe sent 28. Shelters like the Athens-Clarke County Shelter, Hall County Animal Shelter, DeKalb County Shelter and a slew of others also sent animals on the transport to get them into forever homes.

The transporting of animals isn’t free— but it is a group effort between Northeast Georgia’s shelters and the rescues that take those animals in to make sure financial burdens don’t fall on one group or organization.

Habersham County Animal Care and Control Director Madi Nix helps identify and organize all the animals going on their transport home. (Mitchell Simcoe/Facebook)

During transports, the shelters trade off who pays for gas money, and the rescues up north help take care of vet bills. For Habersham’s share of transport costs, Nix says that donations have helped cover those expenses. But she says that even with transports up the coast costing around $400 in gas, it’s a better allocation of tax dollars to transport animals to rescues.

“It’s costing us less to get these animals out of here than it is to pay to feed them, to pay to take care of them, to have the space to house them, all that kind of stuff,” Nix says. “There’s no point in these animals sitting here for no reason. It’s not like we don’t have to put money into them the longer they sit there.”

Nix estimates that each animal at the shelter costs about $10 a day to feed, house and provide veterinary care for.

Finding Fur-ever

Transports work when it comes to getting homeless animals adopted, according to Nix. She tells Now Habersham that the animals they send on transports have been waiting at the shelter hoping for homes for months. Several of the animals that went out on Friday’s transport had been at the shelter since September.

Kensington, a female terrier/pit mix who came to the shelter at the beginning of September, went on a transport to Connecticut earlier this month. Within five days, she’d been adopted by her forever family.

“No one wanted that dog,” Nix said. “[But when] she went up north, she was adopted within five days.”

Kensignton had been at the shelter since early September, where she was surrendered twice. After three months of waiting, she was part of a transport with All Paws on Deck, a Connecticut rescue, where she was adopted within five days. (Mandi Evans/All Paws on Deck Alumni)

 

Kensington joined a family of four, where she has a bed of her own, two children, ages 5 and 7, to play with, a fireplace to warm her belly and an adoring mom.

“We’ve been having a blast with her already,” Mandi Evans, who adopted Kensignton, tells Now Habersham. “She loves snuggling on our beds with us and going for walks to explore the neighborhood. She’s already learned to ‘sit’ and ‘lie down’, so we’re pretty excited about that! She’s super sweet and we just love her so much already!!”

Not only are these transports successful, but Connor says they are the best way for Georgia to decrease their homeless animal population. The best defense against homeless animals and euthanasia is, according to Nix, Connor and animal rescue groups around the country, spaying and neutering.

“The answer to getting our [pet] population under control— there are three things you have,” Connor says. “You’ve got Georgia adoptions, which are never going to solve the problem, you’ve got spay-neuter, which is very important to get these populations under control and then we have transport— or you have euthanasia, take your pick.”

Searching for the spirit of Christmas

Mason and Maleigha Watts stare in disbelief the morning after fire destroyed their Rabun County home.

Carrie Watts is trying to get in the Christmas spirit for her children. It’s been a struggle. A little more than a month ago she arrived home after picking up her daughter from a church program to find her home in flames.

“When I drove down the driveway towards the house, I could see the flames shooting up from the roof. I immediately called 911.”

Fire crews worked hard to control the blaze but it was too late for a house built of pine. That night was life-changing. The home she had worked hard to create for her son, ten-year-old Mason, and her daughter, six-year-old Maleigha, was destroyed in the fire.

Carrie, fiancée Cam, and her children were assisted by Red Cross with a hotel room for a few weeks and have now found a rental house.

“When you lose everything, you need everything. My joy has been robbed but God is able.”

Friends, family, and strangers have been generous with donations of used clothing and other items lost in the fire and her family is grateful.

How to help

The local Red Cross helped Carrie and her family with a place to stay, just as they do for hundreds of families each year after a fire or other disaster. After that, the family found a rental house where they can live until April.

In the meantime, Carrie is struggling to provide the spirit of the Christmas season for her family, especially her kids.

“I’m not sure I have it in me because the loss has been so great this year, beginning with the death of my sister in July, and now this,” she said breaking into tears.

Carrie, Cam, Mason, and Maleigha hope for better days ahead.

She is very grateful for the love shown by people in the community but the needs are still great.

The Red Cross recommends gifts of money or gift cards following a disaster because there is often no place to put used donations or even unusable items in temporary housing after a devastating loss.

Financial donations can be made at South State Bank in Clayton, Cornelia, Clarkesville, Gainesville, Cleveland, or at any of the bank’s locations.

Carrie’s friend, Virginia Stewart, owns Hangar’s Plus, located at 91 E Savannah St. Ste 404 in Clayton. Gift cards can be dropped off there so that Carrie will be able to provide a Merry Christmas for her children.

“Gift cards for meals, to stores where I could buy presents for Mason and Maleigha, or to Walmart or Home Depot to shop for replacement items we need, would be a blessing.”

There is also a Venmo account where donations can be accepted: @carrieann1987.

New year, a new beginning

Carrie and her family will be in their rental home until the spring. She is hoping to use the small amount of insurance money she will receive to begin building a new home.

“When we do build a new house and we are financially able, my first goal is to pay it forward and help other families who have been through this kind of loss.”

After all, isn’t that what Christmas is really all about?

 

 

 

White Christmas? Keep dreaming

Finding snow near North Georgia is a seasonal pursuit. (Photo Damien McCoig, unsplash)

If you’re dreaming of a white Christmas, you’d better head north. Meteorologists predict snow in the Mountain West and from northeast Montana into northern Michigan and parts of upstate New York into northern New England. According to the Weather Channel, lower chances for a white Christmas exist from portions of the Northern Plains into the upper Midwest and the interior Northeast and Appalachians.

As for the rest of us – keep dreaming.

MORE:

White Christmas

Meteorologists define a white Christmas as having 1 inch or more of snow on the ground on Christmas morning. It doesn’t have to be snowing on the holiday for that to happen.

Courtesy: The Weather Channel

The Weather Channel’s snow map closely aligns with historical data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. It reflects the normal chance, or probability, of a white Christmas based on data from the 1981-2010 three-decade averages.

Source: NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center

Suffice it to say (and sorry to dash your dreams), but short of Santa dropping snow from his sleigh, there will be no snow in Northeast Georgia on Christmas Day. In a December that is currently 8 degrees above normal, chances of snow will remain slim through the New Year.

“The normal highs for this time of year are in the low 50s with normal lows in the lower 30s. At this time, temperatures across the area appear too warm for any snow to fall,” says meteorologist Patricia Atwell with the National Weather Service in Peachtree City.

Source: NOAA

Of course, while disappointing to many, this Christmas snow forecast is nothing new. White Christmases are rare in Northeast Georgia. There have been three in White County in the past 78 years, including a light dusting last year that also fell in Habersham and neighboring areas.

Christmas 2020 snowfall outside the fire department in Clarkesville (nowhabersham.com)

The most significant Christmas snowfall in the region occurred in 1947 when Cleveland weather observer Mary Lou Sutton recorded 7 inches of snow and Cornelia recorded 2 inches.

In 2010, WRWH Radio in Cleveland recorded over 2 inches of snow on Christmas day. Other weather stations recorded similar amounts, including in Athens.

About an inch fell in parts of Habersham and White counties last later.

December snow dreams

December snow is also infrequent, but it does happen. Northeast Georgia’s biggest December snowfall event in the 78 years of record-keeping occurred relatively recently, on December 9, 2017. Over 10 inches of snow fell in the area of Anna Ruby Falls in northern White County and 4.5 inches fell in Banks County, National Weather Service records show.

The heaviest snow accumulations occurred in a ribbon stretching from Carroll County into the northwestern Atlanta suburbs and into the north Georgia mountains. Up to a foot of snow accumulated in these areas.

A visible satellite image of north Georgia on the afternoon of Saturday, December 9, 2017, shows much of the snow that fell on Friday and early Saturday remained on the ground. (Source: National Weather Service)

The heaviest December snowstorm known to hit northern Georgia arrived on December 3, 1886, and lasted through December 6 of that year. Reporting in the Dahlonega Signal newspaper the following week, editor J.W. Woodward wrote that Dahlonega recorded a total of 24 inches of accumulated snow on the ground.

Snow on Dahlonega Public Square December 1886.

For now, pictures of snowy white holidays – or a trip up north – will have to satisfy snow-lovers in Georgia, but that doesn’t mean one can’t dream. After all, anticipation is half the fun of Christmas. Although there will be no snow this year, there’s always 2022.

Schumer vows U.S. Senate action on voting rights and social policy, as Manchin rift deepens

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer sent a letter to colleagues on the Hill less than 24 hours after Sen. Joe Manchin III, a West Virginian considered the most conservative Democrat in the chamber, said on Fox News that he would not support the Biden-backed spending measure. Manchin's announcement dealt a surprise blow to the White House. (file photo)

(GA Recorder) — U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said Monday he plans to force votes on voting rights, a sweeping social policy bill and a change to Senate rules early next year — even as members of his caucus have made clear in recent days Democrats lack the support to pass those proposals.

In a letter to Democratic colleagues Monday, Schumer, of New York, said the Senate would vote in early January on a new version of President Joe Biden’s $1.85 trillion social spending and climate bill, as well as voting rights legislation deemed essential by many Democrats in advance of the midterm elections.

Schumer said that if Republicans use procedural tools to block consideration of voting rights through the filibuster, the Senate then would consider changes to its rules to bar such tactics.

The letter came less than 24 hours after Sen. Joe Manchin III, a West Virginian considered the most conservative Democrat in the chamber, said on Fox News that he would not support the Biden-backed spending measure, dealing a surprise blow to the White House and Schumer’s caucus.

In the evenly split Senate, Manchin’s no vote would doom the bill known as Build Back Better, which the Democratic House passed just before Thanksgiving following months of negotiations between moderates and progressives.

Schumer’s letter appeared to take a shot at Manchin’s startling “Fox News Sunday” appearance.

“Senators should be aware that the Senate will, in fact, consider the Build Back Better Act, very early in the new year so that every Member of this body has the opportunity to make their position known on the Senate floor, not just on television,” Schumer wrote.

“We are going to vote on a revised version of the House-passed Build Back Better Act — and we will keep voting on it until we get something done.”

Progressives in Congress wanted to hold a vote on the measure, which includes popular proposals to extend an expanded child tax credit, establish universal pre-K, provide hundreds of billions in clean energy tax credits and others. Manchin has objected to the funding of the child tax credit and the cost of the legislation, among other items.

“I hope that we will bring a strong bill to the floor of the Senate as soon as we can and let Mr. Manchin explain to the people of West Virginia why he doesn’t have the guts to stand up against powerful special interests,” Sen. Bernie Sanders, an independent who votes with Democrats and leading progressive senator from Vermont, said on CNN.

“If he doesn’t have the courage to do the right thing for the working families of West Virginia and America, let him vote no in front of the whole world,” he added.

The New York Times reported that Manchin in an interview Monday with a radio station in West Virginia blamed White House staff for the breakdown and for trying to pressure him. “Well, guess what, I’m from West Virginia. I’m not from where they’re from and they can just beat the living crap out of people and think they’ll be submissive. Period,” Manchin said, according to the Times.

Voting rights

Schumer also pledged to call a vote on voting rights legislation — another major priority for Biden and congressional Democrats after multiple Republican state legislatures enacted laws limiting voting protections.

Schumer has brought three voting rights bills to the floor that have garnered support of all 50 Senate Democrats, but that Republicans have blocked, taking advantage of the Senate rule requiring 60 votes for almost all legislation.

A single Senate Republican, Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski, voted to proceed to debate on the latest voting rights bill.

But Manchin, while he has voted for voting rights bills, has said he also opposes changing the 60-vote threshold for advancing bills in the Senate. Arizona Democrat Kyrsten Sinema also opposes it, a spokeswoman said last week, leaving Schumer at least two votes shy.

In his letter, Schumer appeared to be speaking directly to Manchin with a quote from his predecessor, Sen. Robert C. Byrd, also a Democrat from West Virginia and proponent of Senate decorum.

“As Former Senator Robert C. Byrd said in 1979, Senate rules that seemed appropriate in the past ‘must be changed to reflect changed circumstances,’” Schumer wrote. “Therefore, as with the BBB, Members will be given the chance to debate on the Senate floor and cast a vote so that their choice on this matter is clear and available for everyone to see.”

Several Senate Democrats were not given advance notice of Schumer’s letter, which he also released to the media early Monday.

The unusual move to call votes that are likely to fail was a source of consternation for some Democrats Monday.

The budget bill in particular would provide Republicans an opportunity to tee up votes on amendments that would open up senators to campaign attacks.

“I was honestly baffled when I saw that this morning,” an aide to a Senate Democrat said. “For the life of me, I cannot figure out why a Democratic leader — who barely has a majority — would do that.”

Schumer scheduled a virtual caucus meeting for Tuesday night to discuss the strategy.

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Monday the White House would be closely coordinating with Schumer on the votes in 2022. Psaki at a press briefing said the president’s message to senators would be that “we need to work together to get this done, and he’s going to work like hell to get it done.”

Psaki declined to elaborate on recent conversations between Biden and Manchin, or White House statements that may have contributed to the rift, but she said Biden “of course” is in favor of the extended child tax credit.

“We know that it was a significant contributor to cutting in half the child poverty rate,” she said. “I’m obviously not going to negotiate from here, but he doesn’t think compromise is a dirty word either.”

States Newsroom Washington Bureau Chief Jane Norman contributed to this report.

US judge plans jury pool of 1,000 for 2nd Arbery death trial

Defendant Travis McMichael looks on during his trial with William "Roddie" Bryan, and Gregory McMichael, all charged with the February 2020 death of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery, Tuesday, Nov. 23, 2021, at the Glynn County Courthouse in Brunswick, Ga. (Octavio Jones/Pool Photo via AP)

The federal judge presiding over the upcoming hate crimes trial of three white men convicted of murdering Ahmaud Arbery said Monday she plans to summon a jury pool of roughly 1,000 people scattered across an expansive area that covers 43 Georgia counties.

U.S. District Court Judge Lisa Godbey Wood told prosecutors and defense attorneys at a pretrial hearing that she was granting their joint request to cast a wider net for potential jurors.

Jury selection in the federal case is scheduled to begin Feb. 7. Attorneys had argued in legal filings it could be tough to seat an impartial federal jury so soon after the same three defendants were found guilty of murder in state court the day before Thanksgiving.

“I think the reasons set forth on both sides are extremely valid,” Wood said, adding: “It’s a case that has received so much pretrial publicity.”

The judge said she plans to have approximately 1,000 jury duty notices and questionnaires mailed to people living throughout the federal court system’s Southern District of Georgia, which covers 43 of Georgia’s 159 counties.

The Southern District has a population of about 1.6 million people, with Savannah and Augusta being its largest cities. Its farthest community from the courthouse is rural Wilkes County, located more than 210 miles (338 kilometers) north of Brunswick.

Father and son Greg and Travis McMichael and their neighbor, William “Roddie” Bryan, are scheduled to be sentenced in the state’s murder case Jan. 7, exactly a month before the federal trial begins. Their murder convictions carry a mandatory life sentence. The question for the judge is whether they will serve life in prison with or without a chance of parole.

A Glynn County jury in November found all three guilty of murder and other crimes in the Feb. 23, 2020, killing of Arbery. Bryan recorded cellphone video of Travis McMichael blasting the 25-year-old Black man with a shotgun after Arbery spent several minutes running as the three men chased him in pickup trucks.

Now the McMichaels and Bryan face hate crime charges at the federal level that allege they violated Arbery’s civil rights, unjustly pursuing and threatening him on a public street, because he was Black.

The judge said Monday she plans to keep the federal trial in Brunswick, noting the families of Arbery and the defendants live there, as do many of the witnesses being called to testify.

Typically in a federal trial, a jury would be pulled from Glynn County, which includes Brunswick, and six neighboring counties.

Arbery’s father, Marcus Arbery Sr., told reporters outside the courthouse he’s fine with a jury coming from a wider area of the state.

“It don’t matter, because the evidence is overwhelming,” he said.

The McMichaels armed themselves with guns and jumped in a pickup truck after they spotted Arbery running past their home on a Sunday afternoon last year. They later told police they suspected he was a burglar, though they did not see him committing any crimes.

Bryan joined the chase in his own truck, telling police he used the vehicle to force Arbery into a ditch and cut off his escape from the subdivision. He used his cellphone to record video of Travis McMichael shooting Arbery as he tried to run around the McMichael’s idling truck.

Travis McMichael testified he shot Arbery in self-defense after the running man attacked him and tried to grab his gun. Defense attorneys said the three men had reasonable grounds to suspect Arbery was a criminal and wanted only to detain him until police could arrive.

At the time of his death, Arbery had enrolled at a technical college and was preparing to study to become an electrician like his uncles.

Attorneys on both sides in the federal case have said they hope selecting a jury from a wider area will help avoid the slow-paced grind that made jury selection last 2 1/2 weeks before the state trial could begin.

The state’s jury pool was drawn exclusively from Glynn County, where Arbery’s death had dominated news reports and social media feeds. Most potential jurors arrived at the courthouse already knowing basic facts about the case and many were dismissed for having strong opinions.

The judge agreed with attorneys to send a 14-page questionnaire to potential jurors along with their jury duty notices. Attorneys will be able to review them before jury selection begins.

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

Spaceport Camden receives FAA approval. But legal hurdles remain

A rendering of the proposed Spaceport Camden in Camden Count, Georgia (Spaceport Camden)

 

A proposed launch facility in Southeast Georgia for small commercial rockets has come one step closer to becoming a reality, as the Federal Aviation Administration on Monday granted the Camden County Board of Commissioners a license to operate Spaceport Camden.

The license permits the county to build and run a vertical launch facility, control center complex, alternate control center, visitor center, and mission preparation area on roughly 100 acres of land along the coast of the Atlantic Ocean, roughly halfway between Brunswick and the Georgia-Florida state line.

The Camden County Board of Commissioners, which began pursuing the project in 2015, issued a statement heralding the FAA’s approval as marking a “mission accomplished.”

“We are no longer a one-dimensional economy solely reliant on the brave sailors and contractors at Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay for economic prosperity,” said Camden County Board of Commissioners Chairman Gary Blount in the statement.

Under the FAA license, Spaceport Camden would host up to 12 launches per year, only one of which could be held at night. Each rocket would carry a small payload weighing between 100 and 300 pounds. The booster rocket that powers takeoff would fall between 200 and 300 miles offshore into the Atlantic Ocean, never to be recovered.

Even with the federal go-ahead, the fate of Spaceport Camden remains up in the air, as a grassroots campaign is underway to block the county from purchasing the land from chemical company Union Carbide.

“The marsh, Cumberland Island, Little Cumberland Island, the Atlantic Ocean, the waterways in the Atlantic — all of those are at risk because of the debris, of the fuel, of the other things that will come from [rocket launch failures],” said Megan Desrosiers, executive director of the environmental conservation nonprofit One Hundred Miles.

Camden County itself has admitted that roughly 20% of rocket launch attempts would likely fail.

One Hundred Miles announced last week that a petition it helped distribute to Camden County residents was filed in court on Tuesday. Camden County residents James Goodman and Paul Harris filed a motion in court to temporarily halt Camden County from purchasing the property, while a judge considers whether to schedule a special election on whether to block the purchase.

The petition, which Goodman and Harris say garnered 3,850 signatures, relies on a provision in the Georgia Constitution that allows citizens to force county governments to hold elections to change or repeal ordinances, resolutions, or regulations. In this case, the election would determine whether the county resolutions authorizing the purchase should be repealed.

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