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High school football playoff schedule for Nov. 19

Georgia high school football playoffs continue this week. Below is the schedule of games for Friday, November 19.

Class 7A
Marietta at Milton
Mill Creek at McEachern
Walton at Archer
North Gwinnett at Brookwood
Grayson at Denmark
Roswell at North Cobb
Pebblebrook at Collins Hill
Norcross at Lowndes

Class 6A
Johns Creek at Evans
Dacula at Brunswick (GL)
Douglas Co. at Northside, W.R. (MT)
Shiloh at Hughes
Westlake at Kennesaw Mountain
Carrollton at Alcovy (SH)
Lovejoy at Buford
Cambridge at Lee Co.

Class 5A
Creekside at St. Pius
Lithia Springs at Whitewater
Warner Robins at Cartersville
Eastside at Jones Co.
Harris Co. at Villa Rica
Blessed Trinity at Woodward Academy
Starr’s Mill at Clarke Central
Calhoun at Ware Co.

Class 4A
Dougherty at Riverdale (SC)
Hapeville Charter at Carver, Columbus
Cairo at Cedartown
Flowery Branch at Perry
LaGrange at Marist
Luella at Benedictine (SM)
Spalding at North Oconee
Northwest Whitfield at Bainbridge

Class 3A
Southeast Bulloch at Cedar Grove (GO)
Oconee Co. at Crisp Co.
Appling Co. at Cherokee Bluff
Ringgold at Thomson
Stephens Co. at Burke Co.
Carver, Atlanta at Liberty Co.
Peach Co. at Monroe Area
Dawson Co. at Pierce Co.

Class 2A
Northeast at Haralson Co.
Columbia at Swainsboro
Fitzgerald at Fannin Co.
Lovett at Putnam Co.
Westside, Augusta at South Atlanta (L)
Callaway at Bleckley Co.
Jeff Davis at Rabun Co.
Heard Co. at Thomasville

Class A-Private
Sav. Country Day at Holy Innocents’ (RW)
Athens Academy at ELCA
Tattnall Square at Darlington
Athens Christian at Trinity Christian
Pacelli at Fellowship Christian
Wesleyan at Calvary Day
Brookstone at Prince Avenue Christian
Mount Vernon at First Presbyterian

Class A-Public
Emanuel Co. Institute at Macon Co.
Lincoln Co. at Irwin Co.
Manchester at McIntosh Co. Academy
Trion at Wilcox Co.
Turner Co. at Bowdon
Schley Co. at Metter
Brooks Co. at Washington-Wilkes
Warren Co. at Pelham

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Hamburger corn casserole

When temperatures start to drop, there are few dishes we love more than “comfort” food. There are hundreds of casseroles that fit that bill perfectly. This is a “go-to” dish at our house, especially in the fall and winter.

It’s fairly easy to throw together and hits the spot when the temperatures start to drop because it will warm you up from the inside out.

I’ve been making this for so many years, I’ve forgotten where the recipe came from. Don’t know whether it was from a friend or a cookbook. It doesn’t matter because it is delicious and warms your bones on a chilly night. If you make it, I predict it won’t be the last time.

Ingredients:

  • 3/4 lb. ground beef
  • 1/2 medium chopped onion
  • 12 oz package egg noodles, cooked and drained
  • 1 can of whole kernel corn, drained
  • 1 can (10.5oz) Cream of Mushroom soup
  • 8 oz sour cream
  • 1/2 Tsp pepper
  • 1 Tsp garlic powder
  • 3/4 cup bread crumbs
  • 1/2 cup of melted butter

Directions:

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F.
  2. In a large skillet, cook ground beef and onions until browned. Remove from heat and drain off excess fat. Cook noodles according to package directions and drain. Combine noodles and beef in a large bowl, and add the remaining ingredients (except bread crumbs and butter).
  3. Pour mixture into a large casserole or 9″x13” pan. In a medium-sized bowl, mix bread crumbs and melted butter, then sprinkle on top of the casserole to finish.
  4. Bake approximately 30 minutes or until bread crumbs are brown and crisp. Serve immediately.

Such a great cold-weather “comfort” dish. Let me know what you think or please share your favorite comfort food casserole with all of us! [email protected]

Georgia sues over fed’s nursing home vaccine mandate; staff shortage persists

(Jonathan Borba/Unsplash)

Gov. Brian Kemp and Attorney General Chris Carr continued Georgia’s feud over federal vaccine mandates that now extend to workers in hospitals, nursing homes, and other health care facilities.

A lawsuit filed Tuesday by the state’s two ranking Republican officials challenges the legality of the Biden administration’s requirement that the majority of health care workers get fully vaccinated by Jan. 4. The U.S. District Court suit comes as Georgia and the rest of the nation deals with an alarming shortage of health care workers lost partly to burnout and stress throughout the pandemic.

Georgia officials predicted dire shortages of workers in senior care facilities when the Biden administration announced vaccine requirements in late summer.

Georgia joins Louisiana, Montana, Arizona and Alabama among the 12 states seeking an injunction preventing the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services from enforcing the mandate. The suit argues that COVID-19 vaccine mandates are unlawful and unconstitutional including a claim the Tenth Amendment limits the federal government’s ability to mandate vaccines.

Kemp is laying some of the blame for an ongoing workforce shortage on the mandates pushing people out of the profession to escape being forced to take the vaccines.

Senior care facility managers are struggling to balance their desire for COVID-19 safety precautions with a need for workers who are resisting the vaccines.

“We believe COVID-19 vaccinations are critical to ensuring the safety of the vulnerable individuals residing in nursing centers, and we appreciate efforts to increase uptake in long-term care,” said Devon Barill, director of communications for a Georgia senior care industry association. “However, we are concerned that the mandate could exacerbate the significant workforce crisis long-term care communities are already experiencing.”

Because the mandate would apply to all facilities that treat Medicare and Medicaid patients, it covers the vast majority of the nation’s hospitals, home health care services and other medical service providers that depend on federal payments.

Additionally, Kemp and Carr are fighting in district court federal vaccination mandates for employers with 100 or more employees and federal contractors.

“After health care heroes went above and beyond the call of duty to keep Americans safe and healthy throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, Joe Biden is now threatening their livelihood if they refuse COVID-19 vaccination,” Kemp said. “Yet another unlawful mandate from this administration will only worsen worker shortages in a critical-need area as we continue to balance the everyday health care needs of hardworking Georgians and fighting COVID-19.

“We will continue to fight this repeated, unconstitutional overreach by Joe Biden and his administration in court,” Kemp added.

The Biden administration and organizations like the American Hospital Association are pushing the mandates as a necessary public safety protocol that many hospital systems and other health care providers have instituted on their own that have delivered a declining rate of infection deaths in Georgia and across the country.

Across the nation, about 761,000 people have died due to COVID-19 complications.

In Georgia, many nursing homes already require vaccinations for their staff, while Atrium Health, Emory Healthcare, Piedmont Healthcare and Wellstar Health System are some of the largest hospital systems that do so.

However, HCA Healthcare and some of the other providers encouraged their staff to get immunizations but stopped short of requiring them until the federal government intervened earlier this month.

The Georgia Health Care Association and the Georgia Center for Assisted Living, the state’s largest organization representing long-term care providers, support the health benefits of the vaccine but are worried about the ramifications of a mandate, said Barill.

Her organization reports about 75% of nursing home staff have received at least one COVID-19 vaccination dose.

She said the associations hope to continue working with the federal and state governments to develop solutions to the labor shortage once the mandate takes effect.

“It is important to note that, while centers can mitigate the risk for COVID-19 via routine testing and proper infection control, there is little they can do to address the absence of employees to provide care to their residents,” Barill said.

Health care officials told the state House Committee on Human Relations and Aging Tuesday that their industry cannot survive with the high costs of contract nursing, a high nursing turnover, and the likelihood of blowing past the pre-pandemic projections that more than 1 million nurses will retire by the end of the decade.

The health care experts at Tuesday’s hearing did not directly bring up the vaccine mandate but noted how the pandemic has increased the stress on employees, ramped up costs and reliance on contract nurses and put more strain on medical providers in large metropolitan areas.

Rural communities, where resources are already limited for basic medical care and senior care, face an even greater challenge.

Dave Lamb, president of Home Care Association of America, says the 13% decline in registered certified nursing assistants over the last 18 months makes it more difficult to help the 400,000 Georgians who receive care at home and in their community.

And during the past two years, the number of requests for staffing assistance has jumped from 8,000 to 44,000, said Anna Adams of the Georgia Hospital Association.

“If a new business said we’re bringing 12,500 jobs to Georgia, it’d be front page news and everybody would be so excited about that,” Adams said. “We have that right now, but we don’t have enough people trained who are willing to step into those roles, and we don’t have the ability to train them under our current system.”

Deb Bailey, executive director of government affairs at Northeast Georgia Medical Center, said that even with the state providing millions to help pay for nursing care, it is not enough to resolve all of the problems.

“We’re very sensitive that nurses are now caring for more patients than they should and that’s very difficult for them both physically, psychologically and emotionally,” she told the House committee members.

When the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued the rule on Nov. 5, American Hospital Association President and CEO Rick Pollack said it would create a level playing field for health care organizations by streamlining compliance requirements. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services have also noted that hospitals with their own mandates have not experienced workers quitting on a large-scale because of their vaccine policies.

“AHA has been supportive of hospitals that call for mandatory vaccination of health care workers in order to better protect patients and the communities we serve,” Pollack said.

Indians, Lady Indians sweep past Stephens in Tuesday road games

Devonte Allen (photo by Austin Poffenberger)

The TFS Indians played their second straight road game to open the season, and once again came out with a win. It was Anfernee Hanna and Devonte Allen leading the charge, as the junior duo combined for 39 points in a 58-49 win in Toccoa on Tuesday.

TFS got another productive night from Hanna, who also led the team with 17 points in the season-opening win last Friday at Mt. Paran.

The win makes Tallulah Falls quickly 2-0 on the season, and the boys return to action Friday night at White County.

In an all-Lady Indians battle, Tallulah Falls took control in Toccoa against the Stephens County Lady Indians, 66-50. It got TFS in the win column for the first time in the young season.

The TFS Lady Indians used a 14-point first quarter to build an early lead and padded the gap to 26-16 after two quarters of play. Stephens County outpaced TFS 18-12 in the third to get the game within 43-34 in favor of the visiting team. TFS put up 24 in the fourth to nail down the win.

Veronaye Charlton had a game-high 26 points and added four steals, while Denika Lightbourne added 24 points and six steals. Macy Murdock had six points, Molly Mitchell had five, Kailyn Neal three, and Barrett Whitener two.

The Lady Indians are 1-1 on the season and return to action on Friday at White County.

Clarkesville council discusses leaf sweeping for city streets

(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

The Clarkesville City Council discussed the possible purchase of a leaf sweeping unit at their Nov. 16 work session to keep city street conditions safer following storms and in the fall season.

In many cities across the United States, having a street sweeping vehicle is standard to keep roads clear of debris. Debris on city streets can taint water supplies and make roads dangerous during rainy weather, and Clarkesville is interested in bringing a leaf sweeping unit to the city to address those safety concerns.

“We had a situation where we had a rainstorm come in and there were a lot of wet leaves on the ground because we don’t have a street sweeping program at this point in time,” says Clarkesville City Manager Keith Dickerson. “There was just some concern about sliding on the wet leaves and thought that there might be some benefit to having a street sweeper in town.”

The leaf sweeping unit would have more uses than just leaf removal from the city’s streets, though that would be its main use. Dickerson says it could help with parade cleanup, storm debris on the city’s streets and parking lot cleanup. It would not be for leaves on residential properties, and those would still need to be bagged as usual.

The purchase would cost around $37,000, and the city manager believes it could be funded by ARP or SPLOST funds.

The council has given Dickerson the go-ahead to see the leaf sweeping unit in person and report back to the council once he has further information for further discussion.

GOP lawmakers vow national push for ‘parents’ rights’ in public schools

Georgia House Speaker Pro-Tempore Jan Jones said in a social media post last week she is working with House Education Chair Matt Dubnik and Rep. Chris Erwin to “ensure obscene materials have no place in public schools.” Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder (File 2021)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — Republican lawmakers and Virginia parents trying to capitalize on their success in the November election on Tuesday gathered across from the U.S. Capitol to voice their opposition to mask mandates and lessons about racism in public schools.

The ranking Republican on the U.S. House Education and Labor Committee, Virginia Foxx of North Carolina, told the small crowd of about a dozen participants that the GOP would continue to push for parental rights in the classroom across the U.S., as crucial midterm elections loom in 2022.

Virginia’s election for governor proved that parents want to have more say in what their children are taught in the classroom, Foxx said.

“We’re ready for a new era in education,” Foxx said. “Other people now know what I’ve known for a long time—parents are a force to be reckoned with.”

Participants in the rally, hosted by the conservative Independent Women’s Network, also said they oppose universal pre-K and child care provisions in President Joe Biden’s social safety net package that Congress is set to vote on later this week. They argued that the government is getting too involved in child care.

IWN, a non-profit, is a branch of the Independent Woman’s Forum, which has received funding from the Koch network and pushes conservative and libertarian policies.

The network’s platform offers monthly paid subscriptions at three levels that include chat rooms, workshops, “special events with high profile lawmakers” and more. “Fight for parents’ rights,” it urges.

The rally follows Virginia’s election for governor, where Republican Glenn Youngkin successfully seized on parental fears about critical race theory—an academic level of research that studies the way racism is embedded into the legal system and is not taught in K-12 schools—and promised to overhaul the state’s education system.

Youngkin, who vowed to give more control to parents, also objected to books in public school libraries by Nobel Prize winner Toni Morrison.

The Washington Post reported that his approach “energized” white evangelical voters and gave him a higher percentage of their votes than Donald Trump in 2020.

A powerful Georgia GOP lawmaker and State School Superintendent Richard Woods indicated recently on social media they are ready to consider book restrictions in public schools in the 2022 legislative session that begins in January.

During the 2021 legislative session, a Senate bill backed by some ranking Republican lawmakers proposed a school board-level complaint resolution process for parents to challenge books distributed at public schools, but the bill stalled.

At the Capitol Hill rally, Rep. Vicky Hartzler, (R-Mo.), warned that the Virginia election is “just a foreshadow of what we’re gonna see next year” in midterm congressional races.

“We’re going to take back our country, and we’re going to take back our schools for our kids,” she said.

Parents object to the teaching of race in public schools because “children are vulnerable to this radical thinking,” Rep. Diana Harshbarger, (R-Tenn.), who is also a member of the Education and Labor Committee, said.

“This manipulates their precious little minds,” she said.

After the massive social justice protests during the summer of 2020 following the police killing of George Floyd, coupled with the New York Times publication of the 1619 Project, schools have moved to incorporate teaching about slavery and race in the classroom.

Julie Gunlock, a parent from Northern Virginia and the director of IWN and IWF’s Center for Progress and Innovation, told the group that the rally was just the beginning of a mission that members plan to expand across the country to challenge the government’s role in public schools. None of Gunlock’s children are in public schools, as two attend a Catholic school and another is homeschooled.

“Not all parents have the ability to make these changes and embrace these opportunities, which is why I’m fighting for public schools,” she said. “I’m here to send a message to the government that I am in charge of my kids, and it’s time that they took a seat and stayed in their lane.”

Stacy Langton, a Fairfax, Virginia, parent, said to the group of supporters she discovered an inappropriate book in the public library at her son’s school. Four of her kids are in Catholic schools and two attend Fairfax County Public Schools.

The Associated Press said the school system pulled two books from circulation pending review.

“Pornography in the presence of minor children is illegal,” she said. “And it shouldn’t have been in the library in the first place.”

Langton said she has been attacked by the LGBTQ community and said that she is part of that community because her mother, who died five years ago, came out as a lesbian.

“The biggest criticism of my action in coming forward to expose this has come from the LGBT community, they are saying that I am anti-gay,” she said. “I am the adult child of a gay parent. So I was actually raised in the gay community. So I am one of them.”

The graphic novel in question is “Gender Queer: a Memoir” which details how the author, who uses pronouns e/em/eir, grew up after being assigned the female gender at birth.

The author, Maia Kobabe, responded to the banning of eir book in the Washington Post, arguing that queer kids need to see themselves represented in books.

“Queer youth are often forced to look outside their own homes, and outside the education system, to find information on who they are,” Kobabe wrote. “Removing or restricting queer books in libraries and schools is like cutting a lifeline for queer youth, who might not yet even know what terms to ask Google to find out more about their own identities, bodies and health.”

Georgia state Sen. Josh McClaurin, a Sandy Springs Democrat, posted his assessment that any move to restrict books targeted by GOP elected officials will be a function of next year’s campaign season.

 

Georgia Recorder Editor John McCosh contributed to this report.

Federal judge sides with GOP states over limits on tax cuts in COVID relief law

Gov. Brian Kemp balked at wording in the $1.9 trillion relief package that says the federal funds cannot pay for tax breaks. (file photo) (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — A federal judge in Alabama has ruled in favor of Republican attorneys general in 13 states — including Iowa, Florida, New Hampshire, Kansas and Montana — that sued the federal government over a section of a coronavirus relief bill that barred states from using relief money to offset tax cuts.

The ruling, which granted a permanent injunction, found that the prohibition on state tax cuts was too vague and “a federal invasion of state sovereignty.”

“The inherent ambiguity in the text of the mandate may disincentive the plaintiff states from considering any tax reductions for fear of forfeiting ARPA funds,” wrote Chief Judge L. Scott Coogler, of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Alabama. Coogler was appointed by President George W. Bush.

The ruling follows another in September that was decided in favor of Kentucky and Tennessee, which filed a similar suit.

Republican state officials involved in the suit heralded the victory on Tuesday.

Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt said in a statement that the ruling means tax cuts enacted earlier this year will remain in effect and clears the way for other tax changes.

“The Biden administration was trying to punish fiscally responsible states like Iowa, which has a record budget surplus, and that’s why we took legal action,” Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds said. “With this ruling, Biden’s administration can’t keep us from cutting taxes, and I look forward to doing just that.”

A U.S. Treasury spokeswoman referred questions to the Department of Justice, and officials there did not immediately provide a comment Tuesday afternoon.

The COVID-19 relief package approved in March sent states and local governments the $350 billion in direct federal assistance, but those funds came with a significant prohibition.

States were instructed they could not use the funds “to either directly or indirectly offset a reduction in the net tax revenue” or delay the imposition of any tax or tax increase.

That provision doesn’t entirely prevent state officials from cutting taxes. Some scenarios, such as slashing one tax but offsetting it with a tax increase, wouldn’t be a problem.

Still, it sparked a swift backlash from Republicans in Washington, Georgia and other state capitals, who criticized it as an unprecedented string attached to the federal dollars. The conservative Heritage Foundation urged states to reject the federal assistance.

In Georgia, Attorney General Chris Carr signed onto a letter with 19 other attorneys general criticizing the provision. And Gov. Brian Kemp and other state officials loudly objected before the bill hit the president’s desk.

Guidance issued in May by the U.S. Treasury offered some additional details on ways that states and local governments can use the money, including outlining a framework for how states will be able to show that any tax cuts were paid for using money separate from the federal stimulus dollars.

That could include raising other sources of revenue, cutting spending, or through higher revenue due to economic growth, according to the Biden administration.

Senior administration officials had defended the prohibition against direct or indirect tax cuts as in line with other federal aid to states and said that it would help ensure the funding is used for its intended purposes.

Baldwin gives city employees highest ARP bonus in county

(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

The Biden administration’s American Rescue Plan has directly impacted Habersham County’s local governments, helping the county purchase its upgraded E-911 radio system and allowing municipal governments to begin projects that support local infrastructure.

The ARP will distribute a total of $350 billion in economic COVID-19 relief to eligible state, local, territorial and tribal governments. Habersham County received over $8 million total in ARP funds. Georgia governments supporting populations of less than 50,000 people received a total of $861.8 million, according to the Georgia Municipal Association.

Those funds can be used to provide premium pay for a municipality’s essential workers, as well as support public health response for the COVID-19 pandemic, improve water, sewer and broadband infrastructure and support economic need created by the pandemic.

Many of Habersham’s municipalities are using a portion of their ARP funds to provide premium pay bonuses to their city employees that continued to work during the pandemic.

Councilwoman Stephanie Almagno was one of five unanimous votes to use a portion of Baldwin’s ARP funds to support premium pay for city employees. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

The City of Baldwin has, by far, offered the highest premium pay to employees with ARP funds out of all other cities in the county. Budgeting to use a total of $144,000 dollars from ARP funds, the city will offer a bonus of $3,000 to full-time employees and a bonus of $1,500 to part-time employees who served the city over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I’m thankful to our employees for sticking with us, for being willing to work during such a difficult time, always for the benefit of our citizens,” Baldwin Councilwoman Stephanie Almagno said after the council approved the premium pay. “I am happy to see that employee pay is number one on the list [of ARP projects], I think it represents our commitment to our employees.”

The City of Cornelia sits just below Baldwin in terms of dedicated ARP funds for premium pay, with $120,000 set to use for bonuses. The city plans to distribute a $250 bonus per quarter to city employees who have worked over the course of the pandemic, including the quarters in 2020 and first half of 2021, before the premium pay was instated.

Clarkesville will discuss instating premium pay with ARP funds at their coming Nov. 16 meeting, which is proposed to not exceed $31,000 total.

The City of Demorest’s ARP-funded premium pay will give a bonus of $500 to full-time employees and $200 to part-time employees, with a total premium pay budget of $18,000.

Demorest Councilman John Hendrix brought the idea of using relief funds to support city employees forward at the city’s November meeting. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

“All our departments work very hard, and we need to reward them and let them know that, particularly at this time,” Demorest Councilman John Hendrix said. “It’s been a difficult year with COVID, everybody’s gone the extra mile, and we have the ability to do that, and my view is we should do that.”

The Town of Mt. Airy is drafting a plan to use ARP funds to give premium pay bonuses to employees who served the city during the pandemic, and hopes to have an official plan for the funds within the coming months,

The Towns of Alto and Tallulah Falls don’t have plans at this time to use their ARP funds for premium pay.

Tallulah Falls hasn’t made definitive plans for how they will spend their ARP funds, but according to Town Clerk Linda Lapeyrouse, are considering spending their funds on water and sewer infrastructure exclusively.

This article has been updated.

Kemp, Carr sue Biden administration over vaccine mandate for health care workers

Three lawsuits filed by Gov. Brian Kemp and Attorney General Chris Carr over federal vaccine mandates are now pending in court. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

Governor Brian Kemp and Attorney General Chris Carr have filed another lawsuit challenging the Biden administration’s vaccine mandates, this time for health care workers.

The emergency regulation, issued on Nov. 5 by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, mandates full COVID-19 vaccination for all eligible staff at health care facilities that participate in the Medicare and Medicaid programs by Jan. 4, 2022.

“After healthcare heroes went above and beyond the call of duty to keep Americans safe and healthy throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, Joe Biden is now threatening their livelihood if they refuse COVID-19 vaccination,” said Kemp. He warned of a worsening worker shortage in the healthcare industry if the mandates are upheld.

“We will continue to fight this repeated, unconstitutional overreach by Joe Biden and his administration in court,” Kemp said.

Georgia joined 11 other Republican-led states in filing the lawsuit with the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Louisiana. They’re asking the court to prevent the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and CMS from enforcing the mandate on individuals working at Medicare and Medicaid-certified facilities.

According to the lawsuit, the mandate:

• Exceeds CMS’s statutory authority under the Social Security Act;
• Involves an unlawful attempt to supervise or control the practice of medicine in violation of federal law;
• Was issued without statutorily required public notice and comment;
• Violates the Congressional Review Act;
• Is arbitrary and capricious;
• Was issued without consulting the appropriate state and local agencies in violation of federal law;
• Was issued without public notice or comment as required for all new rules that will have a significant impact on rural hospitals;
• Violates the Spending Clause by placing an unconstitutional condition on receipt of federal funds;
• Violates the Anti-Commandeering Doctrine by directing state officers to administer federal law; and
• Violates the Tenth Amendment because the federal government lacks the power to mandate vaccines.

On October 29, Kemp and Carr sued the Biden administration in the Southern District of Georgia challenging the vaccine mandate for federal contractors. A hearing on the plaintiffs’ request for a preliminary injunction is scheduled for Dec. 7.

Earlier this month, on November 5, Kemp and Carr also filed suit in the U.S. 11th Circuit Court of Appeals to challenge a vaccine mandate for employers with 100 or more workers.

New business coming to Baldwin industrial park

(Google Street View)

A Fieldale supplier business has made plans to set up shop in Baldwin’s Airport Industrial Park and is estimated to generate 25-50 new jobs.

Partnership Habersham Executive Director Charlie Fiveash presented the news to the Baldwin City Council at their Nov. 15 meeting. The name of the company has not been disclosed, but Fiveash says they will manufacture plastic trays for Fieldale to package chicken in, opposed to the styrofoam trays chicken is currently packaged in.

“This is exactly what Airport Business Park was built for,” Fiveash said. “To take the sites that are existing, and create that [development] opportunity for the city and for the citizens of this community.”

This is one of many developments in progress at the business park, in which at least two other developers are discussing the construction of new buildings and renovation of older buildings to house new industries. According to Fiveash, the new business and industry could bring around $95,000 annually to the city in tax revenue, and $165,000 annually to the county.

“I’ve been on the council for a really, really long time,” says Mayor Joe Elam. “I’ve seen the name of that park change, I’ve seen pads [sites] being produced, I’ve never seen a list of activity as strong as this.”

Construction on the new facility for the Fieldale supplier will begin early next year, with an estimated completion at the end of 2022 or the beginning of 2023.

“It’ll be really nice to see the Airport Business Park start to get busy instead of staying stagnant for so long,” Councilwoman Alice Venter said. “That, I’m very pleased with, and all the opportunities that come along with this.”

Fourth rabies case reported in White County

(CLEVELAND)— The fourth confirmed case of rabies has been reported in White County.  White County Environmental Health Manager Sean Sullivan advised in a news release that on Nov. 8,  two dogs had contact with a rabid skunk in the Small Pond Drive area. The skunk attacked and bit one of the dogs through a fence.

The skunk was put down and White County Environmental Health was notified the next morning. The skunk was shipped to the Georgia Public Health Lab – Virology Section in Decatur.

White County Environmental Health was advised Friday that the skunk tested positive for rabies. The dogs were both current on their rabies vaccination and will undergo a 45-day observational quarantine.

Positive alert signs will be posted in the area where the rabid skunk was located.

If you live in this area and have concerns about rabid animal exposure, please contact White County Environmental Health at 706-348-7698 during normal business hours. Animal owners are encouraged to vaccinate their domesticated pets for rabies.

Shotgun caused gaping hole in Arbery’s chest, heavy bleeding

Dr. Edmund R. Donoghue, right, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation Forensic Pathology Specialist, examines shotgun pellets entered into evidence during the trial of Greg McMichael and his son, Travis McMichael, and a neighbor, William "Roddie" Bryan in the Glynn County Courthouse, Tuesday, Nov. 16, 2021, in Brunswick, Ga. The three are charged with the February 2020 slaying of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery. (AP Photo/Stephen B. Morton, Pool)

The shotgun blasts that hit Ahmaud Arbery punched a gaping hole in his chest and unleashed massive bleeding, a medical examiner testified Tuesday as jurors saw autopsy photos that showed Arbery’s white T-shirt stained entirely red.

Testifying at the murder trial of the three white men who chased Arbery down, Dr. Edmund Donoghue said Arbery was hit by two of the three shotgun rounds fired at him. He said both gunshots caused severe bleeding that could have killed the 25-year-old, who was Black.

The first shot at close range tore through an artery in Arbery’s right wrist and punched a big hole in the center of his chest, said Donoghue, a medical examiner for the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.

The second shot missed entirely, while the third shot fired at point-blank range ripped through a major artery and vein near his left armpit and fractured bones in his shoulder and upper arm.

“Is there anything law enforcement or EMS could have done to save his life at the scene?” prosecutor Linda Dunikoski asked the medical examiner.

“I don’t think so. No,” Donoghue replied.

Ahmaud Arbery’s mother Wanda Cooper-Jones reacts to autopsy photos entered into evidence during the trial of Greg McMichael and his son, Travis McMichael, and a neighbor, William “Roddie” Bryan in the Glynn County Courthouse, Tuesday, Nov. 16, 2021, in Brunswick, Ga. The three are charged with the February 2020 slaying of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery. (AP Photo/Stephen B. Morton, Pool)

Donoghue performed an autopsy on Feb. 24, 2020, the day after Arbery was slain. The jury saw close-up photos of his injuries, which included several large abrasions to Arbery’s face from when he fell facedown in the street following the third gunshot. Photos of his clothing showed his T-shirt stained entirely red. Cellphone video of the shooting shows it had been white.

The testimony came a day after the judge refused to declare a mistrial over defense claims that jurors were tainted when Arbery’s mother wept over evidence photos, which called attention to the presence of the Rev. Jesse Jackson, who was sitting beside her in the courtroom’s public gallery.

Defense attorney Kevin Gough on Monday asked the judge to make the civil rights leader leave to avoid unfairly influencing the jury.

Superior Court Judge Timothy Walmsley said no group would be excluded from his courtroom, and he described as “reprehensible” Gough’s complaints last week that the defense did not “want any more Black pastors coming in here.”

The Rev. Jesse Jackson, left, speaks with Ahmaud Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones, center, during the trial of Greg McMichael and his son, Travis McMichael, and a neighbor, William “Roddie” Bryan in the Glynn County Courthouse, Monday, Nov. 15, 2021, in Brunswick, Ga. The three are charged with the February 2020 slaying of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery. (AP Photo/Stephen B. Morton, Pool)

Father and son Greg and Travis McMichael armed themselves and pursued Arbery in a pickup truck after spotting him running in their neighborhood. Their neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan joined the chase and took cellphone video of Travis McMichael shooting Arbery.

Defense attorneys say the men had a right to make a citizen’s arrest of someone they suspected of stealing from the neighborhood, and that the younger McMichael fired the gun in self-defense after Arbery tried to take it from him.

Bryan and the McMichaels are charged with murder and other crimes. Prosecutors say they chased Arbery for five minutes to keep him from leaving the Satilla Shores subdivision outside the port city of Brunswick. The chase ended when Arbery, trailed by Bryan’s truck, tried to run around the McMichaels’ truck as it idled in the road ahead. The video shows Travis McMichael confronting Arbery and then shooting him as he throws punches and grapples for the gun.

The McMichaels told police they suspected Arbery was a burglar after security cameras recorded him several times inside a home under construction, five houses away.

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