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Edward Herbert Scheffler, Jr.

Edward Herbert Scheffler, Jr. age 91, of Hoschton, entered rest Monday, November 15, 2021, at his residence surrounded by his family.

Mr. Scheffler was born February 19, 1930, in Brooklyn, New York to the late Edward, Sr. & Elizabeth Weber Scheffler. He served his country in the United States Army and was of the Lutheran faith. He earned his Bachelor of Science degree in engineering from Carnegie Institute of Technology. He worked as an Aerospace Engineer with Republic Aviation & Northrup -Grumman. He was preceded in death by his wife, Barbara Geier Scheffler; 2 infant daughters, Elizabeth & Louise; brothers, Harry, Artie & Teddy; sister, Helen.

Survivors include daughter, Ann (Stan) Pietras; sons, Robert A. (Susan) Scheffler & Thomas Scheffler; 7 grandchildren & 6 great-grandchildren also survive.

Services to honor Mr. Scheffler will be held at 10:30 a.m. Friday, Nov. 19, 2021, at the Massapequa Funeral Home Chapel, 4980 Merrick Road, Massapequa Park, New York with burial to follow in Calverton National Cemetery. The family will receive friends 1 hour prior to the service.

In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the Tunnel to Towers Foundation, 2361 Hylan Blvd., Staten Island, NY 10306.

Please share online condolences with the family at www.wardsfh.com. Ward’s Funeral Home is honored to serve the family of Edward Herbert Scheffler, Jr.

Robert “Bobby” Griffin Oklapek

Robert “Bobby” Griffin Oklapek went home to be with the Lord on Sunday, November 14, 2021.

Bobby was born on January 24, 2001, in Fort Myers Florida to Elizabeth Ann Griffin of Clarkesville Georgia, and Robert Anthony Oklapek of Bonita Springs Florida, siblings John Robert Oklapek, Laura Zigrida Oklapek, Katherine Elizabeth Lovell, brother-in-law John Spencer Lovell, niece Emma Grace Davis, nephew John Oliver Lovell, Grandmother Mary Elizabeth Griffin.

Bobby was a graduate of Tallulah Falls School, he loved the outdoors, spending time with his family and friends, and constantly sharing witty jokes.

Visitation will be held at Whitfield Funeral Home, North Chapel in Demorest, Friday, November 19, 2021, from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.

A Celebration of Life Ceremony will be held Saturday, November 20, 2021, at 4:45 p.m. at 949 Sam Bell Road, Clarkesville GA

In lieu of flowers, we request a donation be made in Bobby’s Memory to Tallulah Falls Schools Scholarship Fund Attn: Advancement Dept. PO Box 10 Tallulah Falls, GA 30573
Online gifts can be made through the school’s website tallulahfalls.org by selecting ‘Donate’ in the top right corner.

We are also requesting any friends and family of Bobby please bring a written or typed memory they have with him to either the Visitation or Celebration of Life. We plan on making a book of memories in his honor to always remember him.

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

Biden signs $1.2T infrastructure bill, says ‘America is moving again’

President Joe Biden signs the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act during a ceremony in the White House Rose Garden on November 15, 2021. (White House Facebook)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — President Joe Biden on Monday signed into law his $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill during a ceremony at the White House packed with some 800 supporters, heralding what he said was a “truly consequential” spending bill that will improve Americans’ day-to-day lives.

But Democrats also emphasized that there is more to come—a $1.85 trillion social spending measure that still faces a close final vote in the U.S. House and major changes in the evenly divided Senate, where passage will have to come without GOP support.

Biden said the infrastructure legislation — backed by nearly all congressional Democrats, as well as 19 Senate Republicans and 13 House Republicans — is a signal that polarized public officials in Washington can come together to create jobs and solve long-lingering problems.

“My message to the American people is: America is moving again. And your life is going to change for the better,” Biden said during the South Lawn ceremony attended by federal and state legislators, governors, mayors, labor leaders, business leaders, and other supporters.

The signing marked a significant victory for the president’s economic agenda.

But the tougher step still looms, as Democrats attempt to rally their narrow majorities to pass the accompanying bill that would spend trillions more on new programs to expand access to child care and preschool and combat climate change.

Two senators critical to reaching agreement on the infrastructure plan, Democratic Sen. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona and Republican Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio, joined Biden on stage for the bill signing and spoke ahead of the president’s remarks.

“Our legislation represents the substantive policy changes that some have said are no longer possible in today’s Senate,” Sinema said. “How many times have we heard that important policy can only happen on a party line? Our legislation proves the opposite.”

Portman also lauded the bipartisan work involved in approving the infrastructure measure, saying the deal became possible after the group of lawmakers involved in negotiations agreed to shrink the package down to physical infrastructure — and separate out Biden’s proposals for new social and climate-change programs.

“Mr. President … you and I will disagree on the tax and spending (provisions) in the other priority you have, the reconciliation bill, but I think we can both agree that this infrastructure investment shouldn’t be a one-time bipartisan accomplishment,” said Portman, who is retiring at the end of his term next year.

“This should be the beginning of a renewed effort to work together on big issues facing this country,” Portman added.

In his remarks before signing the bill, Biden praised Portman as well as Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, (R-Ky.), who voted for the bill but did not attend Monday’s ceremony.

The new law, Biden said, is “proof that despite the cynics, Democrats and Republicans can come together and deliver results.”

The crowd of guests attending the signing ceremony, including many Georgians. Those included Georgia’s Democratic Sens. Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock, Democratic Reps. Carolyn Bourdeaux, Lucy McBath and Nikema Williams. Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms also joined the celebration.

Provisions of the new law include $110 billion to repair and rebuild roads and bridges; $90 billion for public transit; and $66 billion for passenger rail improvements.

Airports and ports also will see an infusion of federal funding, as will the country’s electric grid. More than $619 million is set aside for repairs and upgrades at Georgia’s airports.

Billions more will pay for electric vehicle charging stations and the purchase of buses and ferries that run on electricity. About $135 million is allotted to build an electric vehicle charging network across Georgia, and there are other grant opportunities to help boost the state’s charging infrastructure as more auto manufacturers roll out electric models.

As the president was signing the bill into law, some Georgia lawmakers were getting briefed Monday afternoon on how the measure will affect the state’s roads, bridges, ports and other infrastructure.

“It has a big emphasis of (electric vehicles), and we’re going to capitalize on that in Georgia,” Transportation Commissioner Russell McMurry said of the bill.

The federal measure also includes competitive grants, such as funding for projects reducing truck emissions at port facilities. But McMurry said Monday it was too early to outline which projects his agency will prioritize for federal funding, which will require a state match.

“The president signed it about 15 minutes ago, so we’re not quite there,” McMurry told lawmakers. The federal government will also have to develop rules and regulations for the new programs, which will take time.

Another $65 billion will go toward expanding access to broadband internet access across the country, a provision touted during the signing ceremony by Donneta Williams, president of the United Steelworkers Local 1025 at a Wilmington, N.C., plant producing optical fiber needed for broadband upgrades. At least $100 million of that will help provide broadband coverage across Georgia

“To paraphrase one of my favorite former vice presidents, it’s a big effing deal,” said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, (D-N.Y.)

Before heading to the White House, U.S. Sen. Jon Tester, a Montana Democrat who was among the 10 senators who wrote the bill, told reporters on a press call that the signing was the culmination of several months of negotiation.

“This is one of the best days I’ve had in Washington, D.C.,” Tester told reporters. “This is something that, for six months we met and we argued and we fought and we worked and in the end we got something that is the biggest non-emergency investment in infrastructure in our nation’s history.”

The legislation drew some bipartisan support in both chambers. But the 13 House Republicans who joined Democrats in support of the bill have faced backlash for that vote from constituents and some of their colleagues.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Rome-based Republican, tweeted that they were “traitors,” and posted their office phone numbers.

GOP opponents of the measure have decried it as part of a “spending spree” by Democrats.

“Tennesseans want real infrastructure investment, not frivolous left-wing programs that add to our nation’s debt,” Sen. Marsha Blackburn, (R-Tenn.), fumed in a press release ahead of the bill signing, slamming it as the “gateway” to the human infrastructure bill Democrats are still seeking to pass.

A half-dozen progressive House Democrats also opposed the physical infrastructure bill.

Those “no” votes included Reps. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and Cori Bush of Missouri, who wanted the $1.85 trillion social safety net and climate bill, known as “Build Back Better,” to be voted on at the same time as the infrastructure bill.

House Democrats have voted to set the terms of debate over the social reform package, and have aimed to hold a final vote as soon as this week.

“This is a great accomplishment, and there’s more to come,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, (D-Calif.), said at the White House.

Environmental advocacy groups and their allies in the Congressional Progressive Caucus also have sought to present the infrastructure bill and the $1.85 trillion social spending plan as a package deal.

“This is scene one of a two-act play,” Manish Bapna, the president and CEO of the Natural Resources Defense Council, said in a statement. “It sets the stage for Congress to pass the Build Back Better Act. That’s the centerpiece of President Biden’s strategy to drive equitable recovery with climate action in a moment the country urgently needs both.”

Asked about the social spending and climate bill, Tester stressed that it and the physical infrastructure bill are separate measures.

His priorities in the larger spending plan include making child care more accessible and affordable, providing federal housing funding and addressing climate change, he added.

During Monday’s ceremony, Vice President Kamala Harris also framed the two infrastructure bills as a set that is to be completed.

“This legislation, as significant as it is, as historic as it is, is part one of two,” Harris said. “Congress must also pass the Build Back Better Act.”

Georgia Recorder Deputy Editor Jill Nolin contributed to this report. 

GOP lawmakers stake out wins in Atlanta suburbs as state-level redistricting wraps

From left, Sens. Frank Ginn, a Republican from Danielsville, and Michelle Au, a Democrat from Johns Creek, talk on the Senate floor. Au is the only senator in a competitive district under the redistricting plan awaiting Gov. Kemp’s signature. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

New district maps for both chambers of Georgia’s Legislature await Gov. Brian Kemp’s pen after the House gave its approval to the Senate’s mapping plan 96-70 Monday, largely along party lines.

Lawmakers from both parties have honed their arguments since the once-a-decade special session began Nov. 3, and Monday’s debate on the House floor struck familiar tones, with Democrats charging the Republicans who drew the maps with protecting their political advantages and ignoring the rapid growth in Georgia’s minority population.

“Over the last 10 years, Georgia’s population grew by 1 million people, and that growth is exclusively comprised of people of color,” said Atlanta Democratic Rep. Bee Nguyen, who is running for secretary of state. “This map really fails to reflect that growth. It does not increase the total number of majority-minority districts, and it turns Senate District 48 into a majority white district.”

Senate District 48, currently represented by Johns Creek Sen. Michelle Au, is set to radically transform its partisan and racial makeup under the latest maps. According to data from the City University of New York’s Redistricting and You and the New York Times, Au’s district will go from 36.8% white and 59.2% Democratic to 50.9% white and 51.6% Republican. Au is Georgia’s only Asian-American woman senator.

“This is what we mean when we talk about allowing the people to elect the representative of their choice so that their voices will be heard,” Nguyen said. “It means when six Asian women are brutally murdered in our state, we know there will be at least one woman on the Senate side, who can speak about cultural barriers, who can speak about language barriers and who can speak about the fears that plague the Asian-American community.”

Democrats also balked at changes to Henry County’s districts they said would benefit Sen. Brian Strickland, a McDonough Republican. Strickland defeated Democrat Kelly Rose last November by fewer than 2,000 votes out of more than 100,000. A slim majority of Strickland’s current district – 50.7% – voted for Joe Biden in that election, but under the new map, just over 60% of his district voted for Donald Trump.

Suwanee Rep. Bonnie Rich, who chairs the House Redistricting and Reapportionment Committee, echoed statements she made throughout the special session Monday, arguing that the process incorporated public comment and was fair to all Georgians, including minorities.

“The Voting Rights Act protects communities and voters. It protects those communities, it ensures that communities have the ability to elect a candidate of their choice,” Rich said.

“It doesn’t guarantee me my seat, and it doesn’t guarantee you your seat or any senator their seat,” she added. “The maps that the Senate has drawn comply with the Voting Rights Act. I know this because we have worked on this process together. We have engaged legal counsel, who are experts in this field. We are confident that the maps comply with the Voting Rights Act.”

According to data from the Office of Legislative and Congressional Reapportionment and Redistricting and You, Rich’s district will go from casting 51.6% of its votes for Biden in 2020 to 60.4% Trump.

The nonpartisan Princeton Gerrymandering Project gave the Senate an F for its redistricting plan, largely faulting for excessive partisanship. The researchers found there is only one competitive district in the plan, the one now represented by Au.

Republicans now hold a 34-22 advantage in the Senate, and though Au’s seat is at risk, Democrats could expand their minority to 23 with the inclusion of two new Democratic-leaning districts in Gwinnett and Fulton – though Princeton finds an optimal map would feature about 26 districts drawn to favor Democratic senators.

The House’s plan, which passed the Senate Friday, got an overall B from Princeton but received an F in the university’s competitiveness rating. The House map pairs four sets of incumbents who are not seeking re-election: Snellville Democratic Reps. Rebecca Mitchell and Shelly Hutchinson, Republican Reps. Dominic LaRiccia of Douglas and James Burchett of Waycross; Republican Reps. Danny Mathis of Cochran and Robert Pruitt of Eastman; and Republican Rep. Gerald Greene of Cuthbert and Democratic Rep. Winifred Dukes of Albany.

Republicans outnumber Democrats 103-77 in the House, and their plan would likely help to protect that majority over the next few elections by infusing Republican incumbents in the north metro Atlanta area with new reliably conservative voters, Redistricting and You data shows.

  • Acworth Republican Rep. Ed Setzler’s district is set to go from 52.3% Biden to 54% Trump by moving the boundary into Cherokee County. In 2020, Setzler slightly edged out Democrat Kyle Rinaudo with 50.5% to Rinaudo’s 49.5%.
  • Republican Rep. Sharon Cooper’s east Cobb district is set to change from 55.6% Biden to 52.1% Trump by moving the eastern boundary into the district of fellow Cobb Republican Rep. Matt Dollar, who has announced he is not seeking re-election. In 2020, Cooper narrowly defeated Democrat Luisa Wakeman 50.8% to 49.2%.
  • Marietta Republican Don Parsons’ district is poised to change from 50.5% Biden to 54.1% Trump by expanding into Cherokee County. In 2020, Parsons defeated Democrat Connie DiCicco 51.8% to 48.2%.
  • Marietta Rep. Devan Seabaugh, who won a special election earlier this year to replace the retired Rep. Bert Reeves, is set to see his district go from 51.8% Trump to 58.4% Trump.
  • Speaker Pro Tem Jan Jones’ Alpharetta district is set to go from 53.4% Trump to 57% Trump by spreading into Cherokee County. In 2020, Jones defeated Democrat Anthia Owens 60.8% to 39.2%.
  • Alpharetta Republican Rep. Chuck Martin’s district will go from 52.8% Biden to 52% Trump by expanding west to Roswell. In 2020, Martin defeated Democrat Jason Hayes 52.78% to 47.2%.

By bolstering Republicans like these in areas that are trending more Democratic, the party is hoping to keep its advantage in future elections, said University of Georgia political science professor Charles Bullock.

“People like Sharon Cooper, Ed Setzler, they haven’t had a whole lot of margin of comfort,” he said. “So if they were to have any hopes of staying around for the next decade, they need to find some Republican voters, and so what these proposals are doing is moving north, and the further north you go in Georgia, the redder it gets, you’re able to pick up Republican voters.

“And the fact that then some of them got paired, what that means is that Republicans have come to the conclusion I was thinking they would have to come to, and that is, ‘Sorry, but there’s not room in the lifeboat for everybody,’” he added.

Once the maps receive Kemp’s signature, they will represent a big win for the Georgia GOP, though it’s likely too early to say whether they will be able to hold on to the new districts through the next redistricting in 2030, Bullock said.

“You could certainly be pretty confident saying they hold for 2022, 2024, maybe 2026, but by then, we get to 2028 and 2030, that’s when it may get very, very difficult,” he said. “If the same kind of changes that we’ve witnessed during the 2010 decade continue into this decade, then what we’ll see is Democrats moving farther and farther out from the city limits of Atlanta, and as they do so, some of these districts are going to flip and become marginal again.”

Some Republican lawmakers are set to lose Trump voters, most notably Sharpsburg Rep. Philip Singleton, who has frequently sparred with House Speaker David Ralston, is set to watch his district go from 72.4% Trump to 66.6% Biden.

Ralston said at a press conference last week that Singleton’s district had to be drawn the way it was to comply with the Voting Rights Act and denied any political payback was involved.

But redistricting is always political, and the party in power is essentially expected to use that power to benefit its members – throughout the hearings, Republicans have relished the opportunity to remind Democrats of the last time they drew the maps in 2001, when their results were widely panned as egregious gerrymanders. The public reaction to that political hardball is considered to be a contributing factor to the Democrats losing their long stronghold on the governor’s office and the Legislature.

Democrats are threatening to sue over the Republicans’ mapmaking, with a Voting Rights Act challenge as the most likely avenue.

“A yes vote on this map is a vote to discard representative government,” said South Fulton Democratic Rep. Debra Bazemore before the House’s vote on the Senate map. “A yes vote on this map is a vote to disenfranchise millions of Georgia voters. A yes vote on this map is an invitation to costly legal challenges that will be incurred to defend an unconstitutional map.”

Redistricting is also a notoriously fraught process that can pit colleagues against one another and set lawmakers up for tough reelection battles. The hurt feelings led longtime state Rep. Carolyn Hugley, a Columbus Democrat, to strike an empathetic note last week when addressing the House Republicans’ point person on redistricting ahead of the vote.

“It is a tough job, a job where nobody’s going to be happy and she’s going to have to make new friends after all of this is over,” Hugley said.

But the rising tensions under the Gold Dome – which intensified after a GOP lawmaker quietly filed bills that would make major changes to the Gwinnett County Commission and Board of Education – prompted veteran state Sen. Jeff Mullis to urge his colleagues not to let things become too personal.

“This is a political process. Sometimes it goes our way. Sometimes it doesn’t. But regardless of that, we need to keep our comments friendlier – I mean on either side. We don’t need to let it go the wrong way. We’re colleagues together. We’re going to love each other for the rest of our lives,” the Chickamauga Republican said Monday.

Georgia Recorder Deputy Editor Jill Nolin contributed to this report. 

Emma Laura Edwards Smith Morrison

Emma Laura Edwards Smith Morrison, age 93 of Clarkesville, Georgia went home to be with the Lord on Sunday, November 14, 2021.

Born in Monticello, Georgia on March 18, 1928, she was a daughter of the late Homer Theron & Ethel Smith Edwards. Emma Laura was a graduate of Monticello High School and a graduate of Georgia State College for Women in Milledgeville, Georgia with degrees in Home Economics and Elementary Education. She taught school for 32 years and received much affirmation from her students over the years since that time. Emma Laura was a member of Clarkesville Baptist Church since 1963 where she served in various church roles including church hostess, coordination of Wednesday night suppers, wedding receptions, and parties. She was also a member of the Friendship Sunday School Class and the WMU.

In addition to her parents, Emma Laura was preceded in death by her first husband, Richard Russell Smith; second husband, Jim Morrison; twin sister, Anna Laura Edwards; sister & brother-in-law, Martha Edwards Baker & James B. Baker, Sr.; brother & sister-in-law, Theron S. Edwards, Sr., & Eleanor Edwards; nephew, Edward Baker, brother-in-law & sister-in-law, Olin Smith, Jr. & Frances Smith; nephew, Olin Smith, III.; & step-son, Donald Morrison.

Survivors include her niece & spouse, Carole Edwards Norris & William “Billy” Norris & their children, Zachary W. Norris & his daughter, Ella Ann; Kerri L. & Chris Moseley; nephew, Theron S. “Ed” Edwards, Jr.; niece, Katherine “Kitty” B. Wilmot & her daughter, Erica; nephews, William B. “Billy” Baker, IV., James B. “Jimmy” Baker, Jr. & spouse, John A. Kolb; niece & spouse, Kay Smith Thompson & Rev. Barry Thompson & their children, Micah & Courtney Thompson; Carmen & Brad Moore & their children, Cohen Moore, Mara Moore, & Halston Dawson; nephew & spouse, Olin Smith, IV & Ashley Smith & their children, Nona Smith, Olin Caston Smith, Reyns Smith; niece, Laura Lynn Smith & her children, C.J. Blackwell & Jazlyn Blackwell; stepchildren, Rick Morrison; Ken Morrison & his children, Lindsey Morrison & Tanner Morrison; friends who are like family, Lee & Ross Davis, Florence Wikle, Peggy Smith, as well as Gloria & Walter Velasco.

Funeral services are scheduled for 2:00 p.m. Wednesday, November 17, 2021, at Hillside Memorial Chapel with Rev. Barry Thompson, Rev. Grady Walden & Rev. David Turner officiating. Interment will follow in the Clarkesville City Cemetery.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 1:00 p.m. until the service hour on Wednesday.

An online guest registry is available for the family at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

Arrangements by Hillside Memorial Chapel, Clarkesville, Georgia. (706) 754-6256

Both Georgia legislative maps await Kemp’s signature. Final congressional map is expected soon, too

A House vote of 96-70 along party lines sent the Senate legislative redistricting map to the governor’s desk — joining the House map approved last week.

“The proposed map splits only 29 counties,” Bonnie Rich (R-Suwanee) said on the House floor. “Our Senate counterparts also engaged counsel to ensure compliance with the Voting Rights Act.”

Republicans hope the legislative maps keep them in the majority at the state Capitol for the next 10 years.

But Democrats who spoke on the House floor told fellow lawmakers the new maps do not account for the changing demographics brought by the 1 million new residents in the state in the past 10 years.

“It is unconscionable to me that the map we are discussing and voting on today disregards Georgia’s population growth and the diversity of this,” Rep. Derrick Jackson (D-Tyrone) said.

This detail of the Georgia House legislative map passed in the 2021 special session of the General Assembly focuses on District 48, which shifts north to more Republican-leaning Forsyth County and threatens Democratic state Sen. Michelle Au’s reelection chances.
(Credit: Georgia General Assembly)

Democrats also claim Republicans are ignoring the impact of redistricting on women lawmakers.

“At a time when the number of women elected to local office is just starting to climb out of the basement,” Rep. Beth Moore (D-Peachtree Corners) said, “we should not be drawing maps that make it harder for women incumbents or harder for women to run and win in new districts.”

The map moves District 48, currently represented by Sen. Michelle Au (D-Johns Creek), into heavily Republican Forsyth County. Au is the first Asian American woman in the Georgia Senate.

“It turns Senate District 48 into a majority white district,” Rep. Bee Nguyen (D-Atlanta) said. “It took our state 230 years to elect an Asian American woman on the Senate side.”

The Republican chairwoman of the House Reapportionment and Redistricting Committee disputed there was any effort to target Au’s district.

“The Senate has been accused of targeting a senator,” Rep. Bonnie Rich (R-Suwanee) said in reply. “That is an oversimplistic analysis of an extremely complicated process.”

Republicans are expected to release their congressional redistricting maps tomorrow.

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

Margie Thomas

Margie Nell Taylor Thomas, age 82 of Mt. Airy, passed away on Monday, November 15, 2021.

Born on February 13, 1939, she was a daughter of the late Marvin and Blondine Leckie Taylor. Mrs. Thomas loved her family especially her grandchildren.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Earl Thomas.

Surviving are her sons and daughters-in-law, Mitchell Earl & Stephanie Thomas of Clarkesville, Danny Eric & Regina Thomas of Alto; daughter and son-in-law, Vicky Ann & Danny Thomason of Cleveland; 9 grandchildren; 8 great-grandchildren; brother, Edwin Taylor of Monroe; sisters, Carolyn Shirley of Demorest, Mary Taylor and Linda Luke both of Cornelia, and Brenda Ridley of Cleveland; several nieces, nephews, other relatives and friends.

Funeral services are scheduled for 2 pm, Wednesday, November 17, 2021, in the Chapel of McGahee-Griffin and Stewart with Rev. Thomas Gragg officiating. Interment will follow in Yonah Memorial Gardens.

The family will receive friends from 6-8 pm on Tuesday at the funeral home.

Those in attendance are asked to please adhere to the public health and social distancing guidelines regarding COVID-19.

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

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

Kaye Scroggs Wilkes

Kaye Scroggs Wilkes, age 67, of Cornelia, Georgia went home to be with the Lord on Sunday, November 14, 2021.

Ms. Wilkes was born on May 27, 1954, and was a lifelong resident of Habersham County. She was preceded in death by her parents, Fred and Irene Scroggs; and her son, Jacob Ballew. Ms. Wilkes attended both The Torch in Demorest and Free Chapel in Gainesville. Kaye was a self employed business owner for many years prior to her retirement. Kaye loved to shop, travel, spend time with her family and friends, and being active in church.

Survivors include her daughters and sons-in-law, Nicole “Nikki” Dyer and Trevor, of Toccoa; Lacey Turner and Adam, of Greencastle, PA; brother and sister-in-law, Jack Scroggs and Connie, of Athens; three grandchildren; and many beloved friends who were considered family.

Memorial Services will be held 4:00 p.m., Wednesday, November 17, 2021 at the Cornelia Community House with Pastor Mike Franklin officiating.

The family will receive friends from 2:00 p.m. to 3:45 p.m., on Wednesday, November 17, 2021 at the Cornelia Community House prior to the service and refreshments will follow after the memorial service.

A livestream of the service will be available on the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory Facebook Page (facebook.com/whitfieldfh) for those who can not attend in person.

A Private Inurnment will be held at Yonah Memorial Gardens for the family at a later date.

Flowers can be sent to Whitfield Funeral Homes, North Chapel, or if you would like to donate to a charitable cause in memory of Kaye, the family asks that contributions be made to “Havyn’s Hope.” To learn more about Havyn’s story and how to donate, click here.

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

Martha W. Milam

Martha W. Milam, age 89, of Cleveland, GA, passed away on Sunday, November 14, 2021 after a battle with an extended illness.

Martha was born April 16, 1932 in Lexington, KY, to the late Jack and Ottie White. Mrs. Milam was an avid lover of crocheting, word search puzzles and spending time with her grandchildren. Martha was a dedicated LPN for more than 50 years. Along with her parents Mrs. Milam is preceded in death by her husband Grady Milam; brothers Bill and Carl White; sisters Allene, Ruby, Esther and Marjorie.

Survivors include daughter and son-in-law Gwenn and David Jenkins, of Jasper; daughter Rita Compton, of Cleveland; 6 grandchildren; 13 great-grandchildren; 3 great-great-grandchildren; sister Yvonne Chrisman, of Lula as well as a host of other family members.

The family will have a private service at a later date.

Arrangements have been entrusted to Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel 1370 Industrial Blvd Baldwin, GA 30511. (706) 778 – 7123

Slain Jackson County deputy ‘didn’t back down from anything’

Jackson County Sheriff Janis Mangum presents the flag that draped their mother's coffin to the children of Deputy Lena Nicole Marshall during her funeral on November 15, 2021, in Braselton. (screenshot funeral live stream Free Chapel)

Lena Nicole Marshall devoted over ten years of her life to law enforcement. On Monday, that devotion came back to her as hundreds of fellow officers joined her family and friends in paying tribute to the slain deputy.

“She loved her job,” said Jackson County Sheriff Janis Mangum. “She gave it all she had all the time. She didn’t back down from anything. She loved her shifts. She loved all of her brothers and sisters in blue.”

Marshall, who previously worked for the Winder and Helen police departments and the Barrow and Habersham County sheriff’s offices, died on November 8, eighteen years to the day that her 6-year-old son Austin died. She leaves behind her other son Colten and daughters Kiley and Chelsea. They listened as Sheriff Mangum and friends eulogized their mother, remembering her as a free spirit who was hard and intimidating, but also soft and caring.

“I’ll be grateful for her friendship for the rest of my life,” said Lauren Stephens. “I called her my ‘no matter what.’ She never judged, no matter what.”

Stephens was one of the last people to communicate with Deputy Marshall before she was fatally wounded on the night of November 5.

Around 9:20 that evening, Marshall and Deputy Zac Billings, whom she was training, responded to a residence at 6416 GA Highway 124 in Hoschton. The homeowners wanted a non-resident removed. The officers made contact with a woman at the front door who, investigators say, pulled a gun on them. Refusing their commands to drop the weapon, the woman opened fire fatally wounding Marshall. Billings returned fire and killed the suspect who was later identified as 43-year-old Jessica Worsham.

In a text just moments before Marshall responded to that call, Stephens said she wrote, “‘I love you. Be safe.'” Marshall texted back, “Love you too. Always.”

People stand along the procession route to pay their respects to slain Jackson County Deputy Lena Nicole Marshall. The 10-year law enforcement veteran was shot and killed earlier this month while on a domestic dispute call in Hoschton. Her funeral was attended by hundreds of law enforcement officers and dignitaries from around the state, including Gov. Kemp. (WSB-TV Facebook live stream screenshot)
Deputy Marshall’s patrol car sits outside Free Chapel church in Braselton in memoriam. (Free Chapel live stream screenshot)
(Free Chapel live stream screenshot)

Governor Brian Kemp and his wife, Marty, were among those who attended the service at Free Chapel Church in Braselton. It was the second law enforcement funeral in Georgia in two days. On Sunday, Henry County police memorialized one of their officers who was shot in the line of duty on November 4. Officer Paramhans Desai and Deputy Marshall died within hours of each other.

Marshall’s service, which began with a nearly 16-mile long procession from the funeral home to the chapel, ended with a formal flag presentation, fifteen-gun salute, ‘missing man’ helicopter formation, Taps, and End of Watch call. A bagpiper led the procession as the crowd filed out of the church following the service.

For all the tributes paid to Deputy Marshall this day, perhaps none resonated more profoundly than that of a woman who Marshall arrested last year. Sheriff Mangum read a letter the woman wrote in which she described a conversation she had with Marshall in the patrol car as the deputy was taking her to jail. They talked about raising children and the woman’s abusive marriage. She said Marshall gave her advice that helped her turn things around.

Mangum relayed that, today, that woman is living in her own home peacefully with her children and is gainfully employed. Of Deputy Marshall, she wrote, “That woman saved my life.”

Former teacher pleads “not guilty” to raping student, other charges

Leslie Terrell (Habersham County Sheriff's Office)

Former Habersham County teacher Leslie Terrell has plead “not guilty” to the slew of charges against her, which include statutory rape and child molestation of a student.

Terrell resigned from her job as a Habersham County Ninth Grade Academy teacher in early March after school administrators began investigating inappropriate text messages she allegedly sent to one of her students. On March 19, 11 days after her resignation, the school system contacted the Habersham County Sheriff’s Department regarding the texts.

Habersham Sheriff’s Lt. Matthew Wurtz said the investigation uncovered that those text messages escalated to a physical sexual relationship.

Terrell turned herself in on March 26 after a warrant was issued for her arrest. Her bond was set at $71,400, which was paid. Terrell was then arrested again May 21 for violating her bond, allegedly contacting the student. After her re-arrest, her bond was revoked, and she received four additional charges.

Terrell now faces charges including child molestation, statutory rape, sexual battery, enticing a child, influencing a witness, making false statements, obstruction/hindering law enforcement, distributing obscene materials, electronically furnishing obscene materials to a minor and interference with custody.

She has since plead “not guilty” to her charges, and has demanded a trial by jury. She is being represented by the Suwanee-based Carter/Pilgrim Law Firm.

The defense claims that Terrell was stopped by an officer with the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office without cause, who detained, handcuffed, interrogated and searched her without giving Terrell her Miranda Rights. Her defense made a motion that any evidence gathered during this detainment not be allowed or considered in her trial, due to their argument that it violated her fourth, fifth and sixth amendments.

In another motion, the defense shared that Terrell believes that there is a video of her arrest, and that the video contains information that could help prove her innocence.

A date for her trial has not been set.

Level Grove Road will reopen this month, here’s why it took so long

Cornelia City Manager Dee Anderson shows on a city map where unmapped water and sewer lines were found on Level Grove Road. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

Level Grove Road will reopen Nov. 24, right before Thanksgiving “without fail,” according to Cornelia City Manager Dee Anderson. The road closed in mid-July to install sidewalks and a new sewer main, and was scheduled to take three to four weeks, but has been closed ever since.

Citizens have grown increasingly frustrated with its closure. Level Grove is a major road for Cornelia residents and businesses, connecting Cornelia’s historic downtown to the rest of the city, and the road work has been a problem for the residents of the homes and apartments right by the worksite.

The month-long project has spanned over four months due to complications under the road’s surface. The contractor working on the project found several water and sewer lines under the road that the city was unaware of and needed to investigate.

While it might seem strange that the city uncovered water and sewer lines it didn’t know about, finding unmapped water and sewer lines in Cornelia isn’t unheard of, it’s actually a fairly common occurrence.

“We have found where we’ve cut a [water] line here, and four streets down, two houses were out of water from where years ago they [city officials] had run a water line,” City Manager Anderson says. “Before other houses were built, they would just run water lines across property instead of following the streets. Nothing’s on a map, it was in somebody’s head, whoever worked here at the time and did it. I guess there used to be this belief that people were going to be here forever.”

(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

Anderson says that old, unmapped lines have been found underneath homes and businesses, and the city has responded to situations where old sewer lines backed up and leaked into buildings.

“It’s just an ongoing thing, and I’m sure we’re not unique in that any of these older cities are going to be that way,” he says. “That’s why a lot of cities have such old infrastructure is the belief that once it goes in the ground, you really didn’t have ever have to worry about it.”

There’s a plan to fix this problem, though. Over the next five years, the city plans to have all of its old water and sewer lines replaced. During his time with the city, Anderson estimates the city has replaced about 90 percent of their water lines, and that sewer lines are the next big undertaking. He says that every time they replace old lines, or discover unmapped lines, they’re added to the city’s Geographic Information System (GIS) to keep records of infrastructure locations.

He says that while the city will have a much better understanding of its water and sewer lines, there “may always be something that’s under somebody’s house.”