Home Blog Page 1679

David Andrew Loudermilk

David Andrew Loudermilk, age 59 of Nicholson, formerly of Mount Airy, Georgia went home to be with the Lord on Wednesday, November 11, 2021.

Born in Demorest, Georgia on January 30, 1962, he was a son of the late Carl Fletcher & Clara Pitts Loudermilk. David was a 1979 graduate of Habersham Central High School and enjoyed cattle farming for most of his life. He was a member of Community Baptist Church where he was a former Sunday School teacher. Most of all David enjoyed spending precious time with his family.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his step-mother, Exie Burrell Loudermilk; sister, Maxine McDuffie; & brother-in-law, Roger Ansley.

Survivors include his daughter & fiancé, Amber Loudermilk & Bruce Harper of Nicholson, GA; son, Andrew Loudermilk of Franklin, NC; grandchildren, Rylee Faye Harper & Brandon Alan James York; sister, Wilma Ansley of Cornelia, GA; brothers & sisters-in-law, Carl Jr., & Valerie Loudermilk of Demorest, GA; Lamar “Marty” & Amanda Loudermilk of Mount Airy, GA; several nieces, nephews, other relatives, & friends.

Graveside services are scheduled for 1:00 p.m. Saturday, November 13, 2021 at Hazel Creek Baptist Church Cemetery with Rev. Billy Burrell & Rev. Kenneth McEntire officiating.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 11:30 a.m. until 12:45 p.m. on Saturday prior to the service.

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

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

New Cornelia VFW opens in time to celebrate Veterans Day

Thursday was a special day for veterans across the United States as the country celebrated their contributions and honored their sacrifices, but in Habersham County, there was something extra for veterans to celebrate, too.

The new veterans center location, which has taken residency at 174 Cornelia Crossing next to Spring Garden restaurant, is now the largest VFW facility in Northeast Georgia. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

The county’s veteran center burnt down in the summer of 2020 due to an electrical shortage, and over a year later, the Grant-Reeves Veteran Center is back and better than ever, taking over the old School Tools & Office Pro’s building in Cornelia.

 

The new building is much bigger than the last, offering a new amount of space to host veterans, their families and community members for popular events like their bingo night. Grant-Reeves VFW Commander Bill Miles says that the new center is now the largest VFW facility in Northeast Georgia.

The new veteran center, which has taken residency in the old School Tools & Office Pro’s in Cornelia, offers a much bigger space for the center’s needs. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

Members of the Grant-Reeves VFW, Grant-Reeves VFW Honor Guard and the Habersham County Chamber of Commerce cut the ribbon to officially open the new Grant-Reeves Veteran Center Thursday night.

Grant-Reeves Veterans Center and Habersham Chamber of Commerce members held the official ribbon-cutting for the new Veterans Center. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

Honoring veterans

It was a busy night for the veterans center as they opened their doors to the public for the first time in their new building, kicked off their $1,000 bingo jackpot and shared the exciting news that the Grant-Reeves Veteran Center won the National Community Service Award for putting in the most community service hours in the state, but honoring the service of veterans is at the heart of their mission.

Commander Miles took a few moments in between celebration of the new building and door prizes to thank and recognize veterans, and their families, on the day the country honors them.

Grant-Reeves VFW Commander Bill Miles recognized veterans and delivered a speech about their sacrifices during the Veterans Day and veterans center grand opening event. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

“Today we celebrate the millions of veterans who have made sure [of] our freedom, since America’s humble beginnings,” Miles says. “We celebrate their determination, dedication and unwavering patriotism.”

The Grant-Reeves VFW choir sang the national anthem, as well as the Armed Forces Medley, during which veterans were asked to stand during their branch’s anthem to be recognized by attendees.

“Through war and in times of peace, American veterans have remained committed to ensuring our great country remains the land of the free, and truly, the home of the brave,” Miles says.

Man walking on tracks struck, killed by train in Hall County

(NowGeorgia.com)

A man from Albany, Georgia, died Wednesday near Gainesville when he was struck and killed by a train. Jartaqaron Duniteo Willis was walking on the tracks around GA 60/Queen City Parkway at the time, investigators say.

Gainesville police and firefighters and Hall County Fire Services responded to the call at approximately 5:20 p.m. on November 10. Willis was dead when emergency crews arrived, according to the Hall County Sheriff’s Office. The sheriff’s office became involved in the investigation when it was determined soon after, that the incident happened in unincorporated Hall County.

Norfolk Southern officials were also notified.

According to the preliminary investigation, the conductor sounded the horn and began slowing the train when Willis was spotted walking on the tracks. He was hit by the train under the Queen City Parkway Bridge.

Willis’ body was sent to the medical examiner for an autopsy. The incident remains under investigation, although the sheriff’s office says no charges are anticipated.

House Dems urge probe of 11th Circuit judge for hiring clerk with ‘racist’ history

Judge William Pryor, chief judge of the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta, hired a law clerk alleged to have sent a racist text. Georgia U.S. Rep. Hank Johnson and his Democratic colleagues are requesting an investigation. (John McCosh/Georgia Recorder)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — Democratic leaders of the U.S. House Judiciary Committee are urging the chief justice of the Supreme Court to investigate decisions by federal judges in Georgia and Alabama to hire a law clerk who allegedly has “a history of nakedly racist and hateful conduct.”

The letter says the Democrats have “grave concern” about the hiring by Judge William Pryor, chief judge of the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta, and Judge Corey Maze of the Northern District of Alabama.

States in the 11th Circuit include Florida, Alabama and Georgia. The letter was led by Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler of New York and Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, and the Internet Chairman Rep. Hank Johnson, a Lithonia Democrat.

“Placing an individual with this history in such close proximity to judicial decision-making threatens to seriously undermine the public’s faith in the federal judiciary,” the House Democrats wrote.

“To put it mildly, it would be reasonable to question these judges’ impartiality in cases where race, religion, or national origin plays a role, which is the statutory standard for disqualification,” they wrote.

They did not name the law clerk in their letter but in footnotes link to articles about Crystal Clanton, a student at Antonin Scalia Law School at George Mason University in Virginia.

The legal blog Above the Law first reported Clanton had been hired for the “incredibly prestigious” clerkships, set for 2022 and 2023, by Pryor and Maze.

Clanton made headlines in 2017  when The New Yorker reported that she sent a racist text message to her co-workers at the conservative student group Turning Point USA, writing “I HATE BLACK PEOPLE… I hate blacks. End of story.” The New Yorker reviewed a screenshot of the text.

Clanton told the publication that “I have no recollection of these messages and they do not reflect what I believe or who I am and the same was true when I was a teenager.”

The House Democrats’ letter details other reported incidents, such as when Clanton sent a photo of a man with brown skin to her co-workers with the caption “just thinking about ways to do another 9/11,” according to the publication Mediaite.

When she worked at Turning Point USA, Clanton fired the organization’s only Black employee on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, and that employee stated in The New Yorker article that she felt “very uncomfortable working there because I was black.”

Clanton left Turning Point USA and later worked for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas’ wife, Ginni.

The House Democrats wrote to Supreme Court Justice John G. Roberts as the presiding member of the Judicial Conference of the United States, the national policy-making body for the federal courts. They also addressed the letter to Judge Charles Wilson, the most senior active member of the 11th Circuit appeals court.

They said while they said the reported remarks are “worrying in the extreme,” their concern was more that Pryor and Maze would make such a hire. They said the clerk’s past conduct was clearly available at the time of the hiring decisions.

“If the judges were not aware of their law clerk’s widely reported record, their negligent hiring practices present their own set of problems with the judiciary and the judges’ abilities to discharge their administrative responsibilities competently,” the Democrats said.

Due to a federal holiday, Pryor and Maze could not be reached for comment.

Pryor was nominated to the federal appeals court by former President George W. Bush. Maze was nominated by former President Donald Trump.

The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in downtown Atlanta conducts hearings in the Elbert P. Tuttle Courthouse in downtown Atlanta. Tuttle exercised great influence during the civil rights era soon after the landmark Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court ruling.

The Democrats said that “to date, the news of these judges’ hiring decisions has been met with uniform silence by the judges themselves, the courts on which they sit, and the Judicial Conference.”

The letter was also signed by Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties Chair Steve Cohen, (D-Tenn.),  and Oversight and Reform Subcommittee on Government Operations Chair Gerry Connolly, (D-Va.).

The lawmakers wrote that they expect a briefing on the matter by Dec. 1.

Georgia Recorder Editor John McCosh contributed to this report.

Rabun County Veterans Day ceremony honors local vets

 

On a cold, rainy day, Northeast Georgian veterans, their families and community members gathered to honor veterans that dedicated their lives to serving the United States.

MORE: American Legion holds Veterans Day celebration in Cleveland

Northeast Georgia’s Grant-Reeves VFW Post 7720 Honor Guard, and veterans from area veteran support organizations, held a Veterans Day ceremony at the war memorial outside of the Rabun County Courthouse. Volunteers distributed red carnations to veterans, their spouses and families.

A crowd of veterans, their families and community members stood at the Rabun County War Memorial in cold temperatures and pouring rain to show support for local veterans. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

RELATED: Northeast Georgia’s 50-year-old honor guard holds onto disappearing tradition

Jim Morgan, commander of the Habersham-based chapter of the Disabled American Veterans, spoke to the gathered crowd about a veteran’s dedication to service.

“When our time of service was over, our oath continues to stand,” Morgan said. “We continue to fight for our community, our veterans and to continue to defend and protect our country. Even though we can’t serve in that uniform, we proudly wear patriotic clothes, pins and hats to show everyone what we’ve done.”

Disabled American Veterans Chapter 15 Commander Jim Morgan spoke at Thursday’s event about the dedication of veterans, not only to their country, but to their neighbors, communities and fellow veterans. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

He says that even after veterans leave the service of the U.S. military, many remain dedicated to serving their communities through community service, like offering support for other veterans and volunteering at food banks.

The honor guard gave a three-volley salute and played Taps as they closed out the ceremony, honoring local veterans.

American Legion holds Veterans Day celebration in Cleveland

(Dean Dyer/wrwh.com)

The ceremony was shorter than normal due to a threat of showers but members of the Roy Head Post 16 of the American Legion along with the general public took time Thursday morning to honor U.S. veterans and those serving in the military.

Post-Commander Mike Allen conducted the ceremony that recognized members of the different branches of the military.

RELATED: Rabun County Veterans Day ceremony honors local vets

In his address, Commander Allen talked about holding onto the Constitution of the United States and the nation’s founding principles.

“In America, there comes a point and time when the people, I’m talking about people as a whole, they stand up and say enough, it’s time to move forward. We’re at that point ladies and gentlemen, we are at that point,” said Allen.

“So as an American citizen, and I’m not talking about Republicans I’m not talking about  Democrats, I’m talking about American Citizens, stand up and be counted, stand up for what you believe, stand up for your heritage,” he said.

At the conclusion of the program, White County Color Guard performed a 21 gun salute to service members who gave the ultimate sacrifice in service or have since passed away.

Earlier in the day the Northeast Georgia Veterans Society dedicated a veterans monument at Helen Veterans Park.

Jack P. Nix Elementary School has a veterans program Thursday evening at 6:30 PM  and White County Middle School students and staff have scheduled a program to salute veterans Friday morning at 9 AM.

A salute to Army Veterans

Salute to Navy Veterans

A salute to Coast Guard Veterans

A salute to all Air Force Veterans

A salute to Marine Corps Veterans

Frances Ellene Stanley

Frances Ellene Stanley, age 82, of Cornelia, entered heaven Tuesday, Nov. 9, 2021, at the Northeast Georgia Medical Center, Gainesville.

Ellene was born in Pulaski, Mississippi, to the late Allen & Mattie Permenter Varner. She was an LPN where she worked a number of years at West Orange Memorial Hospital in Winter Garden, Florida, & Cathedral Gerontology Center in Jacksonville, Florida. She was loved by all who knew her and will be deeply missed.

Left to cherish her memory, daughter, Sandra Stanley; sons, Carl Gregory Farmer & Ronnie Glenn Farmer; sisters, Jonelle Weems & Geneva Hawthorne; 4 grandchildren, Corie Madara, Carlie Starr, Cody Farmer & Katherine C. Stanley; 3 great-grandchildren, Bryson, Caroline & Paisley also survive.

Please share online condolences and memories with the family at www.wardsfh.com.

Ward’s Funeral Home is honored to serve the family of Frances Ellene Stanley.

Gainesville man charged with aggravated battery after allegedly shooting woman with pellet gun

Hall County Sheriff’s Office investigators have charged a Gainesville man with aggravated battery under the Family Violence Act in connection with a shooting this week off of GA 136/Price Road.

Deputies arrested Tony Joseph Savage, 45, early Wednesday morning at the Hall County Sheriff’s Office Headquarters.

Deputies responded to the initial call about the shooting on November 9 at Northeast Georgia Medical Center Gainesville where the victim was transported for treatment.

According to the initial investigation, at approximately 10 p.m. Tuesday, Savage shot the 53-year-old woman in the abdomen with a pellet rifle. The incident occurred during a domestic dispute between Savage and the victim inside his residence in the 5000 block of North Forest Boulevard, officials say. The victim suffered serious injuries.

After the initial call, deputies located Savage at his residence, where they took him into custody without incident. Savage remained in the Hall County Jail without bond Wednesday afternoon.

The sheriff’s office is still investigating.

Georgia House GOP approves legislative map to preserve majority for years

House Redistricting Committee Chair Rep. Bonnie Rich speaks to fellow lawmakers after they approved new House maps. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

ATLANTA (GA Recorder) — The Georgia House approved new borders for their districts on a mostly party-line vote Wednesday, 99 to 79.

If the maps pass the Senate and receive Gov. Brian Kemp’s signature, the new lines will shape Georgians’ choice of their state representatives under the Gold Dome for the next decade.

“I am proud that we have not only drawn a map that is legally sound, but is also fair,” said Speaker David Ralston, a Blue Ridge Republican. “Now, not everybody’s going to be happy. Not all the Republicans are going to be happy and that’s the case with every piece of legislation that we pass, but we have done the best we can to balance competing priorities with the (Census) data that was delivered to us.”

Suwanee Rep. Bonnie Rich, the Republican chair of the House Redistricting Committee, said despite complaints from Democrats and some constituents represented by Republicans, the maps comply with the law and will provide fair representation for all Georgians.

“As an elected Republican woman from Gwinnett County, I’m very proud of the number of minority opportunity districts that we have drafted here,” she said. “My family, my children and I have benefited greatly from our diverse community. We have had a rich experience. And now I know that my neighbors, my friends, my children’s friends and their parents, they all have an opportunity to do what I’m doing here too. Our maps have ensured that. Our maps are representative of our state.”

RELATED: Georgia voice opposition to redistricting changes that affect them

The map will likely help bolster the state’s Republican majority, researchers with the nonpartisan Princeton Gerrymandering Project found, with a 5% bias towards Republicans, but with all factors considered, they gave the plan a B, indicating that it is better than average, but still has room for improvement.

From left, state Reps. Park Cannon, Erica Thomas, Michael Smith and Bonnie Rich look over maps in the House chamber. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder 

The GOP holds the majority in the Georgia House 103-77. Republicans have a 34-22 edge in the state Senate.

In addition to a lack of competitive districts, Princeton also identified a small decrease in the number of minority districts, which include majority-minority and minority-influence districts. The new map contains 109 total minority districts, two fewer than the current map.

Not including pairs in which one member is not seeking re-election, the map will force eight incumbent lawmakers to face off for re-election, Rich said.

They are 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.

Greene has represented a south Georgia legislative district for nearly four decades, at first as a Democrat.

Minority Leader James Beverly, a Macon Democrat, said it was unfair to pair the two Democrats from Gwinnett County, which saw the most growth in the 2020 Census, instead of drawing one of the two into a nearby open district.

“This is a perfect example of politicians using their power in the redistricting process to settle some personal or political grudge rather than to benefit the public good,” he said. “That’s not right. It undermines public confidence in our democracy, and the people of Georgia deserve better.”

Rich said the committee avoided pairing incumbents whenever possible, but some matches were unavoidable because of the high population growth in metro Atlanta and the need to comply with federal laws.

Republican Reps. Danny Mathis and Alan Powell look over the new maps. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder 

“Coming from one of the four pairings in this map, if I can set aside my personal ambitions and my personal feelings to do what’s best for the state of Georgia, I think that each and every one of us can do that,” Burchett said. “I’m appealing to you, just from a personal perspective, just to say, ‘Hey, this is not about you. This is about the state of Georgia. This is about your constituents. This is about the future of Georgia.’”

Two Republicans broke ranks and voted against the plan, Rep. Philip Singleton of Sharpsburg and Rep. Charlice Byrd of Woodstock.

Singleton’s district was the topic of much discussion at House Committee hearings, with dozens of sign-bearing protesters lamenting its proposed transformation from a district that voted 72% for Donald Trump to one that voted 68% for Joe Biden.

Singleton made one last dramatic plea from the House floor for his colleagues to vote the measure down.

“If you allow your voice to be silenced, or you willingly submit your voice to a select few, you are complicit in the destruction of our republic, you are creating a functional oligarchy,” he said. “All that is required for evil to prevail is for good men to do nothing. I want everyone in this room to have an equal voice.”

Democrats were equal in their opposition to their plan, but they took a different tack in their criticism.

Decatur Democrat Rep. Mary Margaret Oliver said the map violates the Voting Rights Act by dividing minority communities.

“The Stonecrest community is split into three separate districts,” she said. “My city of Decatur, where I’ve practiced law for a good while, if I had the corner office, which I don’t have the corner office, I could look at three different districts. The city of Decatur is four square miles. It has four representatives. The district line separating House District 91 and House District 116 divides the community of Stockbridge, the Groveway community in Roswell. A community of African American churches that vote and pray together has been divided by a split precinct.”

Garden City Democratic Rep. Carl Gilliard criticized the Republican-led committee for calling a vote Wednesday on a version of a map that was publicly unveiled just two days earlier.

“Of all the public comments recorded, a vast majority came before the release of the map that we are voting on today,” he said. “Communities across Georgia learned for the first time last week exactly how their representation would change. And in response, they were given two options, come to the state Capitol in the middle of the workday, or go on the portal and put your information in.”

Rich said public feedback found its way into the map by way of summer listening sessions, online comments and Capitol hearings earlier this week, and she criticized Democrats for not getting involved earlier in the process.

“In addition to the 88-plus hours that I made available, in the four separate emails that went out to every member of this body, I also offered to meet with each and every one of you at any other time, if none of those times that I suggested were convenient for you,” she said. “Some people did take me up on that. Most Democrats didn’t, and that’s unfortunate for their districts, and for their constituents.”

The Senate passed its map Tuesday, also along party lines, and the House Redistricting Committee gave its approval to the plan Wednesday, setting it up for a vote from the full body. Once both chambers approve the other’s plan, they will await Gov. Brian Kemp’s signature, and the Legislature will turn to its final task of the special session, redrawing the state’s 14 congressional district boundaries.

Patient safety ratings for Georgia hospitals show decline since spring

About 20 percent of Georgia hospitals got an “A’’ in the Leapfrog Group’s autumn patient safety ratings, released Wednesday.

That’s a lower percentage than in the spring when 31.6 percent earned the top grade.

The safety grades come out twice a year. They are meant to provide safety information to consumers so they can make informed decisions about where to seek care. Hospitals that get high grades heavily promote those results to potential patients and clients.

The ratings reflect performance on more than 30 evidence-based measures of patient safety, including for the first time, post-operative sepsis, blood leakage, and kidney injury.

Overall, sepsis in all settings, including post-operative sepsis, kills more than 270,000 people a year and is the costliest condition in U.S. hospitals, the Leapfrog Group said. Black people are twice as likely as white people to be diagnosed with sepsis.

Georgia’s “A’’ hospitals include smaller rural facilities as well as large urban and suburban medical centers. Piedmont Healthcare, the largest hospital system in the state, had six facilities make the top grade.

Here’s a link to the grades

Nationally, 32 percent of hospitals earned an “A’’ grade. The five states with the highest percentages of “A” hospitals are Virginia, North Carolina, Idaho, Massachusetts and Colorado.

The grades are compiled using information from the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the Leapfrog Hospital Survey and other supplemental data sources.

MORE: Habersham Medical Center and other area hospital grades

Founded in 2000 by large employers, the Leapfrog Group is a national nonprofit focused on improving the quality and safety of American health care.

“As the pandemic continues, we all have heightened awareness of the importance of hospitals in our communities and in our lives,” Leah Binder, president and CEO of the Leapfrog Group, said in a statement. “It is critical that all hospitals put patient safety first. Now we have more information on more hospitals than ever before, so people can protect themselves and their families.”

Amaryllis

Does it seem like the holidays become a blur? One day it’s Halloween and then in the blink of an eye, it’s Thanksgiving and Christmas. The retailers who get a jump start on putting out their displays confuse us at times when you walk in and see almost all three at once.

Sometimes planning ahead is a good thing. Stop for a minute and think about what you want to be in bloom for Christmas. If it’s amaryllis, plant a bulb now!

This chart gives you an idea of when you’re amaryllis will bloom relative to the planting date. It usually takes six to eight weeks for amaryllis to bloom, but check the label on the variety you have — some bloom faster, and some slower.

Planting date Bloom timeframe
Oct. 15 Nov. 19-Dec. 10
Nov. 1 Dec. 6-27
Nov. 15 Dec. 20-Jan. 10
Dec. 1 Jan. 6-28
Dec. 15 Jan. 19-Feb. 9
Jan. 1 Feb. 6-26
Jan. 15 Feb. 19-March 12
Feb. 1 March 8-29
Feb. 15 April 5-26

 

Amaryllis is a stunning addition to your holiday displays. The blooms are enormous. They make a statement! They come in a variety of colors from solid to bi-colored.

Easy, breezy, beautiful amaryllis

Few bulbs are easier to grow than amaryllis and few bloom with greater exuberance and beauty. Just plant the bulb in good potting soil, water regularly, and provide bright, indirect light. A support stake is handy for keeping the blooms upright, but little else is required. Most varieties will begin blooming six to eight weeks after planting; some can take as long as ten weeks.

If your amaryllis is not already potted, plant each amaryllis bulb in a 6-8″ pot. Heavy pots are preferable because lightweight pots may tip over under the weight of the blooms.

Plant the bulb, pointed-end-up, in potting mix. Pack the soil gently around the bulb so approximately one-third of the bulb remains above the soil line.

Place the pot in a location that receives bright, indirect light. Water sparingly until you see about 2″ of new growth. From then on, water regularly. As the plant grows, turn the pot periodically to encourage the flower stalks to grow straight. Flower buds will appear at the top of each stalk, followed by a dramatic floral display. To prolong the blooms, keep the pot out of direct sunlight.

Don’t be alarmed if your amaryllis bulbs sprout leaves first, and then the flower stalk emerges a little later. That’s what many varieties do. Others send up the flower stalk first, followed by the leaves. You should see the flower stalk peeking up between the leaves soon.

A rainbow of varieties

Not only do amaryllis come in a variety of colors, they are also available in single and double blooms. With a 7″ flower, they definitely will put on a show stopping performance in your holiday display.

You should be able to find what you are looking for at Lowe’s of Cornelia or any other local nurseries. For some of the more exotic varieties you can always order online. One of the best sites is www.amaryllis.com.

Bear in mind if you order online, some of these varieties are on the pricey side and shipping is additional.

Get a head start on the holidays today by planting an amaryllis bulb.

 

Broome/Thomson placed 8th to lead TFS at Clarks Hill tournament

Jack Thomson & DJ Broome (photo by TFS Bass Fishing)

The TFS bass fishing team hit the lake in the Clarks Hill tournament on November 6, as 93 teams competed in the senior tournament and over 50 in the junior division.

A pair of TFS teams competed, with middle schoolers DJ Broome and Jack Thomson leading TFS with an eighth-place finish in the junior division. The duo caught five fish, weighing in at 7.04 pounds.

Meanwhile, the high school tandem of Haygen James and Koen Eller placed 79th with one fish at 1.98 pounds. This marked the second tournament of the season for TFS, who compete next in February 2022.