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G. Donald Quinn

G. Donald Quinn, age 91 of Clarkesville, passed away December 4, 2025.

Born on September 13, 1934, in Atlanta, Georgia, Donald was the son of the late Sterling and Alice Trimbel Quinn. He spent his entire career in public safety, serving the community of East Point, Georgia, in the fire service. Don retired as the Assistant Fire Chief for the City of East Point. He was an avid fisherman who loved to trout fish, and he was an animal lover. Donald was a member of Fairfield Baptist Church.

In addition to his parents, Mr. Quinn is preceded in death by his wife, Carolyn Lynn Quinn and sons John Allen Harris and Ronald Lee Harris. He was the last surviving member of his immediate family.

Survivors include son and daughter-in-law, Don and Maria Harris of Flowery Branch, grandchildren Crystal Tirado (Miguel), Robert Harris (Kayla), and great-grandchildren Landon Roberson, Hayden Roberson, Summer Cloud, and Anna Harris.

Funeral services will be held at 1:00 PM on Saturday, December 13, 2025, at Fairfield Baptist Church with Rev. Mark Wheeler and Dr. Keith Allison, officiating. Interment will follow the service in the church cemetery. The family will receive friends at the funeral home on Friday, December 12, 2025 from 7-9 PM.

An online guestbook is available and may be viewed at HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

Arrangements are in the care and professional direction of Hillside Memorial Chapel & Gardens, Clarkesville. 706-754-6256

Christmas in Cornelia celebration Dec. 6

Hayrides through Cornelia's City Park will allow visitors to come check out the light display. (photo submitted)

CORNELIA, Ga. – Downtown Cornelia will glow with Christmas lights, music, and family activities Saturday as the city hosts its annual Christmas in Cornelia festival from 4 to 9 p.m. The popular holiday celebration is expected to draw large crowds and will include food vendors, shopping, children’s activities and several festive photo opportunities.

RELATED Cornelia welcomes holiday season with annual tree lighting

Santa Claus will be available for pictures during the Christmas in Cornelia festival Saturday. (photo submitted)

This year’s festival features as holiday vendor market, themed treats and drinks, and a variety of local food vendors along North Main and Front streets. A dedicated kids zone will be set up near Clarkesville St., while hayrides through the Christmas lights at Cornelia City Park will depart from the Train Depot area.

Families will also have several opportunities for photos with favorite holiday characters. Santa, the Grinch, and the Ice Queen will each have  designated meet-and-greet areas throughout downtown.

City officials say Christmas in Cornelia remains one of the community’s most anticipated traditions, bringing residents and visitors together for an evening of local shopping, seasonal entertainment, and holiday cheer.

Road closures

To prepare for the event, the Cornelia Police Department will begin shutting down portions of downtown at 1 p.m.Hodges St., Clarkesville St., and the Train Depot parking lot will be closed for the remainder of the day, and drivers are encouraged to adjust travel plans and use alternate routes. Parking will be available in several lots surrounding downtown.

Carver in the hunt for back-to-back titles

The Carver Tigers are headed to the GHSA Class 2A Football State Championship game after a dominant semifinal win against Burke County. This marks Carver’s return to the state title game under former UGA star Jarvis Jones’s coaching. The Tigers are the reigning champs and will face Hapeville as they go for back-to-back titles.

The GHSA state championships will be played at Mercedes-Benz Stadium the week of Dec. 15-17.

State championship matchups

Class 6A: Buford v Carrollton

Class 5A: Gainesville v either Thomas County or Roswell (semifinal 12/11 @7:30pm)

Class 4A: Creekside v Benedictine Military

Class 3A: Jefferson v Sandy Creek

Class 2A: Hapeville v Carver, Columbus

Class A Division I: Toombs County v Worth County

Class A Division II: Bowdon v Lincoln County

Private: Hebron Christian v Calvary Day School

State semifinal scores

Benedictine Military 28, Marist 20
Bowdon 45, Clinch County 6
Buford (GA) 39, Valdosta 7
Calvary Day 24, Fellowship Christian School 7
Carrollton 48, North Gwinnett 21
Carver-Columbus 33, Burke County 14
Creekside 35, Kell 6
Gainesville 42, Hughes 30
Hapeville 24, Americus Sumter 18, OT
Hebron Christian Academy 50, Greater Atlanta Christian 24
Jefferson 17, West Laurens 13
Lincoln County 34, Early County 0
Sandy Creek 42, LaGrange 24
Toombs County 40, Heard County 14
Worth County 32, Pepperell 12

Holiday Market and the world of the Neeps brighten the Mason-Scharfenstein Museum of Art

Jan Walker, beloved local artist and author greets fans and signs books at the Holiday Market inside the Mason-Scharfenstein Museum of Art in Demorest, Georgia. (Carly McCurry/NowHabersham.com)

The Mason-Scharfenstein Museum of Art glowed like a coal stove against the gray December afternoon. Students and townsfolk drifted in from Demorest’s square, shaking off the cold as the old brick building filled with the smell of pastry and fresh coffee.

The Kingdom of Neep at the Mason-Scharfenstein Museum of Art

Local artist and art teacher, Jan Walker, author of the “Kingdom of Neep” and related titles, stands before her charming work on display at the Mason-Scharfenstein Museum of Art in Demorest, Georgia. (Carly McCurry/Now Habersham)

Tables of pottery, yarn creatures, and hand-drawn prints lined the gallery floor, but the center of gravity was the legendary Jan Walker, who sat at a table with a small stack of her published works, her precious Neep series.

After a brief introduction, Mrs. Walker guided me to a drawing of two hands, one from 1993 and one from this year. A Neep sat in each palm, the small creature she invented almost forty years ago while teaching children to draw. The older hand strained with age, the fingers bent from arthritis. She said she liked that one best because it told the full truth of her life. She has written five books and taught art to generations in this corner of Georgia, and she still laughs with a joy that settles in every line of her face. When she read her book aloud, the room filled with people who had loved her work for years. You could see at once that the pleasure belonged to everyone in the room.

A holiday market of student creators

Students filled the room with items they themselves created. Mackenzie Williams and Cooper Williams set their pieces on a shared table. Cooper studies neuroscience, and Mackenzie studies criminal justice. They make art with an eye for play and a devotion to detail. They said they craft for the simple pleasure of making something with their hands.

Cooper Williams and Mackenzie Williams create playful, adorable creatures at the holiday market. (Carly McCurry/Now Habersham)

Lizzy Eades, a freshman skilled in the art of jewelry production, ran her first-ever booth. She calls her business Crafts by Liz. Looking for a place to begin, she said she chose this market because it felt safe enough to take a risk. Eades sold whimsical earrings of her own design, perfect for a woman who likes to celebrate the season – and her ears.

Nearby, Brianna Barner stitched her embroidery with the laser precision of a scientist. She works her craft under the name BB Embroidery Design and sells attractive, girly pieces that call to my pastel, embroidery-loving heart. She studies forensic science, but that doesn’t stop her from pursuing other interests outside of her field.

Light from the gallery windows fell across the art in soft panes, and the hum of voices rose as the evening passed and the crowd grew and shrank by turns. Shoppers lingered at tables to hear stories behind the work, and many left with small bags that held gifts – no two alike. For my part, I lingered beside Anjel Lee of Farmhouse Provisions, acquiesing ot my initial craving for one of her Pop-Tarts, then descending into a madness of Christmas cookies and apple turnovers.

Anjel Lee tempts passerby with scrumptious and unique pastries and treats at the Holiday Market at the Mason-Scharfenstein Museum of Art in Demorest. (Carly McCurry/Now Habersham)

Rebecca Brantly knows how to draw a crowd

The museum’s halls usually hold the finished work of seasoned artists, but for two evenings, the space is a workshop. A place where young creators test the life of the working artist. Museum director and professor Rebecca Brantley knows how to draw people in. Visitors wander over from Holden Oversoul Kitchen and Oyster Bar with cocktails in hand, lingering at the booths as if the museum were an extension of the restaurant. Many stop to note the welcoming hours and the steady run of new initiatives that have brought fresh energy into the museum this year.

Davis Knight of Day and Knight stands beside his excellent pottery. (Carly McCurry / Now Habersham)

The Holiday Market will open again on Saturday, Dec. 6, from 3 to 7 p.m. at the Mason-Scharfenstein Museum of Art in downtown Demorest. Shrug on a coat, pick up a Christmas-themed coffee at Farmhouse Coffee or a glass of wine from Holden Oversoul, and take in the downtown decorations before stepping into the museum. There you can browse for unique Christmas gifts, support college students at the start of their careers, and enjoy the museum’s remarkable art.

Championship week: No CFP worries for Big Ten; anxiety reigns elsewhere

Ohio State head coach Ryan Day, left, speaks with quarterback Julian Sayin during the first half of an NCAA college football game against Michigan, Saturday, Nov. 29, 2025, in Ann Arbor, Mich. (AP Photo/Ryan Sun)

The conference championship games are upon us, providing the College Football Playoff committee one last look at contenders for the 12-team field and requiring anxious coaches and players on bubble teams to keep the antacids handy.

The Big Ten will be the only conference with a sense of calm this weekend with No. 1 Ohio State and No. 2 Indiana squaring off in Indianapolis. Those two unbeaten teams are locks for the playoffs, and even the loser could receive a top-four seed and the first-round bye that goes with it. Oregon will be the third Big Ten playoff team.

This is where it could get messy.

Georgia quarterback Gunner Stockton (14) runs out of the pocket against Georgia Tech during the second half of an NCAA college football game, Friday, Nov. 28, 2025, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

Georgia will be in the playoff win or lose against Alabama in the Southeastern Conference game. If Alabama loses — after beating the Bulldogs in the regular season — the committee will have to decide whether to let a three-loss Crimson Tide join Georgia, Mississippi and Texas A&M from the SEC. Oklahoma, Texas and Vanderbilt also will plead their cases.

Texas Tech should secure a top-four seed if it beats BYU for a second time this season in the Big 12. A BYU win likely would give the Big 12 two playoff teams.

The Atlantic Coast Conference game between Virginia and Duke could have ramifications for the Group of Five. Virginia would be in the playoff with a win and out with a loss.

James Madison, if it beats Troy in the Sun Belt on Friday night, would be pulling hard for Duke to beat Virginia. A Duke win probably allows JMU to sneak in as the fifth highest-ranked conference champion, ahead of what would be the five-loss Blue Devils. That doesn’t mean the ACC would necessarily get shut out. The CFP committee could give an at-large spot to Miami,

The first, and maybe only, G5 bid will go to the winner between North Texas and Tulane in the American Conference.

Finally, there’s idle independent Notre Dame. The Fighting Irish lost their first two games of the season to ranked opponents (Miami and Texas A&M) by a total of four points and have been dominant while rolling off 10 straight wins but slipped one spot to No. 10 in this week’s CFP rankings.

Games to watch

No. 3 Georgia (11-1) takes on No. 9 Alabama (10-2) for the SEC championship in Atlanta, Saturday, 4 p.m. ET (ABC & ESPN). The last time these two teams faced off, Alabama beat Georgia 24-21, handing the Bulldogs their only loss of the season.

No. 2 Indiana (12-0, No. 2 CFP) vs. No. 1 Ohio State (12-0, No. 1 CFP) in Indianapolis, Saturday, 8 p.m. ET (Fox). The nation’s first 1-2 matchup in two seasons is a clash of the high-scoring Indiana offense against a Buckeyes defense that could go down as one of the best all-time.

Never mind the Hoosiers haven’t beaten Ohio State since 1988. This isn’t your father’s or grandfather’s Indiana. The Hoosiers were 10-0 and on their way to the CFP last year when they lost 38-15 to the Buckeyes in a top-five matchup, the only meeting since Indiana hired Curt Cignetti after the 2023 season.

Heisman watch

The 48-hour voting window for the Heisman Trophy opens Saturday at 5 p.m. ET, and based on wagering markets and media surveys, it appears to be a three-man race among quarterbacks Fernando Mendoza of Indiana, Julian Sayin of Ohio State and Diego Pavia of Vanderbilt. Notre Dame running back Jeremiyah Love is in line to be a finalist.

BetMGM Sportsbook listed Mendoza as the favorite, just aheaed of Sayin and Pavia.

Voters undecided between Mendoza and Sayin will get one more look at them in the Big Ten championship game.

Four area teams advance to championship round

Northeast Georgia teams had a dominant night, with Buford, Gainesville, Hebron Christian, and Jefferson all securing their shot at a title.

Buford and Gainesville rolled past their opponents with high-powered offenses, while Hebron Christian delivered one of the biggest scoring performances of the evening, defeating Greater Atlanta Christian, 50-24.

Jefferson won a tight, defensive battle against West Laurens to advance to the finals. The Dragons next take on Sandy Creek in the Class 3A title game in Atlanta.

The GHSA state championships will be played at Mercedes-Benz Stadium the week of Dec. 15-17.

State championship matchups

Class 6A: Buford v Carrollton

Class 5A: Gainesville v either Thomas County or Roswell (semifinal 12/11 @7:30pm)

Class 4A: Creekside v Benedictine Military

Class 3A: Jefferson v Sandy Creek

Class 2A: Hapeville v Carver, Columbus

Class A Division I: Toombs County v Worth County

Class A Division II: Bowdon v Lincoln County

Private: Hebron Christian v Calvary Day School

State semifinal scores

Benedictine Military 28, Marist 20
Bowdon 45, Clinch County 6
Buford (GA) 39, Valdosta 7
Calvary Day 24, Fellowship Christian School 7
Carrollton 48, North Gwinnett 21
Carver-Columbus 33, Burke County 14
Creekside 35, Kell 6
Gainesville 42, Hughes 30
Hapeville 24, Americus Sumter 18, OT
Hebron Christian Academy 50, Greater Atlanta Christian 24
Jefferson 17, West Laurens 13
Lincoln County 34, Early County 0
Sandy Creek 42, LaGrange 24
Toombs County 40, Heard County 14
Worth County 32, Pepperell 12

Dragons hit repeat on trip to the Benz, as defense shines [VIDEO]

Back-to-back trips to The Benz! The #1 Dragons (13-1) won a 17-13 slobber-knocker at home against #4 West Laurens (13-1) to make it to the title game for the second year in a row.

A defensive battle early on finally caved when Darren Pinkard scored on a 19-yard run late in the first quarter to give the Dragons an early lead.

The very next play from scrimmage, though, would negate that, as JD Hogan raced in on an 80-yd TD to knot the game with 38 seconds left in the quarter.

The Dragons consistently had good starting field possession and cashed in midway through the second after opening at the 19-yard line. Colton Grant found pay dirt on a 1-yard keeper with less than six minutes on the clock for the 14-7 reclaimed lead.

WATCH Coach Nolan post-game interview

Again, the Raiders had an answer, this time on defense, when Jayce Blash made a house call after lucking into a tipped ball for the pick-six. The extra point was no good, leaving Jefferson up 14-13. The Dragons had another golden opportunity inside the 30, but Shannon Adkins picked off Grant just before the break.

The Dragons got a field goal midway through the third when Taylor McCall split the uprights from 39 yards out. That had Jefferson up 17-13 heading into the final quarter and with the ball. The drive stalled on a turnover on downs at the 21, where the Dragons attempted a 4th-and-2.

In the final minutes, West Laurens failed on a 4th-and-1 from their own 30, turning it back to Jefferson to run out most of the clock. Jefferson dragged it out to the 2-yard line, electing to turn it over on downs with only 22 seconds on the clock.

A few harmless heaves later, the Dragons won when the horn hit zero. Pinkard had the lone TD for Jefferson, while Mack Gaddis was unbelievable defensively, along with the entire unit.

 

Trump order ending birthright citizenship to be argued at US Supreme Court

The U.S. Supreme Court on Oct. 9, 2024. (Jane Norman/States Newsroom)

(States Newsroom) — The U.S. Supreme Court said Friday justices will hear a case to decide if President Donald Trump’s order to end birthright citizenship is constitutional.

The court agreed to hear a case, before it is decided in a lower court, that deals with the Constitution’s 14th Amendment, which grants citizenship to almost everyone born in the United States. The amendment’s birthright citizenship clause has been used to give citizenship to the children of immigrants in the country without legal authorization or on a temporary basis.

While a schedule for arguments has not yet been released by the court, it’s likely the case would be heard sometime in early 2026.

The Trump administration argued in its petition to the court that the amendment, which was adopted in 1868, was meant to apply to newly freed slaves. It was not meant to provide citizenship to the children of immigrants without legal status, Solicitor General D. John Sauer wrote.

“Long after the Clause’s adoption, the mistaken view that birth on U.S. territory confers citizenship on anyone subject to the regulatory reach of U.S. law became pervasive, with destructive consequences,” Sauer wrote in the September petition.

The petition also sought Supreme Court review of a related challenge to the order by the states of Washington, Arizona, Illinois and Oregon. Friday’s court order did not grant a hearing on that case.

Trump signed an executive order on Jan. 20 seeking to redefine the birthright citizenship clause to exclude the children of immigrants in the country without legal authority or only temporarily. Democratic-led states and advocacy groups swiftly sued.

Courts have largely blocked enforcement of the order, although the Supreme Court in June allowed it to go into effect in the states that had not sued to preserve the right.

In a Friday afternoon statement, the American Civil Liberties Union, a leading civil rights group, noted that several federal judges had blocked enforcement and predicted the Supreme Court would preserve birthright citizenship.

“No president can change the 14th Amendment’s fundamental promise of citizenship,” Cecillia Wang, ACLU’s national legal director, said. “For over 150 years, it has been the law and our national tradition that everyone born on U.S. soil is a citizen from birth. The federal courts have unanimously held that President Trump’s executive order is contrary to the Constitution, a Supreme Court decision from 1898, and a law enacted by Congress. We look forward to putting this issue to rest once and for all in the Supreme Court this term.”

‘He knows God hears him’: Kayden Sorrells, age 9, battles cancer and the fourth grade

Kayden is a superhero (Photo by Weathered Willow Imagery, from Angel Millwood Sorrells, The Cute North Georgian Magazine)

Kayden Sorrells appears in his hospital photograph with a wide, steady smile that rises from behind thick glasses. His posture in the picture carries the courage that has marked his nine years. He will turn ten in March. He stands a little smaller than most children his age, yet the image shows a boy who meets the world face forward and a calm that does not bend to the storm.

Months remembered in fragments

Kayden gives a thumbs-up at his doctor’s appointment. (Angel Millwood Sorrells, The Cute North Georgian Magazine)

His mother, Angel Millwood, watched from the other side of the camera, her heart expanding at the sight of her son. She has learned to measure progress in mercies that arrive like manna, enough to sustain her each day.

Kayden reads with the help of a magnifying projector that enlarges each line on a book or worksheet. He leans close, tracks each shape, and keeps pace with his class.

The work takes time, but he does not complain. He knows the reason for these challenges rests in a story that began before his first birthday.

Angel remembers those months in fragments. Kayden’s eyes never held still. By three months, they moved in constant motion. His head grew too fast. By seven months, he could not stop vomiting. A pediatrician missed the signs, and the tumor on his brain pressed against his spine before anyone realized the danger. When they reached Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, nurses and doctors took swift action. A CT scan revealed specks across his brain. An MRI uncovered three tumors on his spine, seven on his head, and more small marks that the doctors monitored with care.

A biopsy gave Angel the news no parent expects. Kayden had a cancer that no other child had been diagnosed with. Specialists in Colorado gathered to decide how to treat it. In December 2016, he began oral chemotherapy, swallowing fourteen pills at a time. The treatment lasted six months. When the next MRI came, only one tumor remained, the one near his eye and deep within his head. That is the tumor he still fights.

Kayden became one of the first children to receive Diraphenid. The drug was provided to him without cost. After his case, other children began to develop this specific cancer and consequently gained access to the same treatment. Now he takes Teflinar. The cancer carries the name A-Typical Ganglioma. It does not bring seizures, but it limits his vision and adds strain to everyday.

Kayden riding a horse (Photo: Angel Millwood Sorrells, The Cute North Georgian Magazine)

Angel calls him “smart as a whip.” Kayden holds facts the way other children hold toys. He asks questions, studies maps, remembers long strings of information. His legal blindness shapes the way he moves through the world, yet it does not blunt his curiosity or dull the way he learns.

Make-A-Wish built a two-story playground in the yard of their home. It has a spiral slide, a play kitchen, and two swings. Kayden calls it his fort. He climbs its steps with the alacrity only a kid can muster.

Angel believes their home, their survival, and their path through these years did not happen by chance. She remembers one night with clarity. It was three in the morning. Kayden was in an MRI machine. She feared he would not live. Anger rose in her throat. She told God she did not understand this suffering; she experienced burning hatred. A television in the waiting room shifted from a vacuum commercial to a sermon. Joel Osteen stood on the screen and said, “I know the medical report did not go how you planned. But God has got His hands on it. When you are resting, God is working, so rest so God can work.”

Pediatric cancer services in Georgia

Kayden Sorrells, Nathan Sorrells, Angel Millwood Sorrells, and Cody Sorrells (Photo from Angel Millwood Sorrells, by Weathered Willow Imagery, The Cute North Georgian Magazine)

Families in Northeast Georgia who receive a pediatric cancer diagnosis often begin their care through regional pediatric practices and specialty clinics, but the heart of treatment for serious conditions, including brain and spinal tumors, takes place within Georgia’s large children’s hospitals. These systems serve as the bulwark for the state’s network of care and provide the multidisciplinary teams needed for complex conditions—oncologists, neurosurgeons, radiologists, therapists, genetic counselors, and long-term survivorship specialists who walk with families from diagnosis through recovery or ongoing management.

Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta (CHOA) serves as the primary hub for pediatric oncology in the region. CHOA’s Aflac Cancer and Blood Disorders Center is one of the largest pediatric cancer programs in the country, drawing families from across North Georgia and surrounding states. Children receive access to cutting-edge therapies, clinical trials, neurosurgical teams for tumor removal, and coordinated long-term care. For many families in Northeast Georgia, CHOA becomes the center of their medical world, even when they live an hour or more away.

The work of nonprofit organizations also plays a vital role in the lives of these families. The Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation, based in the Southeast, stands as one of the nation’s leading organizations dedicated solely to the needs of children with brain tumors and their families. The Foundation funds research for safer treatments, offers family support programs, provides educational resources, and assists with the many practical burdens that come with a pediatric cancer diagnosis. Its outreach programs help families navigate appointments, transportation, financial strain, and the emotional upheaval that follows a child’s diagnosis. For many parents, the Foundation becomes a bridge, connecting them to information, specialists, and a community that understands their fears.

Kayden is a superhero (Photo from Angel Millwood Sorrells, by Weathered Willow Imagery, The Cute North Georgian Magazine)

Across the state, Georgia continues to expand its network of specialized pediatric services. Survivorship clinics help children transition into adolescence and adulthood with careful monitoring for late effects of treatment. Palliative care teams offer comfort and symptom support at every stage of illness. Mental health professionals address trauma, anxiety, and school reintegration. These services reflect a growing recognition that pediatric cancer care extends far beyond chemotherapy; it involves the whole child and the whole family.

In Northeast Georgia, families may travel to Atlanta for specialized treatment, but they rely on the strength of their home communities to sustain them. Churches organize meal trains. Local nonprofits offer financial assistance. Schools support siblings and create stability amid crisis. Pediatric cancer care in Georgia is a medical system, but it’s also a web of compassion that stretches from large hospital centers to small rural towns, cradling families in times of strife and sorrow.

A young man who lives his faith

Kayden was born on Easter Sunday in a leap year. Angel has carried meaning in that timing ever since. She attends Chestatee Worship Center in Dawsonville. Kayden prays for every stranger he sees in trouble. When he passes a wreck, he bows his head and speaks a prayer for the people inside. He tells others God will heal him. He believes it without hesitation.

“Kayden walks his faith out,” Angel says. “He knows God hears him.”

Georgia Power says it needs a huge increase in power capacity to meet data center demand

FILE - Plant Bowen, commonly known as Bowen Steam Plant, is a Coal power station, operating, Monday, Dec. 14, 2020, in Euharlee, Ga. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart, File)

ATLANTA (AP) — With data centers flooding into Georgia, utility regulators face a big decision: Should they let Georgia Power Co. spend more than $15 billion to increase its electricity capacity by 50% over the next six years to serve computer complexes? Or could the utility overbuild and stick other ratepayers with the bill?

It would be one of the biggest build-outs in the U.S. to meet the insatiable electricity demandfrom developers of artificial intelligence. The largest subsidiary of Atlanta-based Southern Co., Georgia Power said in testimony filed last month that the build-out will boost the state’s economy and “allow Georgia to contribute to the nation’s focus on the global importance of artificial intelligence and the digital economy.”

“Given the number of companies interested in doing business in Georgia and the amount of customer load with signed contracts or in advanced discussions, it is important to continue moving forward with support for this great growth opportunity,” company officials said in testimony.

But electricity bills have emerged as a potent political issue in Georgia and nationwide, with grassroots opposition to data centers partly based on fears that other customers will subsidize the power demands of technology behemoths.

“I think what’s happening in Georgia is in some sense a perfect microcosm of what’s happening nationwide,” said Charles Hua, executive director of Powerlines, a nonprofit group that seeks to increase public involvement in utility regulation. “You’re seeing electricity demand grow at the fastest rate in decades, and you’re seeing electricity prices rise at the fastest rate in decades.”

RELATED Athens-Clarke County Commission pauses new data centers

A growing political issue

Electricity costs were a key issue in last month’s elections for governor in New Jersey and Virginia, both data center hot spots. On Tuesday in North Carolina, Democratic Gov. Josh Stein cited concerns about data centers as one reason for opposing a 15% rate increase sought by Duke Energy for two utilities.

In Georgia, the five elected Republicans on the Public Service Commission will decide on Georgia Power’s proposal weeks after voters delivered a stinging rebuke to GOP leadership, ousting two incumbent Republicans on the panel in favor of Democrats by overwhelming margins. Those two Democrats won in campaigns that centered on six Georgia Power rate increases commissioners have allowed in recent years, even though the company agreed to a three-year rate freeze in July.

After hearings next week, commissioners are scheduled to take a final vote Dec. 19. The two new Democrats won’t take office until January and current commissioners denied a request by opponents to postpone the decision until then.

Brionte McCorkle of Georgia Conservation Voters, a group that advocates for carbon-free energy and supported the Democrats, fears the vote will be one last gift from the all-Republican commission to Georgia Power.

“It would be a slap in the face for the commission to rush through this proposal, and give the power company everything it wants,” said McCorkle “It’s just not listening to what the people have said loud and clear.”

80% of new capacity for data centers

FILE — A banner hangs during a ceremony announcing a proposed $300 million expansion of Google’s data center operations Tuesday, June 2, 2015, in Lithia Springs, Ga. (AP Photo/David Goldman, file)

Georgia Power, with 2.8 million customers, projects the largest percentage increase in electricity demand over the next five years of any region but Texas. That’s according to an analysis by power consultant Grid Strategies of forecasts filed with federal officials. The utility says it needs 10,000 megawatts of new capacity — enough to power 4 million Georgia homes — saying 80% of that would power data centers. That’s in addition to the 3,000 megawatts the commission approved in 2024 after an unusual mid-cycle request by Georgia Power.

Whether the forecast is accurate and who will pay the bill if data center customers don’t materialize is at the heart of the decision. Commissioners in January adopted rules meant to make sure data centers pay the costs of building new power plants and transmission lines they need. But if Georgia Power overbuilds and there are no data centers to pay, other customers could shoulder those costs.

“The whole argument is premised on the idea that if we get all these new customers, then we can take costs and spread it out over more people and therefore put downward pressure on prices,” Hua said. “Well, if you don’t actually end up getting all those customers and you built all this new infrastructure, then you could see a scenario where you actually drive bills through the roof even more.”

The ultimate potential costs are unknown because Georgia Power’s estimates are partially a trade secret that the company won’t release. For example, the $15 billion price tag only covers construction costs for 80% of the current 10,000 megawatt request, and it doesn’t include any of the borrowing costs, which customers must also pay. The price of the 3,000 megawatts approved in 2024 remains entirely secret. Because of the rate freeze, ultimate costs won’t become clear until 2028, the next time commissioners set electricity rates.

Will customers pay?

Public Service Commission staff members who have analyzed the request say Georgia Power will need $3.4 billion a year in additional revenue by 2031, which could equal out to $20 a month for a residential customer. The company replied that such a claim is “flatly incorrect.”

“These customers pay upfront the full costs of serving them, commit to long-term contracts, and provide financial guarantees,” said spokesperson Matthew Kent. “That means residential and small business customers are protected from cost increases tied to these projects.”

Staff members recommended that the commission allow Georgia Power to build capacity for new large customers only after they have signed contracts starting with 3,100 megawatts of capacity and up to 7,400 megawatts total for contracts signed by March 16. That recommendation would also allow the commission to avoid approving contracts for some new multibillion-dollar natural gas-fired power plants. Costs for such construction have risen sharply, partly because equipment manufacturers are having trouble meeting demand.

The company reacted sharply against that recommendation, saying “it would significantly inhibit” its ability to sign up new data centers, hurt economic development, and reduce the opportunity to lower rates.

The company and staff could negotiate a settlement before the Dec. 19 vote. McCorkle said any outcome should focus on protecting customers.

“What we don’t want is a form of corporate welfare, where individual citizens are paying for the benefit of big mega corporations like Meta and Amazon,” she said.

NGCF awards more than $545K in community grants to North Georgia nonprofits

The North Georgia Community Foundation celebrated the awarding of $545,200 in community grants at a ceremony Friday. (photo submitted)

GAINESVILLE, Ga. – The North Georgia Community Foundation (NGCF) has awarded $545,200 in community grants to 40 nonprofits across the region, continuing its annual efforts to support organizations that serve some of North Georgia’s most critical needs.

The grants, announced Friday during NGCF’s Community Grants Celebration, will support programs spanning health, human services, education, housing, the arts and other community priorities. Funding is provided through the NGCF Community Fund, a permanent philanthropic resource sustained by decades of donor contributions.

NGCF VP of Nonprofit Engagement Margaux Dolenc (Photo courtesy NGCF)

“The nonprofits awarded today are the heartbeat of North Georgia,” said NGCF’s Vice President of Nonprofit Engagement Margaux Dolenc. “Their dedication, innovation, and compassion touch lives every single day. Funding through our great programs and the generosity of our fundholders reflects how deeply we believe in their missions and how committed we are to strengthening the vital work happening across our region.”

Community grant distributions

This year’s award marks one of NGCF’s largest community grant distributions to date. The foundation last year awarded $200,000 in Opportunity Grants, including support for several agencies serving Habersham and Hall counties.

In addition to grant awards, NGCF unveiled its 2026 GROW Nonprofit Education Schedule. The GROW program provides year-round professional development for nonprofit leaders, board members, and staff. Next year’s expanding schedule includes new sessions created in response to feedback from local nonprofits, with a continued focus on financial sustainability, governance, and organizational leadership

A full list of 2025 Community Grant recipients and details on NGCF’s grant programs are available at www.ngcf.org/ngcf-grant-programs. Information about the 2026 GROW schedule can be found at www.ngcf.org/grow.

VIEW 2024 recipients

Gainesville police identify suspect in attempted bank robbery

(NowHabersham.com)

GAINESVILLE, Ga.- A suspect is in custody after Gainesville police stopped a robbery in progress Thursday afternoon at a Wells Fargo branch on Browns Bridge Road.

Officers responded shortly before noon to a report of an active robbery at the bank, according to the Gainesville Police Department. When they arrived, they encountered the suspect inside and took him into custody without incident.

Police say the quick arrest prevented the robbery from being carried out.

Gainesville police stopped a robbery in progress on Thursday at a Wells Fargo branch bank. (Gainesville Police Department Facebook)

Detectives remained on the scene Thursday afternoon, collecting evidence and interviewing witnesses. The FBI’s Atlanta field office is assisting in the investigation, which is standard protocol for bank robbery cases.

On Friday, Gainesville Police reported that Christopher Hudson, 25, of Gainesville, was charged in connection with the attempted robbery.

According to officials, Hudson entered the Wells Fargo branch and presented a teller with a robbery note. Bank employees notified police, who responded within a matter of minutes.

Authorities said details will be released as the investigation continues.