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Republican John King withdraws from Georgia U.S. Senate race

Georgia Insurance Commissioner John King. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

(Georgia Recorder) — Republican John King dropped his U.S. Senate bid Thursday and says he will instead seek another term as Georgia’s insurance commissioner.

King announced his decision with a social media post at a time when other high-profile Republicans, like former Tennessee football coach Derek Dooley and U.S. Rep. Mike Collins, are increasingly seen as likely entrants in the race.

“I got into the U.S. Senate race to beat Jon Ossoff, not distract from the mission,” King said in a statement. “Right now it’s clear there’s little path forward to the nomination, so today I’m suspending my campaign.”

King recently reported raising $518,000 to fuel his campaign, lagging behind Republican Congressman Buddy Carter’s $3.5 million haul. Ossoff, meanwhile, reported raising more than $41 million in the most recent quarter.

King was originally appointed to the seat in 2019 by Gov. Brian Kemp, who heralded King at the time as the first Hispanic constitutional officer to serve statewide. He was elected to the office in 2022 after defeating a Trump-endorsed candidate in the GOP primary.

“I’m going to do everything I can to keep Georgia’s state offices red and back a Senate nominee who supports President Trump’s agenda,” King said in the statement exiting the Senate race.

King launched his Senate campaign in May. Ossoff, who flipped the seat in 2020, is the only Democratic senator up for re-election in a state won by President Donald Trump in 2024. Trump beat former Vice President Kamala Harris in Georgia last year by about 115,000 votes.

Party leaders, particularly Kemp and Trump, have reportedly been working behind the scenes to identify a candidate who can unify a splintered Republican party. No candidate has publicly emerged yet from those talks.

Trump signs law yanking $9B from NPR, PBS, foreign aid

National Public Radio headquarters on North Capitol Street in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, July 15, 2025. (Jacob Fischler/States Newsroom)

(States Newsroom) — President Donald Trump signed into law Thursday the bill Congress passed earlier this month to revoke $9 billion in previously approved spending for public broadcasting and foreign aid.

Trump’s signature was expected after his Office of Management and Budget compiled the list of requested rescissions.

Congressional Republicans approved a small slice of what the White House initially wanted, but the effort still represents a win for Trump, who used small majorities in both chambers of Congress to claw back money approved in bipartisan spending laws.

The law rescinds $1.1 billion for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, a congressionally chartered nonprofit that provides a small share of funding for National Public Radio and the Public Broadcasting Service but accounts for much larger portions of local public broadcasters’ revenue. The funding had been approved to cover the next two fiscal years.

The law also cancels about $8 billion in foreign aid accounts, including global health initiatives.

Republicans have long criticized NPR and PBS news programs as biased toward politically liberal points of view, while Trump’s America First movement has consistently called for reducing foreign aid.

The law does not touch the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR, after Senate Republicans removed a provision to defund the program created during Republican George W. Bush’s presidency.

No Democrats voted for the law. Two Republicans in each chamber — Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Reps. Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania and Mike Turner of Ohio — voted against it.

It passed 51-48 in the Senate and 216-213 in the House. Each chamber took votes in the wee hours as Republicans raced to meet a July 18 deadline.

Senate Appropriations Vice Chair Patty Murray, a Washington Democrat, warned the move undermined the annual appropriations process, which typically involves consideration of rescissions requests during bipartisan negotiations over government spending.

Congress last approved a stand-alone rescissions bill in 1992, following a series of requests from President George H.W. Bush, according to a report from the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service.

Tumult over Epstein files dogs Trump in both DC and Florida

The Federal Corrections Institution in Tallahassee, Florida, photographed on Thursday, July 24, 2025. Ghislaine Maxwell, former girlfriend of the late financier and Florida sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, is serving a 20-year sentence at the low-security prison for conspiring with Epstein to sexually abuse girls. (Christine Sexton/Florida Phoenix)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — The fallout over President Donald Trump’s handling of financier and Florida sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s case files permeated business on Capitol Hill Thursday, as Senate Democrats urged the release of the information.

Meanwhile, in Tallahassee, Florida, a top Department of Justice official interviewed Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s former girlfriend and a key figure in the growing controversy.

David O. Markus, lawyer for Ghislaine Maxwell, speaks to reporters outside the Joseph Woodrow Hatchett United States Courthouse and Federal Building in downtown Tallahassee, Florida, on Thursday, July 24, 2025. (Video by Christine Sexton/Florida Phoenix)

Members of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary accused their Republican counterparts on the panel of “concealing the Epstein files” after they voted to quash an amendment from New Jersey’s Sen. Cory Booker, who proposed tying the start date of an opioid data collection bill to the release of Epstein case material.

The committee’s tumult came a day after U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson sent his members home earlyfor their six-week August break to avoid voting on efforts by both House Democrats and Republicans to make the files public.

Before heading back to their districts, three House Republicans voted Wednesday with Democrats on a House Committee on Oversight panel to subpoena the Department of Justice to turn over all Epstein investigation records. GOP Reps. Nancy Mace of South Carolina, Scott Perry of Pennsylvania and Brian Jack of Georgia voted in favor of the push led by Pennsylvania Democrat Summer Lee.

Earlier, House Oversight Chair James Comer of Kentucky issued a subpoena for an Aug. 11 deposition with Maxwell, who is serving a 20-year prison sentence in Florida for conspiring with the financier to sexually abuse girls.

‘Lies and obfuscation’

Epstein died in his New York City jail cell in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal charges for sex trafficking minors. He pleaded guilty in 2008 in Florida for procuring and soliciting minors for sex.

The wealthy broker was surrounded by a powerful circle of friends, including Trump. Attorney General Pam Bondi informed the president in May that his name appeared among many others in the case files, The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday. The context in which Trump’s name appears is unclear.

“We had the power today, the possibility today, to force out the truth regarding the Epstein files and the lies and the obfuscation that is happening by this administration,” Booker said after the GOP-led panel advanced an amendment offered by Republican Sen. John Cornyn of Texas that rendered Booker’s effort moot.

Booker eventually withdrew his amendment after roughly 40 minutes of back-and-forth in the middle of a vote, and after Sen. Lindsey Graham vowed to help him with a separate funding issue related to the underlying bill to address opioid overdose deaths.

“What we’re trying to do with this bill is really good, and there’s no end to this (Epstein debate). If this is a headline about ‘Cornyn blocks transparency of Epstein,’ then that would be sad because he’s responding to your amendment that would make the bill, quite frankly, fail,” said the South Carolina Republican. “I don’t think it’s helpful.”

Schumer calls for private Senate briefing

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer also put a spotlight on the Epstein case in his floor remarks Thursday, calling for the Trump administration to provide a closed-door briefing for all senators on details uncovered during the Epstein investigation, including whose names appeared in relation to the sex offender.

“The Senate deserves to hear directly from senior administration officials about Donald Trump’s name appearing in these files and the complete lack of transparency shown to date,” Schumer said.

Trump and his supporters, including some now working in his administration, dealt in conspiracy theories for years on the information surrounding the Epstein case, including whose names turned up during the investigation and the circumstances of his death.

A July 7 Department of Justice memo poured cold water on the fervor, declaring no incriminating “client list” exists and that officials would not be releasing any materials because of the risk of revealing victim identities. The department concluded Epstein harmed over 1,000 victims.

Trump answered swift and sharp criticism from his voter base by calling them “weaklings” for falling for a “Jeffrey Epstein hoax” in several social media posts.

In lieu of releasing the files, he ordered the unsealing of grand jury testimony in the case, which a Florida federal judge blocked Wednesday.

The president also told reporters that it was “appropriate” for Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, his former criminal defense lawyer, to interview Maxwell.

Interview at Florida federal courthouse

Blanche traveled to Florida, where reporters Thursday waited at the Joseph Woodrow Hatchett United States Courthouse and Federal Building in downtown Tallahassee, where the U.S. attorney’s office is located.

The Joseph Woodrow Hatchett United States Courthouse and Federal Building in downtown Tallahassee, Florida, where Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche met on Thursday, July 24, 2025, with David O. Markus, lawyer for Ghislaine Maxwell. (Christine Sexton/Florida Phoenix)

The courthouse is about 4 miles from the city’s Federal Correctional Institution, where Maxwell is serving time.

Blanche arrived around 9 a.m. Eastern at the courthouse, according to media reports. Maxwell’s appellate lawyer, David O. Markus, told ABC News, “We’re looking forward to a productive day” and declined further comment.

Markus, a Miami-based attorney with the firm Markus/Moss PLLC, emerged just before 4 p.m. Eastern and told news media outside the courthouse, including the Florida Phoenix, that Blanche “took a full day and asked a lot of questions, and Ms. Maxwell answered every single question.”

“She never invoked a privilege, she never declined to answer. She answered all the questions truthfully, honestly and to the best of her ability, and that’s all the comment we’re going to have about the meeting. We don’t want to comment on the substance of the meeting for obvious reasons,” Markus said.

Christine Sexton reported from Tallahassee

Athens man arrested after drugs, weapons found in follow-up search

A local man is facing drug and weapons charges after a search at his home turned up narcotics, guns, and cash, police said.

On July 22, the Northeast Georgia Regional Drug Task Force searched a residence in the 700 block of Mitchell Bridge Road. Athens-Clarke County Police and Georgia State Patrol troopers assisted drug agents.

Officers arrested 47-year-old Corby Antwan Faust of Athens. According to police, the search followed a previous traffic stop in which Faust was found with a pistol and a kilogram of cocaine.

During the follow-up search, police said they found Schedule II pills, three more pistols, and an AR-style pistol. They also found a ballistic vest, extended magazines, and various types of ammunition. About $6,000 in cash was also seized.

Faust is charged with trafficking cocaine, possession with intent to distribute, and possession of a firearm during a crime.

Anyone with tips about illegal drug activity can call 706-613-3297.

Eddy family looks to the future after fire destroys part of their past

The still smoldering ashes left by the fire that destroyed the old Eddy West furniture shop and showroom in Clarkesville on July 19, 2025. (Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

“It took a lifetime to acquire it all and a night for it all to be gone.” Those were Juli Eddy’s words after watching the building that once housed her family’s business go up in flames.

When the former Eddy West furniture shop and showroom burned to the ground on July 19, the Eddy family lost pieces of their past. Factory equipment, antiques, and precious family heirlooms stored in the wooden barn turned to ash.

Juli’s daughter, Eryn Adkins, said the fire destroyed irreplaceable family keepsakes—many passed down from her grandmother, Joyce Eddy, who died last fall.

Adkins called the fire “heartbreaking” and “devastating.” Members of the Clarkesville community also lost pieces of their past that night.

Local landmark

The barn was being renovated to reopen as a store and community gathering place, Eryn Adkins said. (GoFundMe)

The old Eddy West shop was a landmark to locals. Joyce Eddy opened it as Habersham Plantation in the 70s. It was a place where many in the area once worked and shopped.

“A lot of men from our area started their careers in that building. So many memories,” said Debbie Whiting.

Nick Robinson grew up near the property and passed by the old Habersham Plantation building every day. “Such a shame,” he said in a social media thread after the fire.

Now in their 70s, Juli and Craig Eddy were looking to reopen the barn as a store and community gathering place. They once held bluegrass festivals on the property and had hoped to revive the space with similar events before it burned.

“Our hope was to make the property a place where the Clarkesville community could come together to enjoy music, connection, and American-made furniture,” said Adkins. “We wanted to create memories that could be remembered and brought into the homes of others, just like the purpose of our furniture once did.”

Cause of the fire

Family members watch from their lawn as the old commercial barn burns. (GoFundMe)

Adkins pointed to lightning as the likely cause of the fire. She said the family heard a loud lightning strike when a storm swept through hours before the fire, but at the time, they couldn’t find any damage.

“Hours later, a neighbor came to tell us there was smoke—and quickly, a fire,” she said.

Firefighters from multiple agencies battled the blaze throughout the night. Since then, they have returned to put out hotspots to ensure the fire does not reignite.

Tanya Zamora of the State Fire Marshal’s Office told Now Habersham the cause of the fire is still under investigation, “but that lightning has not been ruled out.”

Online fundraiser

Unfortunately, the barn was not covered by insurance. The family now faces tens of thousands of dollars in cleanup costs, including hazardous waste removal, equipment rentals, and permitting.

To help with costs, Adkins and family friend Anna Sarkisian launched a GoFundMe fundraiser.

A drone shot taken on Monday, July 21, 2025, shows the debris left by the fire. (Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

“If you know the Eddy family, you know their home has always been a place of open doors, generosity, and welcome,” Sarkisian wrote. “Over four decades, they have shown up for many in the community by creating jobs and inspiring faith—now it’s our turn to show up for them.”

Fundraising organizers say they will use any leftover money from the cleanup to help kick-start the family’s vision: rebuilding the barn into a space the entire community can enjoy.

NGMC Habersham earns national emergency care award

NGMC Habersham in Demorest, Georgia. (NowHabersham.com)

Northeast Georgia Medical Center (NGMC) Habersham has received the prestigious Lantern Award from the Emergency Nurses Association.

With this latest recognition, Northeast Georgia Health System (NGHS) becomes the first healthcare system in Georgia to have five hospitals honored for excellence in emergency care.

The Lantern Award recognizes emergency departments that demonstrate exceptional and innovative performance in leadership, practice, education, advocacy, and research. NGMC Habersham now joins NGMC Gainesville, Braselton, Barrow, and Lumpkin in receiving the award.

“This award means people across our region can rest easy knowing their local hospital provides outstanding emergency care,” said Walt Wiley, NGHS executive director for Emergency, Trauma, Observation, and EMS Services. “It also reflects the outstanding dedication of our physicians, nurses, and staff who work tirelessly every day to provide life-saving care in all the communities we serve.”

For those in need of emergency medical care, NGHS now offers a convenient online tool with estimated wait times at each of its hospitals.

“No one wants to be in an emergency, but if it happens, our goal is to make the experience as smooth and efficient as possible,” said Wiley. “By providing wait times online, we’re giving patients the information they need to make the best decision for their care.”

An NGHS spokesperson says the wait times are “estimations, as patients with life-threatening conditions are prioritized over those with less urgent needs.”

Actual wait times may vary depending on patient needs and the severity of the emergency.

Hulk Hogan, icon in professional wrestling, dies at age 71

(Hulk Hogan/Facebook)

CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP) — Hulk Hogan, the mustachioed, headscarf-wearing, bicep-busting icon of professional wrestling who turned the sport into a massive business and stretched his cultural influence far beyond the ring, died Thursday in Florida at age 71.

Hogan was pronounced dead at a hospital less than 90 minutes after medics in Clearwater arrived at his home to answer a morning call about a cardiac arrest, police said.

“There were no signs of foul play or suspicious activity,” Maj. Nate Burnside told reporters.

Hogan, whose real name was Terry Bollea, was perhaps the biggest star in WWE’s long history. He was the main draw for the first WrestleMania in 1985 and was a fixture for years, facing everyone from Andre The Giant and Randy Savage to The Rock and even WWE co-founder Vince McMahon.

Hogan won at least six WWE championships and was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame in 2005. WWE matches are now held in professional sports stadiums, and millions of fans have watched the company’s weekly live television program, “Raw,” which debuted in January on Netflix.

“He was a trailblazer, the first performer who transitioned from being a wrestling star into a global phenomenon,” McMahon said of Hogan.

Hogan’s own brand of passion

“Hulkamania,” as the energy he created was called, started running wild in the mid-1980s and pushed professional wrestling into the mainstream. He was a flag-waving American hero with the horseshoe mustache, red and yellow gear and massive arms he called his “24-inch pythons.” Crowds were hysterical when he ripped off his T-shirt in the ring — a trademark move — revealing a tan, sculpted body.

Hogan was also a celebrity outside the wrestling world, appearing in numerous movies and television shows, including a reality show about his life on VH1, “Hogan Knows Best.”

In recent years, Hogan added his celebrity to politics. At the 2024 Republican National Convention, he merged classic WWE maneuvers with then-candidate Donald Trump’s rhetoric to passionately endorse him for president.

“Let Trumpamania run wild brother! Let Trumpamania rule again! Let Trumpamania make America great again!” Hogan shouted into the raucous crowd.

He ripped off a T-shirt emblazoned with a picture of himself on a motorcycle to reveal a bright red Trump-Vance campaign shirt underneath. Trump stood to applaud the move.

“We lost a great friend today, the “Hulkster,”” Trump said Thursday on Truth Social. “Hulk Hogan was MAGA all the way — Strong, tough, smart, but with the biggest heart.”

Hogan lately began to invest in alternatives to theatrical, professional wrestling, announcing plans in April to serve as the first commissioner for the Real American Freestyle organization, which describes itself as “the first unscripted pro wrestling” leagues in the world. The first event is Aug. 30 at Cleveland State University.

“The idea was so exciting that I get a chance to be involved with all these young people and help guide them in any way, especially to make them huge stars and create a future for them,” Hogan said. “People might be surprised, but wrestling is wrestling, brother.”

Broken leg and a new attitude

Hogan was born in Georgia but lived much of his life in the Tampa, Florida, area. He recalled skipping school to watch wrestlers at the Sportatorium, a professional wrestling studio in Tampa.

“I had been running my mouth, telling everybody I’m going to be a wrestler, and in a small town, the word gets out,” Hogan told the Tampa Bay Times in 2021. “And so when I went down there, they were laying low for me. They exercised me till I was ready to faint.”

The result: a broken leg and a subsequent warning from his dad.

“Don’t you ever let anybody hurt you again,” Hogan recalled his father saying. “So I went back four or five months later with a whole new attitude. The rest is history.”

Hogan first became champion in what was then the World Wrestling Federation in 1984, and pro wrestling took off from there. His popularity helped lead to the creation of the annual WrestleMania event in 1985, when he teamed up with Mr. T to beat “Rowdy” Roddy Piper and “Mr. Wonderful” Paul Orndorff in the main event.

He slammed and beat Andre the Giant at WrestleMania III in 1987, and the WWF gained momentum. His feud with the late “Macho Man” Randy Savage – perhaps his greatest rival — carried pro wrestling even further.

Hogan was a central figure in what is known as the Monday Night Wars. The WWE and World Championship Wrestling were battling for ratings supremacy in 1996. Hogan tilted things in WCW’s favor with the birth of the Hollywood Hogan character and the formation of the New World Order, a villainous stable that put WCW ahead in the ratings.

He returned to the WWE in 2002 and became a champion again. His match with The Rock at WrestleMania X8, a loss during which fans cheered for his “bad guy” character, was seen as a passing of the torch.

Hogan was perhaps as well known for his larger-than-life personality as he was his in-ring exploits. He was beloved for his “promos” — hype sessions he used to draw fans into matches. He often would play off his interviewer, “Mean” Gene Okerlund, starting his interviews off with, “Well, lemme tell ya something, Mean Gene!”

Outside the ring

He crossed over into movies and television as well. He was Thunderlips in the movie “Rocky III” in 1982.

In 2016, a Florida jury awarded Hogan $115 million in a lawsuit against Gawker Media and then added $25 million in punitive damages. Hogan sued after Gawker in 2012 posted a video of him having sex with his former best friend’s wife. He contended the post violated his privacy.

But there was other fallout outside the court case. WWE for a time cut ties with Hogan after it was reported that he used racial slurs on the tape. Hogan apologized and said his words were “unacceptable.”

During the three-week trial, Hogan smiled and wore black.

“Everywhere I show up, people treat me like I’m still the champ,” he said of the support from fans.

By Curt Anderson and Ed White

Gridiron Preview: Jefferson Dragons

(blitzsportsga.com)

A dream season for the Dragons ended in the Benz – just the way any team hopes to draw it up. And while many of the key pieces are off the roster, including now Florida State QB Gavin Markey, there’s recent Clemson commit Max Brown and several others who push back on the narrative that this team can’t do the same thing.

Head Coach: Travis Noland (4th Season)
2024 Record: 11-4; State Runner-Up, Region Champions

“The goal for the 2025 season is to work to improve throughout the early part of a difficult schedule and to be in a position to compete for a championship in one of the hardest regions in all of 3A.”

2025 SCHEDULE – JEFFERSON

Personnel & Schemes

Key Departures: Gavin Markey, Kelan Butler, Rett Hemphill, Dallas Russell (Oklahoma wrestling commit to forego SR year of football), Talan Childress, Jayden Yang, Ty Oglesby, Ashley Eckert, John Morgan Kinney, RJ Hinton, Dashaun Keith, Mickell Pittman,

Returning Starters: 6 on offense; 5 on defense

Key Returning Players: Max Brown, Dalton Dye, Chance Payne, Darren Pinkard, Tripp Porter, Taylor McCall, Colton Grant, Mack Gaddis, Mikey Pauley

Up & Coming Players: Carter Perrin (RB/DB), Bo Parker (WR/DB), Gavin Simmons (OL/DL), Griffin Drake (RB/LB), Logan Edmunds (WR)

Offense: Multiple style offense
Colton Grant (SR) and Boone Horn (JR) will share the QB duties. Both possess a solid skill set that will enable them to lead the Dragons well. At RB, JR Griffin Drake and JR Max Brown will both get tons of carries, as will JR Eli Primm. SR Dalton Dye returns as the go-to option at WR.

Defense: Multiple 4-3, 3-4
DE Darren Pinkard (SR), DTs Tylek Rucker (SR) and Tripp Porter (SR) will anchor the defense along with highly-touted Clemson commit Max Brown (JR LB) and SR DBs Chance Payne and Mack Gaddis.

Trenches: “This will be one of the biggest offensive lines that Jefferson has played with in a number of years. Mikey Pauley, Vince Ledbetter, and Clifton Williamson all return as starters this season, and Jordan Robinson and Caleb Beusse return at the TE position. On the defensive line, Tripp Porter, Tylek Rucker, Darren Pinkard, and JJ Parker all return after playing a lot on the defensive front last season.”

Strengths & Areas of Focus

Strengths: “We return a number of players who gained experience playing in big games throughout the season, including the state championship game. The offensive line in particular returns three starters and two TEs who played big roles on the offense last season.”

Focusing On: “We have focused a lot in the offseason on building depth at positions on both sides of the ball. It can be a long season, and we need as many players as possible to be ready to step in at any time.”

Helen man indicted on child sex exploitation charges

Thomas Jesse Walker (White County Detention Center)

A Helen man has been indicted on multiple child sex exploitation charges following an investigation by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.

The White County Grand Jury indicted 38-year-old Thomas Jesse Walker earlier this month on six counts of sexual exploitation of children. He also faces charges of possessing a Schedule I controlled substance and drug-related objects.

Walker was arrested on October 24, 2024, after the GBI’s Child Exploitation and Computer Crimes (CEACC) Unit executed a search warrant and allegedly found child sexual abuse material. The Helen Police Department assisted with the arrest.

Walker’s case was one of several presented during the reconvened April term of the White County Grand Jury. The jury returned 16 true bills of indictment.

Also indicted was Samantha Phatara Staves, who faces multiple charges, including entering an auto, financial transaction card theft, and financial transaction card fraud.

The indictments were formally presented to the White County Superior Court on July 11.

 

New nursing transfer agreement aims to boost Georgia’s healthcare workforce

(NowHabersham.com)

In a move to strengthen Georgia’s healthcare workforce, Gov. Brian Kemp announced a new agreement that allows nursing students to transfer seamlessly from the Technical College System of Georgia (TCSG) to the University System of Georgia (USG).

The articulation agreement, signed following the passage of the Top State for Talent Act (HB 192), establishes a “2+2” transfer model. Under the agreement, students who earn an Associate of Science in Nursing (ASN) from a TCSG institution can transfer directly into a Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) program at a participating USG school.

“Georgia’s success as the No. 1 state for business depends on a strong pipeline of talent, especially in critical fields like healthcare,” said Kemp. “This agreement between TCSG and USG is a perfect example of how our state is working together to expand opportunities for students, strengthen our workforce, and ensure that every Georgian has the opportunity to succeed.”

Top State for Talent Act

This is the first agreement signed since the passage of HB 192, also known as the Top State for Talent Act, which aims to align Georgia’s workforce development pipeline with employer needs. The act also introduced the state’s first unified high-demand career list.

TCSG Commissioner Greg Dozier called the agreement a strategic step toward addressing the state’s nursing shortage. “With this agreement, we’re eliminating barriers and opening doors for more Georgians to pursue rewarding careers in nursing,” Dozier said. “It’s a strategic move that helps our students, our healthcare partners, and our communities.”

USG Chancellor Sonny Perdue echoed that sentiment, emphasizing the agreement’s potential to benefit underserved communities. “Georgia’s growing population means a greater demand for healthcare, and this partnership helps meet it by preparing more nurses, especially in rural and underserved areas,” said Perdue. “It’s a smart investment that drives student success, expands access to care, and builds a more prosperous Georgia.”

A ‘game-changer’

The new transfer pathway is designed to help nursing students continue their education without losing credits or facing delays. It also supports broader goals of increasing educational attainment and economic mobility, particularly in high-demand sectors like nursing and allied health.

North Georgia Technical College Academic Affairs Vice President Stephanie Benson called the articulation agreement a “game-changer” for nursing students in Northeast Georgia.

“It’s a critical step toward meeting the growing demand for skilled nurses in our rural and underserved communities while supporting Governor Kemp’s vision of aligning education with workforce needs,” Benson said.

Habersham eyes jail funding, airport growth as SPLOST, shelter, and hangar plans move forward

The Habersham County Board of Commissioners meeting on July 21, 2025. (livestream image)

The Habersham County Commission this week advanced several major initiatives, including the proposed continuation of the Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax (SPLOST VIII), improvements at the animal shelter, and long-term expansion plans at the county airport.

SPLOST VIII heads toward November ballot

During a work session on July 21, commissioners reviewed an intergovernmental agreement with the county’s seven municipalities—Alto, Baldwin, Clarkesville, Cornelia, Demorest, Mount Airy, and Tallulah Falls—to share revenue from SPLOST VIII, a one-cent sales tax used to fund capital projects. They plan to hold a special meeting on Monday, July 28, to finalize plans to place the measure on the November ballot.

If approved, SPLOST VIII would raise an estimated $75.9 million over a six-year period beginning in 2027. The proposed funding includes:

  • $20 million debt service on a new county jail
  • $12.9 million for road and bridges
  • $11 million Phase II of the Central Base Fire, EMS, and 911 Building
  • $8.6 million for fire department equipment, vehicles, and renovations
  • $2.6 million for EMS equipment and vehicles
  • $1.5 million for landfill improvements
  • $1 million for sheriff’s office vehicles and equipment

The cities would use their share for projects such as water system upgrades, roadwork, and public safety investments. If the measure fails in November, officials said they plan to bring it back for another vote in 2026.

Animal control facility progresses

At Monday’s monthly meeting, commissioners approved a contract with Omega Technology Group, LLC, to install low-voltage cabling and access control systems at the new animal shelter. County Manager Tim Sims told Now Habersham he expects construction on the facility to begin by the end of July.

Word of progress on the new shelter comes just weeks after a storm in early July caused the septic tank at the current facility to back up, flooding the front office. Staff have since completed the cleanup.

The shelter remains in high demand. In June, Habersham County Animal Care and Control responded to 1,305 calls and cared for 320 animals, according to director Madi Nix. The shelter has filled only one of its four staff positions. To ease the burden, sheriff’s deputies and local police can now scan pet microchips in the field to help reunite lost animals with their owners.

Airport commission seeks longer lease terms

The board is also pushing forward with plans to expand hangar capacity at the Habersham County Airport. Officials are seeking proposals from businesses to build and lease aircraft hangars on four 60-by-60-foot lots, each with 3,600 square feet of buildable space.

Proposed Hangar Sites: Four 60-by-60-foot lots at Habersham County Airport are marked for development as part of a plan to expand hangar space and attract more based aircraft. (Now Habersham/Carly McCurry)

The Airport Commission is requesting that ground lease terms be extended from 20 years to 30 years to attract more private investment. A third bidder dropped out of the original round of proposals in 2024, citing the short lease term as a major concern. When the county reissued the RFP last fall, it received no new responses.

Despite the setbacks, officials remain optimistic. They estimate that based aircraft in these new hangars could generate thousands in ad valorem tax revenue, ranging from $500 for single-engine planes to $150,000 for small to midsize jets. Additional based aircraft could also help the airport qualify for more Georgia Department of Transportation funding and increase fuel sales, bringing the facility closer to regional status.

Meals on Wheels and other business

Commissioners reviewed an amendment to the county’s contract with Legacy Link, Inc., which unlocks additional state and federal funds for senior nutrition services. The measure allocates $27,847 for congregate meals and $121,251 for home-delivered meals through the Meals on Wheels program. County officials described the contract as vital to maintaining the Senior Center’s ability to provide critical nutrition and wellness support.

And in other business, the commission approved $38,000 to replace a storm-damaged patrol vehicle with a 2023 Ford F-150. The funds were included in the fiscal year 2026 budget and will not expand the current fleet.

This article has been updated 

Bondi facing Democratic calls to testify following report she told Trump he was in Epstein files

Attorney General Pam Bondi speaks to the media, Friday, June 27, 2025, in the briefing room of the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Attorney General Pam Bondi is facing Democratic calls to testify before Congress following a newspaper’s revelation that she told President Donald Trump that his name appeared in the files of the Jeffrey Epstein sex-trafficking investigation.

The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday that Bondi told Trump his name was among many high-profile figures mentioned in the files, which the Justice Department this month said it would not be releasing despite a clamor from online sleuths, conspiracy theorists and members of Trump’s base.

Trump’s personal ties to Epstein are well-established and his name is already known to have been included in records related to the wealthy financier, who killed himself in jail in 2019 as he awaited trial on sex trafficking charges.

Sen. Adam Schiff, a California Democrat, responded to the report by calling on Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel to appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

“We need to bring Bondi and Patel into the Judiciary Committee to testify about this now,” Schiff said in a video posted on X.

The Justice Department declined to comment on the report but issued a joint statement from Bondi and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche saying that investigators had reviewed the records and “nothing in the files warranted further investigation or prosecution.”

“As par of our routine briefing, we made the president aware of the findings,” the statement said.

The mere inclusion of a person’s name in Epstein’s files does not imply wrongdoing and he was known to have been associated with multiple prominent figures, including Trump.

Over the years, thousands of pages of records have been released through lawsuits, Epstein’s criminal dockets, public disclosures and Freedom of Information Act requests.

They include a 2016 deposition in which an accuser recounted she spent several hours with Epstein at Trump’s Atlantic City casino but didn’t say if she met Trump and did not accuse him of any wrongdoing.

Trump has also said he once thought Epstein was a “terrific guy” but they later had a falling-out.

White House spokesman Steven Cheung on Wednesday said the reports were “nothing more than a continuation of the fake news stories concocted by the Democrats and the liberal media.”