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Unexpected winter weather impacts region

Snow covers a road in the higher elevations of Rabun County on Thursday, January 5, 2026. (Rabun County Road Information/Facebook)

RABUN COUNTY, Ga. — A burst of unexpected winter weather brought light snowfall to higher elevations in Northeast Georgia overnight, creating slick conditions on several mountain roads and prompting crews to respond early.

Rabun County officials reported snow accumulation in elevated areas, including Bald Mountain, Black Rock, Germany, and the Persimmon community. Road crews were dispatched to treat impacted routes as a precaution and urged motorists to use care while traveling through those areas.

The surprise snowfall prompted temporary adjustments to school bus routes for students in affected areas.

Now Georgia readers also reported snowfall in Braselton, Sautee, and Highlands, North Carolina.

While accumulations were minimal, the quick-moving weather system served as a reminder that winter conditions can develop rapidly in Northeast Georgia’s mountain terrain. Officials advise residents to monitor forecasts and exercise caution whenever temperatures dip near freezing.

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Dry weather with big weekend warmup

Carolyn “Shortie” Patton-Hale

Carolyn “Shortie” Patton-Hale, Age 75, of Clarkesville, GA, passed away on January 8, 2026.

Carolyn was born on April 2, 1950, in Atlanta, Georgia, to Emory Spear Patton, Jr., and RubyJohnson. She lived a full life, marked with much success as a life insurance agent. She was always the life of the party, with a quick wit and insatiable humor.

Her life impacted many with love, care, understanding, and faith. Carolyn loved her Georgia Bulldogs, Crown Royal & Ginger Ale, and peanut M&M’s. She found victory in the Lord, Jesus Christ, as her Savior and lived out her faith daily.

Carolyn is survived by her daughters, Hope Dollins (and her husband Shaun), Heather Fitz,
Holly Akins (and her husband Nick). Grandchildren: Madelyn Edwards, Trent Edwards, Abigail Fitz, Parker Norris, LJ Dollins, Alyssa Dollins, and Ethan Dollins. A few other special people: Bobby Johnson, Faye Johnson, and Melinda Patton, Rachel Rutledge and Steve Patton, and all of her friends and extended family.

She was preceded in death by her mother, Ruby Johnson, father, Emory Spear Patton, Jr., and brother Rudy Patton.

A Celebration of Life was held on Sunday, January 25, 2026, in Clarkesville, GA. In lieu of flowers, the family asks that you live your life according to 1 Corinthians 16:14 – “Do everything in love.”

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

Habersham Crematory (678-617-2210) of Cornelia is in charge of arrangements

Hawks address persistent lack of depth at center by acquiring Jock Landale from Jazz, AP source says

Minnesota Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards (5) shoots against Memphis Grizzlies center Jock Landale (31) and forward Jaylen Wells, right, in the first half of an NBA basketball game Monday, Feb. 2, 2026, in Memphis, Tenn. (AP Photo/Brandon Dill)

ATLANTA (AP) — The Atlanta Hawks addressed their lack of depth at center by acquiring Jock Landale from the Utah Jazz for cash considerations, a person with knowledge of the move said Wednesday night.

Landale was traded to Atlanta one day after being part of an eight-player trade, said the person, who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because Wednesday’s trade had not yet received the required league approval.

On Tuesday, the Memphis Grizzlies traded Landale, Jaren Jackson Jr., John Konchar and Vince Williams Jr. to Utah in exchange for Georges Niang, Kyle Anderson, Walter Clayton Jr. and Taylor Hendricks. The deal also included three first-round picks for Memphis.

Landale, 30, averaged 11.3 points and 6.5 rebounds in 45 games, including 25 starts, for Memphis.

Landale, a native of Australia, is in his fifth NBA season. He made his NBA debut with San Antonio in the 2021-22 season and has also played for Phoenix and Houston. He hadn’t started more than four games in any season before assuming a more prominent role with Memphis this season.

The 6-foot-11 Landale will add needed inside depth for Atlanta. Veteran Kristaps Porzingis has been unavailable much of the season due to illness and injuries, and N’Faly Dante is out for the season with an injury.

The Hawks traded Porzingis to Golden State on Wednesday night in exchange for forward Jonathan Kuminga and guard Buddy Hield. It has been a busy trade season for Atlanta, which dealt All-Star guard Trae Young to Washington for a package including guard CJ McCollum on Jan. 7.

The addition of Landale was Atlanta’s second trade of the week leading up to Thursday’s NBA trade deadline. On Sunday, the Hawks traded forward Vit Krejci to Portland in exchange for injured center Duop Reath and second-round draft picks in 2027 and 2030.

Reath, who hasn’t played since Jan. 18, underwent surgery to repair a stress fracture in his right foot last week and is expected to miss the rest of the season.

Arizona Department of Public Safety helicopter crash kills pilot and trooper during shooter response

In this grab taken from video, emergency cervices work at a scene of Police Helicopter Crash in Flagstaff, Arizona, the night from Feb. 4 to 5, 2026. (ABC15 Arizona via AP)

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) — An Arizona Department of Public Safety helicopter responding to assist officers with an active shooter situation crashed, killing both the pilot and a trooper who was a paramedic on board, authorities said.

A Ranger helicopter crew responded to assist the Flagstaff Police Department and other law enforcement agencies on Wednesday night, Sgt. Kameron Lee of the department said in a statement.

“Tragically, during the incident, the helicopter crashed, killing both the pilot and the trooper/paramedic on board,” Lee said.

The names of the trooper and pilot have not been released.

The Bell 407 helicopter crashed near Flagstaff about 10:15 p.m. and there was a fire afterward, the Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement. A search of the registration number showed the helicopter was manufactured in 2004.

KTVK-TV showed a map indicating that the crash happened northeast of the shooting scene.

The FAA said it will assist the National Transportation Safety Board in the crash investigation. An email seeking information was sent to the NTSB early Thursday.

The state Department of Public Safety’s Air Rescue Unit is trained for various high-risk situations, including mountain and water rescues.

The suspect in the shooting suffered non-fatal gunshot wounds and was taken into custody, Lee said. No one else was injured.

Indians take win over #4 George Walton, Lady Indians come up short

Neyo Bain (Photo by Austin Poffenberger)

Tallulah Falls earned a second straight win, grabbing a 62-47 home victory against George Walton Academy on Wednesday night.

The #7-ranked Indians defended the home court with a win over the #4 Bulldogs, winning in decisive fashion on senior night.

After a tight first quarter in which TFS held a slim 17-15 advantage, they pulled away in the second. It was a 29-21 halftime lead.

In the third, GW put up a solid comeback attempt with a 21-point period, getting within four points in a 46-42 score.

The Indians’ defense held the Bulldogs to just five points the rest of the way.

Neyo Bain tallied a game-high 20 points, while Brian Neely had 12 and Marquis Rolle 10. Todor Stanimirovic chipped in with eight, Louis Lenain added seven, and Alberto Battino scored five.

The Indians move to 11-9 overall and are 5-4 in region competition.

Seniors Bain, Battino, Stasa Milisavljevic (Manager), Bryson Perdue, Marquis Rolle, and Nestor Serrano Alfonso all were honored as part of senior night.

Lady Indians

Ines Gil (Photo by Austin Poffenberger)

The Lady Indians (6-10; 2-5 in region) dropped a 55-32 final on Wednesday to top-ranked George Walton.
TFS was within striking distance for the first half, but facing a 42-27 when the fourth quarter rolled around.

Ines Gil led in scoring with 14 points, while LB Kafsky added seven. Lone senior Lia Sanjur had four, and Nora Mitchell, Linda White, and Mia Kerr each had two. Azul Felder Terrados added one.

New proposal requires weapons detection systems at all Georgia public schools

FILE PHOTO - Georgia House of Representatives (Daniel Purcell/NowGeorgia.com)

(Georgia Recorder) — Getting off the school bus or being dropped off in the morning could look different if a bill under consideration in the state Capitol passes into law.

House Bill 1023, sponsored by House Majority Leader Chuck Efstration, a Mulberry Republican, would require weapons detection systems to be set up at every student point of entry at public schools. The bill is not meant to apply to doors that are locked and alarmed, emergency doors or doors not intended for student use.

“As a practicing attorney here in Georgia, I am used to entering a Georgia courthouse most days, where I pass through security which includes a weapons detection system,” Efstration said. “It’s my opinion that Georgia students deserve similar security when entering Georgia public schools, that includes a weapons detection system.”

House Majority Leader Chuck Efstration. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

Efstration spoke at a House education subcommittee meeting this week, and the bill is set to come before the full House Education Committee Thursday. If it passes there, it will have until April 2 to move through the House and Senate if it is to become state law this year.

Gwinnett County father of three Jeramie Cavallaro said he became an advocate for weapon detectors in schools after the deadly 2024 shooting at Apalachee High School in Winder.

“This is the closest we’ve lived to a school shooting and Apalachee is about 15 miles from our house, and it really touched us as parents, discussing that tragedy and its wake,” Cavallaro said.

Gwinnett County School District, Georgia’s largest district, is rolling out a plan to install weapons detection systems staffed by school safety officers at all of its middle and high schools. The systems are provided by Massachusetts-based Evolv Technologies. According to its website, Evolv’s products use advanced sensors and artificial intelligence to help distinguish weapons from everyday objects like keys and cell phones.

Cavallaro said he wants to see weapon detecting technology in all of Georgia’s schools.

“As parents, we’re mandated to take our children to school or be held accountable,” he said. “Also as parents, I mandate that the school commits to bringing my children back alive each and every day. And if that was in place in every school, I would be able to relax as a parent and know that that threat has now been mitigated.”

The bill does not provide money to pay for the devices. Efstration said local school systems could pay for them through state-funded school safety grants.

School safety funding has been a priority for lawmakers in previous legislative sessions, especially in the wake of the Apalachee attack. Last year’s budget included more than $47,000 per school in recurring funding for safety efforts in addition to extra one-time funding.

“It’s been about $50,000 per year per Georgia school, and I expect that is going to be sufficient funding with the money that’s been appropriated and grants that will be available in the future for that to continue,” Efstration said.

Rep. David Wilkerson. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

Rep. David Wilkerson, a Democrat from Powder Springs, questioned whether the costs will add up for districts.

“School safety is important, it’s important to both parties, it’s important to all Georgians,” he said. “And the key is that we have to have a solution that actually is funded, that’s reasonable, that makes sense based on the state.”

“The grants that we give would only be used for the hardware,” he added. “When you go to an athletic event, you walk through a detection system, it’s a great detection system, but you also see multiple people standing there to screen you when you have a purse, you have a bag, et cetera. This does not contemplate that. It just says, we’ll pay for the hardware, potentially, but we’re not going to pay for what it takes to actually find out what happens when it goes off.”

Wilkerson said schools likely already have plans to use their allocated safety grants and questioned whether the plan would be feasible for districts like Cobb County, which he represents, where some high schools look more like sprawling college campuses than little red schoolhouses.

Gretchen Walton, Cobb County Schools assistant superintendent with the compliance and legislative affairs office, told lawmakers one campus in the district has 22 buildings with 49 entrances.

“And so when you talk about not wanting to have any kind of unfunded mandate, that is a huge consideration,” she said. “We have 17 high schools, so they’re not all sweet little elementary schools with one entrance or (entrances) in the front and back. Another consideration, clearly, is bus riders. At the beginning of the school day, a large portion of students come in through a different entrance. They do not come in at the main entrance. So we have a lot of operational concerns.”

Musk vows to put data centers in space and run them on solar power but experts have their doubts

FILE - A SpaceX logo is displayed on a building, May 26, 2020, at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip, File)

NEW YORK (AP) — Elon Musk vowed this week to upend another industry just as he did with cars and rockets — and once again he’s taking on long odds.

The world’s richest man said he wants to put as many as a million satellites into orbit to form vast, solar-powered data centers in space — a move to allow expanded use of artificial intelligence and chatbots without triggering blackouts and sending utility bills soaring.

To finance that effort, Musk combined SpaceX with his AI business on Monday and plans a big initial public offering of the combined company.

“Space-based AI is obviously the only way to scale,” Musk wrote on SpaceX’s website Monday, adding about his solar ambitions, “It’s always sunny in space!”

But scientists and industry experts say even Musk — who outsmarted Detroit to turn Tesla into the world’s most valuable automaker — faces formidable technical, financial and environmental obstacles.

Here’s a look:

Feeling the heat

Capturing the sun’s energy from space to run chatbots and other AI tools would ease pressure on power grids and cut demand for sprawling computing warehouses that are consuming farms and forests and vast amounts of water to cool.

But space presents its own set of problems.

Data centers generate enormous heat. Space seems to offer a solution because it is cold. But it is also a vacuum, trapping heat inside objects in the same way that a Thermos keeps coffee hot using double walls with no air between them.

“An uncooled computer chip in space would overheat and melt much faster than one on Earth,” said Josep Jornet, a computer and electrical engineering professor at Northeastern University.

One fix is to build giant radiator panels that glow in infrared light to push the heat “out into the dark void,” says Jornet, noting that the technology has worked on a small scale, including on the International Space Station. But for Musk’s data centers, he says, it would require an array of “massive, fragile structures that have never been built before.”

Musk is undaunted.

“You can mark my words,” Musk said in a preview of a Cheeky Pint podcast episode airing Thursday. “In 36 months, but probably closer to 30 months, the most economically compelling place to put AI will be space. And then it will get ridiculously better to be in space.”

Floating debris

Then there is space junk.

A single malfunctioning satellite breaking down or losing orbit could trigger a cascade of collisions, potentially disrupting emergency communications, weather forecasting and other services.

Musk noted in a recent regulatory filing that he has had only one “low-velocity debris generating event” in seven years running Starlink, his satellite communications network. Starlink has operated about 10,000 satellites — but that’s a fraction of the million or so he now plans to put in space.

“We could reach a tipping point where the chance of collision is going to be too great,” said University at Buffalo’s John Crassidis, a former NASA engineer. “And these objects are going fast — 17,500 miles per hour. There could be very violent collisions.”

No repair crews

Even without collisions, satellites fail, chips degrade, parts break.

Special GPU graphics chips used by AI companies, for instance, can become damaged and need to be replaced.

“On Earth, what you would do is send someone down to the data center,” said Baiju Bhatt, CEO of Aetherflux, a space-based solar energy company. “You replace the server, you replace the GPU, you’d do some surgery on that thing and you’d slide it back in.”

But no such repair crew exists in orbit, and those GPUs in space could get damaged due to their exposure to high-energy particles from the sun.

Bhatt says one workaround is to overprovision the satellite with extra chips to replace the ones that fail. But that’s an expensive proposition given they are likely to cost tens of thousands of dollars each, and current Starlink satellites only have a lifespan of about five years.

Competition — and leverage

Musk is not alone trying to solve these problems.

A company in Redmond, Washington, called Starcloud, launched a satellite in November carrying a single Nvidia-made AI computer chip to test out how it would fare in space. Google is exploring orbital data centers in a venture it calls Project Suncatcher. And Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin announced plans in January for a constellation of more than 5,000 satellites to start launching late next year, though its focus has been more on communications than AI.

Still, Musk has an edge: He’s got rockets.

Starcloud had to use one of his Falcon rockets to put its chip in space last year. Aetherflux plans to send a set of chips it calls a Galactic Brain to space on a SpaceX rocket later this year. And Google may also need to turn to Musk to get its first two planned prototype satellites off the ground by early next year.

Pierre Lionnet, a research director at the trade association Eurospace, says Musk routinely charges rivals far more than he charges himself — as much as $20,000 per kilo of payload versus $2,000 internally.

He said Musk’s announcements this week signal that he plans to use that advantage to win this new space race.

“When he says we are going to put these data centers in space, it’s a way of telling the others we will keep these low launch costs for myself,” said Lionnet. “It’s a kind of powerplay.”

By Bernard Condon and Matt O’brien

Georgia librarians could face criminal charges for ‘harmful materials’

(Georgia Recorder) — Librarians and education advocates are warning that a bill moving through the state Legislature could cause Georgia’s librarians to self-censor controversial materials and lead to more challenges on books about LGBTQ people or issues.

Senate Bill 74, sponsored by Sylvania Republican Sen. Max Burns, changes an exemption in state law dealing with the distribution of harmful materials to minors.

Today, the state exempts public and school or university libraries from the ban on distributing obscene media to people under 18. If Burns’ bill becomes law, one would only be exempt if they were not aware of the harmful material, had previously suggested the material be challenged as obscene or had suggested to have the materials moved to an area of the library not accessible to minors.

Distributing harmful materials to minors is a high and aggravated misdemeanor.

The bill passed a House subcommittee along party lines Tuesday and could be teed up for a vote from the full committee soon. A different version of the bill passed the Senate last year.

Sen. Max Burns. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

“I recognize that there are some really strong emotional positions,” Burns told reporters after the vote. “At the end of the day, the objective is to protect Georgia’s children. The objective is to ensure that the materials that could be harmful or obscene are placed in adult sections. And we’re asking our professionals, our librarians and our library staff to comply with Georgia law. I have to comply with Georgia law and you have to comply with Georgia law. This is not overreach. This is simple reality that says ‘I’m responsible to protect children.’”

The bill has the backing of conservative groups like the Georgia Baptist Mission Board.

Mission board lobbyist Mike Griffin called the effort a “no-brainer” bill to keep pornography away from children.

“Kids are being exposed to pornography at such an early age, don’t be surprised that what they see or what they’re hearing in these education classes, they’re going to try it on somebody else,” he said.

“It’s so very important that we deal with limiting these types of access because it’s creating perpetrators that are out there, they’re trying to go after kids,” he added. “It’s kids that are messing with other kids, and it’s just having such a negative impact on our society, so it’s very important that we stand up and we support this.”

Georgia librarians came out to the hearing in force and expressed outrage at the idea that they would distribute pornography to children.

“Georgia libraries do not purchase obscene materials,” said Mike Cooper, trustee of the DeKalb County Library System and president of the Friends of the Stone Mountain Sue Kellogg Library.

But Cooper said he opposes the bill because he said it will cause librarians fearful of legal consequences to bend to pressure from those who find fault with books on their shelves.

“Let’s say somebody hears somebody make a criticism of a book,” he said. “It is almost incumbent on the employee then to say, ‘Oh, we’re going to have trouble with that book. I think it needs to be investigated, and it needs to go before a review committee,’ or it needs to be removed, or whatever. That process has to be started by a librarian in a defensive posture.”

Georgia’s definition of sexual conduct includes the word “homosexuality.”

Mikayla Arciaga, Georgia advocacy director at the Intercultural Development Research Association, a non-profit educational advocacy group, said that could lead to books with passing references to LGBTQ characters to accusations of obscenity.

“Our major concern is this inclusion of homosexuality as a blanket term for sexual conduct,” she said. “Our understanding is that this definition, as written, would apply to any act of homosexuality in media or literature, not just intercourse, but two men holding hands in a picture book or two women kissing while making dinner in a chapter book. And our concern is that this definition would unintentionally capture an entire aspect of literature that I don’t think is the full intention of this body or the author.”

Speaking to reporters after the vote, Burns suggested that such a book could be flagged as obscene if his bill became law.

“(The bill) did not address any of the underlying obscenity laws in Georgia,” he said. “That would be a discussion for a different bill and a different legislation. Do they need to be updated? Perhaps, but that’s got to be a discussion for another piece of legislation.”

“It’s not like I’m picking on anybody,” he added. “I’m asking everyone to be consistent in following the current law. Laws change all the time.”

Police impersonator under investigation

(Now Network News)

The Columbus Police Department issued a statement on social media regarding information about an alleged police impersonator. Below is their official statement.

The Columbus Police Department is aware of rumors and unverified information regarding an alleged police impersonator. At this time, we are aware of one reported incident on JR Allen Parkway, which is under investigation by our Violent Crimes Unit.

When there is an immediate public safety concern or a confirmed pattern of activity, CPD will notify the community. We encourage the public to rely on official CPD channels for accurate information, as speculation can create unnecessary concern and interfere with active investigations.

Any verified updates will be shared through CPD’s official platforms.

Columbus Police seek help identifying skeletal remains

Police seek help identifying remains (Columbus Police Department)

The Columbus Police Department is requesting the public’s assistance in identifying an unknown male whose remains were recovered in 2018, as the case remains an active and ongoing investigation.

On November 29, 2018, at approximately 10:51 a.m., Columbus Police officers responded to the 3100 block of Plateau Drive after a citizen discovered skeletal remains in a wooded area. The remains were collected and transported to the GBI Medical Examiner’s Office for further investigation.

A forensic sketch has been completed by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI). Investigators believe the sketch represents what the victim may have looked like prior to his death. The Medical Examiner’s Office determined the victim was a Black or Hispanic male, estimated to be between 27 and 66 years old at the time of death. Findings indicate
the victim suffered at least one gunshot wound to the head. The estimated time of death is between 2013 and 2018.

This case remains open and is being actively investigated by CPD’s Violent Crimes Unit. Anyone with information regarding the identity of the victim or the circumstances surrounding his death is urged to contact Cpl. Emily Stice at 706-225-4366 or [email protected].

Border Patrol at career fair sparks protest

University of Georgia students and alumni outside of the career fair at the Classic Center. (WUGA News)

ATHENS, Ga. — University of Georgia students and alumni stood outside of the career fair being held at the Classic Center, February 4th, to protest ICE and their presence at the fair.

Inside the fair, the Border Patrol booth was actively recruiting, but they clarified that they were not a part of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

However, the distinction did not keep protesters away. “I just want to warn the students that they have been doing illegal things, at least the ICE part of Homeland Security has.” That was Sandy Whitney, 74, who is a UGA alumni.

UGA Senior Cameryn Carr says that she is appalled that ICE is attempting to recruit UGA students. “We have people being racially profiled and targeted under a fascist regime and the students aren’t here for it.”

While ICE and Border Patrol both operate under the Department of Homeland Security, they are separate entities.

Gervis King Loggins Taylor

Gervis King Loggins Taylor, age 87, of Alto, passed away on Friday, January 30, 2026.

Born on May 23, 1938, in Alto, she was a daughter of the late Peter King and Recie Martin King. In addition to her parents, Gervis was preceded in death by her first husband, Fay Eugene Loggins; second husband, Robert E. “Bob” Taylor; brothers, Max, Allen, Edward, Amos, and Lemuel King; and sister, Elizabeth King Grier; she was the last surviving member of her immediate family.

Survivors include her son, Scott Loggins; friend, Garnett Chapman; and many nieces, nephews, other relatives, and friends.

Funeral services are 11 am on Thursday, February 5, 2026, in the Chapel of McGahee-Griffin & McEntire, with Rev. Wesley King, Jr. officiating. Interment will follow in Mt. Zion Methodist Church Cemetery.

The family will receive friends from 10 am until the service hour on Thursday, at the funeral home.

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

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