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Royston police officer saves woman trapped in burning home

Police and firefighters saved two people from this burning home on Grove Street in Royston in a pre-dawn fire on Feb. 4. 2026. (Franklin Springs Fire Department/Facebook)

ROYSTON, Ga. — A Royston police officer is being credited with saving a woman’s life after rushing into a burning home during the early morning hours Wednesday.

Emergency crews were dispatched around 2:20 a.m. to a reported residential structure fire on Grove Street. Royston Police Department officers arrived first and found a single-family home with smoke showing. Occupants were believed to be trapped inside, prompting an immediate search of the residence, said Royston Police Chief Brooks Moorhead.

Patrol Officer Elizabeth Eddy quickly located flames coming from a bedroom and discovered a female occupant still inside. With what officials described as total disregard for her own safety, Eddy entered the burning building and pulled the woman outside.

Firefighter West Franklin arrived as they were exiting and helped both Eddy and the rescued occupant to safety.

Eddy’s co-worker, Patrol Officer Josh Fowler, praised her actions in a statement.

Royston Patrol Officer Elizabeth Eddy (Royston Police Department photo)

“(Patrolman) Eddy remained inside the burning structure for over a minute while battling the extreme heat, heavy smoke, and other hazards associated with the fire,” Fowler said. “In my 22 years of law enforcement experience, I have rarely witnessed such an act of bravery. Officer Eddy displayed extraordinary courage and heroism by placing herself in immediate danger to save another person’s life.”

Chief Moorhead said Eddy’s actions went far beyond the call of duty.

“Patrolman Elizabeth Eddy went above and beyond her duties placing herself in grave danger to save a Royston resident,” Moorhead said. “We are blessed to have her as a member of this department. She sets the bar high for us all.”

Moorhead said he is recommending Eddy for the department’s Life Saving with Valor award, which is presented to officers or civilian employees who, “with total disregard for their personal safety, saved or attempted to save the life of another.”

Firefighters from Franklin Springs and Hart County assisted on the call.(Franklin Springs Fire Department/Facebook)

Fire crews assisted officers in continuing the search and helped remove the second trapped occupant. Both were treated at the scene and transported by EMS to a local medical facility.

Initial responding agencies included the Royston Fire Department and Franklin Springs Fire Department, with additional support from Hart County Fire Department Stations 3 and 8, Franklin County EMS, the Royston City Water Department, and the Royston City Gas Department.

The cause of the fire remains under investigation by the Georgia State Fire Marshal’s Office. Officials said more details will be released as they become available.

Family devastated by fire finds ‘Silver’ lining

Silver reemerged this week after being lost for days following a devastating fire at his owner's home on Thornbirar Way in Mt. Airy. (Photo by Amy Gardner)

MT. AIRY, Ga. — Nearly a week after a devastating house fire upended their lives, the Gardner family is celebrating a hopeful sign: their missing cat, Silver, has been found alive.

“We haven’t caught him yet, but he’s alive!” Amy Gardner wrote in an email update to Now Georgia, describing herself in that moment as “overjoyed, relieved” and thankful for “answered prayers.”

Beloved pet and treasured keepsake found

Silver disappeared during the early morning fire on January 28 that destroyed the family’s carport, four vehicles — including Jonathan Gardner’s Baldwin Police patrol car — and caused heavy damage to their home. Four of the family’s five pets were found in the immediate aftermath of the fire, but not Silver. The family feared the worst but never stopped hoping he would return. They are now feeding and watering him at the property, hoping he will soon feel secure enough to come out of hiding.

Jonathan Gardner served eight years in the U.S. Army and was deployed to wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He was injured by a roadside bomb in Iraq in 2011 and awarded a Purple Heart. (Photo by Amy Gardner)

In another bright spot, firefighters were able to recover Jon’s Quilt of Valor from the home. During his eight years in the Army, he deployed to Iraq twice and Afghanistan once. He was injured by a roadside bomb in Iraq in 2011 and awarded a Purple Heart. The Quilt of Valor is a gift of gratitude given to military personnel and veterans in recognition of their service. Jon’s is now at the cleaners, having, like him, survived the fire.

A community steps in

Despite losing nearly everything twice in his life, Jon and his family are leaning on their faith and the strength of their community.

“While the fire was devastating and we lost everything, God has provided for us in countless ways already, and we have seen so many prayers answered through the love and support of our community,” said Amy. “We are deeply grateful for the encouragement we’ve received.”

A GoFundMe account set up by a family member has raised over $20,000 to help the Gardners. For now, their greatest hurdle is transportation, as insurance only covers part of their rental car costs. Still, Amy emphasized that their immediate needs are being met and that they remain deeply thankful for the prayers, kindness, and support surrounding them.

Jonathan and Amy Gardner and their daughter Adilynn were burned out of their home in Mt. Airy, Georgia, on January 28, 2026.

Even as investigators work to determine what sparked the fire, the Gardner family is holding tightly to the signs of hope emerging from the ashes: a treasured quilt saved, a beloved cat found alive, and a community standing beside them. As they wait for Silver to finally come home, the Gardners say those small mercies are lighting the way forward, one day at a time.

Legal fight escalates over Georgia voting records as Trump says he wants to ‘take over’ elections

Georgia General Election 2020 ballots are loaded by the FBI onto trucks at the Fulton County Election HUB, Wednesday, Jan. 28, 2026, in Union City, Ga., near Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

ATLANTA (AP) — Officials in Georgia’s Fulton County said Wednesday they have asked a federal court to order the FBI to return ballots and other documents from the 2020 election that it seized last week, escalating a voting battle as President Donald Trump says he wants to “take over” elections from Democratic-run areas with the November midterms on the horizon.

The FBI had searched a warehouse near Atlanta where those records were stored, a move taken after Trump’s persistent demands for retribution over claims, without evidence, that fraud cost him victory in Georgia. Trump’s election comment came in an interview Monday with a conservative podcaster and the Republican president reaffirmed his position in Oval Office remarks the next day, citing fraud allegations that numerous audits, investigations and courts have debunked.

Officials in heavily Democratic Fulton County referenced those statements in announcing their legal action at a time of increasing anxiety over Trump’s plans for the fall elections that will determine control of Congress.

“This case is not only about Fulton County,” said the county chairman, Robb Pitts. “This is about elections across Georgia and across the nation.”

In a sign of that broader concern, U.S. Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., said this week that he once doubted Trump would intervene in the midterms but now “the notional idea that he will ask his loyalists to do something inappropriate, beyond the Constitution, scares the heck out of me.”

The White House has scoffed at such fears, noting that Trump did not intervene in the 2025 off-year elections despite some Democratic predictions he would. But the president’s party usually loses ground in midterm elections and Trump has already tried to tilt the fall races in his direction.

Democratic state election officials have reacted to Trump’s statements, the seizure of the Georgia election materials and his aggressive deployment of federal officers into Democratic-leaning cities by planning for a wide range of possible scenarios this fall. That includes how they would respond if Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers were stationed outside polling places.

They also have raised concerns about U.S. Department of Justice lawsuits, mostly targeting Democratic states, seeking detailed voter data that includes dates of birth and partial Social Security numbers. Secretaries of state have raised concerns that the administration is building a database it can use to potentially disenfranchise voters in future elections.

Trump and his allies have long fixated on Fulton County, Georgia’s most populous, since he narrowly lost the state to Democrat Joe Biden in 2020. In the weeks after that election, Trump called Georgia’s secretary of state, Republican Brad Raffensperger, urged him to help “find” the 11,780 ballots that would enable Trump to be declared the Georgia winner of the state and raised the prospect of a “criminal offense” if the official failed to comply.

Raffensperger did not change the vote tally, and Biden won Georgia’s 16 electoral votes. Days later, rioters swarmed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and tried to prevent the official certification of Biden’s victory. When Trump returned to the presidency in January 2025, he pardoned more than 1,000 charged in that siege.

“The president himself and his allies, they refuse to accept the fact that they lost,” Pitts said. “And even if he had won Georgia, he would still have lost the presidency.”

Pitts defended the county’s election practices and said Fulton has conducted 17 elections since 2020 without any issues.

A warrant cover sheet provided to the county includes a list of items that the agents were seeking related to the 2020 general election: all ballots, tabulator tapes from the scanners that tally the votes, electronic ballot images created when the ballots were counted and then recounted, and all voter rolls.

The FBI drove away with hundreds of boxes of ballots and other documents. County officials say they were not told why the federal government wanted the documents.

The county is also asking the court to unseal the sworn statement from a law enforcement agent that was presented to the judge who approved the search warrant.

The Justice Department declined to comment on the county’s motion.

“What they’re doing with the ballots that they have now, we don’t know, but if they’re counted fairly and honestly, the results will be the same,” Pitts said.

Tulsi Gabbard, Trump’s director of national intelligence, was at the Fulton search last week, and Democrats in Congress have questioned the propriety of her presence because the search was a law enforcement, not intelligence, action.

In a letter to top Democrats on the House and Senate Intelligence committees Monday, Gabbard said Trump asked her to be there “under my broad statutory authority to coordinate, integrate, and analyze intelligence related to election security.”

White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said Tuesday that the president’s “take over” remarks, which included a vague reference to “15 places” that should be targeted, were a reference to the SAVE Act, legislation that would tighten proof of citizenship requirements. Republicans want to bring it up for a vote in Congress.

But in his remarks that day, Trump did not cite the proposal. Instead, he claimed that Democratic-controlled places such as Atlanta, which falls mainly in Fulton County, have “horrible corruption on elections. And the federal government should not allow that.”

The Constitution vests states with the ability to administer elections. Congress can add rules for federal races. One of Trump’s earliest second-term actions was an executive order that tried to rewrite voting rules nationwide. Judges have largely blocked it because it violates the Constitution.

Trump contended that states were “agents of the federal government to count the votes. If they can’t count the votes legally and honestly, then somebody else should take over.”

Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., said Wednesday said he supported the SAVE Act but not Trump’s desire for a federal takeover. “Nationalizing elections and picking 15 states seems a little off strategy,” Tillis told reporters.

___

Associated Press video journalist Nathan Ellgren in Washington contributed to this report.

Owensby leaving Cornelia development job after decade of service

Cornelia Community Development Manager Jessie Owensby has been instrumental in the city's redevelopment. (Brian Wellmeier/Now Habersham)

CORNELIA, Ga. — Cornelia Community Development Manager Jessie Owensby announced she will leave her position later this month, closing out a decade of service to the city and a career marked by downtown revitalization and economic growth efforts.

Owensby shared the news in a message to colleagues and residents Tuesday night, calling her time with the city “one of the greatest honors” of her professional life.

“Together, we’ve tackled challenges, celebrated wins, and worked every day to make this city an even better place to call home,” she said.

Owensby has accepted the job as White County’s Director of Community and Economic Development. She succeeds John Sell, who is retiring in March. Owensby’s last day on the job in Cornelia will be Feb. 25. She said she plans to work with city leadership to ensure a smooth transition and assist as needed.

Recognized leader in community development

Owensby is recognized statewide for her contributions to Cornelia’s growth and development. In 2019, Georgia Trend magazine named her to its “40 Under 40” list, which highlights top professionals under age 40. And in 2024, the magazine listed her among the 500 most influential state leaders. The publication credited her with advocating for changes that helped spur restaurant growth and make an entertainment district in Cornelia feasible.

The Habersham County native and Piedmont alum has also been recognized with statewide honors and has participated in prestigious cohorts. During her tenure, city leaders have pointed to increased investment downtown and a rise in younger entrepreneurs opening businesses as signs of the city’s momentum.

‘Group project’

Throughout her career, Owensby has emphasized collaboration, often sharing credit with city departments, development partners, volunteers, and local investors.

“I haven’t accomplished anything on my own,” she previously said, describing economic development as “a never-ending group project.”

Her vision has long centered on building a thriving downtown and creating a community where families want to stay — and return.

Owensby said she is “excited to take on a new opportunity and a new challenge” but will always carry Cornelia with her.

“I wish each of you — and the City of Cornelia — continued success and a bright future ahead,” she said.

Jason Bryant sworn in as Cleveland fire chief

Judge Garrison Baker administers the oath of office to Cleveland Fire Chief Jason Bryant. (Photo Dean Dyer/WRWH Radio)

CLEVELAND, Ga. — The Cleveland City Council held a swearing-in ceremony for the city’s new fire chief Monday night. Jason Bryant received the oath of office from Cleveland Municipal Judge Garrison Baker, officially beginning his service to the city.

The City Council approved Bryant as fire chief following an executive session on Thursday, January 22.

Chief Bryant brings more than 31 years of progressive supervisory and executive leadership experience in fire service operations, administration, and emergency response. He served as Deputy Fire Chief in Gilmer County before being selected for the position in Cleveland.

After being sworn in, Bryant told the council, “ This department has a long history of serving this community with pride, and I’m grateful for the trust you’ve placed in me to help lead it forward.”

Robert “Bob” Ranalli

Robert “Bob” Erasmo Ranalli, age 78 of Demorest, passed away January 27, 2026.

Born on May 18, 1947, in Providence, Rhode Island, Mr. Ranalli was the son of the late Erasmo and Lydia Romano Ranalli. Mr. Ranalli was a road mechanic with Amtrak Train Service for over 18 years, which also fueled his love for model trains. He was a lover of old vehicles, especially his 1950 Chevrolet 3100 truck, and he also enjoyed doing puzzles and playing games on the computer. Mr. Ranalli also loved saltwater fish and his two cockatiels, “Cheerio” and “Rocky”. Mr. Ranalli was a member of St. Mark Catholic Church, where he was also a 4th Degree Knight of Columbus. In addition to his parents, Mr. Ranalli is preceded in death by his wife Ann Sharon Dunn Ranalli, as well as his sister Leonora White of Rhode Island and great-grandchild Nicholas Nichols of Washington.

Survivors include son and daughter in law Ken Ranalli and Hong Jiang of Demorest, son Robert Ranalli of Rhode Island, daughter and son in law Michelle and Bruce Nichols of Washington State, sisters Paula Boudreau of Massachusetts and Barbara Alarie of Rhode Island, grandchildren Kyle Ranalli (Makayla) Katlyn Ranalli, and Chen Yu Jiang “Bao Bai”, Nicolette Ranalli, Robert Ranalli, Devin Durrant, Seth Nicholas, Marissa L. Fields (Hunter H. Fields, Sr.) great grandchildren Hunter H Fields Jr., Ronan H. Fields, as well as other family members.

Funeral mass will be held on Tuesday, February 10, 2026, at 11:00 AM at St. Mark Catholic Church.

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

Suspect in deadly shooting of guard member pleads not guilty amid death penalty discussion

Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom’s casket is displayed at a funeral home in her hometown of Webster Springs, West Virginia, on Dec. 5, 2025. (Photo courtesy of the U.S. Department of Defense)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — Department of Justice attorneys said during a Wednesday hearing in federal court that a final decision will be made by May as to what kind of death penalty charges could be pursued for the suspect accused of shooting two West Virginia National Guard members in the nation’s capital, killing one and seriously wounding the other.

The accused, 29-year-old Rahmanullah Lakanwal, appeared before U.S. District Judge Amit P. Mehta for an arraignment hearing, where he pleaded not guilty to all nine federal charges.

His next court hearing is May 6 in the District Court for the District of Columbia, where it was moved from the local court.

Attorney General Pam Bondi had said shortly after the incident in an interview with Fox News that DOJ would seek the death penalty if either guard member died of their injuries.

Thanksgiving eve shooting blocks from White House

The shooting in Washington, D.C., took place on the eve of the Thanksgiving holiday, blocks away from the White House.

U.S. Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom, 20, died as a result of her injuries, and U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe, 24, was severely wounded but recovered.

A U.S. marshal officer pushed Lakanwal into the courtroom. He is using a wheelchair because he was also shot in the Nov. 26 shooting. Lakanwal, an Afghan national who entered the United States in September 2021, was later granted asylum.

The hearing was somewhat delayed because Lakanwal could not hear his translator in his headphones.

Charges against Lakanwal

After the shooting, FBI Director Kash Patel, a Metropolitan Police Department leader and Mayor Muriel Bowser said the shooting was “targeted.” In initial charges from December, officials alleged that Lakanwal drove from his residence in Washington state to the district.

He is charged with first-degree murder while armed and assault with intent to kill while armed.

He is also charged with transportation of a firearm and ammunition with the intent to commit a felony; four counts of possession of a firearm during a crime of violence; and two counts of assault with the intent to kill

Beckstrom and Wolfe were part of the 2,000 troops stationed in the district since last August, after President Donald Trump declared a “crime emergency.” The White House has said National Guard members will remain in the district until the end of the year.

What to know about the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, mother of ‘Today’ show’s Savannah Guthrie

/// Neighbors of Nancy Guthrie, the daughter of "Today" host Savannah Guthrie, show support for the family in metro Tucson, Ariz., on Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2026, as the search continues to find Nancy who was reported missing. (AP Photo/Sejal Govindarao)

Authorities are searching for the 84-year-old mother of “Today” show host Savannah Guthrie after investigators said she was forcibly taken from her home in Tucson, Arizona, over the weekend.

The case is urgent because Nancy Guthrie, last seen Saturday night, could die without her medication, Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos has said.

Investigators have shifted from a rescue effort to a criminal investigation. There were signs of forced entry at Guthrie’s home, according to a person familiar with the investigation who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss details publicly.

Nanos has declined to describe the evidence or say whether Guthrie’s disappearance was random or targeted. As of Wednesday, investigators had not identified a suspect or a person of interest as of Wednesday.

Here’s what to know about the case:

She disappeared from a quiet, affluent neighborhood

Nancy Guthrie lived alone in the upscale Catalina Foothills area and was last seen at her home around 9:30 p.m. Saturday. She was reported missing midday Sunday after someone at her church called a family member to say Guthrie wasn’t there, leading family to search her home and then call 911, Nanos said.

Guthrie has limited mobility, supporting the theory that she was taken against her will, but the sheriff said she is of sound mind.

Her brick home sits in a hilly neighborhood where houses are spaced widely apart and separated from traffic by long driveways, gates and desert vegetation. Saguaro cacti and wispy trees partially block views of the home from the street, and the area appears to have little street lighting at night. That makes it less likely that security cameras captured helpful footage of Guthrie’s disappearance.

Jim Mason, a longtime commander of a search and rescue posse with the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office, said desert terrain can complicate searches because dense brush and cacti can limit visibility. Mason, whose group is based about 175 miles (280 kilometers) north of Tucson, was not involved in the search.

Searchers initially used drones, dogs, volunteers and Border Patrol resources, Nanos said, but crews were pulled back by Monday morning.

Asked Tuesday whether authorities were searching for Guthrie alive, Nanos said, “We hope we are.”

Physical evidence but no clear motive

There were signs of forced entry at Guthrie’s home, and several personal items, including Guthrie’s cellphone, wallet and car, were all still there, according to the person familiar with the investigation. Authorities are reviewing nearby surveillance video, license plate camera data and cellphone tower records, the person said.

The motive remains a mystery. Investigators do not believe the abduction was part of a robbery, home invasion or kidnapping-for-ransom plot, the AP source said early Tuesday.

Unspecified DNA samples were collected and submitted for analysis. “We’ve gotten some back, but nothing to indicate any suspects,” the sheriff said.

Public calls for help

Multiple media outlets reported Tuesday that they received purported ransom notes and turned them over to investigators. The sheriff’s department said it is taking the notes and other tips seriously but declined to comment further.

Nanos and the Tucson FBI chief urged the public to offer tips during a news conference Tuesday. A church in Albany, New York, has offered a $25,000 reward for information leading to Guthrie’s whereabouts.

In a social media post late Monday, Savannah Guthrie asked supporters to “raise your prayers” for her mother, and “believe with us that she will be lifted by them in this very moment. Bring her home.”

The White House said President Donald Trump talked to Savannah Guthrie on Wednesday. Speaking to reporters a day earlier, he called the situation “terrible.”

“I always got along very good with Savannah,” Trump said.

A strong mother figure

Savannah Guthrie is in Arizona and hasn’t appeared at the anchor’s desk this week.

The youngest of three siblings, she grew up in Tucson, graduated from the University of Arizona and previously worked as a reporter and anchor at KVOA-TV before joining “Today” in 2011.

She credits her mother with holding the family together after her father’s fatal heart attack when she was just 16.

“When my dad died, our family just hung onto each other for dear life,” she said on “Today” in 2017.

Before her disappearance, viewers got to know Nancy Guthrie through her daughter’s show. In a segment last year, Nancy Guthrie described why the family settled in Tucson in the 1970s.

“It’s laid back and gentle,” she said.

By AP’s Sarah Brumfield

Update: Columbus man dies after LaGrange shooting

On February 3, 2026, at approximately 12:30AM, Officers with the LaGrange Police Department responded to a call of a person who had been shot at 150 Turner Street, Tall Pines Apartments. Officers located the victim, Marshawn Bailey of Columbus, GA, who had suffered a gunshot wound to his body. Officers quickly rendered aid until LaGrange Fire and Troup County AMR arrived. Bailey was transported to a medical facility in Columbus, GA. The Criminal Investigations Division was responded to the scene to conduct their investigation into the shooting.

On February 3, 2026, at approximately 1:30 p.m., Detectives with the LaGrange Police Department were notified that Marshawn Bailey, the victim in this incident, had died as a result of his injuries.

During the course of the investigation, Detectives identified Tavarion Henry, 16 years of age, as the alleged shooter. At around 7:00 p.m., Detectives located Henry and he was taken into custody without incident. He is being charged as an adult and, due to his age, will be transported to a Youth Detention Facility. The investigation remains ongoing and anyone with information pertaining to this investigation is encouraged to contact Detective K. Scott at 706-883-2620.

Individuals who wish to remain anonymous can submit tips through the Tip411 system. This can be done via the mobile application, through the online portal, or by texting the keyword LAGRANGE to 847411. These channels are designed to ensure the public can share critical information confidentially and securely.

Georgia Republican Barry Loudermilk won’t seek reelection to US House

FILE - Rep. Barry Loudermilk, R-Ga., speaks during a House Committee on House Administration hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington May 11, 2023. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File)

ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia Republican U.S. House member Barry Loudermilk, who has been active in efforts to discredit Democratic-led investigations into the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot, announced Wednesday that he won’t seek reelection this year.

Loudermilk has served in Congress since 2015. He is part of a wave of incumbents exiting the House. So far, 50 are stepping down or running for some other office.

Four Republican-held congressional seats in Georgia will change hands this year. In addition to Loudermilk, U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene resigned from her seat in January, setting up a March special election. U.S. Reps. Buddy Carter and Mike Collins are both running for the GOP’s U.S. Senate nomination, aiming to unseat incumbent Democratic U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff.

Loudermilk, 62, said in a statement that he wanted to spend “more dedicated time” with his family.

“I first ran for election to Congress in 2014 and, as I stated then, representing the people in Congress is a service, not a career,” Loudermilk said. “And although I continue to have strong support from the people of the 11th Congressional District, I believe it is time to contribute to my community, state, and nation in other ways.”

The 11th Congressional District, northwest of Atlanta, includes all of Bartow, Gordon and Pickens counties and parts of Cherokee and Cobb counties. The Cook Political Report ranks the district as the fifth-most strongly Republican district of the nine that the GOP holds in Georgia.

Before serving in Congress, Loudermilk served in the Air Force. He chaired the Bartow County Republican Party and then served six years in the Georgia state House of Representatives and two years in the state Senate.

Loudermilk was scrutinized by the House Jan. 6 committee for giving a tour of parts of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 5, 2021. The committee suggested that some tour participants may have been examining security measures. Loudermilk denied wrongdoing, saying it was a “smear campaign.”

After Republicans took the majority, Loudermilk led a subcommittee that released a report alleging former U.S. Rep. Liz Cheney acted improperly on the Democratic-led Jan. 6 committee and calling for her to be investigated for criminal witness tampering. Loudermilk currently leads another subcommittee that is charged with further investigating Jan. 6.

Cleveland Council approves jail housing agreement

Cleveland City Council (livestream image)

CLEVELAND, Ga. – The City Council approved, during their meeting on Monday,  an agreement with the White County Sheriff’s office for housing persons arrested by city police.

The city will pay the county $45 per diem for the housing services. This is an annual agreement, and the cost of services will remain the same as last year.

In other business, the council denied a request from Trey Crumley, with Ron Cantrell Construction, who was representing Metrick and Howard Properties, seeking a variance from the city’s standard development specifications.

The request asks that the company be able to construct a metal building on Wilford Ash Parkway for a Grease Monkey Oil Change business.

The city’s construction code requires that exterior building materials be stucco, wood, stone, or brick.  Crumley requests a variance due to the building’s special design. But the council said it wanted to stick with the standards approved by the city council in 2016.

The city’s Planning and Zoning Board unanimously denied the variance, so the applicant appealed to the city council.

City Council members agreed to stick with the standards for this construction.

Baldwin council advances Chitwood plat, debates meeting schedule

The Baldwin City Council. (Patrick Fargason/Now Habersham)

BALDWIN, Ga. — The Baldwin City Council voted Tuesday night to approve the next phase of the long-planned Chitwood residential development, while also holding an extended discussion on a proposed home rule charter amendment aimed at clarifying how and when the council meets.

Chitwood plat approved 2-1

The council approved a preliminary plat for 79 homes in the Chitwood development by a 2-1 vote, with Councilwoman Nancy Lehman casting the lone dissenting vote.

Mayor Doug Faust said the development itself was approved years ago and that Tuesday’s action involved only a small portion of the overall project.

“Chitwood Homes was approved for development years ago from the City Council,” Faust said. “There’s in excess of 500 housing units there that was not approved within the last few months. That was approved some years ago.”

Faust said the request before council involved 79 homes located in Pods D and F.

Why the issue returned to council

Councilman Joe Elam outlined why the Chitwood plat returned to the council. (Patrick Fargason/Now Georgia)

Councilman Joe Elam asked why the development returned to council when many projects resolve such matters earlier in the process.

Faust said the original plat approval was delayed beyond its allowed timeframe, prompting the city to require a new plat submission if the developer wished to proceed.

The city engineer was then asked to verify water and sewer capacity for the proposed homes.

“He has completed that and provided correspondence that indicated that the 79 homes are fine to move into our system,” Faust said.

Faust said his recommendation was to approve only the 79 homes until negotiations are completed regarding the remainder of the property.

Elam said the project has received more scrutiny than most because of its size and long-term impact.

“This particular one was so unique to the city that council thought it was wise to step through those,” Elam said. “We do have the benefit of having multiple looks at this project as it moves forward.”

Utilities, fire protection and access

Mayor Doug Faust said the growth in the Chitwood plat requires additional city services. (Patrick Fargason/Now Georgia)

Faust said the engineer determined the additional homes would place minimal demand on the city’s water and sewer systems.

“If there was a large rain event that would kick us over the top, this is 20,000 gallons,” Faust said. “Out of our capacity of 800,000 gallons, that is a very small number.”

Faust noted, however, that residential growth brings additional demands on city services.

“Anytime you build homes, it does require additional police, fire services and administrative services,” he said.

Lehman questioned whether the developer had committed to building a fire station or police facility. Faust said the developer has offered land but not construction.

“They have offered to provide land,” Faust said. “There has been no offer of actually building the station.”

Faust said the 79 homes fall within the city’s current fire service range but warned that future phases farther south could fall outside that distance unless additional facilities are addressed.

Lehman also raised concerns about emergency vehicle access.

“Our trucks can get there as best as they can with the R-cuts designed by the Department of Transportation,” Faust said. “It’s quite a challenge.”

Faust said the city has begun discussions with GDOT to address those designs, noting the fire department was not consulted during the original planning.

Home rule amendment and meeting schedule

City attorney Bubba Samuels describes the additions to the home charter amendment. (Patrick Fargason/Now Georgia)

The council also reviewed a home rule charter amendment intended to clarify meeting dates and times and avoid repeated charter changes when adjusting the council’s schedule.

City Attorney Bubba Samuels said the amendment would not change the city’s form of government but would allow the council greater flexibility.

“You are not required by your charter to hold a work session,” Samuels said. “But it is certainly an appropriate tool to have a forum for discussion where there is no voting item on the agenda.”

Faust said the goal is to ensure transparency while complying with Georgia’s open meetings laws.

“In order to conduct the business of the city, we must have communication in an open setting like this,” Faust said.

Faust also addressed public questions about compensation, noting council members are paid $100 per meeting and the mayor $150 per meeting, with no additional pay for other city work.

Elam said he could not support a structure that would effectively double elected officials’ pay.

“For me to approve doubling our pay does not move toward my agenda,” Elam said. “So I cannot support four paid meetings in a month.”

Elam said he favors two meetings per month but prefers combining discussion and action into each meeting rather than holding separate work sessions.
“Government was made to go slow for a reason,” he said.

Councilman Mike Tope agreed, saying the council needs the ability to take action at both meetings to avoid special called meetings.

“We need to be able to take action,” Tope said. “Otherwise, we end up spending money on special meetings anyway.”

Lehman said her concern is ensuring council members have enough time to review information before voting.

“When we had one meeting a month, there was too much information and no time to consider it,” she said. “That was not a good plan.”

Flock cameras tabled

A proposed agreement with Flock Safety for license plate reader cameras was tabled until the council’s Feb. 17 meeting.

Faust said the delay will allow a memorandum of understanding to be drafted and reviewed by legal counsel before the council considers a vote.