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Atlanta Vibe wins home opener

Atlanta Vibe won their home opener 3-0 at Gas South Arena in Duluth on Feb. 1, 2024. (Atlanta Vibe/Facebook)

Atlanta’s newest professional sports team, the Atlanta Vibe won its first-ever home game on Thursday. The team defeated San Diego Mojo in three straight sets (25-17, 25-15, 25-16) at Gas South Arena in Duluth.

The Vibe, part of the Pro Volleyball Federation, is now 3-0, having defeated teams from Omaha and Orlando last week.

For Kacie Evans, the creation of the league came at a perfect time.

The 22-year-old Wadsworth, Ohio, native put up incredible numbers playing for the University of Georgia. She holds the record for most sets played at Georgia and is a member of the 2,000-point club, the 1,000-kill club, and the 1,000-dig club.

But with college behind her, her future in volleyball was uncertain.

“I came to the realization it might be it for me,” she said. “And then I got a couple phone calls from a few organizations for the PVF.”

Suddenly a path forward opened. She entered the draft and wasn’t selected, but the disappointment didn’t last long. Within an hour of learning she wasn’t drafted, Vibe head coach Todd Dagenais called.

“And said, ‘Hey, like, we want to have you as an undrafted free agent,'” Evans said. “And I took the opportunity right up. I was like, ‘Let’s do this.’”

She’d play for the Atlanta Vibe, just 50 miles from where she’d gone to school.

Evans says the other Vibe players and coaches are great.

“(It’s) crazy for me to adjust with all of these great players,” she said. “And I think that’s what also makes it like so fun, because it’s like, holy crap. Like, I really have to develop a lot more stuff about me now. So like, what more can I do to develop myself?”

Evans will have two dozen regular season games to possibly compete and grow as a player.

Colleen Craig is the founder and owner of the Atlanta Vibe. She played at Cornell University. She went on to have a successful business career in finance and sports management.

“When I got to a point in my career where I wanted to start giving back, I took a look at the landscape, and volleyball jumped out,” she said. “When you start looking at the numbers and the information, it kind of became a no-brainer.”

A no-brainer, she says, because among women’s high school team sports, volleyball has more players than either soccer or basketball.

“Most people would say it’s probably soccer,” she said. “If you kind of do a poll, they would say it’s soccer. And that’s not the case. And we’re growing.”

In addition to the seven teams competing this year, three expansion teams are in the works.

Craig says all of them will provide an opportunity for talented volleyball players to continue high-level competition after college without having to travel overseas.

“So it is a tremendous opportunity for the athletes to compete and for us, to showcase what all the youth already know as a chosen sport amongst girls in the country,” she said.

This article comes to Now Habersham in partnership with GPB News

Northeast Georgia Health System CEO Carol Burrell to retire

Carol Burrell has been with NGHS for over 20 years.

After more than two decades leading Northeast Georgia Health System (NGHS), its chief executive officer announced her plans to retire, the organization said in a press release Thursday.

Carol Burrell plans to retire within the next year or so. She will continue to serve as CEO until a successor is named.

“Carol is a visionary leader who has always been proactive in anticipating and addressing the community’s evolving healthcare needs, as exemplified by the remarkable expansion of NGHS during her tenure. It is fitting that she is providing ample time for the board to plan ahead and identify her successor before her retirement,” says NGHS Board Chair Spence Price.

A CEO search committee will soon be established to choose a national executive recruitment firm. The committee will then lead the rigorous process to evaluate candidates and ultimately choose Burrell’s successor.

Price calls Burrell a “visionary leader” who can never “truly be replaced.”

“Carol is one of the most respected CEOs in the state, regardless of industry, and the communities NGHS serves have been blessed to have her at the helm,” said Price. “While she can never be truly replaced, we are going to move prudently to find the right leader to continue pursuing the level of excellence Carol has achieved.”

Burrell, a native of Barrow County, began her career as a medical technologist in the late 1970s. After receiving her master’s degree in healthcare administration from Central Michigan University, she served as a vice president at St. Vincent’s Health System in Jacksonville, Florida. In 1999, she returned to Georgia to lead NGHS’ network of primary care clinics. She was eventually named chief operating officer in 2004 and CEO in 2011.

Under Burrell’s leadership, NGHS has grown from one hospital in Hall County to five hospitals across the region, including a Level I Trauma Center. The health system’s impact on the local economy has increased from around $1 billion in 2011 to more than $4 billion in 2021.

“It is an honor to serve NGHS and the communities across our region alongside a team of healthcare workers who bring their best every day. While I am not ready to say goodbye just yet, I am excited about the year ahead as we continue growing the greater good by opening our future NGMC Lumpkin hospital campus along Georgia 400 and multispecialty medical plazas in Dawsonville and Bethlehem this spring,” says Burrell.

This year, NGHS will also break ground on a dedicated rehabilitation hospital and medical office park in Gainesville. The health system will finalize construction on the first phase of its hospital campus expansion in Braselton and prepare to open the new patient tower at Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville.

Says Price, “Carol’s mantra is ‘be better tomorrow than you are today,’ and she’s certainly positioned NGHS and our next CEO well for the future.”

Near head-on wreck shuts down Duncan Bridge Road during morning rush

Habersham County Sheriff’s Office personnel confer on the scene of Thursday’s near head-on collision on Duncan Bridge Road at Copperhead Road. (Rob Moore/Habersham County)

One person was transported by ambulance for medical care after being trapped briefly in a rollover wreck on Duncan Bridge Road (Ga. 384) in Habersham County Thursday morning, Feb. 1.

Personnel from Habersham County Emergency Services and the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office were dispatched at 8:03 a.m. to the wreck on Duncan Bridge Road at Copperhead Road.

According to Habersham County Sheriff’s Office HEAT Deputy Chase Trammell, a Chevrolet Trailblazer stopped for the stop sign at the end of Copperhead Road and the driver looked left but did not see the Toyota Tacoma pickup headed toward White County on Duncan Bridge Road.

When the Trailblazer pulled from Copperhead Road, the two vehicles collided headlight to headlight, resulting in disabling damage to the Trailblazer and the Toyota overturning and coming to rest on its side in a ditch on the shoulder across from Copperhead Road.

Glass, vehicle fluids, and vehicle parts stretch across Duncan Bridge Road after Thursday morning’s wreck at Copperhead Road. (Rob Moore/Habersham County)
Towing crews remove the heavily damaged Toyota pickup from the ditch on the side of Duncan Bridge Road Thursday morning. (Rob Moore/Habersham County)

Habersham County Emergency Services Engine 12 and Med 12 personnel cut off the top of the truck to remove the injured driver, who was transported by Med 12 to Northeast Georgia Medical Center Gainesville.

Trammell cited the uninjured Trailblazer driver for failure to yield after stopping.

The wreck and resulting debris field kept the road shut down in both directions until 9:03 a.m.

Habersham County E-911 receives renewed national certification

(Habersham County E911/Facebook)

The E-911 in Habersham County has received national certification. The county will be recognized for its efforts in presenting the award at the national conference in Florida this summer.

APCO (Association of Public Safety Communications Officials) International sent the notification letter on January 29 recognizing Habersham County’s E-911 training curriculum.

“The certification must be renewed every four years,” said Habersham County E-911/Emergency Management Agency Director Lynn Smith. “A lot of work goes into this to meet national standards – policies, procedures, testing, and so forth. Not only is it put on paper for the certification, but we apply it each time we hire a new employee. It is constantly changing to make it work better. The work is uploaded along with the application. Once APCO receives the application, it goes before a review board which goes through each section to make sure all criteria are met. APCO will give you one opportunity to fix any discrepancies they find during the review process. I am happy to say that we did not have any revisions and were approved on the first submission. The official award will be presented at the national conference, where someone from our organization will go on stage and receive it.”

Smith commended Assistant Director Melanie Bellinger and Records Manager Beth Alewine for their hard work in achieving the recertification, as well as all the employees who applied the curriculum during the training process.

Founded in 1935, APCO International is the world’s largest and oldest organization of public safety communications professionals, with a membership of over 40,000. The association is based in Daytona Beach, Fla., with executive offices in Alexandria, Va.

APCO’s 90th Annual Conference & Expo will be held in Orlando, Fla., Aug. 4-7.

National Prayer Breakfast brings Biden, GOP together

President Joe Biden speaks at the National Prayer Breakfast in the U.S. Capitol’s Statuary Hall on Thursday, Feb. 1, 2024. (Jennifer Shutt/States Newsroom)

WASHINGTON (Georgia Recorder)— Italian opera singer Andrea Bocelli performed inside the U.S. Capitol’s cathedral-like Statuary Hall on Thursday morning for the National Prayer Breakfast, an annual event attended by members of Congress and the president.

The ceremony featured numerous prayers, including one that Tennessee Republican Sen. Marsha Blackburn and New York Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand delivered specifically for President Joe Biden.

“The presidency is bigger than one person or one party — it is an American institution, and as such, we should pray for the president and our country,” Blackburn said.

She then quoted from Dwight D. Eisenhower’s first inaugural address, where the former president said, “Give us, we pray, the power to discern clearly right from wrong and allow all our words and actions to be governed thereby.”

The breakfast was a short reprieve from the partisanship that’s marked the last few months on Capitol Hill, where lawmakers have been huddling behind closed doors in an attempt to reach agreement on border security and immigration policy changes as well as funding for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan.

The focus on religion and prayer that physically brought Republicans and Democrats together also came just as Biden’s reelection campaign ramps up and Republicans look to win back not only the White House, but the Senate.

This was the 72nd year for the National Prayer Breakfast, which began in 1953 as a way to unite people “of different backgrounds, religions and political affiliations through the power of prayer,” according to the program.

Johnson reads from Old Testament

U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, sat next to Biden in the front row of the event, except when he read Psalm 37 from the Old Testament.

“Do not fret because of those who are evil or be envious of those who do wrong, for like the grass, they will soon wither, like green plants, they will soon die away,” Johnson said. “Trust in the Lord and do good.”

Biden, speaking at the breakfast that was attended by a few dozen members of Congress, praised Bocelli’s performance.

“By the way, I am an unadulterated fan of Bocelli,” Biden said. “And you know that to be the case.”

Biden called the tenor “incredible” and said that it was like listening to a “choir of herald angels” when Bocelli, the singer’s son and his daughter performed near Christmas at the White House during Biden’s first year in office. The singer has also been important at other points in Biden’s life, he said.

“In a difficult time for our family, after we lost our son Beau, you expressed in a song what we felt in our hearts,” Biden said, noting the song was “Fall on Me.”

“Andrea, you were a gift to my family at that moment and you continue to be.”

Biden told the crowd that he has attended several prayer breakfasts over the years and that he and first lady Jill Biden have “been humbled by the prayers of so many when we needed them badly.”

“It means everything to us,” Biden said. “And we’re all blessed to live in a nation where we can all practice our many faiths and practice them freely. And where we can come together and lift up our nation and each other in our own prayers, especially in tough times.”

Prayers for fallen troops, members of Congress

Biden said his prayers remain with the three U.S. troops killed by a drone attack in Jordan last weekend. The three — Sgt. William Jerome Rivers, Spc. Kennedy Ladon Sanders and Spc. Breonna Alexsondria Moffett — were all from bases in Georgia.

Biden plans to travel to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware on Friday to witness their bodies return home in what’s called a “dignified transfer.”

“They risked it all and we’ll never forget the sacrifice and service to our country that the dozens of service members who were wounded and are recovering now,” Biden said.

Biden said his prayer for members of Congress is the one that states, “And He will raise you up on eagle’s wings and bear you on the breath of dawn and make you shine like the sun. And until we meet again, may God hold you in the palm of his hand.”

While Biden and lawmakers don’t always agree, he said, they should remember that they’re all Americans.

“We have really tough, tough differences. We really go at one another,” Biden said. “Let’s remember who the hell, who we are. We’re the United States of America. It’s all about dignity and respect, so let’s practice it.”

What to see in the night sky in February

February is usually a pretty cold month for stargazing, but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t get out and check out the night sky!

Below is a list by day of some events you can check out!

February 2: Mercury will be at Aphelion today. Aphelion is when Mercury is farthest from the sun. During most of its orbit, the planet is difficult to pick out against the bright sunset background but should be much easier to see during the pre-dawn sky.

As an added bonus, it will be joined by its next-door neighbor Venus, up and to the right, shining much brighter and impossible to miss. The last quarter moon is also today, so be sure to peek at it either before dawn or during the first half of the day!

February 8: The Moon and Mars will make a close approach this morning. The very thin crescent moon will be fairly dim in the pre-dawn sky, but if you can spot it just below Mars, it will certainly be worth the effort to see such a thin moon!

The Alpha Centaurids meteor shower also peaks today. This is a very minor shower, contributing only 2-3 meteors per hour to the background rate, mainly in the southern hemisphere.

February 9: There is nothing to see here; it’s a new moon. New moons generally can’t be seen. They cross the sky with the sun during the day, and the moon’s shadow side is pointed toward Earth. A new moon is visible only during a solar eclipse. After this, there are only two new moons between us and the total solar eclipse on April 8, 2024!

February 10: The moon and Saturn will make a close approach today. You’ll have to be a very careful, diligent observer to see them, though. They will be in the west just after sunset but will not be visible long. With the moon just around 24 hours old, it will be very, very thin and hard to pick out against the bright sunset glare.

February 15: This conjunction will be much easier to see with Jupiter and the nearly quarter-full moon near one another after sunset this night. They will both be plentiful bright and easy to pick out. For an added bonus, grab some binoculars or a small telescope to see the four Galilean moons of Jupiter (Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Calisto) shining.

February 16: The moon reaches its first quarter phase tonight and will be visible from just after lunch through the evening. It will also make a very close conjunction with the Pleiades tonight. The Pleiades, also known as the seven sisters, is an open star cluster and will be easily spotted alongside the moon!

February 22: Venus and Mars will make a close conjunction on this date before sunrise passing less than 1 degree between one other. This will be easy to see in the morning sky!

February 24: The Full Moon of the month will come on this night. It is known as the Snow Moon for what I hope are obvious reasons despite the fact we still haven’t seen snow in North Georgia. It also goes by the Hungry Moon, Bear Moon, Ice Moon, and Storm Moon in different cultures. This will be a “micro” moon, the opposite of a “super” moon, with the moon reaching its farthest point from Earth just a day later.

February 28: This event won’t be visible, but I included it to highlight how quickly Mercury makes a trip around the sun. After reaching the farthest point in its orbit from our perspective at the beginning of the month, it will already have already traveled around to the backside and be completely visible to us once again!

I hope you get a chance to get out and see these wonderful events this month!

Christ, community, and coffee in Carnesville

Gabbie McFarlin opened Mama Mac's Cafe in Carnesville in April 2023. (Damian Dorn/NowHabersham.com)

“But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus his Son cleanses us from all sin.” – John 1:7

Gabbie McFarlin is a Christian, mother of 4, Carnesville City Council member, and owner and operator of Mama Mac’s Coffee & Sandwiches. Since her start-up in April of last year, she has made an indelible mark on Carnesville and Franklin County as a whole, with more to come.

Planting Seeds

The McFarlins bought the building at 175 Athens Street to flip it, but during renovations, Gabbie saw its potential as a community gathering place, and Mama Mac’s Coffee & Sandwiches was born. (Damian Dorn/NowHabersham.com)

McFarlin grew up in Homer, Georgia, but moved to Carnesville only six years ago while pursuing a degree in early childhood education. After the birth of her youngest son, she stayed home to take care of him, but the path she was on in school left her feeling disconnected like the Lord was calling on her to do something else.

The McFarlin family had bought the old barbershop on the corner of Carnesville Square with the intention of flipping it, but during the renovations, she saw the need for community and togetherness and decided that this was the solution to her problems.

“When I started this coffee shop, it was never about coffee; it’s about planting seeds, community connections, and spreading the gospel,” says Mcfarlin.

With spreading the gospel being the leading force behind Mama Mac’s brand, it was a no-brainer for McFarlin to start her women’s Bible study group hosted at the brand-new 9563 event room in Carnesville. Aside from that, her efforts to build up Carnesville are apparent through her work as a newly elected city council member.

“It’s always been Carnesville, this is home, we do life here,” says McFarlin. “I see the potential we have here, and I want Carnesville to be a place we’re proud to call home. I want to feel like I did my part.”

Since opening in 2023, Mama Mac’s has become a centerpiece of community activity. (Damian Dorn/NowHabersham.com)

Being The Light

McFarlin has been adamant about working with her community, hosting events, promoting small businesses, and giving back to a city that has given so much to her. In only one year of being in business, she’s hosted two large-scale events: “The Family Fun on the Square,” where she helped draw in crowds to support local businesses, and her “Pack a Backpack” event for which she teamed up with local churches, business, and police to provide children with school supplies received through donations.

Gabbie McFarlin has already given so much to Carnesville and has no plans to stop. If you’d like to support her and her family, follow Mama Mac’s Coffee & Sandwiches on Facebook, Instagram (mamamacs_athensst), TikTok (mamamacs_athensst), or check them out on their website.

If you’d like to visit Mama Mac in person, her shop is located at 175 Athens Street in  Carnesville, Georgia.

Connecting with Clarkesville and Colby Moore

He is the Main Street Director for Clarkesville and Now Habersham caught up with Colby Moore to keep you connected on what is happening this month in Clarkesville.

Mardi Gras

Don’t miss this memorable occasion, February 10, 2024

“The Mardi Gras Party tickets are almost sold out!” Moore announced. (Read more about it by clicking on the link above).

February 10, from 6:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m., is the place you will want to be. Mardi Gras will feature raffle tickets to highlight the evening.

The proceeds for the evening go to Main Street Facade and Sign Grant. This is a beautification project that has funded 73 projects for $70,000.00 with a 50/50 matching Grant.

Moore added that new this year at Mardi Gras is a live auction of a few fabulous items, including a cabin stay package.

New Main Street Board members

The Main Street Board will have new members sworn in at Monday’s Clarkesville City Council meeting on February 5th.

Claudia Lyle will be recognized for her years of service to the city and Main Street. The public is invited to attend this important meeting.

Need a friend? Come to Pet Adoption Day, February 14th

Pet Adoption Day

There will be a pet adoption day sponsored by Man’s Best Friend Cafe and the Habersham County Animal Shelter from 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. It is to be held on February 14th at the Mauldin House.

Stay tuned – there is always something happening in Clarkesville, and we do not want you to miss out on any opportunities. Keep an eye out for our Connecting with Clarkesville and Colby Moore articles!

 

Child tax credit expanded, business tax breaks get new life in bill passed by U.S. House

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — The U.S. House voted overwhelmingly Wednesday to approve a $78 billion tax package that would expand the child tax credit and reinstate some tax incentives for businesses.

The 357-70 vote sends the bill, dubbed the Tax Relief for American Families and Workers Act of 2024, to the U.S. Senate, where lawmakers are expected to vote on it at some point, though passage isn’t guaranteed.

Twelve members of the Georgia delegation voted to approve, while Democrat Hank Johnson of Lithonia and Republican Andrew Clyde of Athens were in rare alignment when they both voted no.

House debate on the 84-page measure was broadly bipartisan, with both Democrats and Republicans backing the agreement between Missouri Republican Rep. Jason Smith, chairman of the House’s tax-writing committee, and his Senate counterpart, Finance Chairman Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat.

Members of both political parties also spoke against the bill, with several far-right lawmakers arguing the expansion of the child tax credit would broaden the “welfare state” and progressive Democrats saying the bill didn’t go far enough to provide relief to low-income and working families.

“Each of these policies will help American business grow, create jobs, and sharpen their competitive edge against China,” Smith said.

He said the child tax credit expansion continues provisions that Republicans included in the 2017 tax law they passed during the Trump administration while updating some of the language.

“We maintain work requirements while enhancing the benefit to support families crushed by today’s inflation and remove the penalty for families with multiple children,” Smith said.

Massachusetts Rep. Richard Neal, the top Democrat on the tax-writing committee, said the expansion of the child tax credit would immediately help 16 million children throughout the country.

“This is not the bill I would have written, but this is sensible policy,” he said of the overall package.

Neal sharply criticized the far-right Republicans who spoke out against the measure during floor debate and called the CTC “welfare.”

“I can’t believe that we would stand here tonight and hear that addressing childhood poverty is welfare,” Neal said.

Immigrants and child tax credit

Freedom Caucus Chair Bob Good of Virginia, Matt Gaetz of Florida, Thomas Massie of Kentucky, Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, and Chip Roy of Texas were among the Republicans who argued against passage during floor debate.

They all expressed frustration that child tax credit payments could go to undocumented immigrants, even though a provision from the 2017 GOP tax law requires the child to have a Social Security number. And several criticized the tax credits for businesses as well.

“Little kids don’t get the checks sent to them even though they have a Social Security number. But their parents, who are here illegally, do,” Perry said.

Republican Rep. Drew Ferguson of The Rock, Georgia, vehemently rejected the criticism, saying he didn’t worry “one single bit about making sure that American business is more competitive on the global stage.”

“This is not about giving business a tax break; this is about investing in America and American jobs,” Ferguson said. “And the complete mischaracterization about the child tax credit is the most intellectually dishonest conversation that I have heard on this floor in a very long time.”

“This is about making sure that people that work and their families have the ability to get ahead,” Ferguson added.

Connecticut Democratic Rep. Rosa DeLauro, one of the more progressive members of the House and a longtime advocate for the CTC, also said she couldn’t support the bill, arguing it was a “mockery of who representative government works for.”

“I cannot vote for a deal that so lopsidedly benefits big corporations while failing to ensure a substantial tax cut to middle- and working-class families,” DeLauro said. “The deal is inequitable at a time when we’ve seen a rise in inequality.”

Should Congress clear the bill, President Joe Biden is likely to sign it.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in mid-January the legislation was a “welcome step forward.”

“And we believe Congress should pass it,” she said.

What’s in the child tax credit?

The bill would expand the current child tax credit, which is up to $1,600 per child, to a maximum of $1,800 in 2023, $1,900 in 2024 and $2,000 in 2025. The expansion would expire after that.

The three-year expansion of the child tax credit would not reach the level Congress approved during the COVID-19 pandemic, when it reached a maximum $3,000 or $3,600 for children under 6 years old.

The bill includes several tax incentives for businesses, including a provision that would immediately allow businesses to deduct research and development investments made within the United States.

The bill would “​​strengthen America’s competitive position with China by removing the current double taxation that exists for businesses and workers with a footprint in both the United States and Taiwan,” according to a summary of the legislation.

The legislation would help make housing more affordable through an enhancement of the low-income housing tax credit and other provisions.

Parts of the legislation are intended to help communities recover from natural disasters, including tax relief for families harmed by hurricanes, wildfires, flooding or the train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.

The legislation would be paid for by ending a tax break for businesses that kept their employees during the COVID-19 pandemic, known as the employee retention tax credit. The law would end the ability for businesses to file new claims on Jan. 31 instead of April 15, 2025.

The House Ways and Means Committee voted 40-3 in mid-January to send the legislation to the floor.

‘Kids that need diapers and shoes’

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, said Wednesday he supports the tax bill and will be working to figure out when and how it should move to the floor for a vote.

Wyden, chairman of the Senate’s tax-writing committee, said he’ll be talking with Schumer to determine if there will be amendment votes on the package. But he said he wants to see it get a vote “as quickly as possible.”

Wyden also rejected some criticism of the bill not having a more significant expansion of the child tax credit, noting that it lasts for three years and Congress will need to renegotiate on tax policy after that.

“We got kids that need diapers and shoes and paying for essential (and) small businesses that are trying to compete with China,” Wyden said. “I gotta say, ‘Get on with it,’ ‘Get it done.’”

West Virginia Republican Sen. Shelley Moore Capito said she hopes the Finance Committee holds a markup before the bill moves to the Senate floor.

“I think they need to move it through Finance and have an amendment process without having everything all pre-decided,” Capito said. “That’s what bothers people when they’re trying to make policy, they don’t have any opportunities to weigh in. So I’m for the committee process. Bring it over and let it go through committee.”

North Carolina Republican Sen. Thom Tillis said he has several concerns with the bill, including that it’s “not comprehensive enough.” He said he hopes leaders will hold amendment votes on the floor.

“I’ve been saying it’s a mistake. I also think the pay-for is fake,” Tillis said. “I mean, it’s a program that we didn’t pay for when we were doing the COVID bills that we’re now considering a pay-for. And most of that is actually clawing back fraud and abuse.”

“Here’s a concept — why don’t we just send that back to the Treasury and start filling in the $34 trillion hole we have,” Tillis said, referring to the national debt.

Indiana Republican Sen. Todd Young said he and Idaho Sen. Mike Crapo, the top Republican on the tax-writing committee, are hoping to make changes to the legislation once it arrives in their chamber.

“We’re still hoping to make improvements,” Young said, though he declined to detail what changes he wants to make to the tax package. “I’m not going to elaborate.”

Estelle Maebelle Brewer

Estelle Maebelle Brewer, age 80, passed peacefully in her home on January 31, 2024, surrounded by family and loved ones.

Born on March 11, 1943, in Habersham County, she was the daughter of the late Reverend River Wade and Maebelle Thompson Wade. In addition to her parents, Mrs. Brewer was preceded in death by her brothers Efferd Wade, Loyed Wade, Buford Wade, Arthur Wade, and sister, Lucille Armour.

She is survived by her husband of 61 years, Everett Brewer, and her children, Bobby Brewer (wife Alice Brewer) and Debra Brewer (Jeffrey Baugh). She is also survived by her grandchildren Cody Brewer (wife Lillie Brewer), Kalei Davis (husband Caleb Davis), Maci Foster (John Tanguay), Seth Brown (wife Brittany Brown), and Lindsey Brown (Nicholas Wolfe). She is also survived by her great-grandchildren, Isabella Brewer, Presley Brown, Lakely Brown, Hudson Brown, Tucker Hill, Ella Hill, and Essie Sullens.

Estelle has enjoyed many wonderful years with Everett traveling and attending many gatherings with loving family. Her family describes her as a caregiver full of love with an appreciation of life. She had a love of cooking and feeding everyone, always making sure they had enough food on their plates. She loved children and enjoyed sharing bags of candy every Sunday morning with all the members at church. She had a big heart and is known for her “I love you” words and a hug when it was time to leave. Estelle was a member of Crossroads Baptist Church in Alto and carries with her a life of devotion and service to Christ.

Funeral Services will be at 4:00 p.m., Friday, February 2, 2024, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel, with Pastor Ray Davis officiating. Interment will follow in the Crossroads Baptist Church Cemetery, with Pastor Ed Chapman officiating.

The family will receive friends from 3:00 to 3:45 p.m., Friday, February 2, 2024, at the funeral home prior to the service.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, South Chapel, at 1370 Industrial Boulevard, Baldwin, Georgia 30511. Telephone: 706-778-7123.

Court hearings set to begin in March in Angie Ledford murder

The man accused of murdering and decapitating a Clayton, Georgia, woman is set to go to court later this spring. Keegan Phillips was indicted last fall in the murder of Angela “Angie” Ledford.

Phillips was arrested after his employer at the time, Robert Lee Peppers, turned him in to authorities. Peppers, who ran Bob’s Local Tree Service – also known as Bob’s Tree Service – was arrested and booked in the Rabun County jail on August 6 after reporting the murder in a 911 call to Hall County authorities. He was charged at that time with concealing a death and unlawful disposal of a body.

Two days later, Phillips was arrested after an hours-long manhunt in the Gillsville area of Hall County. He remains in custody and was charged with Ledford’s murder.

According to Mountain Judicial Circuit District Attorney George Christian, both defendants waived their arraignment and entered written not guilty pleas through their attorneys.

Phillips remains in custody at the Rabun County Detention Center. Peppers is out of jail on a $50,000 bond.

Court dates have been tentatively set for March, April, and May of this year to hear the case and possibly go to trial. However, Christian says that based on the seriousness of the charges and the extensive investigation, he would not be surprised if the case did not follow that schedule.

RELATED: Ledford killed ahead of murder trial in which she was a witness

Grand Jury indictments

In documents obtained from the Rabun County Clerk of Courts office, a Rabun County grand jury indicted Phillips and Peppers on October 5, 2023.

Peppers was indicted on one count of abandonment of a dead body and one count of concealing the death of another.

The grand jury indicted Phillips with one count of malice murder, one count of felony murder, one count of aggravated assault, and two counts of abandonment of a dead body.

Angela “Angie” Ledford was murdered last summer in Rabun County. She was an eyewitness to a murder in 2022 in Otto, NC. (Samantha White post on legacy.com)

It is unclear when Ledford was actually murdered. The indictments place the date of her death sometime between July 28 and August 4. It is alleged that Phillips initially buried Ledford’s body in a hole he was digging for a well on Peppers’ property at 128 Pepper Lane in Rabun County, just outside of Clayton.

According to court documents, after Phillips admitted to Peppers he killed Ledford, they moved her body to a wooded area off Patterson Gap Road. That’s where GBI agents and Rabun County detectives recovered her remains.

Walkingstick murder

The 22-year-old Ledford was killed before testifying in the Otto, NC murder case of a Mountain City, GA woman, Tina Walkingstick Frizsell. According to statements taken by the Macon County Sheriff’s Office, Ledford was an eyewitness to Frizsell’s murder in May 2022. Ledford had been missing for several weeks before her body was discovered.

Chris Shields is charged with Walkingstick’s shooting death and currently faces capital murder charges and the possibility of the death penalty in North Carolina.

Macon County (NC) District Attorney Ashley Welch believes that the two murder cases are connected due to Shields having a “hit list” of potential witnesses. She stated in Macon County Superior Court in September that she would be working with Georgia authorities on their investigation into Ledford’s murder.

GOP state lawmakers press for ballot watermarks

Georgia legislators in 2024 are taking up bills that would ban using instant runoffs for elections, remove the QR code used for paper ballots and give the State Election Board unilateral authority to investigate the secretary of state. (NowHabersham.com)

(Georgia Recorder) — The Georgia House overwhelmingly passed legislation on Wednesday that would require ballots in future elections to have a visible watermark security feature.

On Wednesday, House Bill 976 was passed 167-1, advancing an enhanced security measure to the Senate that has the support of Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. According to state officials, if approved by the Legislature, the new watermark symbol would likely appear on millions of ballots printed for the November general election.

Rep. Steve Tarvin, a Chickamauga Republican, said the watermark is another step toward improving voter confidence after many Georgians questioned the validity of the gubernatorial and presidential elections in recent years. State and local election offices will be able to take advantage of this enhanced feature at a minimal cost, according to bill sponsor Valdosta GOP Rep. John LaHood.

“It’s a shame we have to do this, but I thank (LaHood) for bringing this bill because it restores confidence when our people vote,” Tarvin said.

During a House subcommittee hearing on Jan. 23, Gabriel Sterling, chief operating officer for the secretary of state, said it’s a good decision to allow voters to verify the authenticity of their ballots with watermarks that are easy to see. Under the proposed law, Georgia’s elections would no longer rely on special laser wands that are used to identify the security measure embedded in paper ballots.

The new watermarking equipment would cost the state about $110,000 for a one-time purchase, according to state election officials.

Sterling said the 13-cent price per ballot set by contract is unlikely to change.

“In the real world application, we don’t see any real downside to doing this,” he said last week. “It’s a lot of upside for a very low cost and a lot of bang for the buck.”.

LaHood’s House committee on Wednesday also advanced legislation that would require every ballot digital image to be uploaded to a statewide database available to the public.

The public can currently request ballot images from local election offices under a rule put in place as part of a 2021 election law overhaul.

“This bill requires that the (secretary of state’s) pilot program that was put into law previously becomes a permanent program that provides digital ballot scans online for citizens to view,” LaHood said at Wednesday’s House Governmental Affairs Committee.

The mechanisms of voting are on the minds of Georgia’s GOP lawmakers during the legislative session leading up to election season. On Tuesday, a Georgia Senate Ethics Committee passed  Senate Bill 189, which calls for replacing the QR code that tabulates votes on paper ballots with readable text or a bubble style mark similar to what is currently used for absentee and provisional ballots.