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3 charged with operating illegal gambling machines at area convenience stores

(file photo)

Deputies arrested three men Thursday following a multi-agency undercover investigation into illegal gambling in Hall County. After executing search warrants, authorities arrested the suspects at three different convenience stores stretching from the north to south end of the county.

The investigation was led by the Hall County Sheriff’s Office Special Investigations Unit (SIU). Arrested were:

  • Harun Ur Rashid, 63, of Buford, at a store in the 5800 block of Lanier Islands Parkway.
  • Zafar Iqbal Ranjha, 61, of Flowery Branch, at a business in the 5400 block of GA 13/Atlanta Highway.
  • Shajumon Philip, 58, of Marietta, at a store in the 4400 block of GA 365/Cornelia Highway.

Officials say the three men operated stores with gambling machines that paid players in cash. SIU charged each of them with commercial gambling, which is a felony. They also charged them with keeping a place of gambling, a misdemeanor.

Deputies booked the suspects into the Hall County Jail. A judge set their bond at $7,000 each. Ranjha and Philip bonded out of jail Thursday. Rashid was still in jail as of early Friday.

Hall County patrol and warrant deputies assisted SIU with its investigation, along with Flowery Branch police officers and inspectors with the Georgia Lottery Corporation Coin Operated Amusement Machines (COAM) Division.

The sheriff’s office says the cases are still under investigation, but no further arrests are expected.

Cleveland DDA seeking funds for a variety of projects

The Cleveland Downtown Development Authority is currently working on several projects that are expected to enhance the downtown area as well as the entire city.

During their meeting on Thursday, the City of Cleveland’s Economic Development and Planning Director Tom O’Bryant said they are ready to submit a grant application to the Appalachian Regional Commission for developing a Strategic Plan for downtown Cleveland. The application is awaiting the mayor’s signature.

O’Bryant said they should hear something during the first part of next year about the funding.

The authority is also working on a grant to place one, possibly two, murals on downtown businesses.

O’Bryant said the city has also applied for a Transportation Alternative Program grant from the Georgia Department of Transportation. According to O’Bryant, the funds will be used for preliminary engineering work for sidewalks to connect Freedom Park downtown with Woodman City Park. If approved, this project would provide a much-needed crosswalk at East Kytle Street and Brooks Street, according to O’Bryant.

In addition to engineering funds, the city can later apply for funding to construct the project. Cleveland is also looking at ways to connect the proposed sidewalks to other resources in the city and county.

“Having this type of plan in place – having our downtown strategic plan in place – further strengthens our opportunity to go after funding and assistance and also to incorporate into our regular planning these types of facilities,” O’Bryant told authority members.

Afternoon house fire guts Gainesville mobile home

This double-wide mobile home on Elrod Street in Gainesville went up in flames just before 1 p.m.m on Friday, Oct. 7, 2022. (Hall County Fire Rescue photo)

The Hall County Fire Marshal’s Office is investigating an early afternoon residential fire.

Around 12:45 p.m. on October 7, Hall County E-911 dispatched crews to the scene in the 5300 block of Elrod Road in Gainesville. When firefighters arrived, they found the double-wide mobile home “fully involved,” says Hall County Fire Rescue Public Information Officer Kimberlie Ledsinger.

“The resident evacuated the home immediately once flames were visible. The bulk of the fire extended from the center of the home to the right side,” says Ledsinger.

Firefighters searched the residence to make sure there was no one else inside. They did not find anyone. No one was injured. As of 1:40 p.m. Friday, crews were still on the scene putting out hot spots, making sure the fire was out.

First responders notified the Red Cross to get help for the displaced resident.

The cause of the fire is unknown.

Gainesville PD’s C0-Responder mental health program gets big boost from NGHS golf tournament

Golfers register for the 30th Medical Center Open at Chicopee Woods Golf Course in Gainesville on Thursday, Oct. 6, 2022. (photo courtesy NGHS)

An innovative program in Gainesville that sends clinicians to mental health calls along with police officers got a big boost in funding from a local golf tournament. The Medical Center Open played at Chicopee Woods Golf Course in Hall County on Thursday raised at least a half-million dollars to support the Co-Responder program.

Originally started with a lead gift from the North Georgia Community Foundation, the Co-Responder program plays a vital role in the Gainesville community, providing support and mental health resources to individuals and their families who may be experiencing a mental health crisis. In these situations, instead of only a police officer responding to a call, a mental health clinician will also respond. This clinician is specially trained to handle situations like this and has already proven to be an asset to the department.

“You are saving lives,” said Jay Parrish, chief of police with Gainesville Police Department. “Every dollar given toward this golf tournament and this program is doing more than supporting a program. It is saving someone’s life.”

The tournament is sponsored by the Northeast Georgia Health System Foundation.

Since 1991, when the inaugural Medical Center Open was held, the event has allowed the NGHS Foundation and area businesses to partner together to support the community initiatives, raising more than $5 million. Proceeds from past events have benefited a variety of projects, including partnerships with Good News Clinics, Gateway Domestic Violence Center, Boys and Girls Clubs of Lanier, Georgia Mountain Food Bank and the Hub at Gainesville High School, to name a few.

It’s a cause businesses and individuals within the Northeast Georgia community believe is worth investing in, year after year. This year’s event included more than 200 participants and 135 sponsors, including premier sponsor Bank of America and long-time sponsor McGarity’s Business Products.

“McGarity’s has supported the Medical Center Open for the past 20 years,” said Todd Pennington president of McGarity’s Business Products. “It’s something that, even after we bought the company in 2019, we continued because we see what the tournament does for the community, supporting different projects and organizations each year. We are proud to support the tournament and NGHS because of its emphasis on the community.”

To date, the Medical Center Open has raised more than $500,000, for the Co-Responder program.

“What a beautiful day and what a deserving cause,” said Michele Pucci, co-chair of this year’s Medical Center Open. “We are grateful to our sponsors and teams who participated in the event. It is a pleasure to have served on the committee for so long and to have the opportunity to help make this tournament, after several years of cancellations, a reality.”

Nancy “Elizabeth” King Grier

Mrs. Nancy “Elizabeth” King Grier, age 89, of Alto, passed away peacefully on October 5, 2022, at Northeast Georgia Medical Center, surrounded by her loving family. Mrs. Grier passed away after a period of declining health and is now joyfully reunited with her beloved husband.

Born on July 9, 1933, Elizabeth was a daughter of the late Peter and Recie Martin King. She was a loving wife, mother, grandmother, sister, aunt and friend. She married her sweetheart, the late Alvin Grier, Jr., on April 8, 1955. She was his “Darling” and they were married for over 65 years. Their union gave them 2 blessings; their daughters, Merle & Karen.

Elizabeth loved the Lord and never missed an opportunity to share about Him. She served in many church leadership positions throughout her life. She especially enjoyed ministering to children and was a beloved Sunday school teacher for many years, where all of the children called her Grandma, just like her own grandchildren did. Grandma was one of her favorite titles and she delighted in spending time with all of her grandchildren and great-grandchildren, making many wonderful memories. Elizabeth had many special talents; even when working a full-time job, she still cooked delicious homemade meals for her family, canned the garden-fresh vegetables grown by her husband and enjoyed her hobbies of reading, sewing and painting. Her family is blessed to have many of her beautiful hand-painted items to cherish. She made this world a better and brighter place and she will be greatly missed.

In addition to her parents and husband, Elizabeth is predeceased by her brothers: Lem, Edward, Allen, Oscar, Amos, and Max King.

She is survived by her daughters and sons-in-law, Merle & Paul Reece of Alto and Karen & David Tomlin of Cornelia; grandchildren, Amy Autry (Kerry) of Lula, Erin Gunti (Charlie) of Buford, Vanessa Marcus (Edward) of Cornelia, Christopher Tribble (Lyndsay) of Gillsville, Adam Tomlin (Becky) of Alto and Isaiah Tomlin of Cornelia; great-grandchildren: Joshua & Andrew Autry of Lula and Ben & James Gunti of Buford; step great-grandchildren: Kira Marcus & daughters, Salem & Saxton of Baldwin and Journee Thurmond (Cotton) & daughter, Love of Cornelia; sister, Gervis Taylor of Alto; sisters-in-law, Geraldine Grier of Alto and Ruth Swann of Clifton Forge, Virginia; brother-in-law, E.D. Grier (Cathy) of Alto; and numerous nieces, nephews, and other family & friends.

Funeral services are scheduled for 12:30 pm on Saturday, October 8, 2022 in the chapel of McGahee-Griffin & Stewart Funeral Home with Pastor David Tomlin officiating.

The family will receive friends from 10:00 am until the service hour at the funeral home. Interment will follow the service. Elizabeth will be laid to rest next to her husband in the Pleasant Grove Cemetery in Alto.

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

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

Biden to pardon all federal offenses for simple marijuana possession, review criminalization

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — President Joe Biden on Thursday announced executive actions that would pardon thousands of people with prior federal offenses of simple marijuana possession.

Biden then called on governors to follow suit with state offenses for simple marijuana possession, saying that “just as no one should be in a Federal prison solely due to the possession of marijuana, no one should be in a local jail or state prison for that reason, either.”

The president also directed U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra and Attorney General Merrick Garland to review how marijuana is classified under federal law as a Schedule I drug, the Drug Enforcement Agency’s most dangerous classification that includes substances like heroin and LSD.

Biden’s executive order to pardon simple possession includes the District of Columbia as well as people convicted in the federal court system.

“Sending people to prison for possessing marijuana has upended too many lives and incarcerated people for conduct that many states no longer prohibit,” Biden said in a statement.

‘Failed approach to marijuana’

The move is intended to address the country’s “failed approach to marijuana,” a senior administration official said Thursday afternoon minutes before the announcement.

Recreational use of marijuana is legal in 19 states, including the District of Columbia, but there is still a mix of laws related to the drug. In 38 states, marijuana is allowed for medical purposes.

There are three states—Idaho, Kansas and Nebraska—where marijuana is illegal in all forms, recreational or medical.

Civil rights organizations and researchers have shown that charges for marijuana possession disproportionately affect Black and brown communities. For example, the ACLU found that Black people were 3.7 times more likely to be charged with marijuana possession compared to white people.

Police made 663,000 arrests for marijuana-related offenses in 2018, according to FBI data, which amounted to 40% of all drug arrests for that year.

A senior administration official said Thursday that “while white, Black and brown people use marijuana at similar rates, Black and brown people are disproportionately in jail for it.”

Senior administration officials said that even if a person has not been charged or convicted of a marijuana possession, as of Thursday’s date, “the pardon does cover that conduct.”

The Department of Justice will create an administrative process for those who are pardoned to obtain a certificate of their pardon “so that they will have documentation that they can show to law enforcement, employers and others as needed,” a senior administration official said.

States moved first

States began decriminalizing or legalizing recreational use of marijuana in 2012, when Colorado and Washington voters passed statewide ballot measures. Over the next decade, 17 more states followed suit. Those states have operated for years in conflict with federal laws that have kept the substance strictly illegal.

The U.S. House passed legislation earlier this year to legalize marijuana nationally, but the bill failed to gain traction in the Senate.

The House voted 220-204 to approve the measure, which would fix the split between federal law and states where recreational marijuana is legal. Three Republicans joined all but two Democrats in approving the measure.

Democratic lawmakers reacted positively to Biden’s announcement, and several called for full legalization.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said federal drug policies relating to marijuana have harmed communities of color, and torn families apart.

“These transformative actions are the latest manifestation of Democrats’ unyielding commitment to justice, especially for those unfairly harmed by cannabis criminalization,” she said in a statement.

“This is a major step toward justice,” U.S. Rep. Diana DeGette of Colorado tweeted. “Now, we need to legalize it nationwide.”

“A great first step for equitable treatment under the law—but we can and we will do more when we (expand) our Democratic majorities in November,” Virginia’s Rep. Gerald E. Connolly said.

U.S. Sen Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, applauded the move in a statement and called for passage of a bill he sponsored, along with New Jersey Democrat Cory Booker and Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer of New York, that would remove the substance from the list of controlled substances and expunge the records of anyone convicted of a marijuana-related crime.

“Legal protections for victims of the War on Drugs should be codified in law, cannabis should be descheduled and a federal regulatory system should be put in place to protect public health and safety,” he said. “Leader Schumer, Senator Booker and I have the bill to get it done. I look forward to working with President Biden to build on today’s movement and advance commonsense cannabis reform.”

Schumer called the action “historic” and said he hoped it would catalyze further congressional action.

“For far too long, the federal prohibition on cannabis and the War on Drugs has been a war on people, and particularly people of color,” the New York Democrat said in a statement. “President Biden’s action to pardon people convicted of simple marijuana possession under federal law is a huge step forward to correct decades of over-criminalization.”

Chair of the House Education and Labor Committee Bobby Scott, a Virginia Democrat, said in a statement that incarcerating people for possession of marijuana does not keep communities safer and is a waste of federal resources.

“We should instead be using those funds on evidence-based prevention and early intervention initiatives that actually reduce crime and save money,” he said.

GOP ties pardons to crime

Many more Democrats than Republicans commented on the move, which is in line with most Americans’ views on marijuana. A MorningConsult/Politico poll this month found that 60% of respondents favored legalization.

Republicans who did comment largely framed the initiative as soft on crime. Republicans are making rising crime rates a campaign issue in next month’s elections.

“In the midst of a crime wave and on the brink of a recession, Joe Biden is giving blanket pardons to drug offenders—many of whom pled down from more serious charges,” Sen. Tom Cotton, a Republican of Arkansas, said on Twitter. An earlier version of the tweet, which was deleted after nine minutes, complained of pardons to “pot heads.”

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, who is retiring this year, said in a statement that the Justice Department should not issue “blanket pardons” and each offender should be looked at individually. Hutchinson was the director of the Drug Enforcement Administration under President George W. Bush.

“As Governor I have issued hundreds of pardons to those who have been convicted of drug offenses,” he said. “But in this time of rising crime there should a clear record of law-abiding conduct before pardons are issued.”

Hutchinson is staunchly anti-legalization and has publicly opposed the proposed constitutional amendment on the Nov. 8 ballot that would create a legal marijuana regime in Arkansas.

Candidates campaigning for Congress quickly weighed in on the announcement as well, with Pennsylvania Democratic Senate candidate John Fetterman saying in a statement that it’s “a massive step towards justice.”

“Too many lives—and lives of Black and brown Americans in particular—have been derailed by this criminalization of this plant,” Fetterman said.

Ohio Democratic Rep. Tim Ryan, who is running for the open Senate seat, tweeted “legalize it” from his congressional Twitter account.

Schedule 1 drug

Unless Congress changes federal marijuana laws or the president takes further action, marijuana is likely to stay classified as a Schedule 1 drug for the near future.

Senior administration officials said Thursday it will take a while for the HHS secretary and the attorney general to assess if marijuana should stay in the highest classification or drop to a lower category within the DEA’s system.

“The process will take some time, because it must be based on a careful consideration of all of the available evidence, including scientific… and medical information that’s available,” the senior administration official said, adding that while Biden hasn’t set a timeline he wants the review to be “expeditious.”

The DEA has five schedule classifications for legal and illegal drugs, with Schedule 1 including substances with a high potential for abuse and no medical use. Heroin, LSD and peyote are classified as Schedule 1 drugs along with marijuana.

The next category, Schedule 2 is supposed to host drugs with a high potential for abuse and that can lead to “severe psychological or physical dependence,” according to the DEA. Cocaine, fentanyl, methamphetamine and oxycodone are all currently classified as Schedule 2.

Schedule 3 includes substances with a low to moderate likelihood of physical and psychological dependence, such as anabolic steroids and testosterone. Schedule 4 hosts drugs like Xanax, Valium and Ambien that have a low potential for abuse, according to the DEA. And Schedule 5 includes substances with a lower possibility of abuse than Schedule 4.

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Written by: Ariana Figeuroa, Jennifer Shutt, and Jacob Fischler

Hilda Davidson Tench

Hilda Davidson Tench, age 93, of Gainesville entered heaven Thursday October 6, 2022 in Blue Ridge with her family by her side.

Hilda was born in Maysville, Georgia to the late Joeve & Leila Boswell Davidson. She was a former member of Emmanuel Baptist Church where she was a longtime nursery worker. She currently was a member of Pinecrest Baptist Church. Hazel was a homemaker & was preceded in death by her husband, Earl Tench; brother, Cecil L. Davidson; sister, Hazel D. Collins.

Left to cherish sweet memories, daughter, Beverly T. (Sheron) Pass; grandchildren, Blake (Suzianne) Pass, Corey (Amy) Pass & Devin (Natalie) Pass; great grandchildren, Taber, Calvin, Annabelle, Karen & Rhys; sisters, Glinda (George) Roshau & Betty Eddings; brother-in-law, Leslie (Martha) Tench; a number of nieces, nephews and other relatives also survive.

Funeral services honoring Hilda will be held 2:00 p.m. Sunday October 9, 2022 at the Ward’s Funeral Home Chapel with Rev. Corey Pass & Grandson, Devin Pass officiating. She will be laid to rest by her husband, Earl at Memorial Park Cemetery. The family will receive friends from 2:00 p.m. until 4:00 p.m. & again from 6:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. Saturday October 8, 2022.

Flowers are accepted or contributions may be made to the Pinecrest Baptist Church building fund.

You may share online condolences with the family or you may sign the guest book at www.wardsfh.com.

Ward’s Funeral Home of Gainesville is honored to serve the family of Hilda Davidson Tench.

DACA ruled unlawful by federal appeals court; 20,000 Georgians still protected

Nine Republican-led states challenged DACA, arguing that the White House overreached in creating a program that should have been left to Congress. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — A federal appeals court has upheld a prior ruling that the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program is unlawful, sending the case back to a lower court that will decide the legality of the program that includes more than 600,000 undocumented people.

About 20,000 of those undocumented people live in Georgia.

The ruling means the program remains for now and those in it are still protected, but the future of DACA is up in the air pending the next judicial step. No new participants are being enrolled.

President Joe Biden issued a statement that he was “disappointed” in the Wednesday night ruling, and said the “decision is the result of continued efforts by Republican state officials to strip DACA recipients of the protections and work authorization that many have now held for over a decade.”

The president also called on Congress to “pass permanent protections for Dreamers, including a pathway to citizenship.”

Nine Republican-led states challenged DACA, arguing that the White House overreached in creating a program that should have been left to Congress. The states also said they were harmed financially by incurring costs for DACA recipients’ health care and education.

Those states are Texas, Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Nebraska, South Carolina, West Virginia, Kansas and Mississippi.

Lower court decision

The Wednesday ruling upholds a lower court decision in the Southern District of Texas by U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen, who ruled in July 2021 that the program was unlawful and prevented the government from accepting new DACA applications, but allowed the program to remain for current participants.

Hanen decided that because the program was not subject to public comment or notice, it violated the Administrative Procedure Act.

In the Wednesday decision, a three-judge panel from the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, headquartered in New Orleans, said that the Obama administration did not have the authority to create the program in 2012. The panel sent the case back to Hanen, asking the judge to look at the new version of a rule on the program issued by the Biden administration in August, which is set to take effect Oct. 31.

“A district court is in the best position to review the administrative record in the rulemaking proceeding and determine whether our holdings as to the 2012 DACA Memorandum fully resolve issues concerning the Final Rule,” the judges, one appointed by President George W. Bush and two by President Donald Trump, wrote.

In July, the U.S. Department of Justice, allied with the state of New Jersey, immigration advocacy groups and corporations like Amazon and Google, argued for the program, saying that Dreamers have grown up in it and become vital to the U.S. economy.

DACA was created a decade ago with the aim of providing temporary relief for children who were brought into the country unlawfully, allowing them to obtain drivers licenses and work permits and protecting them from deportation.

Most of the children in the program are now adults, and their futures remain in limbo.

FWD.us Georgia State Immigration Director Jaime Rangel  condemned the ruling and urged Congress to provide Dreamers with a pathway to citizenship.

“I came to the U.S. with my family when I was six months old and since then, I’ve been able to build a career and start a family,” Rangel said in a statement. I’m beyond thankful for DACA, which enabled me” to follow my passion and work diligently with statewide lawmakers and representatives in Congress to enact real change to our immigration system in a way that sets all Georgians up for success.”

Secretary of U.S. Homeland Security Alejandro N. Mayorkas said in a statement that he was deeply disappointed by the ruling and that the agency is “currently reviewing the court’s decision and will work with the Department of Justice on an appropriate legal response.”

He said that DHS will continue to accept new and renewed DACA applications, but will only process the renewal requests.

“It is clear, though, that only the passage of legislation will give full protection and a well-deserved path to citizenship for DACA recipients,” Mayorkas said.

‘Hanging by a thread’

U.S. House Democrats and immigration advocates worry that the program is in danger of ending, leaving hundreds of thousands of Dreamers without protections.

Sergio Gonzales, the executive director of the Immigration Hub, a group that lobbies for immigration and migration policy, said in a statement that DACA is “hanging by a thread.”

“The only question is when it will end,” Gonzales said of DACA. “The only realistic way to protect the 610,000 young people with DACA is for Congress to act by the end of the year.”

Congressional action on making a permanent pathway to citizenship for Dreamers is stalled, and is unlikely to change despite Democrats controlling both chambers. An evenly divided Senate would need all Democratic lawmakers on board plus an additional 10 Republicans to meet a 60-vote threshold to advance past a filibuster.

The Congressional Hispanic Caucus chair, Rep. Raul Ruiz, a California Democrat, called on 10 Republican senators to pass legislation providing a pathway to citizenship for Dreamers.

“Our Dreamers cannot wait,” he said in a statement. “We must modernize our broken immigration system, keep families together, strengthen our economy, provide pathways to citizenship, and live up to our nation’s values of hope, opportunity, and the American dream.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi blasted Republicans for continuing to block House-passed bills that would provide a permanent pathway to citizenship for Dreamers.

“Shamefully, extreme MAGA Republicans in the Senate have blocked this bill, playing political games with families’ futures while embracing an extreme agenda of anti-immigrant cruelty,” she said in a statement. “Senate Republicans must join us to immediately pass this urgent, necessary, House-passed legislation and send it straight to President Biden’s desk.”

Georgia Recorder Editor John McCosh contributed to this report.

Report says many utilities are slow-walking clean energy goals

Georgia Power’s coal-fired Plant Scherer contributed to the state’s largest electric public utility and its parent company receiving failing grades in new Sierra Club environmental report card. (Contributed/Altamaha Riverkeeper)

DENVER (GA Recorder) – A report released this week by the Sierra Club faults dozens of utilities that provide a major chunk of U.S. electric generation for failing to speed up their decarbonization efforts.

“For the sake of our communities and planet, we must do everything in our power to create a clean, renewable electric grid by 2030,” the Sierra’s Club’s “Dirty Truth” report says. “Utilities must lead this transition, but our research shows they are wholly unprepared to do their part. Clean energy is reliable and affordable; electric utilities have no excuse to delay and no time left to waste.”

The report, released Monday, is an update of a 2021 study the group did. The Sierra Club analyzed plans of 77 utilities that collectively supply about 40% of U.S. electric generation and gave out letter grades based on how well utilities, many with their own clean energy goals, were working to decarbonize.

Sierra Club gave Southern Co. subsidiary Georgia Power a failing grade in its second edition of  its “Dirty Truth” report, imploring the state’s largest utility to accelerate retirement of coal plants, put a halt to building new gas plants and to invest more in clean energy.

Georgia Power’s 20-year roadmap, approved by the Georgia Public Service Commission this summer, details the company plans to retire its fleet of coal fired power plants and close 29 coal ash ponds in its push to produce more economically feasible electricity and cut greenhouse gas emissions to close to zero by 2050.

That plan set retirement dates for coal-fired units at Plant Scherer in Juliette and Plant Wansley near Carrollton, however, state regulators delayed a decision until 2025 on when the final two generators will be shut down at Plant Bowen in northwest Georgia.

RELATED: For offshore wind aspirations to become reality, transmission hurdles must be cleared

Georgia Power had ceased generating coal at Plant Wansley by the start of September and changed course to a cleanup process preferred by environmental groups that stores coal ash in a lined landfill instead of leaving it in unlined pits that could contaminate groundwater.

But the company’s plans at many other sites is to use the “cap in place” method for coal ash that the Sierra Club says poses dangers to nearby residents.

Charline Whyte, Senior Campaign Representative for the Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal Campaign in Alabama, Georgia, and Mississippi said the big regional supplier of electricity needs to do more to protect the environment.

“We’re happy to see Georgia Power closing coal units, but replacing one dirty fossil fuel with another is not good for our communities,” Whyte said. “Georgia Power’s latest energy plan secured fracked gas power purchase agreements that lock the state into another decade of fossil fuels and eclipse the small renewable investments the utility proposed.”

“Southern Company’s net zero pledge is a step in the right direction, but it will only become reality if Alabama Power, Georgia Power, and Mississippi Power actually step up and take the actions necessary to meet the 2050 timeline. As a whole, Southern Company would have you believe that it’s rapidly transitioning its energy portfolio from dirty fossil fuels like coal and fracked gas to clean energy, but numbers don’t lie: Southern Company still heavily relies on fossil fuels to power our grid.”

“Most are still not on the path to achieve 80% clean electricity by 2030. Of the 77 utilities we studied, nearly half of them (44%) made no progress or received a lower score than in our previous report,” the Sierra Club said. “This disappointing inaction occurred despite a tumultuous 18 months of grid reliability crises, blackouts, energy price spikes and extreme weather events; many of these trace their roots in large part to utilities’ stubborn reliance on expensive and unreliable fossil fuels.”

To determine the grades, the Sierra Club looked at the latest versions of the utilities’ integrated resource plans, documents that lay out how they will meet future electric demand, evaluating how quickly they intend to retire coal plants and penalizing them for plans that include building new gas generation.

“If a company includes multiple scenarios in their IRP, we use the scenario they denote as their preferred scenario,” said Cara Bottorff, a Sierra Club managing senior analyst. “If they do not denote a preferred scenario, we use the scenario that is the worst case for gas (i.e., the one that would add the most gas) to demonstrate the largest amount of gas that the company is considering building.”

Overall, 56% of the utilities examined improved their scores, 9% made no progress and 35% got worse grades. You can check how your local utility did here.

The Edison Electric Institute, an association that represents investor-owned utilities, called the metrics “arbitrary” and dismissed the report as a “messaging document.”

“The reality is that existing nuclear generation and the flexibility provided by natural gas generation are what enabled the U.S. electric power industry to deploy 27 gigawatts of new renewables, reliably and cost-effectively, last year,” said Brian Reil, an EEI spokesman.

“The emissions reductions goals set by America’s investor-owned electric companies are firmly grounded in our current understanding of technology and economics, and they also reflect our responsibility to prioritize customer affordability and reliability.”

Reil noted that more than 40% of U.S. electricity is now generated by carbon-free resources and said electric utilities are investing in new technologies to deliver more.

“If the Sierra Club truly wants to accelerate the deployment of clean energy, they should consider joining the other environmental, industry and government leaders who are working together constructively to identify ways to overcome the barriers to building the transmission and other clean energy infrastructure we clearly need in order to deliver more resilient clean energy to customers,” he said.

At the Experience POWER conference for energy industry professionals Tuesday in Denver, the pace of the renewable energy transition was a major theme. Duane Highley, the CEO of Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association – a not-for-profit cooperative supplier which operates in New Mexico, Colorado, Wyoming and Nebraska and includes 42 electric distribution cooperatives and public power districts that provide power to more than a million consumers – used an old George Carlin comedy bit about driving to illustrate the competing tensions on utilities and electric co-ops trying to decarbonize without risking reliability.

Anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, Carlin said, while anybody going faster is a maniac.

“We’re being pulled between those people who think we are going too fast and those who think we are going too slow,” he said, noting that two states his coop operates in, New Mexico and Colorado, are much more green-energy oriented than the other two: Nebraska and Wyoming.

“There’s no map for this,” he said. “We’re in uncharted territory.”

He said the ability to generate electricity from fuel oil helped bail out Tri-State during the 2021 winter storm that caused the grid to collapse in Texas, resulting in an estimated 246 deaths. That makes it hard for utilities to ditch the reliability benefits of certain kinds of fossil fuel generation as quickly as some would like.

“We can make this happen and it is happening,” Highley said. He added that Tri-State, which got a B grade on the Sierra Club report, is on pace to have 50% of the electricity used by its members come from renewable sources by 2024 thanks to bountiful wind and solar resources, with an eventual goal of getting to 80% decarbonization, though that will still require some fossil fuel generation to stay in the mix.

“We’re going to clean up the grid and then we’re going to electrify everything,” he said.

Georgia Recorder Senior Reporter Stanley Dunlap contributed to this article.

James Robert “Jim” Patton

James Robert “Jim” Patton age 87 of Clarkesville, Georgia went home to be with the Lord on Thursday, October 6, 2022.

Born on June 28, 1935, in Anderson, South Carolina, Jim was the son of the late Robert and Inez Dickson Patton. He was a retired United States Navy Veteran having served in Korea, Lebanon, Vietnam, and in the Cuban Missile Crisis. After retirement, Jim pursued a career with Citgo Petroleum as a truck driver and a terminal manager. Jim was a Master Mason and a member of the Grand Lodge of Georgia and Clarkesville Lodge #325 F&AM, Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, York Rite of Freemasonry, Shriners of North America, a lifetime member of the Avenue of the Flags, life member of VFW Post #7720 and DAV Chapter 15 (Past Commander), American Legion Post 84 (Past Commander), Sons of Confederate Veterans, Sons of the American Revolution, a lifetime member of the Clan MacLaine Society of Lochbuie, Scotland, as well as Hills Crossing Baptist Church. In addition to his parents, Jim is preceded in death by his brother Ralph Patton.

Survivors include his wife Sheila Chau Thi Patton of Clarkesville, daughters Neva Bowen of Arkansas, Jackie Chamberlain of Georgia, Brenda Sheppard (David) of South Carolina and Jami Cannon (Owen) of Tennessee, son Frankie Patton (Shady) of Georgia, 13 grandchildren, 26 great-grandchildren, and 5 great-great-grandchildren.

A memorial service is scheduled for 1:00 p.m. Monday, October 10, 2022, at the Hillside Memorial Chapel in Clarkesville with Rev. David Stancil officiating. Interment will follow in the Hills Crossing Baptist Church Cemetery with full military honors provided by the Grant Reeves Honor Guard.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 11:00 a.m. until the service hour on Monday, October 10, 2022.

An online guest registry is available for the Patton family at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

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

Frances Marie Ivester Erwin

Frances Marie Ivester Erwin, age 87 of Cornelia, Georgia took her Heavenly flight home to be with the Lord on Tuesday, October 04, 2022, following an extended illness.

Born in Rabun County, Georgia on March 03, 1935, she was a daughter of the late Garnet & Carrie Turpin Ivester. Frances retired after many years of dedicated service in the Textile Industry. She was a faithful Christian woman who was very grounded in her faith and was a member of the Mud Creek Baptist Church for many years. In her spare time, Frances loved listening to Southern Gospel Music, was an avid crocheter, and enjoyed word search puzzles. She also received an award from Curves Fitness of Cornelia for having the most visits to exercise.

In addition to her parents, Frances was preceded in death by her loving husband of 63 years, James Lawton Erwin; brothers, William Ivester, Lester Ivester, Lamar Ivester, Abraham Ivester, Hoyt Ivester, & Frank Ivester; sisters & brothers-in-law, Drucilla & Rev. Johnny Barrett, Sally & Ernest Erwin; & her fur baby, Champer.

Survivors include her daughter, Judy Marie Erwin (Bobby Stowe); son, Ricky Erwin (Kathy); grandson, Heath Caudell (Amanda); great-grandson, Cruise Caudell (Chelsea Begley) special nieces, Deborah Suttles & Teresa Umbehant; step-grandchildren, Kimberly Garrett & Frankie Weber; as well as number of other special nieces, nephews, other relatives, a host of friends, & her fur babies, Skye, Bailey, & June.

All family and friends are requested to meet for a Homegoing Celebration of Life at 3:00 p.m. Tuesday, October 11, 2022 at Hillside Memorial Chapel in Clarkesville with Rev. Lewis Fortner & Rev. Mickey Umbehant officiating. Interment will follow in the Level Grove Cemetery with Rev. Grady Walden officiating at the graveside.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made to Gideons International, c/o Habersham North Camp, P.O. Box 1855, Clarkesville, GA. 30523

An online guest registry is available for the Erwin family at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com

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

Driver escapes injury when chicken feed truck overturns on GA 365

Traffic was temporarily stalled on GA 365 in Mt.Airy late Wednesday when an 18-wheeler hauling chicken feed overturned.

Habersham County E-911 dispatched first responders to the scene around 10:36 p.m. A 911 caller reported the truck was “on its side and was leaking.”

According to the Georgia State Patrol, 24-year-old Holden Hiatt of Gillsville was driving the 2015 Peterbilt truck northbound near Cody Road when he ran off the highway and overcorrected. The truck overturned on its passenger side in the median.

Habersham County Emergency Services, sheriff’s deputies and GSP responded to the scene. Hiatt told EMS he was not hurt and refused treatment, officials say.

The state trooper investigating the crash charged Hiatt with failure to maintain lane.

The crash shut down both northbound lanes and one southbound lane of the highway near Cody Road for more than an hour.