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Baldwin considers potential tax hike

(file photo)

The City of Baldwin is facing steep cuts or a tax hike. Those are the two options left to city leaders after it was divulged this week there’s a projected $722,870 budget shortfall for the upcoming fiscal year.

The proposed figures presented to the public at a town hall meeting Thursday night list revenues of $2,444,630 against expenses of $3,124,275.

The revenue does not include fines collected from the city’s school zone speed cameras. The council set that money aside in a restricted fund, according to officials who spoke during the meeting at Life Church.

“As the City Clerk and Chief Administrative Officer, I would say the driving force for the deficit is a realistic budget. While our city has continued to see an increase in growth over the last three to five years, our city services were faced with budget cuts, freezing positions, and even a reduction in staff; and all without increasing operating revenues,” Emily Woodmaster tells Now Habersham.

Woodmaster points out that Baldwin has not raised its millage rate in the last five years, adding that between 2017-and 2021, the rate dropped from 7.75 mils to 6.793.

“Combining these realities, the city inevitably added to the deficit for each budget year. As a direct result, the current administration is faced with a greater demand for services with insufficient resources to provide those services,” she says.

An information sheet Woodmaster circulated at Thursday’s meeting shows the city would have to nearly double its millage rate – from 6.793 to 13.29 mils – to fully fund the currently proposed expenditures for FY 2022-23. City officials also discussed a much more modest rate increase of 1.611 mils. If such a rate increase were to be adopted, the owner of a home with an assessed value of $100,000 would pay approximately $160 more a year in property taxes. If a lower rate is adopted, the city will have to decide what to leave out of next year’s budget.

The city is still in the process of drafting its FY 2022-23 budget.

“We have not proposed a millage rate increase at this time,” says Woodmaster. “The town hall meeting was designed to get the citizen’s input on how they would like to see the city eliminate the deficit.”

Around 35 members of the public attended Thursday’s town hall. At least one expressed her concerns that now is not a good time for a tax hike, citing the rising cost of groceries, gas, and other household expenses due to inflation.

Baldwin has until June 30 to adopt its new budget.

This article has been updated with comments and additional information

Final decision issued on Foothills Landscape Project

Willis Knob Horse Trail in Rabun County is among the sites due to see changes under the newly-adopted Foothills Landscape Project. (photo courtesy USFS)

The U.S. Forest Service has published the final Decision Notice for their  Foothills Landscape Project. The project is designed to maintain and restore healthy forest, habitat, and watershed conditions across 157,625 acres within the Chattahoochee National Forest in portions of Dawson, Fannin, Gilmer, Habersham, Lumpkin, Murray, Rabun, and White counties.

Since 2016, partners and community members from across North Georgia have been working together with the Forest Service to address complex conservation challenges across this landscape. According to the USFS, fire-dependent forests and associated open habitat are in decline due to decades of fire suppression. Young forest is practically non-existent.

“The reality facing our forests is that without active management on the ground to increase the resiliency of these ecosystems and difficult decisions for the sustainability of our recreation program, these public lands and all their inhabitants are at severe risk,” says Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest Supervisor Edward Hunter.

The newly-adopted project would apply some limits to commercial logging and offroad activities to prevent stream and soil erosion. The project also calls for active fire management and reforestation efforts. Hunter says the Land and Resource Management Plan, or Forest Plan, signed in 2004 is not adequately meeting its goals and objectives. This new approach should help achieve the following:

  • enhance unique habitats;
  • improve forest composition and structure;
  • reduce risks to forest health;
  • maintain the forest’s resilience to climate change;
  • increase forest age diversity;
  • provide quality habitat for threatened and endangered species;
  • increase aquatic habitat quality and connectivity;
  • expand the ecological role of fire;
  • protect neighboring communities from wildfire;
  • and enhance and provide sustainable recreation opportunities.

Among the many proposed actions in the FLP are some specific to Northeast Georgia, including the permanent closure of the Boggs Creek and Oakey Mountain campgrounds in Cleveland and Clayton, respectively. The project also calls for improvements to the Willis Knob Horse Trail in Clayton to correct erosion and drainage problems caused by the illegal use of off-highway vehicles (OHVs) and Jeeps.

“The range of management actions proposed are a necessary step to ensuring these public lands remain healthy and resilient for generations to come,” says Hunter. He adds, that the public-private sector collaboration that helped steer the project will continue. The Forest Service plans to hold annual workshops and is also forming a Foothills Collaborative Group to guide the project’s implementation.

“I value the differing perspectives of our public and choose to see opportunities in our differences, rather than obstacles,” Hunter says. “Since the project was first scoped in October 2017, we as managers have listened, learned, corrected, and evolved alongside the project. I am confident this current decision reflects that evolution and provides the necessary actions to truly meet the ecological need of this forest for future generations to come.”

To learn more about the Foothills Landscape Project, visit www.fs.usda.gov/goto/Foothills.

Dean Dyer of WRWH News contributed to this report

Man airlifted to hospital after fall from scaffolding

LifeNet 10 from Pickens, South Carolina, transported a seriously injured man to the hospital after he fell from scaffolding in Turnerville Thursday. (photo by Red Bird Media)

Air paramedics transported a seriously injured man to the hospital after he fell approximately 15 feet from scaffolding Thursday in Turnerville. At 3:20 p.m., Habersham E-911 dispatched first responders to Turkey Crest Road in reference to a man suffering from head injuries.

“Units responded without delay. Due to the location, the Air Methods air ambulance was activated,” says Habersham County Emergency Services Capt. Matt Ruark.

LifeNet 10 from Pickens, South Carolina, responded to pick up the patient since AirLife crews in Baldwin were on another call.

Paramedics prepare the injured man for transport to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville. (Red Bird Media)

When ground crews arrived on the scene, they found the injured man entangled in the scaffolding; it took rescuers approximately 10 minutes to free him. They then transported him by ambulance to the waiting helicopter at Mount Zion Baptist Church.

Capt. Ruark says the man, who has not been publicly identified, was alert and oriented when airlifted to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville.

Kemp signs off on laws he says will keep ‘woke politics’ out of public schools

Gov. Brian Kemp, right, jokes with Sen. Butch Miller, left, as Kemp signs a slew of education bills. Miller sponsored bills to create new rules for local school board meetings and create a committee to decide on sports participation for transgender girls. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

FORSYTH COUNTY (GA Recorder)  — Gov. Brian Kemp cemented much of his planned education policy Thursday, signing a raft of bills aimed at keeping controversial ideas out of the malleable minds of Georgia’s youngsters.

At a signing ceremony in Forsyth County, Kemp touted recent investments in public education.

“This session, we built on that momentum, fully funding the QBE school formula for three out of the four years I’ve been your Governor, even as we emerged from a global pandemic,” he said. “We finished out the final installment of the teacher pay raise I promised on the campaign trail in 2018 for a total of $5,000, and we put students and parents first by keeping woke politics out of the classroom and off our ballfields.”

That last bit is where Georgia liberals find fault.

Republicans in the Legislature say their smorgasbord of education policy changes will give parents more power in the classroom and protect kids from propaganda disguised as history lessons. Democrats and activists call it an election-year ploy to shore up support against the governor’s GOP primary challenger, former Sen. David Perdue, and presumed Democratic nominee Stacey Abrams at students’ expense.

Two of the new laws aim to enshrine the role of parents in their children’s education. One, which supporters call the Parents’ Bill of Rights, spells out a list of rights for public school parents, including the ability to examine and register complaints against all classroom materials. The other requires local boards of education to publish rules of conduct specifying what behavior constitutes removal from a meeting.

State legislatures around the country have been experimenting with changes to education policy after a year of culture war clashes over COVID-19 mask rules and classroom discussions on race and gender have some conservatives fed up.

It’s a worrying trend, said Jalaya Liles Dunn, director of the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Learning for Justice project.

“With today’s signing of HB 1084 and other so-called parental rights bills, Georgia will join at least 17 other states that have passed laws or other policies to limit how teachers can discuss race and racism in classrooms,” she said. “This sets a dangerous precedent that allows our democratic government to dictate, conceal and censor accurate information they disagree with. These bills were designed to distort the truth and sanitize history at a time when awareness of systemic racism is growing as a result of the last few years’ historic uprisings.”

Another pair of newly signed laws are concerned with what ideas school children should have access to. One requires districts to create a process for parents to complain about objectionable materials in school libraries, and another, House Bill 1084, bars nine concepts from classroom lessons, including the idea that the United States is “fundamentally racist,” that anyone should feel guilt because of his or her race or that anyone bears guilt for actions done by members of their race in the past.

“It ensures all of our state and nation’s history is taught accurately – because here in Georgia, our classrooms will not be pawns of those who want to indoctrinate our kids with their partisan political agendas,” Kemp said.

Civil Rights organizations say it’s Kemp who is playing politics by inserting culture war issues into classrooms.

“This law turns our schools into battlegrounds, where our children need the care and support of trusted adults, parents and teachers working together more than ever,” said Andrea Young, executive director of the Georgia chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union.

Young spoke at a virtual press conference Thursday where the Georgia ACLU and Southern Poverty Law Center announced an email address, [email protected], where parents, students and educators can email information about how the new law impacts learning.

Critics point out that efforts to ban discussion of topics viewed as controversial often disproportionately impact authors belonging to or subjects related to racial or sexual minorities.

“My son should be able to go into his school library and find books that reflect what his family looks like, just like every other student in Georgia,” said Amanda Lee, president-elect of the Georgia Library Media Association and a Georgia educator at a Thursday press conference held by the Georgia Democrats. “Let me be clear, a parent has the right to determine what’s best for their child and only their child. Allowing some parents more of a voice than others, denies students of books they need to learn and grow, and it serves as a reminder to all whose stories are valued and whose stories are deemed ‘inappropriate.’”

“It’s shameful that Brian Kemp has decided his re-election campaign is more important than our schools and our kids’ education,” she added.

Despite the new law, some teachers like Atlanta Public School teacher Anthony Downer say they will keep pushing for ways to teach about how white supremacy is entrenched in U.S. society. But he said strong partnerships with organizations are necessary to protect educators, even at Frederick Douglass High School, where he teaches civics and Africana Studies.

“Without those services, teachers, even Black teachers at places like these will begin to self-censor,” he said. “They won’t have to come after a lot of teachers because a lot of teachers will be shut up. The second thing we need to do is think bigger and brighter about how we give our students culturally sustaining education. It can live beyond the brick and mortar, beyond the four walls.”

In a dramatic last-minute move, lawmakers amended HB 1084 to include language creating a committee to determine whether transgender girls should be allowed to play on girls’ public school sports teams.

Conservatives have been pushing for such a measure for several years, arguing that transgender girls have an unfair advantage, but LGBTQ advocates call the law an unnecessary attack on vulnerable children.

Bills targeting transgender youth have popped up across the country this year, including in Texas, Florida, Alabama, Iowa and South Dakota.

Kemp acknowledged the controversy surrounding his favored legislation but said it is unwarranted.

“Standing up for the God-given potential of each and every child in our schools and protecting the teaching of freedom, liberty, opportunity and the American dream in the classroom should not be controversial,” he said. “Making sure parents have the ultimate say in their child’s education should not be controversial. And as the parents of three daughters, (First lady Marty Kemp) and I want every young girl in this state to have every opportunity to succeed in the sport they love. That should not be controversial.”

Toccoa wreck sends 4 to hospital

Two young children, ages 3 and 1, were among four people injured in a two-vehicle wreck Friday in Toccoa.

The children were passengers in a car driven by 20-year-old Odalys Garcia of Toccoa. Troopers say Garcia failed to yield while pulling out of a driveway onto West Currahee Street. She pulled into the path of an oncoming GMC Yukon which struck the driver’s side of the Nissan Altima Garcia was driving.

The early afternoon accident injured Garcia, the children, and another passenger in her vehicle, 21-year-old Edwin Lopez of Toccoa. The Yukon driver, 29-year-old Kersha Parker of Toccoa, was not injured.

Stephens County EMS transported the injured patients to Stephens County Hospital with minor injuries

 

EPA issues waiver for sales of 15% ethanol blend during summer driving season

A waiver for the corn-produced ethanol blend will last until May 20, but the EPA could decide to extend it if rising fuel prices continue to spike. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — The EPA issued a fuel waiver Friday afternoon to allow for a heightened ethanol gasoline blend to be sold at service stations this summer, an attempt by the Biden administration to lower soaring fuel prices.

In a letter to Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, EPA administrator Michael S. Regan wrote that the waiver will allow gas stations to sell the cheaper fuel blend with 15% ethanol in order “to address extreme and unusual fuel supply circumstances caused by the war in Ukraine that are affecting all regions of the Nation.”

The waiver for the corn-produced ethanol blend will last until May 20, but the EPA could decide to extend the waiver, Regan wrote, adding that the situation of rising fuel prices could worsen. Biden said earlier this month in an Iowa appearance that the waiver would continue through the summer.

In roughly two-thirds of the country, E15 cannot be sold from terminals starting on May 1 and at retail stations starting on June 1, the EPA said.

“The EPA also believes that the current extreme and unusual circumstances affecting global supply will continue in the near term, while the pressure on U.S. markets, including production and distribution of gasoline and other petroleum products, may worsen considering that crude oil disruptions, record usage of existing refineries, and even stronger international demand, have put significant pressure on the ability of domestic gasoline and other petroleum product supply to meet demand,” Regan wrote.

The waiver affects a small portion of gas stations in the U.S. that sell corn-based ethanol fuel. There are only 2,300 gas stations nationwide that offer a 15% ethanol blend, compared to the more than 140,000 gas stations across the U.S.

Iowa’s congressional delegation has pushed for year-round use of biofuels, but under current law, the 15% ethanol blend may not be sold from June to September due to concerns about air pollution. The EPA said Friday that it “does not expect any impact on air quality from this limited action.”

While in Iowa in early April, President Joe Biden announced his administration planned to direct the EPA to initiate a waiver. Iowa is home to 42 ethanol refineries.

“I’m here today because home-grown biofuels have a role to play right now …  as we work to get prices under control and reduce the costs for families,” Biden told the crowd.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki in a statement Friday characterized the move as a money-saver. “At current prices, E15 can save a family 10 cents per gallon of gas on average and many stores sell E15 at an even greater discount and today’s waiver will allow families to pay that lower price for months to come,” she said.

The Iowa Renewable Fuels Association praised the move.

“We thank President Biden and EPA Administrator Regan for upholding the promise to ensure E15 can be sold nationwide this summer. It was very important this action was taken today before May 1 when fuel terminals would have had to start discontinuing the distribution of E15 to retailers,” said executive director Monte Shaw. “This way terminals and retailers can have certainty and there will be absolutely no interruption in consumer access to cleaner-burning, lower-cost E15.”

The Bad Guys

The Bad Guys is an animated movie that has a lot of humor, energy and heart even if it follows a predictable and derivative script. Where it may lack in any real surprises, it makes up for with a voice talent that carries it through for 100 minutes.

The movie takes place in a world where humans and animals coexist. A ragtag team of anthropomorphic critters known as the Bad Guys wreaks havoc on the city by stealing. They’re led by Mr. Wolf (Sam Rockwell). Mr. Wolf’s cohorts include Mr. Snake (Marc Meron), a safecracker; Ms. Tarantula (Awkwafina), a computer hacker; Mr. Shark (Craig Robinson), a master of disguise; and Mr. Piranha (Anthony Ramos) who has a short fuse.

Together they team up on heists and at the beginning, they’re planning to steal the Good Samaritan Award that’s expected to be given to Professor Marmalade (Richard Ayoade), a guinea pig who helped save the city from a meteor.

The Bad Guys almost get away with their crime and are about to be sent to prison when Marmalade is persuaded by Mr. Wolf to help reform their wicked ways.

Zazie Beetz from Deadpool 2 and Joker costars as Governor Foxington who has some real doubts about their rehabilitation, but she reluctantly agrees.

Marmalade’s attempts prove to be unsuccessful, but Mr. Wolf starts turning on his own after he saves the life of a woman from falling down a flight of steps. This gives Marmalade the idea of using the Bad Guys’ talents to reinvent their image.

Each part of their plan serves as a homage to other movies. We get spoofs of everything from Pulp Fiction, Mission: Impossible, Fast & Furious and the Ocean’s movies. The pop-culture references miss just about as much as they hit.

There’s nothing fresh or original about The Bad Guys. We can see the plot twist a mile away and the movie is obviously setting itself up for an inevitable sequel, but the talents of Rockwell, Maron, Awkwafina, and others lend real charm and charisma to their roles.

I did like how the characters are each given enough screen time to allow their personalities to take front and center and the actors are certainly having a great time with the material.

I think perhaps the mechanics of predictability prevented this from being a memorable animated movie. As it is, it’s just entertaining enough for kids, and adults might find it a moderate diversion.

Grade: B+

(Rated PG for action and rude humor.)

U.S. to lend and lease military supplies to Ukraine under bill cleared by Congress

U.S. military equipment is loaded aboard an aircraft to assist Ukraine. (Screen shot from Defense Department video)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — The U.S. House voted overwhelmingly Thursday to use the framework of a World War II-era program to allow the federal government to lend and lease military equipment to Ukraine as it resists Russian troops.

The legislation, called the Ukraine Democracy Defense Lend-Lease Act, would remove red tape and require the White House to create an expedited process for lending or leasing military equipment to Ukraine’s government.

The bill, passed 417-10 with all the no votes from Republicans, now goes to President Joe Biden for his expected signature.

“Eighty years ago, the U.S created the Lend-Lease program to provide military and humanitarian aid to Great Britain and our allies in Europe as they stood on the front lines to oppose the Axis powers that threatened democracies around the world, including our own,” Pennsylvania Democratic Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon said.

“Today the Ukrainian people are standing on the front lines in the fight for democracy and against tyranny, and the U.S. needs to provide them with every possible measure of humanitarian and military aid.”

Indiana Republican Rep. Victoria Spartz — who was born in 1978 in what was then the Soviet Union, but is now Ukraine — spoke in support of the bill, saying that “streamlining the process” for lending or leasing weapons and equipment to Ukraine was crucial.

Spartz said she’s been to Ukraine twice recently and witnessed the “brutality of this war” and the “atrocities that happened to the civilian population.”

“It’s very difficult to express with words, very disturbing. But the strength and resilience of the Ukrainian people and optimism is very inspiring for me as an American,” Spartz said.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, a Maryland Democrat, said the only acceptable outcome of the war in Ukraine is “strategic defeat” for Russian President Vladimir Putin and “global criminality.”

“Anything less would send a dangerous signal to other dictators around the world that wars of aggression could yield net gains. That must not happen,” Hoyer said. “America and our allies must ensure that the only thing Putin gains from the invasion of Ukraine is a hard lesson learned through bitter defeat and loss.”

Michigan GOP Rep. Tim Walberg recalled his recent trip to Ukraine over Easter while urging his colleagues to vote for the bill.

“Stand with Ukraine. They’ve stood with us,” he said.

Voting no

The 10 Republicans who voted against the measure include Arizona Rep. Andy Biggs, North Carolina Rep. Dan Bishop, Ohio Rep. Warren Davidson, Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz, Arizona Rep. Paul Gosar, Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie, South Carolina Rep. Ralph Norman, Pennsylvania Rep. Scott Perry and Wisconsin Rep. Tom Tiffany.

The legislation will allow the Biden administration to lend or lease military equipment to Ukraine or other Eastern European governments “to help bolster those countries’ defense capabilities and protect their civilian populations” from Russia.

Biden currently has authority under the Arms Export Control Act to lend or lease military equipment to other countries as long as it’s in the U.S. national security interest. But several Republican and Democratic lawmakers introduced legislation earlier this year to remove some of the bureaucratic hurdles and speed up the process.

The legislation will waive some of the current Lend-Lease requirements, including that loans must be capped at five years and that the government agreeing to the lease pay the United States for all costs associated with the lease.

The legislation also requires the Biden administration to create expedited procedures for timely delivering military equipment under the Lend-Lease program within 60 days of the bill becoming law.

The U.S. Senate passed the bill on a voice vote in early April.

New Hampshire Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, a primary co-sponsor, said at the time “delivering military aid as quickly as possible is pivotal for Ukraine’s ability to defend itself against Putin’s unprovoked attacks.”

“As the world bears witness to the most serious security threat to Europe and our global stability since World War II, this legislation to speed up the process of moving military equipment to the frontlines couldn’t be more urgent,” Shaheen said.

Lend-Lease and FDR

The U.S Congress originally approved the Lend-Lease Act (H.R. 1776) in 1941, giving the president the authority to sell, lend, or lease military equipment to any nation deemed vital to national security.

Then-President Franklin D. Roosevelt urged Congress to approve the legislation in his January 1941 message, according to the U.S. House historian’s office.

“We cannot, and we will not, tell them that they must surrender, merely because of present inability to pay for the weapons which we know they must have,” he said.

After the bill became law, Roosevelt established the Office of Lend-Lease Administration and ordered the first shipment of food and equipment to go to the United Kingdom, according to the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum.

Within two years, Roosevelt added Australia, China, New Zealand and the Soviet Union to the list of eligible Lend-Lease nations as well as numerous others, including the Netherlands, Norway and Poland, whose governments were in exile at the time.

The list of supplies sent during World War II’s Lend-Lease program was broad. It included items directly needed by other militaries, such as airplanes, tanks, small arms and ships, as well as clothing and food.

During his floor speech Thursday, Hoyer noted that Roosevelt said the Lend-Lease program helped establish America as an “arsenal for democracy.”

“Today, the battle for democracy is taking place in another European nation — Ukraine,” Hoyer said. “The Ukrainian people are the ones engaged in combat directly. They are the point of the spear.”

The U.S. House vote to approve the bipartisan Lend-Lease measure on Thursday came just hours after Biden called on Congress to approve $33 billion in additional economic, humanitarian and military assistance to Ukraine.

Hoyer said he plans to bring that bill to the floor as soon as Democrats and Republicans agree on the package.

Asher James Williams

Infant Asher James Williams, son of Jebb Connor Williams and Danielle Leann Waters of Cornelia was born on March 28, 2022, in Gainesville and passed away on Tuesday, April 26, 2022.

In addition to his parents, Asher is also survived by his grandparents, Kevin and Misty Williams of Cornelia and Danny and Amanda Waters of Alto; great grandparents, Buster and Tillie Williams of Clarkesville; Betty Whitfield of Cornelia, Mary Ann McDuffie (Joe) of Alto, Ronnie Ross (Vanessa Hall) of Griffin, Ronnie and Denise Scott of Newnan; numerous aunts and uncles.

He was preceded in death by great grandparents, Doug Porterfield, Anita Franklin, and James Steve Waters; and great-great-grandmother Eva Ruth Bruce.

Funeral services will be held at 2 pm on Monday, May 2, 2022, in the Chapel of McGahee-Griffin and Stewart with Rev. Sandy Coggins and Rev. Phil Yarber officiating. Interment will follow in Level Grove Cemetery.

The family will receive friends from 12 noon until the service hour on Monday at the funeral home.

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.

Firefighters respond to report of elderly woman trapped inside burning home

Firefighters responded to this house at 798 Stekoa Falls Road in Rabun County believing an elderly woman was trapped inside. After searching for her, firefighters learned she was safe with family. (photo by Rabun County Fire Services)

There were some extremely tense moments for firefighters in Rabun County on Wednesday while responding to a house fire with a report of a woman trapped inside.

Firefighters were dispatched to the scene at 798 Stekoa Falls Road around 3:21 p.m. on April 27. When they arrived, the back of the single-story structure and two vehicles under a carport were heavily involved with fire. Flames were also showing from the front door and living room windows says Rabun County Fire Services Assistant Chief Justin Upchurch.

“The fire attack was begun quickly as well as a search for the occupant. After the fire was controlled and the primary search had revealed no occupant, family arrived on scene stating the missing female was safe with them,” Upchurch says.

The fire severely damaged the interior of the residence. Firefighters helped remove items from the house for the family.

Fortunately, no one was injured. The State Fire Marshal’s Office is investigating the cause of the fire.

Multiple agencies from different jurisdictions helped with the response, including Rabun County EMS, Clayton and Dillard police, and the Rabun County Sheriff’s Office.

According to Upchurch, “It was a true multi-agency response with all hands contributing to the best outcome possible for the situation.”

Flowery Branch standoff ends peacefully, man arrested for threatening officers

A lengthy standoff between an armed resident and law enforcement ended peacefully early Thursday morning in Hall County.

In a joint effort between the Flowery Branch Police Department and Hall County Sheriff’s Office, the was taken into custody at his home in the Sterling on the Lake Community in Flowery Branch.

Initially, police officers responded to a 911 call Wednesday afternoon from someone requesting a welfare check on the man who lived in the 6800 block of Lake Overlook Lane. That man, later identified as Jacob Lee Hill, 30, reportedly had been threatening to harm himself.

When officers approached the residence, Hill brandished a firearm and threatened to shoot the officers if they did not leave his property, officials say. Hill continued to threaten to harm himself, as well. When Hill fired a shot inside the house, Flowery Branch officers called for assistance from Hall County SWAT. The team, including negotiators, responded to the neighborhood and tried to convince Hill to exit the home. During the course of the negotiations, Hill fired two more shots inside the house.

Around midnight, SWAT officers determined they would have to force Hill from the residence. They deployed a less-than-lethal chemical agent into the house and Hill surrendered peacefully about 20 minutes later.

“This was a team effort all around,” says Flowery Branch Police Chief Chris Hulsey. “Neighbors were very patient because we had roads closed in the neighborhood and they couldn’t get home until very late. I also commend the Hall County Sheriff’s Office and their SWAT Team for helping to bring this incident to a peaceful end.”

No one suffered any injuries during the standoff.

“We’re thankful for the positive outcome of this very tense situation,” says Hall County Sheriff Gerald Couch. “Our SWAT members and officers from the Flowery Branch Police Department worked together in tandem through the night and we’re just glad the incident was resolved without anyone being hurt.”

Hill has been charged with two counts of aggravated assault against a peace officer and four counts of terroristic threats. He remains in the Hall County Jail.

Are child abuse crimes on the rise in Habersham County?

The blue lights in Clarkesville shine each April to draw attention to National Child Abuse Prevention Month. (Joy Purcell/Now Habersham)

Recent reports on child abuse in Habersham County seem to indicate that crime against children is on the rise. According to Deputy Kevin Angell, the Public Information Officer of the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office, that’s not necessarily so. Angell explains that the work of the Sheriff’s Office has increased public reporting of incidents as well as convictions. That means the office is receiving more reports of child abuse than they have in the past. As Angell says, “We can’t know what we don’t know.” They can’t investigate crimes that haven’t been reported.

And that success in more reporting is no accident.

The Special Victims Unit at work

In 2020 a special grant from COPS allowed the Sheriff’s Office to restructure the way they approach crime incidents. Investigators were divided into two investigating teams, one for crimes against persons and the other for property crimes.

Angell points out that any success in the areas of child abuse and domestic violence requires the public’s trust in reporting incidents. He credits the work of the crimes against persons team, known as the Special Victims Unit (SVU) for building trust with the community to be willing to call for help. That trust has been built through intentional efforts.

First is the anonymous reporting system put in place in all county schools. Designed as a safe way for children to report abuse, either against them or friends, the system works through an app that children can put on their phones. It’s allowed children to quickly call for help and to report anonymously if necessary. Furthermore, the county has an actively engaged School Resource Officer (SRO) program. Officers work to build strong, positive relationships with students and staff.

Second, the sheriff’s office partners with FAITH’s Power House, a child advocacy and sexual assault center in Toccoa, Georgia. The trained staff at Power House conducts all forensic units, creating a safer and more calming experience for abuse victims.

Third, the SVU has added a patrol investigator to its team. In that position is Deputy Michael Meadenhall who is dually assigned to the patrol unit and SVU. Because Depty Meadenhall is already on patrol, he is able to get to a call on abuse or domestic violence quickly.

Fourth, the investigation division created the position of Public Information Officer. In this role, Angell has the responsibility of keeping the community informed.

The Special Victims Unit (SVU) has been carefully structured with personnel. The unit is made up of four investigators. Besides Patrol Investigator Michael Meadenhall, Investigator Eric Newcomb and Investigator Kevin Angell (also the PIO) are especially skilled in internet research; and Investigator Cale Garrison, home-grown in the area, has the historical knowledge and relationships to understand the community and to locate people. Sergeant Wesley Welborn is the working supervisor of the unit, as well as handling financial crimes and adult protective services.

They care deeply about what they do

Angell emphasized that the deputies of the SVU are “passionate about what we do.” He says, “Sometimes, people see us in their worst hours. But we don’t get to see the end of their journeys once the case is passed on to the District Attorney’s office. That bothers us. We care. We wish we knew how the victims are doing.”

That’s the reason you’ll see so many investigators at extra activities and community events. They want the community to see that they really do care. They do their jobs well, but they are also parents and spouses – they care about what happens to people in Habersham County and the victims they’ve met along the way.

The community can help

The SVU depends upon the community to let them know when abuse is taking place. The case of Melinda and David Cowart’s alleged abuse of their four children discovered that other people in the family knew something was wrong but did not realize how bad it was. Reports can be made anonymously. For phone numbers, go to www.habershamsheriff.com/victimsassistance.

The community can also help by providing new stuffed animals and small blankets to the SVU. These are kept in patrol cars and are used to provide comfort to children and adults of abuse crimes. Interestingly, the community has been providing these in the past, but the supply dried up during the COVID pandemic.