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Debbie Mobley Haynes

Debbie Mobley Haynes, 65, of Cleveland, Georgia, died April 12, 2022. Born in Abbeville, South Carolina on September 15, 1956, to the late Charlie C. and Ruby Scott Mobley.

In addition to her parents, Debra is preceded in death by Skeet Mobley of Abbeville, Benny Mobley of West Minister, Linda Partain of Abbeville and Carolyn Cheshire of Donald’s.

Survivors include husband of 25 years Sammy Haynes, Stepdaughter Tiffany Hernandez (Ricardo), granddaughter Brianna Hernandez, grandsons Carson and Ashton Hernandez, Stepson Jeromy Haynes (Patricia), grandsons Bryson and Brantley Haynes, Stepson Joshton Haynes (Sheena), grandsons Joshton Haynes, Jr. and Jaxson Haynes. Brother Pete Mobley (Judy) of Minot, N.D., Gwen Pye of Boiling Springs, S.C., Mary Cox (Ronnie) of Calhoun Falls, S.C., Marolyn Whited of Greenwood, S.C., and a very special niece Tammie Larkin.

Debbie loved her rescued fur baby Angel and respectfully requested that in lieu of flowers please make donations to the animal shelter of one’s choice.

There will be no formal services held at this time.

Arrangements by Hillside Memorial Chapel & Gardens, Clarkesville. 706-754-6256

Area Easter egg hunts

(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

What’s more fun than colorful eggs? Eggs with toys and treats inside, of course! There are several Easter egg hunts open to the community in Northeast Georgia. Below are some of them, beginning Good Friday through Easter Sunday.

If your business, organization, or church is holding an egg hunt and you would like to add it to our list, email details to [email protected]!

Good Friday, April 15

  • Mt. Yonah Baptist Church: 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m.
    882 Asbestos Road, Cleveland
  • The Egg Hunt at the Torch: 6 p.m. 800 Cannon Bridge Road, Demorest and Hancock Park in Dahlonega.
  • Chattahoochee Baptist Church: 7 p.m.
    7905 Duncan Bridge Road, Cleveland

Holy Saturday, April 16

  • Hollywood Baptist Church: 10:30 a.m.
    208 Hollywood Church Road, Clarkesville
  • Tantrum Brewing Company: 12 p.m.
    1139 Helen Highway, Cleveland
  • Clarkesville Church of God: 1 p.m.
    173 Highway 197 North, Clarkesville
  • Riverwalk Plaza: 1:30 p.m.
    60 Chattahoochee Strasse, Helen
  • The River Church: 2-5 p.m.
    885 Alto-Mud Creek Road, Alto
  • Enon Baptist Church: 5 p.m.
    7321 Old Cornelia Highway, Alto

Easter Sunday, April 17

  • Grace-Calvary Episcopal Church: 10:15 a.m.
    260 East Green Street, Clarkesville
  • Gate Church: 11 a.m.
    451 Roper Drive, Clarkesville
  • Camp Creek Baptist Church: 12 p.m.
    1761 Camp Creek Road, Cornelia

Looking for where to worship on Easter Sunday? Click here for a list of services in and around Northeast Georgia.

Trump sends cash to anti-Kemp group, marking his first big midterm donation

Former President Donald Trump held a rally for former U.S. Sen. David Perdue last month. Trump put his money where his mouth is Wednesday with a $500,000 donation from his political action committee aimed at defeating Gov. Brian Kemp. (FILE PHOTO -Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

(GA Recorder) — Former President Donald Trump has opened up his wallet – or at least his political action committee – in the hopes of thwarting Gov. Brian Kemp’s bid for a second term.

Trump’s Save America PAC has donated $500,000 to Get Georgia Right, a Virginia-based anti-Kemp super PAC.

As Politico first reported, the check is Trump’s first big donation in this year’s midterm elections nationally, and it may also be just the beginning of Trump’s spending in the Georgia governor’s race. Trump has socked away more than $110 million in his Save America PAC.

The donation comes as former U.S. Sen. David Perdue lags behind Kemp in the polls and in fundraising, and it is yet another sign of the important role Georgia continues to play in national politics.

Following the March 25 donation, Get Georgia Right began sponsoring TV ads featuring unsubstantiated claims tying Gov. Brian Kemp to supposed “illegal ballot harvesting” in 2020.

Relitigating the last presidential election has become standard for Trump, said Georgia State University political science professor Amy Steigerwalt. Once political allies, Trump and Kemp fell out after the 2020 election in which Trump lost Georgia and accused Kemp of not doing enough to illegally overturn the results.

“It really is the one thing that he focuses on and that he has devoted a lot of energy to, and in many ways, his dislike of Kemp is also very personal,” Steigerwalt said Wednesday. “And I think you really see that in that it’s sort of continuing, that it’s not just about what happened in the election, but really, that he doesn’t want Kemp to be there and sort of anyone but Kemp would be preferable.”

Trump’s criticism of Kemp has been unrelenting ever since the governor refused to help overturn the presidential election results nearly two years ago, and the former president has vowed to foil Kemp’s plans for a second term in the governor’s mansion.

Perdue publicly announced his candidacy in December, immediately complicating the GOP primary in Georgia, and he received Trump’s official endorsement the same day.

Trump has since endorsed a slate of statewide candidates in the Republican primary in Georgia, even wading into lower ballot races like the insurance commissioner’s contest. The Republican incumbent commissioner, John King, was appointed by Kemp.

Since Trump has ventured so far into Georgia politics this year, the May 24 primary is widely seen as a test of Trump’s hold on Republican voters.

“He very clearly has a lot of sway still over elected members of the Republican Party,” Steigerwalt said. “What we don’t entirely know is whether or not the voters are going to respond to that. And really, indications are that they’re not. Really, it doesn’t appear to be helping, for example, David Perdue, now that people know that Trump has endorsed him. We’re not seeing his numbers going up. In fact, in anything, it seems to have somewhat led to an increase, actually, in how Kemp is doing.”

Kemp held an 11-point lead over Perdue in an Emerson College poll released this month, which cast doubt on whether Trump’s March rally in Commerce benefited his favored candidate.

Trump has seemed to lower expectations in more recent interviews, telling a conservative radio host this month “it’s always hard to beat a sitting governor. Just remember that.”

Kemp’s campaign shrugged off Trump’s $500,000 donation to Perdue.

“David Perdue is going to need a lot more than $500,000 to distract from his unhinged rant attacking the Georgia State Patrol,” said Cody Hall, spokesman for the Kemp campaign.

Perdue lamented the condition of the Georgia State Patrol under Kemp, telling reporters Tuesday the agency had been allowed to “deteriorate” and was no longer functioning at an “elite level.” Perdue’s press conference was held the same day Kemp signed into law a bill ending a permit requirement and fee to carry a concealed firearm, which is a change Perdue has argued his primary challenge helped spur.

But even if Trump is not able to propel Perdue past the primary, he could still remain a thorn in Kemp’s side as he tries to focus on defeating presumed Democratic nominee Stacey Abrams. The 2018 challenge between the two was famously close, and if 2022 sees the same dynamic, a small number of Trump loyalists sitting the election out could boost Abrams across the finish line.

Georgia Sens. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff likely benefited from Trump supporters sitting out the 2020 runoffs.

Georgia Recorder Deputy Editor Jill Nolin contributed to this report. 

Georgia law nixes permit requirement for firearms

Gov. Brian Kemp claps outside of Douglasville’s Gable Sporting Goods after he signed a bill ending a permit requirement to carry concealed handguns in public. (Stanley Dunlap/Georgia Recorder)

(GA Recorder) — The first political event 30-year-old Nick Champion ever attended was Tuesday outside a sporting goods store to see Gov. Brian Kemp officially end a state permit requirement to carry concealed handguns in Georgia.

The clock repairman from Douglasville was among the dozens of supporters of the GOP’s so-called constitutional carry bill who gathered at Gable Sporting Goods off a main strip in the county seat of Douglas County.

Kemp was joined Tuesday by Attorney General Chris Carr, the bill’s sponsors in the House and Senate, Marty Kemp, and their daughters outside a gun store where the Republican governor said he purchased his daughter Lucy her first firearm.

The governor’s signature makes Georgia the 25th state to allow lawful gun owners to carry a firearm in public without a permit, a law that for many gun rights advocates is considered the gold standard. Gone is also the up to $75 fee that accompanied the permit.

Permit-less carry was the focus of counter-programming Tuesday from gun safety advocacy groups like Moms Demand Action, Georgia Democratic lawmakers, and a group of mayors. Opponents called the law dangerous and said it removes a last-defense background check that weeds out thousands of applicants with criminal histories or mental health problems.

Kemp said many people cannot wait upwards of a year for some local probate judges to issue a permit, a problem during the peak of the pandemic as court shutdowns led to slower processing of newer applications and renewals.

“You certainly shouldn’t have to have a piece of paper from the government to legally carry a weapon,” he said. “You’re still gonna have to go through background checks at stores just like this to purchase a firearm. All the laws that have always been in place about who can carry weapons and who can’t, this doesn’t change that.”

Champion celebrated being liberated from the extra steps to renew his license. He argued safeguards remain in place, pointing to the background checks on the federal level to purchase firearms from licensed dealers and the loss of gun rights for those who break the law.

“My wife’s carry license just expired about a month ago and in the meantime, before we could get it renewed if she was carrying somewhere like in her purse, that’d be illegal,” Champion said. “And I told her you know, if you’re gonna carry it, carry it open, so people see it that way.”

About an hour before the bill signing ceremony, a group of Georgia Democratic legislators gathered near the gun store to hold a press conference condemning the governor and other political leaders for weaning gun laws.

“It’s a sad day across Georgia when our leaders care more about their political careers than ensuring our communities are safe,” Atlanta Democratic state Rep. Roger Bruce said. “Georgians should take notice — if your governor prioritizes votes over our lives, it’s time we elect a new governor.”

Seven mayors sent Kemp a letter prior to the signing urging him not to sign off on a law they say will make it more difficult for law enforcement and increase the likelihood of guns being stolen as more people leave their weapons in unlocked cars and other unsecured locations.

“Officers also have warned that this law would ‘cause an increase in gun crimes,’ ‘put us backward,’ and leave them in ‘uncharted waters’ when it comes to determining whether an armed individual is lawfully carrying a firearm,” read the letter signed by the mayors of Buena Vista, Brookhaven, Toomsboro, Athens-Clarke County, Cuthbert, Savannah, and Union City.

Over 5,200 applicants were denied a concealed weapon permit in Georgia in 2020, mostly because of prior criminal records or domestic violence history.

“Shame on Kemp, and shame on every lawmaker who joined him in ramming this reckless bill through,” said Courtney Spriggs, former law enforcement officer and a volunteer with the Georgia chapter of Moms Demand Action.  “They have undermined public safety and ignored those fighting to keep their communities safe every step of the way, but we aren’t going anywhere. We will be holding our leaders accountable for the violence they’re enabling, we will make sure of it.”

But Kemp also drew fire from his right. The governor’s GOP primary challenger, former U.S. Sen. David Perdue, questioned why Kemp did not get permit-less carry done sooner. Kemp campaigned on the issue back in 2018.

The number of annual applications for concealed and open carry reached about 300,000 a couple years ago as people paid up to a $75 fee to have it processed and a smaller fee to renew every handful of years.

The law required that an application submitted to a probate court in Georgia must be granted or denied within 10 days of receiving the background report.

The state could refuse to issue a license if an applicant has a felony conviction, a conviction for carrying a weapon without a license, certain mental health issues or a conviction for a misdemeanor crime of domestic violence

While the idea of permit-less carry is an easy concept to understand, there are some complicated parts in unraveling parts of the law, said Matt Kilgo, an independent program attorney for the U.S. LawShield.

The organization is collaborating with GA2A, an organization that advocates for expanded gun rights, to hold free information sessions on the law through the end of April.

“The most basic concept is anywhere in the law where it requires you to have a weapons carry license, it now requires you to be in lawful weapons carrier,” he said.

“You also get the benefit of not having to go through the background check every single time you buy a firearm,” Kilgo said.

Under the new law, carrying a firearm is still off limits in places such as courthouses, mental health facilities, polling places and also in churches without permission.

Clarkesville man arrested on child molestation charges

A Clarkesville man has been arrested on child molestation charges after allegedly attempting to molest an 11-year-old family member.

Randall Gene Mull, 35, of Clarkesville, was arrested Tuesday after the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office was informed of a February incident in which the girl accused Mull of making sexual advances toward her.

According to the incident report, the girl was asleep on Mull’s couch with his daughter on the night of February 19 when Mull allegedly picked her up and took her into his bedroom. He told her she should sleep in his room to keep her and his daughter from fighting. He allegedly made a lewd suggestion and grabbed the young girl’s hand to put it down his pants. The girl pulled away from him and left the house. She and her mother reported the incident to the sheriff’s office.

According to HCSO Public Information Officer Kevin Angell, when deputies attempted to question Mull after the event, he fled from law enforcement. A judge signed warrants for his arrest on March 15. Angell says he’s glad Mull has been arrested and can be brought to justice.

“It’s another child molestation case, and our special victims unit works very hard to bring these types of people to justice,” Angell tells Now Habersham. “We’re just happy that he’s been arrested.”

Investigators charged Mull with three felony counts including child molestation, enticing a child for indecent purposes, and probation violation. At the time of the alleged incident, he was on probation for obstructing and fleeing from a law enforcement officer.

Following his arrest on April 12, deputies booked Mull in at the Habersham County Detention Center. He’s being held there on a $44,200 bond.

Gainesville shooting at Walmart under investigation

(Gainesville Police Department/Facebook)

The Gainesville Police Department (GPD) is currently investigating a shooting that occurred Tuesday evening at Walmart on Shallowford Road.

At around 5:00 p.m. on April 12, the GPD responded to Walmart’s parking lot regarding the shooting incident. Gainesville police say that at the scene, they found an adult male with a gunshot wound to the leg. The man was transported to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in stable condition.

Police took another adult male subject into custody as a person of interest in the case. The GPD believes the shooting may have been a domestic incident- GPD Lt. Kevin Holbrook says that all parties involved knew each other.

The case remains under investigation.

Kevin Harris named sole finalist for Cleveland administrator job

The City of Cleveland has announced that Kevin Harris has been named the sole finalist for the position of City Administrator. The Cleveland City Council voted on Tuesday afternoon, following an executive session, to name Harris as the sole finalist.

Harris currently serves as the Government Affairs Director for the Georgia Department of Human Services where he coordinates all legislative efforts for the department and its programs including the Department of Family and Children Services. Additionally, he is the point of contact for the agency during the budget process where the agency is appropriated over $1.9 billion. Harris previously served as the Deputy Executive Director of the Georgia Vocational Rehabilitation Agency and as the Economic Development Director for the Fannin County Development Authority.

Early in his career, Harris was a part of the Cleveland community when he served on the Faculty and as Department Chair of Government at Truett McConnell University.

Mayor Josh Turner said “We are thrilled to have Kevin Harris joining the City Hall staff as City Administrator. His vast experience and management within local and state government make him an ideal candidate. The City Council and I look forward to working with Mr. Harris as we continue to make Cleveland a great place to work, live, and raise a family.”

Turner said they received several applications for the position and they narrowed those down to three. Following the interviews with the top three, they selected Harris.

Harris received his Bachelor of Arts and Master of Public Administration degrees from the University of Georgia and is a Certified Public Manager through the Carl Vinson Institute of Government.

“I’m excited for the opportunity and can’t wait to get to work for the City of Cleveland. I respect the deep heritage of the city and look forward to working with the Mayor and City Council for what the future has to bring,” Harris said.

Harris’s first day as City Administrator will be May 2.

The City Administrator position was left vacant when the City Council appointed Tom O’Bryant to a new position reporting directly to the Mayor and Council as Director of Economic Development and Planning with responsibilities to include directing the economic development of the city.

Auditions for Shakespeare’s The Tempest at SNCA, April 23, 2022

Auditions for the Shakespearean play The Tempest take place on April 23-24, 2022. (Photo provided by SNCA)

Auditions for Sautee Nacoochee Cultural Center’s (SNCA) summer outdoor community theatre for playwright William Shakespeare’s play –– The Tempest. The production will be directed by Cheyenne Welborn.

Performances of The Tempest are scheduled on Friday, Saturday, & Sunday, July 22, 23, & 24 at 7:00 pm on the outdoors stage and lawn

Audition Info: 

Auditions will be held April 23 and 24 from 4 – 8 pm in the Center Theatre at the Sautee Nacoochee Cultural Center. To audition, prepare a one minute Shakespearean monologue and be prepared to cold read from the script when called upon.

To schedule audition time, contact Cheyenne Welborn at [email protected] or text/call 706-348-3179.

About The Tempest 

Prospero, the former and rightful Duke of Milan, washed up on the shores of this island with his daughter, Miranda, many years ago. On this day, Prospero uses his magic and the powers of his spirit-servant, Ariel, to conjure a storm, the tempest, to shipwreck a passing vessel. Aboard this wrecked ship is a group of royals: Alonso, the King of Naples; his son Ferdinand, the prince; his treacherous brother, Sebastian; and Prospero’s treacherous brother, Antonio, among other nobles and mariners.

In this tale of magic, betrayal, revenge, and family, Prospero uses his learned sorcery to trick and trial the stranded sea voyagers, in the hopes that he will be avenged for these years of forced exile. Meanwhile, Prospero’s slave, Caliban, forms alliances with Stephano and Trinculo, a drunken clown and fool, respectively, to try to rid himself of his master. On another part of the island, Ferdinand and Miranda meet and begin to fall in love. All must come to terms with the past if peace and love are to reign in this brave new world.

Coach Joe Dix returning to East Hall High

Coach Joe Dix (Twitter)

East Hall High School is welcoming back Joe Dix as the boys’ head basketball coach. The school’s athletic director, Adam Rich, announced Tuesday that Dix is returning to the Vikings pending school board approval.

Coach Dix is returning to East Hall after a 4-year stint with Collins Hill High School. Previously, he served as East Hall’s head basketball coach for 14 years and was with the program for a total of 22 years.

Dix had much success at East Hall High, leading the program to its last state title in 2005. He amassed 56 wins and 3 playoff appearances while at Collins Hill. During his career as an assistant and a head coach, Coach Dix has won 374 games, 6 region titles, and competed in 6 state title games.

“We are excited to bring Coach Dix back home to Valhalla!” said Athletic Director Adam Rich. “Coach Dix is an excellent basketball coach with an impeccable track record, a man of exemplary integrity, and a great role model for the students of East Hall.”

“I am excited to be back, and I’m looking forward to being in a place that holds special memories for me,” said Coach Dix. “I enjoyed my time at Collins Hill and the relationships built while there. This was a family decision, and we are looking forward to being home at East Hall.”

Coach Dix will be residing in Hall County with his wife, Maria, and son, AJ. He also has several adult children as well as grandchildren.

Georgia Ag Dept. guards against threat of Avian flu

Chickens at a research facility in Georgia. (Stephen Ausmus/USDA)

(GA Recorder) — April may be a good month to catch a glimpse of various duck species in Georgia on their way north, but some farmers and public health officials will be watching those flocks with suspicion rather than wonder.

Ducks are a major carrier of the highly pathogenic avian influenza, and eight waterfowl representing three duck species have been identified as carriers across Glynn, Camden and Hart counties since February, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Ducks usually do not get sick from the virus, but they can spread it to domesticated birds like chickens and turkeys, among whom it can be deadly. That threat has state officials on high alert in Georgia, which is one of the nation’s top broiler producers.

No cases of avian influenza have been found in commercial or domestic flocks in Georgia, but it has been a major problem in other states this year. Avian influenza, or bird flu, has been detected in commercial flocks in 26 states.

Georgia’s Department of Agriculture has been planning for a bad avian flu season since the last major outbreak in 2015 that saw more than 50 million birds culled.

Members of the industry, department workers and scientists have been cooperating to keep the virus out, said Georgia Commissioner of Agriculture Gary Black.

“We do regular tabletop exercises at the department with our team, regular maintenance on equipment, regular walkthroughs, and certainly since the advent of the disease this season, we’ve been on the most brilliant red alert you can imagine with our animal teams, working in concert with our Georgia poultry diagnostic laboratories.”

Since February, the state has suspended all poultry exhibitions, shows, sales, swaps and meets in an attempt to keep the state’s birds in pandemic bubbles.

“We hope that’s just temporarily, we’ve done it before, I think we did it back in 2017,” said Bo Warren, chief communications officer for the state Department of Agriculture. “What we’re trying to accomplish there is just to keep birds from different farms congregating together, whether that’s at a swap meet, bird show, flea market, or even a livestock barn. You can still buy and sell poultry, birds direct to each other, but we’re trying to prevent the public congregation of birds.”

Black said he’s confident in the plan his department has hatched.

“We’re the No. 1 poultry producing state in the nation, and so my commitment in doing this job has been that we would be the No. 1 best prepared,” he said.

There’s no need for chicken consumers to worry about their next wing or thigh, Black said.

“Georgians need to know, and this is important even with our trading partners around the globe, every flock of chickens, before it goes to market, is tested,” he said. “And so it’s not like we just suddenly find this. It’s an every day vigilance with our laboratory network, and not just with (highly pathogenic avian influenza), but it’s also a host of other diseases.”

A lot of money could be at stake in preventing the spread in Georgia. Poultry makes up $28 billion of the state’s $75 billion agriculture industry, and top importers of U.S. poultry have restricted imports based on the birds’ state of origin.

Mexico and China have restricted trade by state, while Canada has limited its restrictions to areas that extend about six miles from infected sites.

Public health officials say another reason to prevent the spread is to lower the chances of the virus mutating to become dangerous to people. They warn that avian influenza viruses can spread from bird to human from exposure to infected livestock, though the risk of this happening is low, as is the risk of the virus developing a capability to effectively spread from human to human.

The Georgia Department of Public Health is monitoring the situation to make sure that what’s been happening with birds across the country this year does not happen with people, said state epidemiologist Dr. Cherie Drenzek at a board of public health meeting Tuesday.

“If indeed we see this transfer to people, it doesn’t belong there in the first place, it could change and evolve,” she said. “We want to be able to monitor that. We’ve had a lot of experience with other new viruses that have crossed the line into people. In China, since 2003, there have been outbreaks of avian influenza in people as well, of varying types over the years. And over the last few years here in the U.S., we’ve even seen swine flu viruses cross into and infect people at some agricultural fairs, primarily in the Midwest. So it can happen, but it’s never resulted in this sustained transmission or change, where we’ve gotten a brand new virus, but that’s what we keep an eye on.”

Drenzek said that involves keeping track of people who work with birds who become ill.

“Our role is really to be able to identify individuals, people that may have been exposed to these birds, either working directly with them or depopulating them if needed, and usually, they’re under protection, and PPE is appropriate, but we want to be able to monitor them for the development of any flu-like illness and facilitate testing.”

Baldwin Police Station to receive upgrades

The Baldwin Police Department's GCIC office will receive new carpet, and the station will see other updates as well. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

The Baldwin Police Station will receive a few updates in the near future to make the station a more inviting place, both for staff and the community.

The main update the department will receive will remove the old, separating carpet in the city’s Georgia Crime Information Center department, and replace it with carpet tiles. The tiles will be easier to replace when the carpet is damaged, and make the room a more welcoming space for the staff working there, officials say.

The police department will also update its lobby to remove the two-way mirror service window, replacing it with a glass window. They also plan to repaint the lobby.

“That window [is] very off-putting,” Councilwoman Stephanie Almagno said. “We can do things that will make it [visiting the police department] less stressful. . . and if the philosophy is community policing, then I think we’re moving in the right direction.”

The updates will remove the two-way mirror in the lobby and replace the mirror with glass, allowing visitors to see the person they’re speaking with. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

The updates to the lobby are part of Baldwin’s ongoing goal to rebrand its police department as a friendlier, more open community department. Police Chief Jeff Branyon told Now Habersham that one of his goals is to make sure people in the Baldwin community see the law enforcement in the community.

“I tell my officers, ‘I want you to patrol and I want your windows rolled down when you’re in the neighborhoods, I want you talking to the people that are cutting grass and shooting baskets and walking their dogs,’ you know, building relationships,” Branyon said in a September interview. “Because that’s what makes policing work. If the public doesn’t trust us, we’re not effective. So we’ve got to build that trust in the public. That’s what we’re here to do.”

The updates will be paid for through revenue the department made by selling city patrol cars.

Cynthia Wilson Morgan Mahan

Cynthia Wilson Morgan Mahan, age 67, of Cornelia, passed away Monday evening at Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville, Georgia, April 11, 2022.

Born on April 4, 1955, in East Orange, New Jersey, she was a daughter of the late Jim and Faye Edwards Morgan. Cynthia was a graduate of Newton County High School in Covington, Georgia and also attended West Georgia College in Carrollton, Georgia. She and her husband, Wayne, met in Delta Flight Attendant Training and were graduates of the March 1976 Flight Attendant Class. This began a 44-year career with Delta Airlines, in which Cynthia was twice awarded the Customer Commendation Award, which is awarded to the top one percent of Delta flight attendants. She loved people and never met a stranger. In her spare time, she enjoyed numerous hobbies which included; gardening, needle handwork, reading and interior design. Known by family and friends as an outstanding cook and host; often finding herself entertaining at any given opportunity.

She is survived by her husband, Wayne Mahan of Cornelia, Georgia; son, Nathan Mahan of Appleton, Wisconsin; brother J. Mike Morgan and wife Emily Morgan of Hahira, Georgia; niece, Jennifer Silverio and husband Chris Silverio of Ft. Lauderdale, Florida; nephew Jeffrey S. Morgan of Panama City Beach, Florida; sister Judy M. Nelson of Jackson, Georgia; nephew Walter J. Nelson and wife Candace K. Nelson of Williamson, Georgia; great-niece Charlotte Rae Nelson of Williamson, Georgia; Ivey M. Nelson of Monticello, Georgia; sister Virginia L. Saxton and husband Tim Saxton of Atlanta, Georgia; niece Katie Brice of Gwinnett County, Georgia; niece Ruth A. Conkin and husband Chris Conkin of Barnesville, Georgia.

There will be a Celebration of Life from 3:00 – 5:00 pm on Friday, April 15, 2022, at the Mahan residence, 218 Chase Summit Lane, Cornelia, Georgia 30531.

In lieu of cut flowers and indoor plants, the family requests outdoor plants for the garden or a gift certificate to Billingsley Garden Center of Rabun Gap, Georgia, 706-746-2887.

Those in attendance are asked to please adhere to the public health and social distancing guidelines regarding COVID-19.

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.