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Agnes Mae Smith Holtzclaw

Agnes Mae Smith Holtzclaw, age 86, of Clarkesville, Georgia passed away on Thursday, April 7, 2022.

Mrs. Holtzclaw was born on February 14, 1936, in Toccoa Falls, Georgia to the late Paul and Donie Rumsey Smith. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her daughter, Patricia Ann Shedd; brother, Ernest Alfred Smith. Agnes was of the Baptist Faith and had a beautiful singing voice; as a young lady, she sang in a gospel trio, The Sunshine Trio. Agnes was a loving and dedicated mother and grandmother. She was known to her grandchildren as “Granny” and “Grandma Aggie”. She was very much a “people person”, Agnes was a friend to all.

Survivors include her son and daughter-in-law, Dennis and Lynn Shedd, of Dillard; daughter and son-in-law, Tammie and Mark Rudeseal, of Lawrenceville; son, David Glenn Stewart, of Clarkesville; brother and sister-in-law, Richard and Lanette Smith, of Sautee; grandchildren, Jamie (Reesa) Shedd, Kelly Byron, Autumn (Josh) Chatham, all of Dahlonega; Whitney (Devon) Peet, of Peachtree Corners; her great-grandpuppy, Ginger Peet; and several great-grandchildren.

Private Graveside Services will be held at Yonah Memorial Gardens.

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

Driver faces slew of charges after striking patrol cars during Toccoa chase

This dashcam image shows a Stephens County deputy standing outside his vehicle as a fleeing motorist strikes his patrol car. The impact shoved the patrol car into the deputy and pushed him down an embankment, says the police chief. (TPD)

A North Georgia woman faces numerous charges after driving her vehicle into two patrol cars while fleeing from police. A Stephens County Sheriff’s deputy was injured in the incident, the state patrol says.

Officers charged Jennifer Ashley Mock, 35, of Auburn, with two counts of aggravated assault against a law enforcement officer following her arrest on Sunday, April 3, in Toccoa.

The incident began around 6 p.m. on April 3 when officers responded to a report of a hit-and-run at the light on Big A Road at Walmart.

“The victim followed the suspect vehicle to Big A and Glendale where the officer attempted a traffic stop,” says Toccoa Police Chief Jimmy Mize. “The suspect did not stop, weaving in and out of traffic, and ran the red light at Big A and Currahee Street.”

Police contacted dispatch asking for backup from Stephens County deputies. During the pursuit, the suspect, later identified as Mock, drove through town and came to a complete stop at the dead end on North Pine Street, says Chief Mize.

“Assuming the suspect would get out and attempt to flee on foot, the TPD officer and county officer exited their vehicles, drawing their service weapons and commanding the suspect to stop.”

A second patrol vehicle from the Toccoa Police Department arrived as the suspect took off again, striking the side of the county vehicle which in turn hit the deputy and knocked him down an embankment. The suspect then hit the second patrol car head-on and continued fleeing, Mize says.

This dashcam view from the second TPD patrol unit shows the Toyota Corolla running head-on into a police Charger. (TPD)
In the third image of the dashcam sequence provided by Toccoa Police, the Corolla’s bumper is seen in the middle of the road and the deputy’s car has shifted left. (TPD)

The pursuit continued through town on West Doyle Street and onto a dirt road. It ended when the 2011 Toyota Corolla that Mock was driving got stuck in a large mud hole at the end of that road.

According to Mize, officers had to break the car window to open the door and get Mock out of the vehicle. They arrested her and booked her at the Stephens County jail.

In addition to aggravated assault, Mock is charged with two counts of interfering with government property, fleeing or attempting to elude a police officer, and obstructing or hindering law enforcement officers. Police also cited her for hit-and-run, reckless driving, not having a license on her, failure to maintain lane, failure to obey a traffic control device, and running four stop signs.

Stephens County EMS transported the injured deputy to Stephens County Hospital for treatment.

Cleveland man charged with rape and other sex crimes

A Cleveland man remains in jail without bond after being arrested on multiple sex crime charges.

On Tuesday, April 5, Cleveland police arrested 38-year-old Daniel Diaz-Morales and charged him with rape, aggravated sodomy, and sexual battery.

“The arrest stemmed from an investigation that began in March of 2022 when the incident was initially reported by a victim who was known to the offender,” says Cleveland Chief of Police Jeff Shoemaker.

Diaz-Morales was transported to the White County Detention Center where he remains in custody without bond.

According to Shoemaker, the case remains under investigation.

U.S. Senate confirms Ketanji Brown Jackson to Supreme Court

WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 31: Supreme Court Nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson smiles during a meeting with Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) on Capitol Hill March 31, 2022 in Washington, DC. Judge Jackson continues to meet with Senate members on Capitol Hill ahead of her confirmation vote. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — Ketanji Brown Jackson will make history by becoming the first Black woman to sit on the U.S. Supreme Court after Democratic and Republican senators voted Thursday to confirm her to the lifetime appointment.

The 53-47 vote comes just six weeks after President Joe Biden announced his nomination of Jackson from the White House, fulfilling a promise he first made on the campaign trail.

“For too long, our government, our courts haven’t looked like America,” Biden said at the time. “I believe it’s time that we have a Court that reflects the full talents and greatness of our nation with a nominee of  qualifications, and that will inspire all young people to believe that they can one day serve their country at the highest level.”

According to the White House, Jackson joined Biden and other senior staff in the Roosevelt Room to watch the vote results.

“She is America at its best. That I believe in my heart after meeting with her in my office, talking to folks who I trust who know her and hearing her testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee.” – Georgia Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock

The momentous nature of Jackson’s confirmation was visible throughout the Senate chamber. Senators stayed at their desks on the floor for much of the vote and dozens of U.S. House members, including the Congressional Black Caucus, gathered to watch.

Vice President Kamala Harris presided over the Senate vote even though she wasn’t needed to break a tie, since Jackson won over the support of three Republicans: Maine’s Susan Collins, Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski, and Utah’s Mitt Romney.

After Harris called the vote, the Senate chamber erupted into a standing ovation. While most of the Republican senators filed out of the Senate, Democratic lawmakers cheered as staff packed the benches around the Senate floor and most of the seats in the gallery clapped.

Georgia Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock said before the vote that “Ketanji Brown Jackson’s improbable journey to the nation’s highest court is a reflection of our own journey through fits and starts toward the nation’s highest ideals.”

“She embodies the arc of our history,” Warnock continued. “She is America at its best. That I believe in my heart after meeting with her in my office, talking to folks who I trust who know her and hearing her testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee.”

Iowa GOP Sen. Charles Grassley said he would vote against Jackson, in part, because of her “lenient approach to criminal law and sentencing” and  “judicial activism.”

“Her record clearly shows she does not believe in or act within the limited and proper role of a judge, so I will vote against her confirmation,” said Grassley, the top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, which split 11-11 on her nomination.

The three Republicans who backed Jackson on the floor said she was well qualified to become an associate justice, though Collins and Murkowski added their support for her was also meant to reject how partisan the Supreme Court confirmation process has become.

“In my view, the role the Constitution clearly assigns to the Senate is to examine the experience, qualifications, and integrity of the nominee,” Collins said in a statement. “It is not to assess whether a nominee reflects the ideology of an individual Senator or would rule exactly as an individual Senator would want.”

Jackson will be sworn in later this year to fill Associate Justice Stephen Breyer’s seat after he retires this summer. She will not change the 6-3 conservative tilt of the court.

Hawley and Blackburn questioning

The Thursday vote followed a particularly grueling confirmation process for Jackson in the Judiciary Committee.

Numerous Republican senators, including Missouri’s Josh Hawley and Tennessee’s Marsha Blackburn, grilled Jackson during her first and second days of questioning during the four-day confirmation hearing.

Republicans brought up numerous concerns with Jackson, including her time as a federal public defender and how she sentenced some of the cases that came before her when she was a U.S. district court judge.

Hawley spent nearly all of his time questioning Jackson on seven cases in which she sentenced people convicted of possession of child pornography, alleging that she should have required more prison time.

Blackburn also focused on those cases but asked additional questions about how Jackson would define a woman and abortion.

Democrats rebuked some of the Republican questioning, saying data proved Jackson’s sentencing in child pornography cases was in line with the vast majority of other judges and that trying to imply she was “soft on crime” was political.

“The overwhelming majority of Senators on both sides I thought were asking appropriate questions and positive in their approach and respectful of the nominee before us,” Judiciary Committee Chair Dick Durbin, an Illinois Democrat, said during the second day of questioning. “But for many senators, yesterday was an opportunity to showcase talking points for the November election.”

From Miami to the high court

Jackson’s path to the U.S. Supreme Court has been decades in the making.

Jackson, who was born in Washington, D.C., but grew up in Miami, testified at her confirmation hearing that one of her earliest memories was watching her father study law.

“My very earliest memories are of watching my father study. He had his stack of law books on the kitchen table while I sat across from him with my stack of coloring books,”

Jackson said last month on the first day of her confirmation hearing.

Jackson went on to graduate magna cum laude from Harvard University in 1992 and Harvard Law School cum laude in 1996.

She later clerked for the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts, the United States Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit and for Breyer.

Jackson worked in private practice before joining the U.S. Sentencing Commission in 2003. She became a federal public defender in 2005 before being confirmed as a U.S. district court judge in 2007.

The U.S. Senate voted on Jackson just last year, confirming her 53-44 to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham joined Collins and Murkowski in backing her for that role.

Jackson received dozens of endorsements for her nomination to the Supreme Court, including from the Fraternal Order of Police, the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence and the National Education Association.

 

The American Bar Association rated Jackson’s as “highly qualified.”

Wrapping up the Senate floor debate on Thursday afternoon, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, said Jackson becoming an associate justice would take a “bold and important step on the well trodden path to fulfilling our country’s founding promise.”

“This is a great moment for Judge Jackson, but it is even a greater moment for America as we rise to a more perfect union,” Schumer said.

More than 1,500 books have been banned in public schools, and a U.S. House panel asks why

A new report by PEN America — an organization that advocates for the protection of free speech — that found from July 2021 to the end of March this year, more than 1,500 books were banned in 86 school districts in 26 states.

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — A U.S. House Oversight and Reform Committee panel on Thursday examined why thousands of books, predominantly written by marginalized authors, have been banned from public schools, and the impact of those actions on students and teachers.

“Most books being targeted for censorship are books that introduce ideas about diversity or our common humanity, books that teach children to recognize and respect humanity in one another,” said the chair of the Subcommittee on Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, Rep. Jamie Raskin.

Raskin, a Maryland Democrat, cited a new report by PEN America — an organization that advocates for the protection of free speech — that found from July 2021 to the end of March this year, more than 1,500 books were banned in 86 school districts in 26 states.

The report found that of the banned books, 467 — or 41% —  contained main or secondary characters of color; 247, or 22%, addressed racism; and 379, or 33%, of the books contained LGBTQ+ themes.

Raskin held up a children’s book that administrators have tried to remove from school libraries. The book was written by Ruby Bridges, a civil rights icon who was the first Black child to desegregate an all-white Louisiana school. Bridges, who was 6 years old at the time, was a witness at the hearing.

“The truth is that rarely do children of color or immigrants see themselves in these textbooks we are forced to use,” Bridges said. “I write because I want them to understand the contributions their ancestors have made to our great country, whether that contribution was made as slaves or volunteers.”

Her book, “This Is Your Time,” is being reviewed for possible removal in a school district in Texas. Books written about her story have been banned in classrooms in Pennsylvania.

High school students speak out

The hearing began with testimony from several high school students.

Olivia Pituch and Christina Ellis, of York, Pennsylvania, said it is important for students to see books written by authors who are people of color, LGBTQ+, Black and Indigenous, and with characters from marginalized groups.

Pituch, who identifies with the LGBTQ+ community, said that if she had been able to have access to books with queer representation, she would have “been able to embrace and love myself a lot earlier on.”

“I deserve to walk into my school library and find a book with someone like me,” she said.

Ellis, who is Black, said that books that center characters who are people of color also benefit white students, so those students are educated about different cultures.

 

She talked about how growing up, classmates would make fun of the Caribbean food she brought from home and how her classmates and sometimes teachers would touch her hair.

“Books that highlight our differences, and that teach others how to address diversity, are crucial,” she said. “Books can help kids educate themselves on various cultures and ways of life.”

Mindy Freeman, a parent from Pennsylvania, said a book called “George (Now Melissa)” was able to help her daughter, in fourth grade at the time, understand what she was going through as a transgender girl. Freeman said her daughter’s access to an age-appropriate book provided her the support and visibility she needed.

“No book made my child become transgender any more than a book could have turned her eyes from brown to blue,” Freedman said.

Freedom of speech on campus

Republicans on the panel, Reps. Jim Jordan of Ohio and Andy Biggs of Arizona, focused on freedom of speech on college campuses, and argued that these places were not welcoming to conservatives.

This week, Georgia lawmakers approved legislation to expand free-speech areas campus-wide at the state’s public colleges. If the governor signs the bill, the limited free-speech zones will be a thing of the past.

Biggs asked the Republican witness, Jonathan Pidluzny, what action should be taken so that conservatives are not barred from speaking on college campuses. Pidluzny is the vice president of academic affairs for the American Council of Trustees and Alumni, which is an organization that supports free speech across universities.

“We need to learn to tolerate the speech we abhor,” Pidluzny said.

Two Republicans, Reps. Byron Donalds of Florida and ranking member Nancy Mace of South Carolina, asked witnesses about district decisions about school curriculum and school administrators’ decisions to ban books.

“Taxpayers should have the ability to review that material because they pay for it,” Donalds said.

He, along with Mace, argued that there were other ways that students could get books, such as buying them or going to a public library.

“They can get a book from a lot of different places,” Mace said. “Is there anything that prevents a kid from going to a public library?”

Two of the witnesses, Samantha Hull, a librarian from Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, and Jessica Berg, a teacher from Loudoun County, Virginia, said that not every student has the financial means to buy books or has adequate access to transportation to visit public libraries to read books where they see themselves represented.

Berg said that visceral attacks on education from Republicans almost caused her to quit her job. She said she has received death threats from members of her own community as well as continued questioning of her expertise.

“Books … offer a mirror to readers so they can see themselves reflected in some way, be it their gender, race, culture, identity or experience, and it makes them feel less alone in the world,” she said. “When I think about the books frequently being challenged, the only connection I see between them is that they are the books that give voice to the most marginalized in our society.”

Mace agreed that history, especially “problematic chapters in our history,” should be taught in schools, but said books dealing with adult topics expose young kids to inappropriate topics.

“We should be teaching critical thinking skills,” Mace said, adding that she’s disturbed by reports of colleges “stifling speech to coddle young adults.”

Tennessee book banning

Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Florida Democrat, held up a graphic novel about the Holocaust that was the latest book to be banned in Tennessee classrooms, “Maus.” She said with the rise in white nationalism, antisemitism and racism, books like “Maus” are now more important than ever.

“We know that bigotry is learned,” Wasserman Schultz said, adding that “we also know it can be unlearned.”

She asked Hall what removing books like “Maus” and ones that have diverse characters does to students.

“It’s my opinion when books are removed … students are erased,” Hall said. “They feel their identities are not valued in the school and outside the school.”

Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., did not ask any of the witnesses questions but expressed the fear of discrimination her two Muslim sons might face growing up.

“Our children, they just simply want to exist as they are,” she said.

Old Clarkesville Cemetery volunteer cleanup day this Saturday

(E. Lane Gresham/Old Clarkesville Cemetery)

The City of Clarkesville’s historic charm makes the city what it is, but it takes the work of dedicated volunteers to preserve that history. This Saturday, volunteers from the community will join the Historic Clarkesville Cemetery Preservation Corporation to clean up the cemetery.

“The Old Clarkesville Cemetery, established in 1831 with the donation of a city lot by Col. James Brannon, a Methodist, is the final resting place of those individuals who founded this community,” says E. Lane Gresham, chair of Historic Clarkesville Cemetery Preservation Corporation. “All walks of life are represented therein – city leaders, formerly enslaved people, veterans of the Revolutionary War, War of 1812, Civil War. It is also the site of the first formal worship space in the village of Clarkesville in 1831.”

Preserving this history of the cemetery is the mission of the corporation— but they can’t do it without their community.

She says community partners make a big impact on the cemetery’s preservation. The City of Clarkesville has helped the preservation group locate an astounding total of 237 unmarked graves with a ground-penetrating radar, which the group plans to mark with white crosses.

“Thanks to the support of the community and several key donors, we’ve completed two-thirds of the fencing around the cemetery and added native plants to enhance the rural garden cemetery feel,” Gresham said. “We’ve also cleaned and repaired many of the headstones.”

Joseph McGahee unveils his “slice of history” project to the Clarkesville community in September of 2020. (E. Lane Gresham/Old Clarkesville Cemetery)

Local boy scouts have also contributed to the preservation of the cemetery with their Eagle Scout projects. Joseph McGahee’s “slice of history” Eagle Scout project displays a slice from a tree that grew in the Old Clarkesville Cemetery, as well as holds information about local and national history.

Gresham says that his brother, Mitchell McGahee, will work on his own Eagle Scout project at the cemetery in the coming week. He plans to restore the grave of Matthew Rhodes, a War of 1812 veteran.

The cleanup day will focus on brush and limb pick up, general landscaping and getting the cemetery ready for Holy Week. The cemetery will host both the Clarkesville First United Methodist Church’s Good Friday cross walk and the First Presbyterian Church of Clarkesville’s Easter sunrise service this year.

To get involved, email contact@oldclarkesvillecemetery.com for more information about the workday and other volunteer opportunities. The workday begins at 9 a.m., and volunteers will work until noon. Volunteers are encouraged to bring work gloves, rakes, shovels and wheelbarrows if they have them.

Velma L. Reiss

Velma L. Reiss, age 87, of Demorest, Georgia passed away on Tuesday, April 6, 2022.

Mrs. Reiss was born on June 28, 1934, in Versailles, Missouri, to the late Edward and Mary Elizabeth Garber. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her loving husband of nearly 50 years, Robert L. Reiss; siblings, Raymond, Bob, Pauline, Dennis, Ina, Ed, Bill, Bud, and Violet. Mrs. Reiss attended Victory Baptist Church. Velma’s three most important things in her life were her Christian Faith, her family, and her friends. She loved to entertain people through her cooking, family reunions, board games, and other activities. She was an avid crafter, through quilting and sewing. Velma was a loving wife, mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother; she was known to her grandchildren as “Grandma”. Velma had an unconditional love for anyone and everyone she came in contact with and always loved to share her testimony of her love for her Savior, Jesus Christ.

Survivors include her sons, Bob Reiss and spouse, Lisa, of Demorest; Ralph Reiss, of the home; Bruce Reiss and Julie, of Clarkesville; grandchildren and spouses, Robert and Kris; Lyndsy and Michael; Coner, Emma, and Ella; great-grandchildren, Trey, Hannah, Noah, Levi, Micah, Lisabeth, and Tucker; sisters, Lena, Mary, and Rosie; brother, Homer;
and was loved by numerous nieces and nephews.

Funeral Services will be held at 2:00 p.m., Saturday, April 9, 2022, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel with Pastor Shane Jenkins officiating. A livestream of the service will be available at facebook.com/whitfieldfh.

The family will receive friends from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., Friday, April 8, 2022, at the funeral home.

A Graveside Service will be held at the Osage City Cemetery in Osage, Kansas

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

Early voting dates set, precinct changes in place for primary election

(NowHabersham.com)

The Habersham County Board of Elections has announced the official early voting dates, as well as a voting precinct change, for the May 24 election.

While the Republican gubernatorial primaries have headlined the election, in Habersham County, the ESPLOST, two county commission seats, three board of education seats, a City of Clarkesville council seat and Mt. Airy’s Sunday sales liquor referendum will also be on the ballot.

The deadline to register to vote in the election is Monday, April 25. The last day to request an absentee ballot is May 13. To request an absentee ballot, click here.

All early voting will take place at the Ruby Fulbright Aquatic Center in Clarkesville.

Early Voting will begin on Monday, May 2 and continue until May 13 from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday.

Saturday Voting will be held from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on May 7, and May 14.

Advance Voting Week will be May 16 – 20, from 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.

Election day will be May 24, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the county’s voting precincts.

Precinct changes

Due to the closing of Concord at Habersham church, the Demorest voting precinct will temporarily move back to the Demorest City Council meeting room, located underneath the Demorest Fire Department.

All Demorest voters will receive new precinct cards with the new location and address. If you do not receive a new precinct card by mid-April, please contact the Habersham County Elections and Voter Registration Office at 706-839-0170.

Cornelia and Habersham South precinct voters will continue to report to the Cornelia Community House for voting.

The county’s voting precincts are as follows:

*Habersham North Precinct (City of Clarkesville Precinct)
Ruby Fulbright Aquatic Center
120 Paul Franklin Road, Toccoa Hwy
Clarkesville, Ga 30523
706-839-0234

Habersham South Precinct (City of Cornelia Precinct)
Cornelia Community House (TEMPORARY LOCATION)
601 Wyly Street
Cornelia, Ga. 30523
706-778-8585

Demorest Precinct (City of Demorest Precinct)
Demorest Fire Station, council meeting room (TEMPORARY LOCATION)
125 Ivy Street
Demorest, Ga 30535
678-936-9664

Town of Mount Airy (CITY VOTERS ONLY)
City Hall, Old Schoolhouse
1231 Dicks Hill Parkway
Mount Airy, Ga 30563
706-778-6990

City of Baldwin Precinct (CITY VOTERS ONLY)
City Hall, (Old Habersham Bank)
186 Highway 441 By-Pass
Baldwin, Ga 30511
706-776-5256

Mud Creek Precinct (Town of Alto Precinct)
B. C. Grant Baptist Church
1405 B. C. Grant Rd (fellowship hall)
Alto, Ga 30510
706-778-5703

Amy’s Creek Precinct
Amy’s Creek Fire Department
6357 State Hwy. 17
Clarkesville, Ga. 30523
706-754-5913

Stronger opioid reversal drugs are needed to combat the fentanyl crisis, Narcan developer says

A volunteer with the Atlanta Harm Reduction Coalition gives out sterile syringes in exchange to get potentially contaminated needles off the street. (Credit: Ellen Eldridge / GPB News)

The fentanyl crisis is creating a need for a more potent opioid reversal medication than naloxone, which is the active ingredient in Narcan Nasal Spray, the drug’s lead developer says.

The company, Opiant Pharmaceuticals, is working on a similar nasal spray opioid reversal agent using nalmefene.

“We think this has the potential to be, if you like, faster, stronger and longer acting than what’s available today, and that’s so much more important than ever, given where this (fentanyl) crisis has got to,” company founder Dr. Roger Crystal said.

From May 2020 through May 2021, fentanyl-involved overdose deaths in Georgia rose 106% as compared to the same time period the previous year.

Other experts say fentanyl pills have become so common in the drug market that most users have come to realize what’s in them and seek them out because they contain fentanyl.

Nelly Miles, a spokesperson for the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, said the agency is seeing “a significant increase’’ in fentanyl, as well as a rise in overdose clusters, opioid-related deaths, and seizures of fentanyl, Georgia Health News reported last week.

“In the crime lab alone, the lab has seen an 80% increase of fentanyl results in the last year,’’ Miles said. “We’ve also seen a disturbing trend of samples called ‘purple heroin/purp’ that contains heroin and fentanyl.”

Caleb Banta-Green, principal research scientist at the Alcohol & Drug Abuse Institute (ADAI) at the University of Washington School of Medicine, told NPR that awareness of fentanyl pills has risen quickly among users. In a recent survey in Washington State, two-thirds of those who used fentanyl said they did so “on purpose.”

They said they consumed fentanyl most often in pill form.

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The emergency medical technicians, police or fire officials who first arrive on scene often don’t know what an unconscious person took, but Crystal said it’s safe to assume a fentanyl overdose.

“I will go so far to say that we have to assume it is fentanyl or something much stronger because the vast majority, over 80%, of opioid overdose deaths are fentanyl-related,” he said.

The increased likelihood of deadly overdose comes from the drug’s strength.

“A fentanyl overdose is a lot more dangerous than any other prior form of overdose,” Crystal said. “It’s going to require multiple doses of naloxone to initially revive someone, and people must be aware that even if they are initially resuscitated, they have a risk that the patient is going to fall back into an overdose again.”

That’s because while naloxone has a half-life of up to two hours, fentanyl has a half-life of roughly eight hours.

“So when the naloxone wears off, the fentanyl can come back again and bite,” Crystal said.

While the new nasal spray formula with nalmefene won’t be available until after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration gives its approval, Crystal expects to see availability on the market by 2023. Until then, anyone who is a parent of a teenager or an older family member who may have an opioid prescription should keep naloxone on hand.

“You can get the Narcan nasal spray, for example, from a pharmacist without a prescription,” he said.

While Narcan is not officially an over-the-counter treatment, people with insurance coverage can pay as little as a $5 co-pay, Crystal said.

Many local organizations raise money to help police and other first responders carry Narcan.

There is a higher overdose rate per capita in rural communities across Georgia than that of urban areas, according to the Georgia Opioid Overdose Annual Surveillance Report from 2020. Counties such as Bibb, Houston, Coffee, Crisp and Dawson had experienced more than 60 overdose-related emergency department visits per 100,000 people whereas counties such as Fulton and DeKalb had fewer than 50 per 100,000.

“So, first responders, absolutely be mindful of what a fentanyl overdose means,” Crystal said. “And for people in the community and parents, for anyone that might encounter an opioid overdose, you can be a first responder. You can arm yourselves with naloxone.”

Public health officials emphasize:

  • If you suspect a drug overdose, call 911 immediately, provide the location of the overdose and stay with the individual until help arrives.
  • Georgia has a medical amnesty law that protects individuals who may be experiencing an overdose and callers seeking medical attention for drug overdoses.
  • Naloxone can be obtained from pharmacies in Georgia without a prescription under a standing order from the Public Health commissioner.

For access to services and immediate crisis help, the Georgia Crisis & Access Line, 1-800-715-4225, is available 24/7.

This article appears on Now Habersham in partnership with GPB News

U.S. House panel grills oil executives at hearing on soaring gas prices

Over nearly six hours Wednesday, members of the U.S. House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations and executives from six oil companies painted a complex picture of an industry reaping substantial profits, but still roiled by the pandemic, the war in Ukraine and federal regulations. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — Democrats blamed the oil industry, Republicans blamed President Joe Biden and oil executives blamed global market forces at a U.S. House hearing Wednesday on how to reverse a dramatic increase in gas prices.

Over nearly six hours, members of the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations and executives from six oil companies painted a complex picture of an industry reaping substantial profits, but still roiled by the pandemic, the war in Ukraine and federal regulations.

Democrats and Republicans also differed on possible solutions to high prices. Democrats called for moving away from oil and gas and toward renewable sources of energy.

“If this crisis has shown us anything, it’s why we as a country must work to break our addiction to oil as quickly as possible,” Subcommittee Chairwoman Diana DeGette, D-Colo., said.

“It’s reinforced the urgent and existential need to transition to a more sustainable energy future. For the sake of our economy, our environment and our national security, we must work as quickly as possible to go to that clean energy future.”

Republicans said the administration should reverse policies that made energy production more difficult. Subcommittee ranking Republican Morgan Griffith of Virginia said Biden’s first-week actions to cancel the XL Keystone crude oil pipeline and ban new oil and gas leases on federal lands discouraged domestic production.

“The majority is laying the blame for the problem at the wrong feet,” he said. “Rather than deflect blame, President Biden should consider his own culpability for higher energy prices thanks to his relentless pursuit of policies that discourage domestic energy production.”

Republicans also attacked the Biden administration’s claim that Russian President Vladimir Putin’s attack on Ukraine — and the subsequent sanctions on Russia and disruptions to the global supply of oil — are responsible for the rise in gas prices.

“This was happening before Vladimir Putin’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine,” U.S. Rep. Earl “Buddy” Carter, a Pooler Republican, said.

Democrats slam big oil

Democrats on the panel chastised the companies for providing shareholder dividends and stock buybacks instead of reinvesting profits into more production or lowering prices.

DeGette noted crude oil had returned to the same price it was before Putin invaded Ukraine, yet gasoline remained 50 cents per gallon higher than it was in late February.

Meanwhile, the six companies represented at the hearing, bp America, Chevron, Devon Energy, ExxonMobil, Pioneer and Natural Resources Co. and Shell USA, recorded $75 billion in profits in 2021.

“Something doesn’t add up,” DeGette said.

Executives for major oil producers said individual gas stations — not the oil companies — set retail gas prices. Most gas stations, even those carrying a large company’s brand, are independently owned and operated.

“No single company sets the price of oil or gasoline,” ExxonMobil CEO Darren W. Woods said. “The market establishes the price based on available supply and the demand for that supply.”

Full committee Chairman Frank Pallone, a New Jersey Democrat, rejected that argument.

“The bottom line is you set the wholesale price and that’s the biggest part of the real retail price,” he said. “So don’t tell us that you can’t do anything about it. You can do something about it. And we expect you to do that. Maybe it’s a matter of patriotism.”

Several Democrats on the panel raised the prospect of reducing tax subsidies to energy companies, though the Ways and Means Committee is the primary House panel for tax law changes.

 

“This committee is not going to sit back and allow this system, which forces American taxpayers to pay oil companies out of both pockets — first at the pump and then again through tax breaks — to continue in its current form,” DeGette said.

Chevron Chairman and CEO Michael K. Wirth said his company was providing both shareholder payments and increased production.

“We’re investing more capital to grow production,” Wirth said. “We can do that and return value to shareholders. They’re not mutually exclusive.”

Production was also hurt by industry changes during the economic slowdown caused by the coronavirus pandemic. As demand dried up, companies slowed production. Returning to pre-pandemic levels is not simple, the executives said.

GOP blames climate action

Republicans on the panel said Democrats who now blast the industry for not producing enough had previously called for ending fossil fuel production.

Biden campaigned on climate pledges to move away from fossil fuel.

“President Biden walked in on day one with an agenda to kill American energy,” House Minority Whip Steve Scalise said.

The Louisiana Republican then asked the executives if federal regulations made it harder to produce oil.

Wirth, Scott Sheffield of Pioneer and Richard E. Moncrief of Devon all said regulations did make their business harder. Gretchen Watkins, Shell USA’s president, said some regulations were necessary, but that Shell was waiting on outstanding federal permits.

U.S. Rep. Donald McEachin of Virginia said Republicans’ attack on the Keystone XL pipeline decision was off base because that pipeline wouldn’t even be in operation yet if it had been approved. It was also primarily planned to transport Canadian oil to overseas markets, doing little for the domestic supply, he said.

McEachin also asked each executive if a potential suspension of the 18.3 cents-per-gallon federal gas tax would translate to savings for consumers.

The executives responded that they would not collect the tax, but that the price of oil is not predictable, and they could not guarantee an exact price drop to match any tax waiver.

“What I’m trying to do is disabuse the American public of this myth that if we do something like declare a federal tax holiday that the price of gasoline will go down,” McEachin said. “We don’t know what’s going to happen.”

Instead of a gas tax holiday, Congress should provide direct payments to help cover the cost of more expensive gas, he said.

Biden extends pause on federal student loan repayments through Aug. 31

Georgia Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock is pushing for more than a pause in student loan repayments, campaigning for a complete cancellation. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — The Biden administration Wednesday announced its plans to extend the pause on federal student loan repayments until the end of August.

“I recognized in recently extending the COVID-19 national emergency, we are still recovering from the pandemic and the unprecedented economic disruption it caused,” President Joe Biden said in a statement. 

“If loan payments were to resume on schedule in May, analysis of recent data from the Federal Reserve suggests that millions of student loan borrowers would face significant economic hardship, and delinquencies and defaults could threaten Americans’ financial stability.”

The White House will extend the deadline for student borrowers to pause on federal loan repayments, interest and collections until Aug. 31. The announcement also provides a “fresh start” on loan repayments by removing any prior defaults to allow those borrowers to re-enter repayment in good standing.

The current pause would have ended on May 1.

“The Department of Education is committed to ensuring that student loan borrowers have a smooth transition back to repayment,” U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona said in a statement. 

“This additional extension will allow borrowers to gain more financial security as the economy continues to improve and as the nation continues to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Cristina Tzintzún Ramirez, the president of NextGen America, an organization that mobilizes young voters, released a statement calling the announcement “another short-term fix to a crisis that demands a long-term solution.”

“Young voters feel frustrated with President Biden’s failure to fulfill his promise on student debt cancellation,” Tzintzún Ramirez said. “While borrowers surely appreciate the help paying rent and making ends meet, what they really need is a debt cancellation that will allow them to buy a house and build a future.”

During Biden’s campaign for the presidency, he pledged to cancel student loan debt during a town hall in Miami.

 

“I’m going to eliminate your student debt if you come from a family (making less) than $125,000 and went to a public university,” he said, according to Black Enterprise.

Biden has since called on Congress to pass legislation to cancel up to $10,000 of student debt, but many congressional Democrats argue that Biden could reduce debt through an executive order. They’ve pushed him to cancel up to $50,000 in student loan debt.

The Federal Reserve estimates that the total U.S. student loan debt is more than $1.75 trillion. The Department of Education owns about 92% of that student loan debt.

Democrats push for debt cancellation

A handful of U.S. Senate and House Democrats released a joint statement that said they welcomed the extension, but stressed the need to cancel student loan debt.

“While the extension is welcome, a looming restart of student loan payments in September underscores the importance of swift executive action on meaningful student debt cancellation,” they wrote. “We continue to implore the President to use his clear legal authority to cancel student debt, which will help narrow the racial wealth gap, boost our economic recovery, and demonstrate that this government is fighting for the people.”

Those lawmakers include Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock of Georgia.

“I’m happy to hear that the administration heeded my call to extend the pause on student loan payments,” Warnock said in a statement. “As wonderful as this news is, it is only a partial measure. Our children are leaving college owing the equivalent of a mortgage before they even own a home and have a mortgage. Canceling student loan debt would lower people’s burdens and spur entrepreneurship. We have to get this done.”

The chair of the House Education and Labor Committee, Rep. Bobby Scott, released a statement in which he did not call for the cancellation of student debt, but praised the administration for its decision to continue the pause.

“By extending the pause on student loan repayments, collections, and interest accrual, the Biden-Harris Administration has demonstrated that it remains committed to helping borrowers get back on their feet,” the Virginia Democrat said.

Georgia Recorder Editor John McCosh contributed to this report.

Habersham County grandfather accused of child molestation

A 76-year-old Cornelia man is in jail accused of molesting his granddaughters. Habersham County deputies arrested Eugene Frank Clay on Tuesday, April 5, and charged him with two counts of child molestation.

The alleged abuse took place approximately eight years ago while the girls were visiting their grandfather’s home in Cornelia. The two juveniles, now adults, told a family member about it. On September 17, 2021, the family member reported the allegations to the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office, prompting an investigation.

As part of the investigation, both victims were forensically interviewed at Faith’s Power House in Toccoa. Investigators say during those interviews, both female victims told the interviewer their grandfather routinely touched them inappropriately when they were between the ages of 8 and 9 years old.

“In the Clay case, both of our victims and a third out-of-state victim all gave the same complaint about their grandfather inappropriately touching them during their childhood years,” says Habersham County Sheriff’s Public Information Officer Kevin Angell.

Investigators interviewed Clay on the day he was arrested. They also interviewed his wife, Angell says.

“Due to extensive interviews and follow up, our Special Victims Unit investigators were able to arrest Mr. Clay for two counts of child molestation.”

The alleged out-of-state incident occurred in Ohio. Law enforcement there would have to handle any charges stemming from those allegations. It remains unclear whether there is an active investigation in Ohio.

Clay remains in the Habersham County Detention Center. No bond has been set.