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Rep. Anderson to chair of subcommittee on Cityhood

Rep. Victor Anderson (R-Cornelia)

ATLANTA — State Representative Victor Anderson (R-Cornelia) was recently appointed by House Governmental Affairs Committee Chair Darlene Taylor (R-Thomasville) to serve as the chairman of the House Governmental Affairs Special Subcommittee on Cityhood.

“I look forward to working with my colleagues to promote smart development that also protects property owners,” said Rep. Anderson. “It has been several years since the General Assembly updated certain laws regarding the incorporation of new municipalities. While there has been a major political push lately to create new cities, especially in the metro Atlanta area, we need to be sure that our laws will consider the voices of local property owners and protect citizens from paying for fragmented and duplicated government services.”

The House Special Subcommittee on Cityhood’s first meeting is scheduled for 1 p.m. on Wednesday, January 12, in room 406 of the Coverdell Legislative Office Building in Atlanta. It will include a discussion on House Bill 841, legislation to incorporate the City of East Cobb. To watch a live stream of this meeting, click here.

Rep. Anderson previously served as the chairman of the House Study Committee on Annexation and Cityhood. Established by House Resolution 222 during the 2021 legislative session, this study committee conducted a thorough study of annexation dispute resolution and cityhood procedures to determine appropriate revisions to these laws. For more information on this study committee, please click here.

Rep. Anderson represents State House District 10, which currently includes portions of Habersham and White counties. He was first elected to the House of Representatives in 2020 and currently serves on the Energy, Utilities & Telecommunications, Governmental Affairs and State Planning & Community Affairs committees.

Elizabeth Nicole Kramer

Elizabeth Nicole Kramer, age 21 of Coffeeville, Mississippi, passed away on Tuesday, January 4, 2022.

Born on August 24, 2000, in Demorest, Georgia, she was the daughter of Jewel Earl Williams and April Wakester Kramer. Ms. Kramer lived most of her life in Texas. She was a homemaker and of the Christian faith.

She was preceded in death by a stepson, Zachary Boyd.

Survivors include her daughter, Aurora Smith of Toccoa and step-daughter, Piper Boyd of Mississippi; father, Jewel Earl Williams of Clarkesville; mother and adoptive father, April Kramer of Toccoa and Jacob Kramer of Texas; fiancé, Tommy Boyd of Mississippi; grandmothers, Alice Woodley and Cathleen Wakester; brothers, Daniel, Charles and Nicholas Kramer all of Texas and Jonathan Presley of Clarkesville; many aunts, uncles and cousins.

Funeral services are 2 p.m. on Friday, January 14, 2022, in the Chapel of McGahee-Griffin & Stewart with Pastor Paul Hunter, Rev. Terry Benfield, and Rev. Bud Foster officiating.

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

Those in attendance are asked to adhere to 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.

Cornelia talks entertainment district expansion, stormwater blockages

(Livestream photo)

The City of Cornelia had two orders of business to take care of that require the public’s input at their Jan. 10 meeting: a proposed expansion of Cornelia’s downtown entertainment district and an amendment to their solid waste city code.

At the meeting, they put voting on both of those items off until they can hold public hearings for them at their upcoming meeting on Feb. 1 at 6 p.m. in Cornelia City Hall.

Expanding the entertainment district

The expansion of Cornelia’s entertainment district would bring the district to the south side of Main Street, across from the train tracks that run through downtown.

This expansion would allow businesses across the tracks to participate in the city’s successful entertainment district, which allows businesses more freedom with alcohol sales and patrons the ability to walk around the entertainment district area with open containers.

In addition to the current downtown entertainment district, which covers much of Downtown Cornelia on the north side of the tracks, this expansion would add in the highlighted areas of South Main Street, Front Street, Larkin Street and Fore Acre Street. (Google Maps)

The expansion would include South Main Street, Front Street, Larkin Street and Fore Acre Street in the entertainment district. The city’s downtown development authority has given their approval of the expansion, encouraging the city to move forward with it.

“I want to stand here up in front of you today and say that every board member on the Cornelia DDA fully supports this expansion of the entertainment district,” said Heath Barrett, Cornelia DDA member. He says that in the year that the city has had an entertainment district, he has been “astonished” by the amount of new business in downtown Cornelia. “At the end of the day, it shows you that it’s more than just the alcohol, it’s a lot of business and opportunities that it brings forth.”

The commission will hold a public hearing at the next commission meeting to further discuss the expansion.

Amendment to solid waste city code

The commission also discussed an ordinance that would amend the city’s solid waste code to make it illegal for residents to put their leaves and brush in city stormwater mitigation infrastructure.

“This ordinance is a result of an issue that we’re having with residents placing their leaves and brush in the city’s storm ditches, culverts and on top of catch basins,” City Manager Dee Anderson told the commission. “As a result, this creates flooding issues during rain events.”

The commission voted to post the proposed ordinance for public comment, which will be heard at the upcoming meeting.

A recording of the meeting is available here.

Finally! UGA wins first national title in 41 years

Georgia's Stetson Bennett celebrates after the College Football Playoff championship football game against Alabama Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2022, in Indianapolis. Georgia won 33-18. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)

The Georgia Bulldogs went into Monday night’s college football championship looking for redemption against Alabama and they found it. Stetson Bennett delivered the biggest throws of his storybook career and Georgia’s defense sealed the sweetest victory in program history, vanquishing rival Alabama 33-18 Monday night for its first national title in 41 years.

Bennett connected with Adonai Mitchell on a 40-yard touchdown to give No. 3 Georgia a 19-18 lead with 8:09 left and then hooked up with Brock Bowers for a 15-yard TD on a screen to put the Bulldogs up eight with 3:33 left.

The final blow came from Georgia’s dominant defense. Kelee Ringo intercepted an underthrown deep ball down the sideline by Heisman Trophy winner Bryce Young.

“I just saw the ball in his hands and that was all she wrote,” said safety Lewis Cine, the game’s defensive MVP.

Instead of going down with a little over a minute left, Ringo took off and behind a convoy of blockers and went 79 yards for a touchdown that set off a wild celebration by the relieved Georgia fans who packed Lucas Oil Stadium.

“There’s going to be some property torn up in Indianapolis tonight,” Georgia coach Kirby Smart said, paraphrasing the late Georgia play-by-play man Larry Munson.

Coach Kirby Smart celebrates College Football Championship
Georgia head coach Kirby Smart celebrates after winning the Bulldogs’ first college football championship since the 1980 season. The Bulldogs beat Alabama 33-18 on Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2022, in Indianapolis. (Credit: AP/Darron Cummings)

The Bulldogs (14-1) hadn’t won a national title since freshman Herschel Walker led them there in 1980. If simply snapping the drought wasn’t good enough, doing against No. 1 Alabama (13-2) had to make it feel even better.

“I cried, so pretty good,” Bennett said when asked how it felt.

Nick Saban’s Crimson Tide had won seven straight against the Bulldogs, including the last four against Smart, Saban’s longtime assistant.

Smart returned to his alma mater as coach in 2016 and has been chasing his mentor ever since. The Bulldogs lost two SEC championship games to Alabama, including one five weeks ago, and the 2018 CFP title game to the Tide under Smart.

“I told them we burned the boats. The only way home was through them,” Smart said he told his team about the Crimson Tide.

Mission accomplished.

Bennett, the former walk-on turned starter, finished 17 for 26 for 224 yards and no interceptions.

For most of the first three quarters, first CFP title game to be a rematch of a regular-season game was an ol’ fashion Southeastern Conference defensive struggle.

The first touchdown of the game came with 1:20 left in the third quarter. After James Cook broke a 67-yard run to get the Bulldogs into the red zone, three more running plays — a facemask penalty by Alabama — got them into the end zone. Zamir White went in standing up from a yard out with massive defensive tackles Jalen Carter and Jordan Davis leading the way as blockers. The Bulldogs led for the first time, 13-9.

After Alabama added another field goal, the Tide caught a break on a strange looking turnover by the Bulldogs.

As Bennett was being taken down deep in Georgia territory, he tried to throw the ball away. The ball slipped loose and bounced toward the sideline, seemingly harmless. Alabama’s Drew Sanders casually caught the ball as he was jogging out of bounds.

Surprisingly, the ruling on the field was a fumble, recovered by the Tide and replay upheld the call, giving the Tide the ball in the red zone. A few plays later, Young eluded the rush and found Cameron Latu for a 3-yard touchdown that put Alabama up 18-13 with 10:14 left in the fourth.

Once again, it felt like Georgia would not be able to break whatever spell Alabama seemingly had on the Bulldogs.

Bennett was 13 for 22 for 141 yards as the next drive started, and you could practically hear all skeptical Georgia fans wondering why Smart didn’t turn to his four-star backup QB, J.T. Daniels, for a spark.

As he has done so many times during a career that started on the scout team and took a detour through junior college in Mississippi, the small-town Georgia kid nicknamed Mailman came through.

Bennett completed all three of his passes for 68 yards, including a long strike to Mitchell for a touchdown with 8:09 left that gave the Bulldogs a 19-18 lead after a failed 2-point conversion.

The Bulldogs’ defense clamped down on Young, forcing a three-and-out on the Tide’s next drive, and then Georgia went to work on sealing a long-awaited championship.

Young finished 35 for 57 for 359 yards with two interceptions and was sacked three times after Georgia didn’t bring him down one in the SEC title game.

“We played a heck of a game against a heck of a team for the first three quarters of the game,” said Saban, who was denied his eighth national title, seventh with Alabama in the last 13 years. “Nobody can take the SEC championship away from this team, the Cotton Bowl championship. We just didn’t finish the way we needed to finish.”

Former Georgia head coach Vince Dooley was among the thousands of UGA fans who traveled to Indianapolis for the game. Afterward, he and head coach Kirby Smart shared an emotional moment on the field.

The Bulldogs won their last championship under Dooley. Smart, who played for Georgia during college, joined the ranks of head coaches to win national titles at their alma mater.

This article appears on Now Habersham through a news partnership with GPB News.

Half the nation’s caregivers who died by COVID-19 were in 5 states. Georgia is one of them

Caption A new report estimates that 167,082 children – roughly one of every 450 – in the United States lost a parent or other caregiver in the home to COVID-19. (Credit: Pexels stock photo)

A new report estimates more than 167,000 children nationwide lost a primary caregiver to COVID-19. Georgia is one of five states making up half that number.

Nearly 6,500 children in Georgia lost a parent or caregiver to COVID-19 — a staggering toll that one expert says is a “rallying cry” for the nation to help those children who have suffered such a loss.

The number of caregiver deaths puts Georgia in the top five in the nation, according to a new study examining the topic.

Though Georgia is the eighth-most populous state in the United States, it’s ranked fifth in caregiver loss because it’s fifth among states in deaths from COVID-19, says John Bridgeland, co-founder and CEO of COVID Collaborative and former director of the White House Domestic Policy Council.

In December 2021, COVID Collaborative and Social Policy Analytics released its report “Hidden Pain: Children Who Lost a Parent or Caretaker to COVID-19 and What the Nation Can Do to Help Them,” which finds that roughly one in every 450 children lost a parent or other caregiver in the home to COVID.

Half of those caregiver deaths come from five states including Georgia. The four remaining states are California, Florida, New York, and Texas.

The loss of caregivers to COVID is not just an urban problem, Bridgeland said.

“It’s hurting rural areas really hard in Georgia,” he said.

More than 31,000 Georgians died from COVID, leaving nearly 6,500 bereaved children behind. About half of those are between 5 and 13 years old, and another 1,200 are even younger, Bridgeland said.

MORE: They were pregnant when the pandemic hit. Now these moms are eager to vaccinate their new kids

The youngest children affected by loss of a caregiver are the most vulnerable in terms of development, socialization and economic stability, Bridgeland said.

In Georgia, Black children lost caregivers in about two and a half times the rate of white children nationally.

“These parents died and caregivers died in a lonely hospital, beds in isolation wards, not giving children the time and experience to actually understand and cope with the loss,” Bridgeland said. “So this is a rallying cry to the nation to step up to help this highly vulnerable population, including thousands of children in the state of Georgia.”

Lane Pease is the program director of Kate’s Club, an Atlanta-based nonprofit dedicated to helping adolescents when a parent or sibling dies.

Before the pandemic started, one in every 13 Georgia children experienced the death of a parent or sibling before age 18, and that number is higher in some counties with greater health care disparities, Pease said.

It will take years to assess the damage done to families by the coronavirus pandemic, Pease said.

Bridgeland studied decades of evidence on the effects of the loss of a parent on a child.

“And we know that it’s higher rates of anxiety, depression — even suicide,” he said. “If these children don’t get the support they need, the effects can persist over a lifetime.”

Now is the time to outline a plan of action for what the nation can do to help this highly vulnerable population, Bridgeland said.

This article appears on Now Habersham through a news partnership with GPB News

Lesia Carol Millwood Alexander

Lesia Carol Millwood Alexander, age 51, of Alto, passed away on Sunday, January 9, 2022.

Born on February 12, 1970, in Gainesville, she was a daughter of the late Phyllis Free Millwood and Eugene Millwood of Gillsville. Mrs. Alexander was a homemaker and of the Christian faith.

In addition to her father, survivors include her husband, Wayne Daniel Alexander of Alto; son and fiancé, Donovan Alexander and Kaitlyn Atkins of Alto; daughter and son-in-law, Latree and James Franklin of Alto; eleven grandchildren; brothers and sisters-in-law: Scottie Millwood and Amy of Alto, Steven Millwood and Rhona Evans of Gainesville, and James Millwood and Shayna Niece of Alto; great-nephew, Keilan Millwood; and several aunts, uncles, and cousins.

No formal services are planned at this time.

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.

HCES’s central station could make several improvements to public safety

(Daniel Purcell/Red Bird Media)

At a recent town hall meeting, Habersham County Commissioner Bruce Palmer brought forward several challenges and new developments in public safety around the county. Those topics ranged from cows wandering into roadways to funding for public safety, but many of the developments in Habersham’s public safety centered around the county’s new emergency services station.

The project was proposed in 2019 in the county’s possible SPLOST projects. The SPLOST was passed overwhelmingly, and the new emergency services station is estimated to cost around $4 million in SPLOST funds.

The “central station” will include housing for firefighters, a hub for Habersham County Fire and Emergency Services, as well as a new location for the county’s E-911 services— but this new station isn’t just an improvement for HCES and E-911’s facilities, it could be the means to putting an end to HCES’s understaffing.

The need for a central station

The county’s emergency services are spaced out across the county, but there isn’t a location with immediate access to GA-365 and better positioning to reach different areas of the county. This Demorest location would change that.

“That’s going to be put in the center of the county where it’s needed,” Habersham County Emergency Services Director Chad Black tells Now Habersham. “It’s going to put us where we can deploy more personnel from a central location and from there, going north, south, east and west is going to be much faster.”

The new location won’t just serve the county’s fire department and emergency services to improve their response times, it will also give the county’s E-911 dispatching services a better environment to work in.

The current E-911 dispatching location is underground in a bunker-like facility, where there are no windows and only one door. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

Chairman Palmer says the current E-911 facility is “like a dungeon.” The building is underground with no windows and only one door. The only other point of exit in the building is an escape hatch. He believes this new location will better serve the staff, who often work 12-hour-long shifts in a dark room with no way to see outside.

365 and school traffic

The central station will be located on Demorest Mt. Airy Highway, across from Wilbanks Middle School, next to Demorest Elementary in the area that used to be their soccer field; the area was abandoned and is now overgrown. The county purchased the land from the Habersham County Board of Education for $252,264.

The central location will give the county’s emergency services direct access to GA-365. But with school traffic coming from both sides of the highway and after-school traffic on 365, there may be some concerns with getting emergency vehicles out of the new station.

Black assures citizens that the county and emergency services studied the traffic on the highway before and after school to determine how the school traffic would impact emergency services vehicles getting in and out of the station, and determined that the location was the right fit.

HCES Director Chad Black says that the new central station will provide much-needed access to the county and improve HCES’s ability to respond to emergencies throughout the county. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

“We will have an exit for emergency vehicles only that will come out onto Demorest-Mt. Airy Highway in front of the station,” Black said. “Between our emergency warning systems and the officers directing traffic, we don’t see any problem with it.”

He says the school traffic does exist there, but due to their working relationship with school resource officers and infrastructure, even if a call comes in during school traffic, they’ll have a way around it.

“There will be times we run calls during that [school traffic], but it’s not going to be any problem,” Black said.

Interim County Manager Alicia Vaughn says that during the planning of the building and site, she plans to work with the developer to make sure all infrastructure needs are met to keep both students, their families and first responders safe.

“We’ll do whatever improvements to the infrastructure need to be done to make sure it is safe,” Vaughn said.

“Growing our own”

The county’s emergency services are understaffed right now, and it would require 12 new staff members to join HCES to fully staff the new station. But Black says that’s an issue they’re working to fix.

RELATED: Public safety officials respond to concerns about emergency response times

Habersham’s Emergency Services, which includes fire and emergency medical services,(Photo: Chad Black)

“Right now, it’s hard to find people that are qualified [to work for HCES],” Black says.

The department is hoping to offer in-house training with the addition of a new station. This would give HCES the opportunity to train and certify EMTs and paramedics in Habersham, as well as offer that training to other cities and counties.

They are also looking at offering fire services classes to the curriculum at Habersham Central High School. This curriculum would allow students to train as firefighters and graduate high school with the skillset to get a job in the county’s fire services, improving their staffing as well as giving recent graduates more opportunities.

When those new staff members come on board, from both on-site and student training, grant funding would be available to cover their gear for their first three years of service through the Safer Grant, according to Black.

Black says offering these training opportunities is “growing our own” emergency services workforce in Habersham County. Professionals that are already trained as firefighters, EMTs and paramedics already have departments they work with, and likely aren’t planning to leave, according to Black. He believes giving local citizens the opportunity to train and join the force is the way to grow their staff to the size they need.

“If we start growing our own and training them as an EMT, firefighter and medic, and they sign contracts that they have to work here for an extended period of time or they have to pay the county back, that’s going to help,” Black says.

B-I-N-G-O

(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

If you haven’t played bingo at the new Grant-Reeves Veteran Center, their massive crowds on Tuesday and Thursday nights might surprise you. But for the crowds that come out, bingo night isn’t just a chance to win big, it’s a chance to spend time with the community.

Linda Loggins, who lives in White County, has been playing bingo for over 33 years. Every week, Loggins meets up with her friends Kathy Cabe of Toccoa and Beaulah Kilpatrick of Toccoa at the GRVC (formerly Grant Reeves VFW Post) bingo night in Cornelia. The three dedicated bingo players travel around Northeast Georgia through the week, hitting bingo spots in Habersham, Stephens and White Counties.

Cabe and Kilpatrick make their way around Toccoa’s bingo nights while Loggins attends bingo in Cleveland. When they meet in the middle at the Cornelia veteran’s center for bingo night, the group of friends sets up their table with their drinks, snacks, colorful bingo daubers and good conversation.

Linda Loggins has been playing bingo for more than 33 years in both White and Habersham Counties. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

“It’s just fun,” Loggins says. “It’s fun to be with people [and] get out of the house.”

The conversation and laughs flow easily. Amidst the crowd of others hoping to hit it big, these three feel a sense of anxious anticipation.

Cabe, who has only been playing two years to Loggins’ 33 plus, says she looks forward to being around friends and making new ones during bingo night— and how much money she could win.

“It gets you out of the house, you get to be around friends, it’s a lot of fun,” Cabe says.

Kathy Cabe, front, and Beaulah Kilpatrick, back, play bingo in Toccoa together and join Loggins once a week for bingo in Cornelia. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

After losing the old VFW Post in a fire, the Post reopened as the Grant Reeves Veterans Center and moved to their new Cornelia location inside the old Office Pros and School Tools at Cornelia Crossing Shopping Center. While the loss of the former Post was unfortunate and untimely, the new location has given them room to dramatically expand their bingo audience.

RELATED: New Cornelia VFW opens in time to celebrate Veterans Day

GRVC volunteers say that they’ve seen well over 300 people come out for bingo on $1,000 jackpot nights. On the evening of Jan. 6, 183 players joined the game.

The money people spend at the GRVC, whether it’s to buy bingo cards or to grab snacks at the canteen, goes back into supporting the programs they offer veterans and their families.

If you want to check out bingo night, which happens every Tuesday and Thursday, beginning at 6:30 p.m., head over to the GRVC at 174 Cornelia Crossing. Their next $1,000 jackpot is on Feb. 10.

Myer new Cherokee Bluff High volleyball coach

Tiann Myer will be the next Volleyball Head Coach for the Cherokee Bluff Bears.

Cherokee Bluff High School athletic director, Kenny Hill, made the announcement Tuesday afternoon.

“Coach Myer brings a wealth of experience and knowledge to the Bears, with over 20 years of teaching and coaching,” said Hill. “We are excited about the future of the program.”

Meyer has an overall record of 367 wins and 151 losses. She led the volleyball program at Mason High School in Ohio for 14 years, taking the Comets to 8 conference titles, 4 sectional championships, and 3 district crowns. She and her husband Greg recently moved to the area from Cincinnati and this past year she served as the Head Coach at West Hall High School.

Biden and Harris head to Atlanta on Tuesday to push ‘urgent need’ for federal voting rights law

President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris arrive to speak from Statuary Hall at the U.S. Capitol to mark the one year anniversary of the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol by supporters loyal to then-President Donald Trump, Thursday, Jan. 6, 2022, in Washington. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

Under pressure to deliver on promises of voting rights legislation, President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris will visit Atlanta on Tuesday.

The nation’s top two leaders will speak at Atlanta University Center Consortium on the grounds of Clark Atlanta University and Morehouse College, according to the White House.

Their remarks are said to be focused on the “urgent need” for Congress to pass federal voting protections to counteract restrictive voting measures being passed in states across the country.

Georgia has become ground zero for the national fight over federal voting rights protections after state lawmakers passed a controversial new election law in the wake of the 2021 legislative session.

Proponents argued the sweeping bill made necessary changes to the state’s voting system in the wake of the pandemic. But critics called it a blatant attempt to make it harder to vote after Democrats saw large statewide gains during the 2020 election.

The Georgia General Assembly is still handily controlled by Republicans, but in November 2020, Georgians backed Biden — the first time the state has elected a Democrat for president since 1992 — and sent two Democrats to the U.S. Senate, Jon Ossoff and the Rev. Raphael Warnock, in January 2021 runoff elections.

Warnock, who is also the pastor at Martin Luther King Jr.’s church, became Georgia’s first Black U.S. senator and made voting rights a cornerstone of his campaign. He narrowly beat former U.S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler during the high-profile runoffs.

Warnock’s and Ossoff’s wins solidified Democrats’ majority in the Senate and unified control over both Congress and the White House.

Since Warnock was elected, he has become the poster child for federal voting rights legislation and has urged his colleagues to act more aggressively to get legislation passed.

During a news conference last week, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, flanked by Warnock and other lawmakers, pledged that Democrats would use their majority power to find a way to push past their GOP colleagues who have blocked movement on voting rights legislation in the Senate.

Warnock — who is up for reelection next year —  blasted state GOP lawmakers for additional voting changes proposed ahead of Georgia’s legislative session, including a bill that would eliminate ballot drop boxes altogether.

RELATED: Congressional Dems urge movement on voting rights legislation. ‘Time is running out,’ Warnock says

Biden, too, has been under pressure to act on voting rights after calling it a top priority for his administration.

The president made a trip to Georgia during the Senate runoffs, which solidified Georgia’s new political power on the national stage. But news of his upcoming visit has been met with frustration.

A group of voting rights groups pushed back against the president and vice president’s scheduled appearance in Atlanta on Tuesday.

First reported by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the statement issued a stark warning: “it’s time for you to deliver.”

“Georgia voters made history and made their voices heard, overcoming obstacles, threats, and suppressive laws to deliver the White House and the US Senate,” the statement said. “As civil rights leaders and advocates, we reject any visit by President Biden that does not include an announcement of a finalized voting rights plan that will pass both chambers, not be stopped by the filibuster, and be signed into law; anything less is insufficient and unwelcome.”

The statement was signed by the Black Voters Matter Fund, Asian American Advocacy Fund, James Woodall, former Georgia NAACP President, GALEO Impact Action Fund and the New Georgia Project Action Fund.

This article appears on Now Habersham in partnership with GPB News

2022 will be a contentious election year. That means conflicting priorities for lawmakers

House Speaker David Ralston (R-Blue Ridge) speaks on the first day of the 2022 legislative session. (Credit: Riley Bunch/GPB News)

Georgia’s legislative leadership has a lengthy checklist of action items for this legislative session — from bolstering mental health access to prioritizing foster care reform.

But just months before statewide elections, complicated by a bitter rift within the Republican Party, time under the Gold Dome will likely be dominated by extreme proposals aimed to curry favor with voters.

The chaotic political atmosphere of 2022 is marked by a battle raging within the GOP between members who are still loyal to Donald Trump and those who have lost favor with the former president.

Redistricting ensures Democrats have a slim chance at taking control of either chamber for several years, but policies proposed during the session will likely set the tone for campaigns in the coming months on both sides.

With more than a dozen lawmakers eyeing higher office, political pundits warn Georgians to keep motives in the back of their minds.

“Whatever one sees playing out in the legislature probably should step back and say, ‘Okay, … is this being motivated by someone’s efforts to better position themselves or their ally for the upcoming elections?’” said Dr. Charles Bullock, political science professor at the University of Georgia.

Duncan Senate
Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan pounds the gavel in the Georgia State Senate on the first day of the 2022 legislative session on Jan. 10, 2022. (Credit: Riley Bunch/GPB News)

‘I don’t intend to let it’

In press conferences last week, House Speaker David Ralston (R-Blue Ridge) and Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan outlined ambitious agendas for the upcoming session. Both noted proposals intend to tackle the rise in violent crime being seen across the state.

When asked if he was concerned that lawmakers will use the lectern to bolster campaign platforms, Ralston’s message was straightforward. “I don’t intend to let it,” he said.

“I think I’ve been pretty clear about that,” Ralston said. “We’ve got some important things to get done — public safety, mental health, the budget. These are things that I think we can make a difference in the lives of Georgians in doing. I’m not going to be distracted by what other people are doing in their campaigns.”

Although Gov. Brian Kemp will reveal his legislative priorities later this week in his State of the State address, a few of them are all but certain: a state budget that includes pay raises for teachers and state employees, changes to Georgia’s education system and legislation to expand gun rights.

But Kemp, too, faces a bitter primary challenge from Trump-backed former Sen. David Perdue, who has pushed far-right proposals around education, elections and income taxes in the opening weeks of his campaign.

Bullock said the primary battle could result in Kemp’s priorities shifting rightward as well.

Last week, the governor endorsed so-called “constitutional carry” legislation that would allow gun owners to carry firearms without a permit, potentially joining more than 20 other states with similar laws.

The infighting within the Republican Party will be on full display in the state senate.

Duncan is not seeking a second term as lieutenant governor, and Senate President Pro Tem Butch Miller (R-Gainesville) and Sen. Burt Jones (R-Jackson) are frontrunners locked in a tight primary battle to lead the chamber next year.

“​​It may be a situation where one makes a conservative proposal and the other says, ‘I’ll see you and raise you by five,” Bullock said.

Already, Miller and Jones have leaned into dueling base-pleasing proposals, from fully eliminating the state’s income tax that funds half the state’s budget to undoing election laws and processes they themselves voted to approve in recent legislative sessions.

Bullock said Trump’s entry into the primary, endorsing several challengers, creates a dynamic this year that “creates an incentive for these candidates to move to the right.”

Duncan’s control over his chamber will be tested more than ever this session. The two-term lieutenant governor has been outspoken against the far-right faction of the GOP that has fallen in line behind Trump.

“You’re certainly always concerned about folks that deliver legislation into this body only for political purposes and for headlines,” Duncan said. “That certainly is not a healthy place, I believe, to make laws. I believe it creates a divide.”

Election issues on full display

The election-year fight over social and economic issues that won’t likely become law may dominate committee meetings and floor sessions, despite leaderships’ best efforts to take a higher road.

Lawmakers from both sides of the aisle have teed-up bills that have little chance of doing more than exciting their voters and outraging opponents.

Those proposals range from banning so-called “Critical Race Theory” in schools to full Medicaid expansion and dueling ideas about how to reshape Georgia’s election laws.

A pending battle over Buckhead cityhood has been championed by GOP lawmakers from outside the area in question.

After the 2020 election saw Democrats win the state’s presidential votes for the first time in three decades and January 2021 saw two Democrats get elected to the U.S. Senate, the legislature spent much of the 2021 session working on a massive overhaul of Georgia election code.

The 98-page SB 202 that passed currently faces eight different lawsuits challenging parts of the law — and some Republicans still want to make more changes.

Still, in a closely divided state at the center of the political universe this year, leaders such as Ralston said they will forge ahead with what they believe is best for all Georgians.

“I know that many of the bills, particularly this year, they’re designed to get your attention and for you to give them coverage,” Ralston said. “To the extent that they succeed, I guess they’ll keep doing it. But you know, I’ve got a job to do and I’m going to do my job.”

This article appears on Now Habersham in partnership with GPB News

Habersham Board of Education announces new Ninth Grade Academy principal

The Habersham County Board of Education named their next principal for the Habersham Ninth Grade Academy at their Jan. 10 meeting: HNGA Assistant Principal David Leenman. His first day as principal will be on Feb. 28, 2022.

Current Habersham Ninth Grade Academy Principal, Dr. Connie Franklin, has been named the new superintendent for Stephens County Schools and will begin her new job on March 1.

“I think, considering the circumstances that he’s taking over in the spring during the school year, it’s a wonderful thing for that school,” Habersham County Superintendent Matthew Cooper said. “He knows our parents and our families, our students, Mr. Leenman knows our staff, and that positions him better than anyone to take over like this in the middle of the year.”

Leenman is currently in his sixth year as assistant principal at HNGA.

Current Habersham Ninth Grade Academy Assistant Principal David Leenman will become the HNGA’s new principal, starting Feb. 28. (Photo: Habersham County Schools)

“As I told Mr. Leenman, he’s not entitled to this in any way simply because he was the assistant principal for six years,” Cooper told the Board of Education. “He has earned this. Mr. Leenman has grown tremendously in his six years as assistant principal.”

Leenman lives in Habersham County with his wife, Sarah Leenman, who is a teacher at Woodville Elementary. His three children also attend school in Habersham County. Cooper says his living in the community further communicates his dedication to Habersham’s schools.

Leenman will be joined by two veteran administrators, Darlene Hudson, principal at Level Grove Elementary School and former Fairview Elementary School principal, and Scott Kersh, former Habersham Central High School assistant principal. Hudson will serve as a part-time assistant principal and Kersh as a full-time assistant principal at HNGA through the end of the year.

The school system will post two open positions for assistant principals at the Habersham Ninth Grade Academy in February, and will announce the permanent assistant principals in March.

“Mr. Leenman is, without a doubt, ready to be a principal,” Cooper said. “I have full confidence in his abilities and his skills.”