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Lady Indians claim sixth in a row with road win at Prince Ave; JV girls win also

Molly Mitchell (photo by Austin Poffenberger)

The Lady Indians won for the second time in as many nights, cruising to a 76-45 win Saturday evening at Prince Avenue Christian. The win also gave the #10-ranked girls a sixth straight win overall.

It was tightly contested in the first quarter, as the Lady Indians held a 19-12 lead going into the second. The girls began to pull ahead, outscoring PAC 14-9 in the second to take a 33-21 lead into the break. The offense exploded for 27 points in the third, and TFS completed the win with a 16-11 advantage in the final stanza.

Eight different Lady Indians scored points, led by Veronaye Charlton’s game-high 21 points and Denika Lightbourne’s 19. Molly Mitchell and Macy Murdock both scored in double figures as well with 13 and 12 points, respectively. Haygen James and Kailyn Neal both had 4 points, while Barrett Whitener finished with 2 and Miracle Bain one.

The Lady Indians limited their turnovers and shot well from the field to earn the win. The Lady Indians are now 7-2 overall and 2-0 in region play.

Meanwhile, the JV girls also pulled out the win Saturday, edging Prince Avenue 34-28. After an 11-4 first quarter, the home team rallied to hold TFS to just 2 points in the second, which made it a 13-11 Tallulah Falls lead at the half.

The Lady Indians outscored PAC 15-9 in the third, and held on in the fourth for the 6-point win. Breelyn Wood led all scorers with 16 points, and the trio of Allie Phasavang, Haygen James, and Chesney Tanksley all had 6 points apiece. The Lady Indians JV team is now 2-1 overall.

Jimmie Clarence Truelove

Jimmie Clarence Truelove, age 59, of Cornelia, passed away on Friday, January 7, 2022.

Mr. Truelove was born on March 26, 1962, in Stockbridge. At the age of 17, he began working in the poultry business and later retired from Fieldale. He enjoyed fishing and working on his vehicles. Mr. Truelove was a member of New Hope Baptist Church.

He was preceded in death by his father, Thomas William Truelove; his mother and stepfather, Bessie and John Ambrose; and his fiancé, Joyce Smith.

Survivors include his half-brother, Thomas Truelove of Athens, GA; sisters and brother-in-law: Dorothy Wilkinson of Macclenny, FL, Elaine Dixon of East Dublin, GA, Ethel and Fred Gosnell of Homer, GA, and Pat Hensley of Athens, TN; and several nieces, nephews, great-nieces, and great-nephews.

A private family memorial service will be held.

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

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

Victor Anderson to run for re-election

Victor Anderson, shown here at the opening of Habersham County's new administration building in 2018, is running for a second State House term. He currently represents Habersham and White counties. The district's new boundary lines have shifted to include most of Habersham and all of Rabun County. (Daniel Purcell/Now Habersham)

District 10 State Representative Victor Anderson is running for re-election. The freshman legislator this week formally announced his intention to seek a second term in office. He’ll be campaigning in a newly-minted district. With the recently signed Legislative Redistricting Law, District 10 will change from including approximately two-thirds of the population of both Habersham and White counties to including approximately 93% of Habersham County and all of Rabun County.

During his first legislative session in 2021, the former chair of the Habersham County Board of Commissioners sponsored and helped pass several municipal-friendly bills.

He pushed through a bill that allows governments to discuss cybersecurity in private – outside the bounds of the state’s open records meeting laws. He also sponsored legislation to create an exception to the competitive award bidding requirements for public works construction contracts. Anderson was also instrumental in establishing a study committee on Annexation and Cityhood issues. As chair of that five-member committee, he’s now working to incorporate the committee’s recommendations into legislation he plans to introduce this year.

Rep. Anderson was one of 100 House members to vote in favor of Georgia’s controversial new election law (SB 202). He voted to expand weapons carry license reciprocity in Georgia (HB 218) and supported a measure to extend paid parental leave to eligible state and local board of education employees (HB 146).

He serves on several House committees including Energy, Utilities & Telecommunications, Governmental Affairs, and State Planning & Community Affairs.

“My family and I are lifelong citizens of Northeast Georgia and District 10. As a husband, father, grandfather and small business owner, I want to protect our heritage and strong conservative values,” he said in a statement announcing his re-election bid.

Candidate qualifying ends on March 11. Party primaries are set for May 24 with the general election on November 8.

Life in Motion: A real-life ‘Rosie the Riveter’ turns 99

Pearle Crisler then and now (Habersham County Senior Center Facebook)

She’s among the few World War II veterans still alive. This week, Pearle Crisler turned 99.

Crisler was a Navy Machinist Mate during the war. She’s now one of the nation’s approximate 240,000 remaining WWII vets – 4,582 of whom live in Georgia. Crisler is also a cherished member of the Habersham County Senior Center family.

The Senior Center hosted a birthday party for Crisler on January 6. The county shared a social media post of the event recognizing this “real-life Rosie the Riveter.”

Remembering the legacy of Coach Shane Dover

Habersham Central High School Coach Shane Dover passed away on Jan. 4, 2022, after suffering an apparent heart attack. (photo by Daniel Purcell)

When Habersham County Coach Shane Dover suddenly passed away Tuesday, the community felt shockwaves of pain as they lost a beloved father, husband, teacher and coach.

Shane Dover dedicated his life to helping Habersham’s youth develop a love for learning and grow their potential as athletes. His dedication to Habersham County students set him apart, making him a beloved member of the Habersham County School System, a great coach and a pillar in the Habersham County Community.

“When I think about Shane Dover I think of a teacher and coach that truly loved his job,” Habersham County Schools Superintendent Matthew Cooper said. “He told me on a number of occasions how much he enjoyed being a teacher. He was always grateful for the opportunity to be in the education profession. He was living his dream job.”

HCHS Coach Shane Dover, right, joins Raiders head coach Benji Harrison on the sidelines during a football game. Harrison is among those scheduled to speak during Dover’s funeral on Jan. 8, 2022. (photo by Daniel Purcell)

Dover leaves behind a school board that admired him, students who adored him and a team of coaches who loved him like family, as well as his wife, Kristie, and three sons, Sawyer, Sutton and Slade.

“As I’ve thought about Shane over the last few days, the word that keeps coming to my mind is ‘love,'” Habersham Central High School Head Baseball Coach Chris Akridge said. “Through coaching both football and baseball with him, I saw that Shane loved coaching and truly loved our players. I also witnessed the love that he had for his sons and his wife. It was evident that he loved his family with every fiber of his being.”

He was dedicated to Habersham’s athletics, serving as a coach for the Habersham Central Raiders football team and Wilbanks Middle School girls’ basketball.

“Coach Dover was a total team player,” says Habersham County Schools Athletic Director Geep Cunningham. “He loved his job and he loved the Raiders.”

Cunningham says that Dover’s commitment to athletics and coaching of multiple sports is “unheard of in today’s times.”

“He did things the right way,” Cunningham says. “It makes me extremely proud to work with Coach [Dover] and know that we will always be members together in the Raider Family.”

Dover is remembered not only as a friend, teacher and coach, but as someone dedicated to his faith and his community.

“From the standpoint of being his friend and co-worker, Shane was a guy who was easy to love,” Akridge said. “He always had a positive attitude and a servant’s heart which made him lovable to everyone that he came in contact with. As a man of faith, it was noticeable that he loved his Savior. To me, that is the legacy that he left on our community and on the students and athletes that he worked with—a legacy of loving life and loving others.”

A love for students

Dover’s passion was working with youth, whether it was on the field, in the classroom or at church. His family says that out of everything he did, including a 29-year career with the Georgia Department of Transportation, working with youth was his true calling.

“Coach Dover was the kind of teacher that our students just loved,” Superintendent Cooper said. “His students knew that he cared about them deeply and that he was willing to do whatever was necessary to make class fun.”

He taught at Wilbanks Middle School, where his students looked forward to class with him.

“Coach Dover was a great teacher, coach, husband and father, and a great friend,” said Wilbanks Middle School Assistant Principal Chris Chitwood and Principal MaryBeth Thomas in a statement to Now Habersham. “He will be missed by our staff and our students.”

WMS says that his impact on students as both a teacher and coach left a mark on the school and its students, building a place where students wanted to be.

(Photo: Habersham Athletics)

“In the classroom, he created an environment where students wanted to come to school and be in his class,” WMS administration says. “On the field, he was more than a coach – he was a mentor. For Coach Dover, teaching and coaching was not a job but something he wanted to do, and he enjoyed it. His students absolutely loved him. He was excited about teaching and coaching and was devoted to it.”

Habersham County Schools students, faculty, administration and staff all agree that Dover was one-of-a-kind, and will be deeply missed.

“He simply cannot be replaced,” Cooper said. “There is no doubt in my mind that his legacy will live on in his three sons and in the many students that he impacted in the classroom and in athletics.”

Services for Dover will be held Saturday, Jan. 8 in the Habersham Central High School auditorium beginning at noon. Rev. Doug Porter, Dr. Brian James and Coach Benji Harrison will officiate. Interment will follow at Yonah Memorial Gardens.

Lady Indians open region play with blowout win at Loganville Christian

Haygen James (photo by Austin Poffenberger)

Playing for the first time in exactly one month, the #10-ranked Lady Indians won convincingly 63-8 at Loganville Christian. The win gives the Lady Indians a 1-0 start in region play.

There was no doubt from the opening tip, as TFS ran up a 20-0 lead after one quarter of play, and held a 29-8 lead going into the half. Loganville was held scoreless in the first, third, and fourth quarters.

A 22-0 third quarter had TFS up 51-8 going into the final period, where the girls polished off the win with a 12-0 fourth quarter. Denika Lightbourne led all scorers with 21 points, adding 7 steals. Veronaye Charlton had 11 points, Miracle Bain had 8, and Haygen James had 7 points and 7 steals. Rounding out the scoring was Kailyn Neal (6 points), Breelyn Wood and Allie Phasavang (3 points apiece), and Barrett Whitener and Macy Murdock with 2 points each.

The Lady Indians are now 6-2 overall and 1-0 in region play, earning a fifth consecutive win in the process. The girls return to action on Saturday at Prince Avenue Christian.

State superintendent expects students back in class, teacher raises in 2022

Superintendent Richard Woods, left, said he’s wishing for in-person classes and teacher raises in 2022. File photo. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

(GA Recorder) — Despite some large Georgia school systems implementing an online start to the semester this week, the state’s public educational system is poised for a successful and mostly in-person semester, state Superintendent Richard Woods said Friday.

“It goes without saying that the last two years have been shaped by the pandemic, our recovery is ongoing,” Woods said, “With that said, I think it’s important to recognize that this is not March 2020, which I’m very thankful of that, but we do have a lot more tools in our toolkit than when we did when we first started off almost two years ago now.”

Woods said widely available vaccines along with improved planning and infrastructure will help make in-person classes possible.

“Hopefully, this will be a very short interruption for those districts, but again, across the state, most districts are back face to face and we’re glad for that, and that’s what we’re trying to make sure,” he said.

Woods spoke at the Georgia Partnership for Education’s annual Top Ten Issues to Watch conference, held virtually this year because of the pandemic’s resurgence.

The partnership, a nonpartisan group founded by the Georgia Chamber of Commerce, usually holds the event each year in Atlanta in conjunction with the publication of a report outlining the major issues facing public education as the school year resumes from winter break and lawmakers prepare to gather for a new session.

Much of Woods’ wishlist for the coming session comes down to more money for teachers.

“Definitely the completion of the teacher raise, we’re looking at $2,000, that will fulfill that,” he said. “That, I think, would be very, very well received across the state. Also making sure that the budget is fully funded, we don’t have to deal with austerity, I think that would be greatly appreciated across the board.”

Gov. Brian Kemp made a $5,000 teacher pay raise a key pledge in his 2018 campaign, and the legislature approved a $3,000 raise the following year. The difference was planned to be a part of the 2020 budget, but the COVID-19 pandemic scuttled those plans. This year, with the state treasury flush with cash and Kemp facing re-election, completing the pay raises and fully funding the state’s contribution to local school budgets seem like relatively safe bets to take priority.

Social issues

Woods also pledged to make school lessons more accessible to parents by requiring district officials to make annual reports on what third-party curriculum programs and assessments they are using and uploading those reports to a publicly available dashboard.

The role of parental involvement in school lessons has erupted as a controversy in recent months as masses of parents come to local school board meetings to protest the inclusion of critical race theory, a once-niche academic term that has become a catch-all for lessons that suggest racism exists or has historically existed in American institutions.

The GPEE’s Top Ten Issues to Watch in 2022

Equity

Unfinished instruction

Non-academic barriers

Improving school culture

Funding

Accountability

Early learning

Revamping the teaching profession

Workforce readiness

Rural transformation

Woods did not speak directly about critical race theory, but he said educators need to be transparent about what they are teaching and that parents should have a say in the classroom.

“We cannot be seen or act as educational elitists and assume that we know best without listening to our parents in our community, we have to have that buy-in and that trust on a day in day out basis,” he said. “And so I think making sure that we are transparent about what is taking place within our school is very prudent for each of our districts.”

Woods’ opponent in the June Republican primary, former Superintendent John Barge, has pledged to remove critical race theory from classrooms and teach students patriotism instead.

The winner of the GOP primary will face one of the two Democratic candidates, Cobb County school board member Jaha Howard or Gwinnett County Board of Education Chair Everton Blair.

Woods also reiterated his support for an idea Speaker Pro Tem Jan Jones raised late last year, creating legislation to prevent access to obscene materials in public schools, though the scope of any planned legislation is not yet clear.

“We’ve had some discussions about what obscenity is looking like and revisiting a law that is a little bit dated,” Woods said. “Definitely, when you look at the area of electronics and things that are out there, how we can better protect our kids and just make sure that we’re focused on what needs to be taught.”

Assessments and accountability

Students did not take the Georgia Milestones standardized test in 2020, and participation rates plummeted last year after after the state board of education dropped the weight of end of course testing to .01% of a student’s final grade, a move Woods championed to lower the pressure of the high-stakes tests for students who missed out on classroom hours because of the pandemic.

This year, standardized testing will be back to normal, Woods said, but he promised to minimize the tests’ role in determining whether a student moves on to the next grade.

“The U.S. Department of Education will require state assessments this spring, so we look at testing, as going on as normal this year,” he said. “We will continue to direct local school districts with flexibility contracts to use course grades and other measures, not just the Milestones scores, when it comes to promotion and retention decisions. Our teachers, they’re frontline, they know the kids, they’ve been working with them.”

A lack of reliable test scores has severely hampered the state’s ability to grade and compare schools using its College and Career Ready Performance Index formula, said GPEE President Dana Rickman.

“We haven’t had any sort of accountability due to COVID over the past two years because, I think, for understandable reasons, we’ve suspended that,” she said. “But there are clear indications and outright statements from the Georgia Department of Education that they’re done with the CCRPI, they don’t like it. They don’t think that it does what it’s supposed to do. But our concern at the partnership is that there has not been a robust statewide discussion of what it should be replaced with.”

Woods said the state’s accountability system should be broadened to include more information to help schools grow, but specifics would have to wait, he said.

“It’s something that we’re exploring with the school improvement to help us get a better idea of what goes on,” he said. “So we’re looking at addressing accountability, and I think that as the pandemic wanes, we’ll be able to see a little bit more of what that looks like, and hopefully not have the disruption we’ve had over the past couple of years.”

Judge calls sentencing for Arbery’s killers an ‘exercise in accountability’

Superior Court Judge Timothy Walmsley, left, listens to Ahmaud Arbery's father Marcus Arbery's impact statement during the sentencing of Greg McMichael and his son, Travis McMichael, and a neighbor, William "Roddie" Bryan in the Glynn County Courthouse, Friday, Jan. 7, 2022, in Brunswick, Ga. The three were found guilty in the February 2020 slaying of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery. (AP Photo/Stephen B. Morton, Pool)

The three white men who murdered unarmed Black jogger Ahmaud Arbery nearly two years ago outside Brunswick were each sentenced on Friday to life in prison — Travis McMichael and his father, Greg McMichael, without the possibility of parole, and William “Roddie” Bryan with the possibility of parole after serving at least 30 years.

Judge Timothy Walmsley issued the sentences at the Glynn County Courthouse after multiple hours of arguments from prosecutors and defense attorneys.

“When I thought about this [sentencing], I thought from a lot of different angles,” Walmsley said. “And I kept coming back to the terror that must have been in the mind of the young man running through Satilla Shores.”

That was the subdivision where Arbery, 25, was running on Feb. 23, 2020, when the McMichaels and Bryan chased him in their pickup trucks for about five minutes, before Travis McMichael blasted Arbery with a shotgun.

“It is a chilling, truly disturbing scene,” Walmsley said, of video recorded by Bryan that shows the murder. “Today demonstrates that everybody is accountable to the rule of law. Taking the law into your own hands is a dangerous endeavor.”

MORE: Arbery killers get life in prison; no parole for father, son

In addition to their life sentences for murder, the McMichaels were both sentenced to 20 years for aggravated assault.

Walmsley noted mitigating factors for the relatively lighter sentence of Bryan, who was the only defendant not armed at the scene of the crime.

“But it does not change the fact that, was it not for the fact that Mr. Bryan used his vehicle in a way to impede Mr. Arbery’s course of travel, this may not have ever occurred,” Walmsley said. “Instead of closure, maybe it would be best to see today’s proceeding as an exercise in accountability.”

With sentences having been issued, the men can now appeal their convictions. Appeals must be filed within 30 days, Walmsley said.

Outside the courthouse, Arbery’s parents celebrated the sentences as they stood alongside civil rights lawyers and advocates.

“I sat in that courtroom for five weeks straight,” said mother Wanda Cooper-Jones, referring to the murder trial that ended in November. “But I knew that we would come out with a victory. I never doubted it. And I knew that today would come.”

“He’s a kid of love, because he brought people together,” said his father, Marcus Arbery. “Ahmaud, rest in peace.”

Attention now shifts to a federal trial scheduled to begin in February against the McMichaels and Bryan, who are each charged with hate crimes and attempted kidnapping of Arbery.

“What we just experienced was very important for accountability in this community,” civil rights lawyer Lee Merritt said outside the courthouse. “However, it’s so important that the federal hate crime charges move forward because there is an issue of race taking place in this country.

“And so we are looking forward to the federal federal trial, where the issue of motivation, the issue of hate that we believe was the motivating factor behind this murder, is finally addressed.”

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

#2-ranked Indians win sixth straight in region-opening win at Loganville Christian

Diego Crotta (photo by Austin Poffenberger)

The newly-ranked #2 Indians opened the second half of the season and region play with a 77-38 win Friday at Loganville Christian. TFS, appearing as the #2-ranked team in Class 1A Private in the MaxPreps state polls, moved their win streak to 6 in a row with the victory.

Anfernee Hanna led 5 Indians in double figures with 15 points. Charlie Cody had 13, Diego Crotta and Devonte Allen had 12 apiece, and Gavin Page had 10. Lincoln Hall finished with 8 points, Zakhar Valasiuk had 3, and George Ketch and KC Respress both had 2 points.

“The team played really hard on both ends of the floor tonight,” says coach Cody Coleman. “They executed well on offense and brought excellent pressure on the defensive side.”

The Indians are now 11-1 overall on the season and 1-0 in region competition. TFS returns to the court on Saturday at Prince Avenue Christian.

Meanwhile, the Indians JV boys earned another win, their third straight, in a 55-19 final. The JV team is now 4-2 overall.

The 355

The 355 refers to the codename of a female agent during the Revolutionary War. Granted, it does set up an inversion of the espionage genre, but the execution is formulaic and forgettable.

It stars Jessica Chastain as “Mace” Brown, a CIA officer who poses as an undercover agent in Paris with her cohort (Sebastian Sean) to try and retrieve a device that could potentially lead to another World War. You can see the premise is already devoid of originality.

Things go awry when Mace chases down a German agent (Diane Kruger) who steals the device and Mace believes she’s part of the team who invented it.

Soon, she’s calling on an old friend (Lupita Nyong’o) who serves as a computer scientist for assistance and the two begin a globe-trotting journey to find the device.

Penelope Cruz costars as an agent from Colombia as well as being a psychologist who reluctantly gets entangled in the mess. Out of all these characters, Cruz is the one that should’ve had the most development, but instead, she’s reduced to standard fare for a character of her sort.

The 355 was directed and co-written by Simon Kinberg whose had a hand in the action genre, but he concocts a script that checks all the boxes and leaves little to no room for surprise or insight. Any attempts at setting up these women into three-dimensional characters are diminished by the plot catching up to them just when they’re becoming interesting.

The 355 plays like the Bourne movies crossed with Charlie’s Angels. Just surgically remove the intelligence of the former and the sex appeal of the latter. These ladies give it their all, but they’re stuck in a script that does have good pacing from time to time, but how they all come together is a contrivance that doesn’t give any sense of authenticity.

If Kinberg were given more time to polish his script, maybe we’d have something as exciting as some of the action, but even that fails.

Grade: C

(Rated PG-13 for sequences of strong violence, brief strong language, and suggestive material.)

Supreme Court appears wary of Biden vaccine-or-test employer mandate

On a snowy day in Washington, the U.S. Supreme Court’s six conservative members questioned the Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s authority to impose an emergency vaccine rule on employers of more than 100 workers. (Ariana Figueroa/States Newsroom)

(GA Recorder) — The U.S. Supreme Court’s conservative majority appeared unconvinced Friday of the Biden administration’s authority to impose a vaccine-or-test mandate on private businesses, casting doubt on a key piece of the White House COVID-19 response.

The justices seemed potentially more comfortable with another Biden administration rule to fight the virus that requires certain health care workers be vaccinated against COVID-19, with no options for testing.

The court’s six conservative members during a two-hour special hearing on Friday on the workplace rule questioned the Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s authority to impose an emergency vaccine rule on employers of more than 100 workers.

States have asked the court to pause the OSHA rule’s implementation, scheduled for Monday. The justices could issue a ruling as soon as this weekend.

Under the proposed Biden administration rule, those businesses either must have their entire workforce vaccinated against COVID-19 or require unvaccinated employees to test regularly and wear masks on the job.

The conservative justices characterized the emergency standard as a broader public health measure than OSHA has previously imposed and argued that Congress has had sufficient time to impose such a mandate if it wanted.

Chief Justice John Roberts said the OSHA mandate and a separate but similar one by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services that requires health care workers in facilities receiving federal funding be vaccinated — which was challenged by states in another unusually long argument following the OSHA case — were part of an administration-wide program.

That approach undercut the government’s case that each agency was working within its particular authority, he said.

“As more and more agencies come into place, it’s a little hard to accept the idea that it is particularized to this thing,” Roberts told U.S. Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar, the administration’s chief lawyer.

“It seems to me that the government is trying to work across the waterfront and it’s just going agency by agency. This has been referred to as a workaround, and I’m wondering what it is you’re trying to work around.”

Justice Neil M. Gorsuch asked why the issue was not best answered by “the people’s representatives in the states and the halls of Congress” instead of an emergency order by OSHA.

“Congress has had a year to act on the question of vaccine mandates already,” he said.

Roberts, Gorsuch and Justice Samuel Alito said the OSHA rule was “unprecedented.”

Benjamin Flowers, the Ohio solicitor general who argued the case for a group of Republican-led states that are challenging the OSHA mandate, said on such an important policy, Congress — not an executive branch agency — should be involved, even during an emergency.

“When there’s an emergency, it’s especially important that it be a considered, thoughtful process,” he said.

The court’s three liberal members — Justices Stephen Breyer, Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor — defended both the OSHA rule and the health care workers mandate.

The court could only strike down the OSHA  rule before it takes effect Monday if it would be in the public interest to do so, Breyer said.

With nearly 750,000 new cases Thursday — about 10 times the number when OSHA wrote the rule — and hospitals filled with unvaccinated people, Breyer said states would not be acting in the public interest.

“I would find it unbelievable that it would be in the public interest to suddenly stop these vaccinations,” he said.

Kagan said vaccinations have been shown to be the best way to prevent COVID-19, with masking the second-best. The federal law creating OSHA permits the agency to take necessary emergency measures to protect workers’ health.

“Why isn’t that necessary? What else should be done?” Kagan asked. “It’s obviously the policy that gears to preventing most sickness and death. And the agency has done everything but stand on its head to show quite clearly that no other policy will prevent sickness and death anywhere like this one will.”

Scott Keller, an attorney for the National Federation of Independent Business, which is challenging the mandate, said the requirement would lead workers to quit their jobs.

But waves of sick workers who cannot report to their jobs would also be disruptive, Sotomayor said.

The states challenging the workplace mandate include Ohio, Tennessee, Idaho, Kansas, Missouri, Montana, Arizona, New Hampshire, Florida, Georgia, Iowa and Louisiana.

Health care workers case

The court also heard arguments on the case challenging the related CMS requirement that certain health care workers be vaccinated against COVID-19.

Louisiana Solicitor General Elizabeth Murrill and Missouri Deputy Solicitor General Jesus A. Osete argued for the states challenging that mandate. Montana, Georgia, Arizona, Idaho, Iowa and New Hampshire are also part of the challenge.

Roberts appeared to possibly give more leeway to the Department of Health and Human Services, the parent agency to CMS, to impose rules on facilities that receive federal health funding.

Similar rules mandate where hand sanitizer must be or how high beds must be, Sotomayor said.

“I’m not saying that there’s not some limit there,” Roberts said. “But I don’t know why a provision addressing an infectious disease of this scope is beyond the secretary’s determination that the mandate at issue here is necessary.”

Murrill said the federal government is required to consult states on such major policies because of the major effect on health care.

“I cannot (underscore) enough the impact on states and their provider networks,” she said.

In a statement, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said that unvaccinated people remain at high risk of serious consequences from COVID-19 and that the policies before the court were important pieces of the government’s response.

“Unvaccinated Americans continue to face a real threat of severe illness and death — including from Omicron,” she said.

“The OSHA rule ensures that employers are protecting their employees by encouraging workers to get vaccinated and requiring unvaccinated workers to mask and test. The CMS healthcare rule protects vulnerable patients by requiring that covered healthcare providers get vaccinated. The need and the urgency for these policies is greater than ever, and we are confident in the legal authority for both policies.”

Flowers and Murrill argued remotely instead of in person because of recent positive COVID-19 tests, Reuters reported Friday.

A spokesman for the Ohio Attorney General’s office confirmed Flowers tested positive Thursday. He first tested positive late last month and has since fully recovered, but the court-required test still detected the virus Thursday, the spokesman said.

Representatives for the Louisiana Attorney General’s office did not immediately return a message seeking confirmation.

Arbery killers get life in prison; no parole for father, son

BRUNSWICK, GA — Three white men who chased and killed Ahmaud Arbery were sentenced Friday to life in prison, with a judge denying any chance of parole for the father and son who armed themselves and initiated the deadly pursuit of the 25-year-old Black man.

Murder carries a mandatory sentence of life in prison under Georgia law unless prosecutors seek the death penalty, which they opted against for Arbery’s killing. For Superior Court Judge Timothy Walmsley, the main decision was whether to grant Greg and Travis McMichael and their neighbor, William “Roddie” Bryan, an eventual chance to earn parole.

The judge ordered both McMichaels to serve life without parole. Bryan was granted a chance of parole, but must first serve at least 30 years in prison.

Arbery’s family asked a judge to show no lenience Friday in sentencing three men.

During the sentencing hearing, Arbery’s sister recalled her brother’s humor, describing him as a positive thinker with a big personality. She told the judge her brother had dark skin “that glistened in the sunlight,” thick, curly hair and an athletic build, factors that made him a target to the men who pursued him.

“These are the qualities that made these men assume that Ahmaud was a dangerous criminal and chase them with guns drawn. To me, those qualities reflect a young man full of life and energy who looked like me and the people I loved,” Jasmine Arbery said.

Arbery’s mother asked for the maximum sentence, saying she suffered a personal, intense loss made worse by a trial where the men’s defense was that Arbery made bad choices that led to his death.

“This wasn’t a case of mistaken identity or mistaken fact. They chose to target my son because they didn’t want him in their community. They chose to treat him differently than other people who frequently visited their community,” Wanda Cooper-Jones said. “And when they couldn’t sufficiently scare or intimidate him, they killed him.”

Ahmaud Arbery’s sister Jasmine Arbery wipes a tear from her eyes while listening to her mother’s impact statement to Superior Court Judge Timothy Walmsley during the sentencing of Greg McMichael and his son, Travis McMichael, and a neighbor, William “Roddie” Bryan in the Glynn County Courthouse, on January 7, 2022, in Brunswick, Georgia. (Photo by Stephen B. Morton-Pool/Getty Images)

Prosecutor Linda Dunikoski asked the judge for life without parole for Travis and Greg McMichael and the possibility of parole for Bryan. But she said all deserved that mandatory life sentence for showing “no empathy for the trapped and terrified Ahmaud Arbery.”

Contending the McMichaels still believed they didn’t do anything wrong, Dunikoski disclosed Friday that Greg McMichael gave Bryan’s cellphone video of the shooting to an attorney, who leaked it.

“He believed it was going to exonerate him,” the prosecutor said.

For Travis McMichael, who is 35, the possibility for parole could mean hope for release from prison in his 60s, said Robert Rubin, one of his defense attorneys. He argued that Travis McMichael opened fire only after “Mr. Arbery came at him and grabbed the gun.” But Rubin also acknowledged his client’s decisions to arm himself and chase Arbery were ”reckless” and “thoughtless.”

“They are not evidence of a soul so blackened as to deserve to spend the rest of his life in prison,” Rubin said. “This was not a planned murder. This was a fight over a gun that led to Mr. Arbery’s death.”

Greg McMichael recently turned 66, and Bryan is 52, raising the chances that they would spend the remainder of their lives in prison even if granted a chance of parole.

Greg McMichael’s lawyer, Laura Hogue, said her client has health problems and acknowledged he likely won’t ever get out of prison. But he said granting him a chance at parole would show he didn’t intend Arbery to die, never pulling his gun until his son fired his shotgun.

“Greg McMichael did not leave his home that day hoping to kill,” Hogue told the judge. “He did not view his son firing that shotgun with anything other than fear and sadness. What this jury found was this was an unintentional act.”

Bryan’s lawyer said he should get a chance at parole because he showed remorse and cooperated with police, turning over the cellphone video of the shooting to help them get to the truth.

“Mr. Bryan isn’t the one who brought a gun,” Kevin Gough said. “He was unarmed. And I think that reflects his intentions.”

The guilty verdicts against the men handed down the day before Thanksgiving prompted a victory celebration outside the Glynn County courthouse for those who saw Arbery’s death as part of a larger national reckoning on racial injustice.

All three men were also convicted of aggravated assault, false imprisonment and criminal attempt to commit false imprisonment. Maximum prison terms for those counts range from five to 20 years. The judge was likely to allow those additional penalties to be served simultaneously with the life sentences for murder.

The McMichaels grabbed guns and jumped in a pickup truck to chase the 25-year-old Arbery after spotting him running in their neighborhood outside the Georgia port city of Brunswick on Feb. 23, 2020. Bryan joined the pursuit in his own truck and recorded cellphone video of Travis McMichael firing close-range shotgun blasts into Arbery as he threw punches and grabbed for the weapon.

The killing went largely unnoticed until two months later, when the graphic video was leaked online and touched off a national outcry. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation took over the case from local police and soon arrested all three men.

Defense attorneys have said they plan to appeal the convictions. They have 30 days after sentencing to file them.

Next month, the McMichaels and Bryan face a second trial, this time in U.S. District Court on federal hate crime charges. A judge has set jury selection to begin Feb. 7. Prosecutors will argue that the three men violated Arbery’s civil rights and targeted him because he was Black.

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