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Stanley Richard “Ricky” Arrowood

Stanley Richard “Ricky” Arrowood, age 66 of Mt. Airy, Georgia passed away on Friday, December 10, 2021.

Born in Cumming, Georgia on May 21, 1955, he was a son of the late Clyde Arrowood & the late Ethel Nations Freeman. Ricky was self-employed in the flooring industry for many years. In his spare time, he enjoyed landscaping his yard and painting houses. Most of all, he enjoyed precious time with his family, especially his grandchildren. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a brother, David Arrowood; sisters, Connie Arrowood & Barbara Arrowood; and by his granddaughter, Braelyn Nixon.

Survivors include his loving wife, Rita Sullens-Arrowood; daughter and spouse, Connie Arrowood & Tyler Lewis Collins; son, David Arrowood, all of Mt. Airy, GA; daughter-in-law, Bridgett McConnell of Cornelia, GA; brothers, Jimmy Arrowood, Gene Arrowood, Clarence Arrowood, & Earl Arrowood; sister, Joyce Jones; grandchildren, Ashley Thomason, Aaliyah Grier, Scarlett Grier, Raelynn Nixon, Briella Nixon, Conner Arrowood, & Alexis Jarrard; as well as many nieces, nephews, other relatives, & friends.

Funeral services are scheduled for 2:00 p.m. Wednesday, December 15, 2021, at Hillside Memorial Chapel with Rev. Connie Berry officiating. Interment will follow in the Hillside Gardens Cemetery.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 12:00 Noon until the service hour on Wednesday, December 15, 2021.

An online guest registry is available for the Arrowood family at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

Arrangements by Hillside Memorial Chapel, Clarkesville, Georgia. (706) 754-6256

Buford claims third straight title during GHSA state championship weekend

Brooks County and Trinity Christian are the new reigning football champs in Class A Public and Private, respectively. Brooks defeated Irwin County 56 to 28 Thursday at Center Parc Stadium in Atlanta. Trinity beat Prince Avenue Christian, 55 to 28.

Three more state championships were decided over the weekend.

In Class 2A, Fitzgerald defeated Thomasville, 21-7, to claim its first state title since 1948. Benedictine defeated Carver (Columbus) in 4A, 35-28. And Buford eeked out a 21-20 win over Hughes to hold onto the Class 6A crown for the third consecutive year.

In Class 3A, Cedar Grove beat Carver Atlanta, 56-26, to win its fourth state title in the last six seasons. Warner Robins won its second consecutive 5A state title Saturday in a 38-14 win over Calhoun. And Collins Hill defeated Milton, 24-8, to win the Region 7A state championship.

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Championship game recaps

Ivan Huaroco Hurtado

Ivan Huaroco Hurtado, age 26 of Demorest, Georgia passed away on Friday, December 10, 2021, following injuries he sustained in an automobile accident.

Born in Demorest, Georgia on May 21, 1995, he was the son of Juan Hurtado & Juana Huaroco of Demorest. Ivan was a graduate of Habersham Central High School, Class of 2013 and was employed in the Welding & Fabrication Industry. He was a wonderful son, brother, devoted husband, & loving dad to his two precious daughters. Ivan was of the Catholic faith.

He was preceded in death by his wife, Kathaleena “Kathy” Phosai who passed away on April 11, 2021.

In addition to his parents, survivors include his two daughters, Navi Hurtado Phosai & Asuna Hurtado Phosai; sisters, Vanessa Huaroco Hurtado & Janet Huaroco Hurtado, all of Demorest, GA; a host of aunts, uncles, cousins, other relatives, & many friends.

Funeral services will be held at 12:00 Noon Monday, December 13, 2021, at St. Mark Catholic Church in Clarkesville with Father Roberto officiating. Interment will follow in the Level Grove Cemetery.

The family is at the residence and will receive friends at the home starting at 5:00 p.m. on Sunday, December 12, 2021.

An online guest registry is available for the Hurtado family at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

Arrangements by Hillside Memorial Chapel, Clarkesville, Georgia. (706) 754-6256.

Families forced from homes as storm rips through Clarkesville

Several families were forced from their apartments on the west side of Clarkesville on Saturday as a sudden storm ripped though the town.

The storm swept through around 1:43 p.m. Saturday carrying heavy wind and rain. Residents in the housing complex on Daisy Street say it looked and sounded like a “small tornado,” but judging from the radar, Now Habersham’s Tyler Penland says it appears to have been straight line winds that blew through gusting up to between 30 and 40 mph.

Three families had to temporarily evacuate their apartments in the complex after a tree fell on top of one of the units and caused a gas leak. The tree seriously damaged one apartment, forcing the occupant from her home until repairs are made. The Red Cross is offering temporary housing assistance and the Northeast Georgia Housing Authority is overseeing repairs.

The same storm system that hit the housing complex toppled a large tree north of Clarkesville, blocking Stonebank Road and cutting off HEMC power to the area. There are reports of downed trees on New Liberty Road, as well.

There were reports of scattered power outages throughout the county, one took down the Habersham 911 Dispatch, prompting emergency personnel to use a backup system.

In White County, despite optimistic assurances they wouldn’t have to, organizers canceled Alpine Helen’s annual Christmas parade due to the weather and safety concerns.

The severe weather that struck Georgia was part of the same system that rolled through the Central U.S. overnight, spawning dozens of tornadoes in six states and killing as many as 100 people in Kentucky.

Penland says the severe weather that struck Northeast Georgia is now over, but Now Habersham is still closely monitoring regional conditions. Check back here for updates.

Life in Motion: After the storm

10-year-old Forrester Lunsford cleans up overturned trash cans in Clarkesville after the storm. (photo submitted)

As parents, we are often blessed with simple moments where we can sit back and watch with pride the people our children are becoming. Such was the case Saturday for Jennifer Lunsford.

She and her 10-year-old son, Forrester, were in Clarkesville when a storm blew through the city square. The wind gust blew one of the outside trash cans into a parked car, so, when it was safe, Forrester – a 4th grader from Fairview Elementary School – went out into the rain and picked it up.

“When he saw the storm come through and noticed the trash cans his initial reaction was to help his community,” says Jennifer.

She describes her son as “very giving” and a “forward thinker” who has a heart for others and community. Lunsford captured that spirit in the photo she snapped of her son doing his good deed.

“When the storm passed he went to pick up other trash cans,” she says. “I am so proud of Forrester. He always has others’ best interest at heart and this moment made me feel extra special to be his mom and confirmed again how special this kid is.”

Local artist brings Christmas cheer to pharmacy customers

(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

When Kerri Johnson’s daughter volunteered her to paint the windows of Habersham Drug for the holiday season, she wasn’t sure what she was getting herself into. She just know she would be spending time doing what she loved, making art, but what started as a creative job became something much more meaningful.

Artist Kerri Pulliam Johnson with some of her artwork.

“It’s going to bring me to tears and think about it again,” Johnson said. “They [Habersham Drug customers] were so excited.”

Johnson painted a total of 16 windows outside of Habersham Drug and Habersham Medical Surgical Services with a penguin snow day scene, and community members were filled with joy as her art brought a playful and festive feel to the area. She said some customers would sit in their cars and watch her paint or would come by multiple times a day to see the scene come together.

Johnson painted a total of 16 windows outside of Habersham Drug and Habersham Medical Surgical Services with a penguin snow day scene. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

“One lady said she was dreading Christmas and that the windows gave her something to cue her Christmas spirit again,” Johnson said. “I thought ‘oh, that’s wonderful,’ so if that’s all I got out of it, that was enough.”

Johnson says that she thought the experience of painting the windows would be a therapeutic experience, where she got to spend time immersed in one of her favorite hobbies, but she says it turned out to be much more than that.

Johnson says that during her time painting, community members would sit in their cars and watch her work or would come by multiple times a day to see the festive scene come together. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

“It was a blessing to me,” Johnson said. “I thought I was doing it as a blessing to others, but it was such a blessing to me to see how everybody responded, and how everybody anticipated what was coming next.”

Hanna hits game-winner as #8-ranked Indians win third straight

Gavin Page (photo by Austin Poffenberger)

The #8-ranked Indians won their third consecutive game in a 57-56 win at Wesleyan on Saturday. Junior Anfernee Hanna hit the game-winner with 18 seconds left, and the defense held strong til the final horn.

Three Indians reached double figures, led by Hanna’s game-high 22 points. Devonte Allen had 12 points and Milos Vico had 11. Hanna put the Indians ahead with 18 seconds to go in the game, as TFS was down one with the ball. Wesleyan missed a shot, and the ball bobbled out of bounds, giving them another chance as it was out on Tallulah Falls.

With 13 seconds to go, Wesleyan missed a corner 3-pointer, giving TFS the ball. The Indians ran out the clock for the 57-56 win. TFS stormed back from down 10 points in the third quarter.

TFS is now 8-1 overall, and will play Pinecrest Academy at home on December 17.

Area Christmas displays illuminate the holidays

The City of Cornelia’s Christmas Light Spectacular opened for the holiday season on Thanksgiving night. The display at Cornelia City Park is now open from 6:00 p.m. until 10:00 p.m. nightly through the new year.

Here’s a list of other Northeast Georgia area holiday light displays and events you can enjoy (and a few farther south).

Free light displays

Admission-only events

Encanto

Encanto is Disney/Pixar’s latest effort and like virtually every one of their films, it has the standard trappings: Dazzling animation, terrific voice over work and a message that speaks to both kids and adults without alienating any demographic.

The movie centers around an elderly woman named Alma (María Cecilia Botero) who possesses a magical candle called an Encanto. Through the candle, she is able to sprout a brand new village after her former one was destroyed by conquistadors.

Also through the candle, it gives each member of her family unique gifts that they use to better the community. That is, of course except for her granddaughter, Mirabel (Stephanie Beatriz). She’s gifted with nothing.

The rest of the family’s gifts include doing such unbelievable acts as seeing the future, making flowers bloom instantly, possessing superhuman strength and even controlling the weather. You might be wondering if the script is ripping off The Incredibles or the X-Men.

Mirabel is determined to find her gift, but by doing so, she starts making the townspeople distrust her due to outrageous claims such as seeing things that aren’t there. Even her own grandmother is beginning to wonder if she’s worthy of having a gift.

The rest of the movie is filled with equal magic as the story itself, including musical numbers that would rival anything in the Frozen movies, and the animation is on par with more recent Disney computer animated movies such as Moana.

However, Encanto has much more going for it than its eye-pleasing visuals or its infectious music. Similar to many Pixar movies, there’s a great heart to it all by telling a story that embraces cultural diversity and that everyone has a unique ability to shine.

In a weak year for animated movies, Encanto is a not-so-obvious standout.

Grade: A-

(Rated PG for some thematic elements and mild peril.)

988 will be the ‘911’ for mental health/addiction crisis calls. Georgia preps for the extra load

A sign reads "calltaker cove" inside the Cobb County 911 call center. With the nationwide July 2022 launch of the new 988 number for mental health and addiction crisis calls, the workload here could double. (Ellen Eldridge / GPB News)

When people think about calling 911 in an emergency, they’re usually thinking about getting help — and fast.

That means call centers need people to answer calls and dispatch police, fire or ambulance.

But for people in active mental health crises and those calling for help, it’s tough to remember Georgia’s current 10-digit number: 1-800-715-4225.

Next year, Georgia will join the nation in using a single three-digit hotline: 988 is meant to be the “911” of behavioral health, said Judy Fitzgerald, the commissioner of the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities.

Establishing 988 for suicide prevention and mental health crisis services will make it easier for Georgians in crisis to access the help they need and decrease the stigma surrounding suicide and mental health.

As states are scrambling to be ready for 988 to go live on July 16, 2022, Fitzgerald’s department is leading Georgia’s planning process.

“This is probably one of the largest and most transformative initiatives that I’m going to experience in my lifetime in behavioral health,” she said.

The easy-to-remember number is expected to increase demand on the crisis system twofold. But Georgia has taken steps to be ready.

Georgia’s General Assembly approved $114,039 for 988 support in March, a year and a half ahead of the federal deadline for the number to go live.

Additionally, the state allocated in its budget $86,602 for a youth suicide specialist; $107,748 for a suicide epidemiologist; $12,900 for suicide prevention training in school systems; and $70,000 in funding for suicide prevention for issues related to COVID-19.

The state’s also ahead of the game with its existing dedicated crisis line, the Georgia Crisis and Access Line, known as GCAL.

Twenty-four hours a day, every day of the year, Georgians in crisis can call for help — not 911 for the police or fire officials, but the Georgia Crisis and Access Line for help in mental health and substance use disorder crises.

“If people call right now the National Suicide Prevention Hotline from Georgia, those calls already come to GCAL,” Fitzgerald said.

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Georgia has a plan in place to send help, too, because while a person in crisis sometimes simply needs someone to listen, other times, they will need a place to go.

“The more we know about who the people are, where they’re calling from and what’s available in their local community and exactly where they are, and we can get to them that second category, right?” Fitzgerald said. “I said first someone to talk to (and) second, someone to go.”

About 10% of calls to GCAL end with the person in crisis being taken to a mental health facility for their safety, Fitzgerald said.

Cobb County 911 call center operations manager Kathy Stickland sits at the desk in her office.
Cobb County 911 call center operations manager Kathy Stickland (Ellen Eldridge / GPB News)

Calling 911 after a loved one attempts suicide does not mean trained mental health specialists will respond, Cobb County’s 911 call center operations manager, Kathy Strickland, said. It’s also tough to quickly determine if a person has autism or struggles with communicating the extent of their mental anguish.

“We send fire and we send police because we don’t know if they’re having a mental episode,” Strickland said. “We don’t know if they’re having an issue with a situation that’s going on at home. We don’t know what the case is.”

That has, at times, proven deadly when police respond with force.

The DBHDD has a planning committee to ensure all stakeholders are involved with the planning process.

“We’ve got law enforcement representation, we’ve got health care representation and really importantly, 911 is at the table with us as well,” Fitzgerald said.

The DBHDD estimates the new 988 number will at least double calls to GCAL in the first year, and those stakeholders have real logistical challenges ahead.

Kelli Miller, a mother who lives in Cherokee County, said when her son had a breathing emergency, she dialed 911 from her home driveway, but the cellphone call routed to a neighboring county.

“I thought they automatically knew where I was and could pin my location, and I was so frantic at the moment the operator kept asking me what my location was, but I really wasn’t paying attention,” Miller said. “And I believe like the third or fourth time she said it, it dawned on me that I was calling from the cellphone and not the landline that I had reserved for this purpose.”

That meant precious minutes were lost even when Miller dialed the number we all know by heart — 911.

Consider, now, how 988 will confuse an emergency situation when frantic people forget not only where they are but also which three-digit number to call.

That’s why explaining what the new 988 number is for is one of the next steps in Georgia’s rollout.

Until then, if you or someone you love is experiencing a mental health emergency, call Georgia’s current Crisis Access Line at 1-800-715-4225.

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

Cleveland man sentenced to three life terms for molesting young children

A 45-year-old Cleveland man has been sentenced to three life terms in prison for child molestation.

Enotah Judicial Circuit Court Judge Joy Parks sentenced Jason David Loucks to two life sentences to serve consecutively and one to serve concurrently, reports WRWH News.

Loucks has remained in jail since authorities arrested him in January 2018 for abusing a male and female child, both under the age of 15. Prosecutors say Loucks gave his victims meth in order to sexually assault them.

Judge Parks sentenced Loucks on all 13 counts of child molestation filed against him as well as distribution of methamphetamine.

Enotah Circuit District Attorney Jeff Langley represented the State in court.

“When it came across my desk it was so horrendous I determined immediately to try this one myself,” he says.

Fifteen witnesses testified over the course of the five-day trial.

Demorest man killed in Old Cleveland Road crash

fatal accident

A Demorest man was found dead Friday afternoon following a fatal crash that may have occurred the night before.

Around 11:00 a.m. on Friday, Georgia State Patrol troopers from Toccoa Post 7 responded to a fatal crash in Habersham County, where they discovered the body of Ivan Huaroco Hurtado, 26, of Demorest.

According to the GSP, Hurtado was driving a 2017 Chevrolet Silverado, traveling north on Old Cleveland Road, when the vehicle crossed the centerline and exited the roadway to the left. It then traveled down an embankment and vaulted. Hurtado was not wearing a seatbelt and was ejected from the vehicle.

The car continued moving for approximately 248 feet after leaving the roadway before it stopped in an embankment on the West shoulder of Old Cleveland Road.

At this time, it is unknown what caused the driver to leave the roadway. The GSP belives that the crash may have occurred overnight on Thursday. No other information is available at this time.