Home Blog Page 1219

Akins elected to Habersham commission amid low voter turnout

Ty Akins casts his ballot in the Nov. 30 runoff election between himself and Jason Hogan. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

Habersham County voters have elected Ty Akins as their new District 5 commissioner, with Akins receiving 65% of the vote. Akins will succeed Tim Stamey who resigned from the board of commissioners earlier this year for health reasons.

Commissioner-elect Ty Akins puts wife Christina’s “I voted” sticker on after voting at the Ruby Fulbright Aquatic Center. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

“I feel great,” Akins told Now Habersham after the votes were counted. “I’m very happy to have the opportunity to serve Habersham County and the community I love.”

The Tuesday runoff election was marked by low voter turnout; Akins received 836 votes to runoff opponent Jason Hogan’s 480. The Elections Office counted a total of 1,321 ballots cast, less than 5 percent of Habersham County’s registered voter population.

RELATED: Runoff election voting going smoothly in District 5, despite some bumps

“The sad part is, that’s somewhat expected,” Habersham North Poll Manager Steve Lindley said. “. . . A lot of people might not turn out with just two names on the ballot.”

Poll workers from area precincts bring ballots and poll pads to the elections office. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

Early voting and absentee voting made up nearly half of the election results, with a total of 610 early and absentee ballots making up the runoff results. The number of voters participating in the runoff election was even lower than the municipal and special elections at the beginning of the month, which saw around 2,675 voters.

Election results are currently “unofficial and incomplete” and will be certified on Friday, at which point the results will become final. Akins will join the commission in January of 2022.

Vaccine mandate for health care workers halted nationwide by Louisiana judge

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) —A federal judge in Louisiana on Tuesday issued a ruling blocking nationwide the Biden administration mandate requiring millions of health care workers be vaccinated against COVID-19.

A suit challenging the mandate was led on behalf of multiple states including Georgia by Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry, a Republican, and U.S. Judge Terry Doughty granted the states’ request for a preliminary injunction.

Doughty said in his opinion that he extended the injunction beyond those states and to the entire U.S. because “there are unvaccinated healthcare workers in other states who also need protection.”

Other states joining Louisiana in its suit, filed Nov. 15, included Montana, Arizona, Alabama, Idaho, Indiana, Mississippi, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Utah and West Virginia.

Doughty, an appointee of former President Donald Trump, said that “this Court believes the balance of equities and the public interest favors the issuance of a preliminary injunction.”

“The public interest is served by maintaining the constitutional structure and maintaining the liberty of individuals who do not want to take the COVID-19 vaccine,” he wrote. “This interest outweighs Government Defendants’ interests. “

At issue is President Joe Biden’s campaign to ensure that workers throughout the country are vaccinated against COVID-19.

Under Biden’s order, many private-sector employees were required to get vaccinated or undergo weekly tests, while some 17 million health care providers at facilities participating in the federal Medicare and Medicaid health insurance programs must be vaccinated — with no option to choose weekly testing instead.

Under the requirement, health care workers were to be fully vaccinated by Jan. 4, 2022.

Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr expressed vindication Tuesday after Doughty’s ruling.

 

Becker’s Hospital Review reported earlier this month that a federal study found 30 percent of health care workers in 2,000 hospitals across the U.S. remained unvaccinated as of Sept. 15.

“I applaud Judge Doughty for recognizing that Louisiana is likely to succeed on the merits and for delivering yet another victory for the medical freedom of Americans,” Landry said in a statement. “While Joe Biden villainizes our healthcare heroes with his ‘jab or job’ edicts, I will continue to stand up to the President’s bully tactics and fight for liberty.”

The Louisiana ruling followed another on Monday by a federal judge in Missouri that blocked enforcement of the Biden administration’s vaccine mandate for millions in 10 states.

That ruling by U.S. District Judge Matthew Schelp, another Trump appointee, affected the states involved in that lawsuit: Missouri, Iowa, Kansas, New Hampshire, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Arkansas, Wyoming and Alaska.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters Monday that the administration is “obviously going to abide by the law and fight any efforts in courts or otherwise” to prevent health care facilities from protecting their workforces.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp is laying some of the blame for an ongoing workforce shortage in senior care facilities and at other health care providers on the mandates pushing people out of the profession to escape being forced to take the vaccines.

Senior care facility managers are struggling to balance their desire for COVID-19 safety precautions with a need for workers who are resisting the vaccines.

“We believe COVID-19 vaccinations are critical to ensuring the safety of the vulnerable individuals residing in nursing centers, and we appreciate efforts to increase uptake in long-term care,” said Devon Barill, director of communications for a Georgia senior care industry association. “However, we are concerned that the mandate could exacerbate the significant workforce crisis long-term care communities are already experiencing.”

Because the mandate would apply to all facilities that treat Medicare and Medicaid patients, it covers the vast majority of the nation’s hospitals, home health care services and other medical service providers that depend on federal payments.

Additionally, Kemp and Carr are fighting in district court federal vaccination mandates for employers with 100 or more employees and federal contractors.

The governor vowed Tuesday to continue the state’s legal battles against vaccine mandates ordered by the Biden administration.

 

Georgia Recorder Editor John McCosh contributed to this report.

Albert William Miele

Albert William Miele, age 74 of Braselton entered rest Tuesday, Nov. 30, 2021, at the Northeast Georgia Medical Center, Gainesville Campus.

Albert was born March 19, 1947, in Philadelphia, PA to the late Dennis & Ida Kane Miele. He was retired from the construction industry and was of the Catholic faith. He was preceded in death by his wife, Diane Miele. He loved sports and was known for pulling for whichever team was winning at that time. He will be missed greatly.

Left to cherish his memory, sons, Phillip (April) Miele, Brett Miele & Paul McBride; brothers, Johnnie Gorman & James Gorman; sisters, Eileen Findley, Colleen Babin & Darlene McBride; 5 grandchildren & a number of nieces & nephews also survive.

Please share online condolences with the family at www.wardsfh.com. Ward’s Funeral Home is honored to serve the family of Albert William Miele.

Another high fire danger day in extreme Northeast Georgia

Dry weather continues across Georgia and the Carolinas, increasing the risk of grass and brush fires across the region.

While conditions have improved in some parts of Georgia, high fire danger continues in extreme Northeast Georgia including Elbert, Franklin, Habersham, Hart, Rabun, and Stephens counties.

The National Weather Service says a dry air mass will remain entrenched over the area, with afternoon relative humidity Wednesday dropping to the 35 to 45 percent range. The dry conditions and exceptionally dry fuels will make outdoor burning dangerous.

North Carolina has banned all outdoor burning until further notice. Wildfires in that state have burned more than 1,300 acres in recent days. The largest, the Grindstone Fire, has devoured 1,050 acres and, as of December 1, was only 20 percent contained.

RELATED: Is La Niña to blame for our recent spell of dry weather?

“It is fall wildfire season in North Carolina, and we are seeing wildfire activity increase due to dry conditions,” says Agriculture Commissioner Steve Troxler. “With these ongoing conditions, a statewide burn ban is necessary to reduce the risk of fires starting and spreading quickly.”

Across Upstate South Carolina and northeast Georgia, refer to your local burn authority before starting any fires.

When a rainy year goes dry: An Intro to ENSO

Weather stations across North Georgia have had quite the busy year. The station in Cornelia had already exceeded the yearly rainfall average by 1″ before the end of October and seemed poised to crack the top ten wettest on record.

Then something strange happened; things dried up.

As quickly as they turned wet the weather pattern turned dry with only 2.07″ of rain falling during November, with most of that falling on just two separate days (the 12th and 22nd). While meteorological fall (Sep-Nov) is statistically the driest time of year across Northeast Georgia, most stations saw double their average in September and October but only half or less in November. And now as of the first of December, the dry streak looks to continue with the forecast over the next two weeks only calling for around 1-2″ of potential rainfall at best. Why the sudden switch? The answer may lie a few thousand miles away over the eastern Pacific.

RELATED: High fire danger

You’ve probably heard of El Niño and La Niña, but what exactly is it? These two phenomena are centered around the water temperatures over a particular region of the Pacific Ocean. The most commonly used region is known as the Niño 3.4 region, as can be seen in the image below. When water temperatures in this area are colder than average you have a La Niña, and when warmer than average an El Niño. The index we use to measure this is known as the El-Niño Southern Oscillation Index, or ENSO.

The water temperature of this region has a known effect on the overall weather pattern downstream. Stronger “episodes”, or times when they are farther above/below average, result in more concrete and predictable changes. However a weak episode can also have an effect.

Since the middle of 2020 we have been predominantly in a weak to moderate La Niña, only broken up briefly during the middle of this year when the Pacific heated up slightly. Since then, though, water temps have been going back down again and the forecast calls for a return to moderate La Niña conditions over the winter. Since the effects of these phenomena tend to be most visible over the winter I expect it to have a noticeable effect on our upcoming winter.

When a La Niña is in place the weather pattern tends to behave in a specific way. The jet stream over the Pacific tends to move north, resulting in a drier and warmer weather pattern across much of the Southeast US. By comparison, an El Niño tends to shift the jet stream to the south, resulting in wetter and cooler weather across the southern US and drier/warmer across the central/northern regions.

Interestingly during weak to moderate La Niñas there is often a fairly sharp cutoff from wet to dry. The map below shows the precipitation departure from normal from Nov-Jan during your “average” weak La Niña.

As you can see there is a noticeable, significant below-average region over the southeast US that includes part of Northeast Georgia. However if you go just to our west you get quickly into an area of above average. This is a very common outcome and, interestingly enough, the forecast maps over the next two weeks show a precip forecast that looks suspiciously just like the map above with a sharp cutoff from west to east.

Our last major drought that occurred in 2016-2017 occurred during a La Niña event very similar in strength to the current one, although it should be noted the pattern was shifting from a strong El Niño into a moderate La Niña which can have different effects than our current change of Niña, then average, then back to Niña transition. Last winter we also saw a moderate La Niña and, while there was less precipitation than average we were never in any real trouble of a drought. That said, we had also seen more rainfall since despite being below average both November and December 2020 was the 3rd wettest on record for much of the region.

The recent fire danger statements and wildfires in North Carolina have certainly brought some attention to this change in weather pattern. Just across the state line a burn ban is in effect until further notice for all of North Carolina, and multiple wildfires have already destroyed over 1000 acres of forest. Parts of Georgia have been officially classified as D0, or abnormally dry, by the drought monitor. While this is by no means a particularly big problem just yet, the forecast for very little rain over the coming at least two weeks will only cause these areas to get larger. In addition the emergence of this La Niña could spell trouble over the next 2-3 months since it generally results in drier than normal conditions.

So, is La Niña to blame for our recent spell of dry weather? Most likely, but forecasting future La Niña/El Niño events is very difficult even when only trying to forecast 2-3 months in advance. If we do see a moderate La Niña develop over the winter we could easily see a weak drought develop across Northeast Georgia.

At the end of the day this just goes to show that weather across the entire planet is connected. What happens in the Pacific Ocean can/does have an effect on what goes on here in North Georgia. In the meantime be sure to be very careful if doing any outdoor burning and stay vigilant for any fire danger statements issued by the NWS.

 

 

Middle schoolers collect hundreds of donated cans for local food bank

A recent food drive led by seventh-grade students at Tallulah Falls School generated more than 900 cans for the Food Bank of Northeast Georgia. Shown, from left, are seventh-graders Gracey Eller of Clarkesville, Megan Prince of Rabun Gap, Caylin Tucker of Demorest, Avery Keim of Clarkesville and FBNG Warehouse Coordinator Philip Wilkes. (photo courtesy Tallulah Falls School)

Four local middle school girls helped organize a food drive that collected more than 900 cans for the Food Bank of Northeast Georgia. Tallulah Falls School seventh-graders Avery Keim of Clarkesville, Megan Prince of Rabun Gap, Caylin Tucker of Demorest and Gracey Eller of Clarkesville spearheaded the successful drive.

FBNG Warehouse Coordinator Philip Wilkes picked up the donations on November 19 at the end of TFS Spirit Week.

This is the second year these students have organized the canned food drive, according to  TFS Middle School Director Carol Madden. “They were so excited to help people last year,” she says. “This year they were thrilled we more than doubled the number of cans collected.”

The food bank will distribute the cans to food insecure households throughout the region.

Blue ribbon Almond Roca cookies

Since we are focusing on holiday cookie baking this month, this may seem like a weird admission but I am not a big sweets eater. I love to bake and I will usually do a taste test on my confections but I’m not one to sit down and eat three or four cookies.

Having said that, I do have an affinity for one candy in particular, Almond Roca. It’s crunchy, sweet, and buttery and, to me, doesn’t taste like anything else. It’s a little bit of magic in a gold wrapper and a pink tin you can’t miss on the shelf of your grocer.

Brown and Haley have been making these gems since 1912 and in the 1990s it became the largest exported gift candy in the U.S. They can feel free to export some to my house any time.

When I found this cookie recipe years ago, I stopped in my tracks. They had me at “Almond Roca”. The cookies are every bit as delicious as their candy namesake.

Ingredients

  • 2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup dark brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup sugar
  • 1 cup butter, room temperature
  • 2 eggs, room temperature
  • 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
  • 1 package toffee bits
  • 1 cup coarsely ground almonds
  • 4 ounces milk chocolate
  • 1/2 tablespoon vegetable oil

Directions:

Preheat oven to 300 degrees.

In a medium mixing bowl, whisk together flour, baking soda, and salt. Set aside.

In the bowl of an electric mixer, blend sugars at medium speed. Add butter and mix to form a grainy paste. Add eggs and vanilla and mix at medium speed until light and fluffy. At low speed, slowly add the flour mixture and then the toffee bits. Mix until just blended; do not over-mix.

Place ground nuts in a small bowl. Using hands, roll balls of dough into 1 to 1 1/2-inch balls, then roll in the ground nuts. Place on cookie sheets several inches apart.

Bake for approximately 22 minutes and then transfer cookies to a cooling rack. Melt the chocolate with the vegetable oil in a double boiler or in a bowl set over a pan of simmering water. Drizzle melted chocolate over cooled cookies.

Place cookies on a cookie sheet and place in the freezer or refrigerator until chocolate is firmly set.

Let me know if you give them a try or if you have a favorite cookie recipe you’d like to share. [email protected]

4 killed, including officer and suspect, in Clayton County shooting

Four people are dead, including a police officer, after officers responded to a domestic disturbance call Tuesday in Clayton County.

According to WSB-TV, Field Training Officer Henry Laxson was fatally shot, along with two women and the suspected shooter, Clayton County police said.

A child and another officer were also shot, Clayton County Police Chief Kevin Roberts said.

The child is in critical but stable condition. The officer, identified as Alex Chandler, is expected to survive.

The preliminary information indicates that at 8:38 p.m., the Clayton County Police Department received 911 calls about a domestic disturbance in Rex, Georgia.

As officers were responding to the scene, additional 911 calls indicated that shots had been fired. When officers arrived, they encountered an armed man who shot and killed Clayton County Police Department Officer Henry Laxson and wounded another Clayton County Police Department officer.

Officers on scene returned fire, hitting the man, who died on scene. Officers later determined that the man had just shot and killed two women and also shot a 12-year-old boy in the face just prior to officers arriving.

Officer Laxson was taken to Piedmont Henry Hospital where he died. The injured officer was taken to a local area hospital for treatment of non-life-threatening injuries. The GBI will perform an autopsy on the suspect in the triple shooting investigation.

Police did not identify the victims or the shooter.

Laxson is the third north Georgia police officer killed in the line of duty since November, WSB-TV reports.

Henry County Officer Paramhans Desai was shot as he attempted to make an arrest on Nov. 5. He died from his injuries days later.

Jackson County Deputy Lena Marshall was also shot at a separate call on Nov. 5 when she responded to a domestic incident. She died from her injuries on Nov. 8.

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

Thurmond L. Gibson

Thurmond L. Gibson, age 82, of Demorest, Georgia went home to be with the Lord on Tuesday, November 30, 2021, following an extended illness.

Born in Demorest, Georgia on July 11, 1939, he was a son of the late Harrison Newt & Ethel Ivester Gibson. Thurmond worked with Fieldale Farms Corporation for many years. In his spare time, he was an avid fisherman and enjoyed vegetable and flower gardening. Thurmond was a hardworking man and a great provider for his family. He was a member of Old Nacoochee Missionary Baptist Church.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his loving wife of 58 years, Patsy Ann Holden Gibson; brothers, Garnett Gibson & Doyle Gibson; sisters, Cora Lee Whitfield, Annabelle Waddell, Evelyn Howard, Wilma Gomez, & Carolyn Tyler.

Survivors include his children, Brenda Gibson of Demorest, GA; Donna & Jeff Bohannon of Baldwin, GA; Lonnie Gibson, Richard & Ann Gibson all of Demorest, GA; Lisa & Mark Williams of Clarkesville, GA; brother, Clinton Gibson of Toccoa, GA; 10 grandchildren, 16 great-grandchildren, a host of nieces, nephews, other relatives, & friends.

Funeral services are scheduled for 3:00 p.m. Thursday, December 02, 2021, at Hillside Memorial Chapel with Rev. Bill Trotter officiating. Interment will follow in the Turnerville Church of God Cemetery in Clarkesville.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 6:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. on Wednesday, December 1, 2021.

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

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

Downtown Clarkesville square designated as historic district

Aerial view of downtown Clarkesville (Photo by City of Clarkesville)

The downtown Clarkesville square has been listed as a historic district with the National Register of Historic Places, the city announced Monday. A historic listing from the National Parks Service is to follow.

“So many people have contributed to documenting the history of this sweet place we call home,” Clarkesville Councilwoman Lane Gresham tells Now Habersham. “Receiving this designation reminds me of the many community members no longer with us who helped to write the larger community story; Gladys Holcomb, John Kollock and many others would be so pleased to see the city receive this designation. This news simply affirms what we already know about Clarkesville – it’s a remarkable place that deserves thoughtful planning as we move forward with future plans to revitalize the downtown.”

Clarkesville officials have worked with the Georgia Department of Community Affairs to secure this historic designation since the fire of March 2014, which destroyed much of the city’s downtown square.

“There are a great many steps to achieving this important designation,” said Mayor Barrie Aycock in a press release. “I am grateful to all of the people who played a pivotal role in the multi-step, lengthy process.”

According to Cynthia Catellier, National Register Historian for the Georgia Department of Community Affairs, the city will receive an official certificate and announcement of its designation in the near future.

“Being a multi-generational resident of Clarkesville it makes me just so incredibly proud,” Councilwoman Roxie Barron tells Now Habersham. “I think back to growing up in this little town, I think of my parents, my grandparents, my friends and my family throughout the many years that have called Clarkesville ‘home.’ Clarkesville is special. All who come recognize as much so this is very very deserving. And many thanks go out to all of those folks that worked so diligently to make it happen!”

Driver burned in Rabun County vehicle fire

A vehicle crashed and burned late Monday night in Rabun County, seriously injuring the driver.

Around 11:45 p.m. on November 29, Rabun County Fire Station 1 was dispatched to a report of a vehicle fire in the Payne Hill Drive area of Clayton.

Fire and EMS units on scene found a pickup truck burning. It had veered off the road and traveled “a short distance down an embankment,” where it caught fire, according to Rabun County Fire Services Assistant Chief Justin Upchurch.

The pickup truck driver was able to get himself out of the driver’s side window. Fire and EMS personnel saw him fall to the ground with his clothes on fire. Firefighters extinguished the flames and emergency personnel carried the injured driver up the bank to safety.

Rabun EMS requested an airlift transport. Paramedics flew the man to the Grady Hospital Burn Unit in Atlanta, where he is currently being treated for burns and other injuries from the accident.

Robert J. “Bob” Venherm, Jr.

Robert J “Bob” Venherm, Jr., a resident of Dothan, Alabama, passed away Monday November 29, 2021, in Cleveland. He was 70.

Mr. Venherm was born in Buffalo, New York to the late Robert J. and Clara Lamb Venherm. He had previously lived in Englewood, FL before moving to the Dothan area approximately 19 years ago. Before retiring he worked at The Woodpile in Dothan. He was preceded in death by his wife, Carol Ann Venherm.

Leaving to cherish his memories are his daughter Kathy Hall and Steven and grandchildren, Steven Lee, Ethan, Jade and Trace of Homosassa, FL, Sisters Marjorie V. McIntire and (Jim Butler); Deborah Bass, Jaqueline Davids and (Ronnie); Nancy Rosales and (Joe); Barbara Brown and 3 Step Children Anthony Schultz and(Mary); and their children, Isabel, Aaron, Naomi and James of Lake Villa, IL and Amy Bosely (Jessie) and their son, John and great-grandson, John Michael of Thomasville, Ga, and Justin Rieble (Typhanie) and their children Dakota, Savannah, Zoey and Thomas of Marinette, WI. He was also blessed with many nieces and nephews.

No services are planned at this time.

Please share online condolences with the family at www.wardsfh.com. Ward’s Funeral Home is honored to serve the family of Robert John “Bob” Venherm, Jr.