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Habersham Schools COVID-19 numbers drop significantly

The Habersham County School System’s COVID-19 data for this week shows a significant drop in COVID-19 cases, following the school system’s fall break.

HCSS’s overall reported cases total at only 7, with 6 student cases and 1 staff case. Compared to the data from the week of 10/1/21, overall cases have decreased almost 83 percent.

System Data Week Ending 10/22/21

Active Student COVID-19 Cases   6
Active School Staff COVID-19 Cases   1
Active Non-School Staff COVID-19 Cases   0
Elementary Active Student Cases Active Staff Cases
Baldwin 0 0
Clarkesville 0 0
Cornelia 0 0
Demorest 1 0
Fairview 1 0
Hazel Grove 0 0
Level Grove 0 0
Woodville 0 0
Secondary Active Student Cases Active Staff Cases
North Habersham 0 0
South Habersham 1 0
Wilbanks 2 0
Ninth Grade Academy 0 0
Success Academy 0 0
Habersham Central 1 1

Data provided by Director of Nursing and Health Services Crystal Holcomb

With only 2 reported cases at the elementary level and 5 at the secondary level, the report is a welcome difference from the system’s early September report, during which COVID-19 numbers surged in the county.

Habersham County’s cases as a whole are trending downwards as well, with the entire county seeing 95 cases in the past two weeks. This time last month, the county had seen 304 cases over that two-week period, according to the Georgia Department of Health.

Those who would like to obtain weekly COVID-19 updates must contact Director of Nursing and Health Services Crystal Holcomb at [email protected] or speak with their child’s school principal.

Tony Thomas

Tony Thomas, age 59, of Maysville, Georgia, went to be with the Lord on Wednesday, October 20, 2021.

Mr. Thomas was born on July 25, 1962, in Demorest, Georgia, to the late Eloise and Barbara Thomas. He was a member of the Jimmy Swaggart Ministries. Mr. Thomas was disabled.

Survivors include his beloved wife of forty years, Kathy Thomas, of Maysville, Georgia; daughters: Melanie Thomas, Maysville, Georgia, and Christy McConnell, Rochester, Minnesota; son: Billy Thomas, Maysville, Georgia; sister: Darlene Thomas, brothers: Randall Thomas, Alto, Georgia, Gary Thomas, Alto, Georgia, Terry Thomas, Maysville, Georgia, and Jody Thomas, Gillsville, Georgia; grandchildren: Kenneth Lawrence and Emma McConnell.

Funeral services will be held at 2:00 PM, Sunday, October 24, 2021, at the Whitfield Funeral Home and Crematory, South Chapel, with the Rev. Fred Enslow officiating. Interment will follow in the Yonah Memorial Gardens.

The family will receive friends from 5:00 PM until 7:00 PM, Saturday, October 23, at the funeral home.

Arrangements are entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Home and Crematory, South Chapel, Baldwin, Georgia, 1370 Industrial Blvd., Baldwin, Georgia 30511. Phone number 706-778-7123.

Joy Evelynn Branumn Lovell

Joy Evelynn Branumn Lovell, age 78 of Clarkesville, Georgia passed away on Friday, October 22, 2021.

Born in Byrdstown, Tennessee on September 23, 1943, she was a daughter of the late Sam & Pauline Jones Branumn. Joy was preceded in death by her first husband, Johnny Broyles, as well as one brother & one sister.

Survivors include her husband of 33 years, Henry Lovell of Clarkesville, GA; children, Johnny Broyles, Alesa Broyles Adams both of Clarkesville, GA; Judy Broyles Stephens of London, KY; 4 brothers, 8 sisters, 3 grandsons, & 5 great-granddaughters; several nieces, nephews, other relatives, & friends.

Funeral services will be held at 11:00 a.m. Tuesday, October 26, 2021, at Hillside Memorial Chapel with Mr. Johnny Broyles officiating. Interment will follow in the Hillside Gardens Cemetery.

An online guest registry is available at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com

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

Finding Habersham’s perfect pumpkin spice latte: Grains of Grace

(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

I continued my quest for Habersham’s best pumpkin spice latte in Clarkesville today as I trekked my way across the county. The service I received at Grains of Grace was wonderful, and I was excited to try the first iced coffee I’d ever gotten from a local coffee shop’s drive-through window.

This PSL wasn’t quite as creamy as the one I tried at Starbucks, but it was close. It was warm enough today to warrant an iced coffee, and with the level of sweetness and creaminess I got from the drink, it felt a little more like a thin milkshake than an iced latte.

That being said, it was a good milkshake.

Aesthetics-wise, this PSL wins by a mile. The photo doesn’t do the layering of coffee, cream and pumpkin-y goodness justice, and the clear-cup-black-staw combo was simple and chic. And while the aesthetics of an iced coffee might be a strange thing to critique, after my Solo cup coffee experience, it was hard not to appreciate.

I’d rate the Grains of Grace pumpkin spice latte at 4/5. Even though this wasn’t necessarily my kind of drink, I can recognize that it might be the ideal PSL for someone else. The latte was well-made and had a great flavor, but for someone who was looking for a mid-day coffee rather than a dessert, it didn’t quite hit the mark for me.

The French Dispatch

Wes Anderson is beyond debate a filmmaker that has made quirky, offbeat movies. Everything from The Royal Tenenbaums to The Life Aquatic With Steve Zizzou to The Grand Budapest Hotel has his eccentric sensibilities on every frame.

His latest effort, The French Dispatch, is no exception. Rich with his visual aesthetic punctuated with exceptional performances from its outstanding cast, the movie mostly succeeds in putting another feather in his cap.

The movie is an anthology series of stories that occasionally interconnect. It centers around Arthur Howitzer, Jr. (Bill Murray), the editor of the newspaper known as the French Dispatch, who dies of a heart attack. As his staff goes through his will to prepare to publish the final edition of the publication, we’re treated to three articles that serve as the focal point of the film.

Note: Howitzer’s favorite quote that he uses with his staff is: “Just try to make it sound like you wrote it that way on purpose.”

The first plot thread entitled The Concrete Masterpiece involves a mentally disturbed artist named Moses Rosenthaler (Benicio Del Toro) serving a sentence for murder in Ennui, France. His latest subject is a prison guard (Lea Seydoux) with whom he begins a relationship. Adrien Brody costars as an art dealer who is desperate to acquire his work.

The second story called Revisions to a Manifesto deals with Lucinda Krementz (Frances McDormand), a journalist for the Dispatch who shares about a student revolution in Ennui in which a game of chess dictates which way the revolution will go. Krementz is determined to maintain “journalistic neutrality” despite having a fling with one of the revolutionaries (Timothee Chalamet).

The third story is called The Private Dining Room of the Police Commissioner and it follows a food journalist named Roebuck Wright (Jeffrey Wright) detailing his dinner with the Commissioner of the Ennui police. The dinner is interrupted when the Commissioner’s son is kidnapped by criminals and this thread becomes more of a cat-and-mouse sequence than focusing on any one individual character.

The performances in each thread give a sense of depth and purpose to each story. In addition to Murray and the rest that are mentioned, we also get brief but memorable work from the likes of Owen Wilson, Tilda Swinson, Christoph Waltz, Edward Norton and Willem Dafoe.

This is not Anderson’s best work nor most ambitious, but it does set out to create in his own words “a love letter to journalism” and that love letter is written all over the screen. It’s a voyeuristic journey into the minds and hearts of these characters and how and why they love what they do.

The look of this movie is fantastic in its execution. Everything from the terrific production design recreating Ennui in its different time periods to Alexandre Desplat’s score, make us know that Anderson is in charge of his craft and he’s telling his story.

Grade: B+

(Rated R for for graphic nudity, some sexual references and language.)

Thousands head to Habersham for spook-tacular fun

(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

It was a busy night in Clarkesville, and the Habersham County Fairgrounds were packed with crazy costumes, public safety vehicles, Northeast Georgia families and plenty of candy. The Habersham County E-911 Children’s Fun Fest was in full swing after being canceled last year, and citizens were ready.

“It’s just amazing, it’s [the turnout] pleasantly surprising every year,” Habersham County Emergency Services Director Chad Black said.

Chelsea and Maverick Wood of White County enjoyed the E-911 Fun Fest as Maverick took in all the sights and sounds of public safety vehicles, a petting zoo and costumes. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

Black and Habersham E-911 Director Lynn Smith wondered what the crowds would look like this year with last year’s cancelation due to the pandemic and COVID-19 cases trending downward state-wide. Smith says she worried not as many people would come out— but the crowds this year were just as successful as previous years.

The event, which has been a hit since its start in 2006, brings out thousands. For perspective, in 2019, Smith says more than 8,000 people came out to the Children’s Fun Festival.

The event isn’t just about candy and costumes, though. It’s about helping the community connect with county public safety, first responders and county services.

From the Habersham County Animal Care and Control team to the Habersham County Library System, as well as municipal fire departments and county law enforcement, children and families were able to speak with county officials, ask questions and even see some of the equipment first responders use up-close.

“It’s been great seeing all the families out here— not just the kids, but the adults— all dressed up,” says Habersham County Sheriff Joey Terrell. “Lynn and her folks at E-911 put a lot of hard work into it [the event], and it’s great to see everybody out here enjoying themselves.”

E-911 Children’s Fun Fest photo gallery

Georgia Democrats propose a congressional redistricting map that is split 50-50 between parties

Georgia Democrats have released a proposed congressional redistricting map that splits 14 seats evenly between the parties. (Georgia Legislative and Congressional Reapportionment Office)

Democrats in the Georgia legislature have released a proposed congressional redistricting map that would give the party equal representation in the U.S. House.

Currently, eight Republicans and six Democrats serve, and this map would be evenly split at seven. The biggest change would move the 10th Congressional District, in east Georgia and currently represented by Republican Jody Hice, to Cobb, Douglas and Fulton counties.

The proposed 9th District would rotate to include most of the current 10th District while the 14th would run across most of north Georgia, and Rep. Barry Loudermilk’s 11th District would no longer include Cobb and Fulton but instead stretch over to include heavily conservative Forsyth County and part of Hall County.

“Georgia has changed significantly over the last decade, and our proposed congressional map reflects that growth,” Rep. Sanford Bishop said in a statement. “We are proud to have collaborated with Georgia House and Senate Democrats to devise a congressional map that recognizes Georgia’s rich diversity and evolving political landscape.”

Bishop’s district would see minimal tweaks, adding in Democratic-leaning areas of Warner Robins and part of Thomas County to reach the equal population requirement.

The Democratic proposal statement also notes that shifting another district to metro Atlanta “rightly acknowledges that more than half of all Georgians live in metro Atlanta, which has driven more than two-thirds of Georgia’s population growth over the last decade.”

House Minority Leader James Beverly said the map reflects “fairness, transparency, inclusivity and integrity.”

Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan and Senate Republican leadership released a map late last month that went in the opposite direction, making the 6th Congressional District represented by Lucy McBath a conservative-leaning district by adding Forsyth County to the north Fulton County suburbs that anchor the seat now.

The redistricting special session begins Nov. 3.

Rabun County’s Gibson tops 1,000 yards receiving

Jaden Gibson (photo courtesy hudl)

Rabun County junior Jaden Gibson became the state’s first player with more than 1,000 yards receiving this season when he logged his second 200-yard game last week in a 63-0 victory over Banks County.

Gibson had 11 receptions for 236 yards and two touchdowns against Banks. The main target of all-state quarterback Gunner Stockton, Gibson is on pace for 1,503 yards receiving for the regular season.

A state record also is within sight. In 2018, Warner Robins’ Marcayll Jones had 1,494 yards receiving in the regular season and 2,046 total, the most in state history.

Gibson and the Wildcats return home to take on the Elbert County Blue Devils on Oct. 22 in Week 10 of high school football action.


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The Last Duel

The Last Duel could be argued as a metaphor for the whole #MeToo movement and on the surface, the parallels are pretty hard to miss. Another way to see it is some of Hollywood’s best returning to their best in a film that’s engrossing made with splendid detail and packed with performances that are acted with conviction and weight.

The movie opens in medieval France and centers around three individuals: Knight Jean de Carrouges (Matt Damon), his wife Marguerite (Jodie Comer), and squire Jacques Le Gris (Adam Driver).

Le Gris is accused of rape by Marguerite and de Carrouges wants to defend her honor by challenging him to a duel. As the movie progresses, we’re told the story through each of their perspectives and their morality isn’t exactly black and white.

Ben Affleck also costars as well, co-penning the script with Damon. This script marks their first time working together since their Oscars for Good Will Hunting. Affleck plays Count Pierre d’Alençon who is named the overlord to de Carrouges by King Charles VI (Alex Lawther), de Carrouges starts to see him as a threat to his chance at achieving justice.

The Last Duel was directed by Ridley Scott who finds himself returning to the historical epic genre that he works so well in — such movies as Gladiator, Kingdom of Heaven, Robin Hood and Exodus: Gods and Kings. Once again, he features spectacular detail for crafting an absorbing world that makes us feel like we’re in 12th century France, but importantly, he begins in the classical style by putting the story and the characters at the forefront.

As mentioned, these are people who have a soupy morality and their intentions are not always clear in terms of their motivations. Sometimes the Matt Damon character is fueled by honor and other times, he can be fueled by keeping his social standing.

However, Driver and Comer supply excellent work, and their stories make The Last Duel swerve off into unexpected directions. Their perspectives on the events are so layered that we’re not even sure how this duel is going to end.

The Last Duel is a terrific character study surrounded by true events and brought to the screen by masters of their craft who know how to make this material relevant as well as placing its audience in the thick of the setting.

Grade: A-

(Rated R for strong violence including sexual assault, sexual content, some graphic nudity, and language.)

State House committee hears pitch to give Georgia DACA students in-state tuition

Next year could bring the revival of a bill to allow Georgia’s DACA recipients to pay a similar tuition rate as other state residents.

ATLANTA (GA Recorder) — Georgia lawmakers are set to convene under the Gold Dome in January for the 2022 General Assembly, and that means a second chance for bills that did not cross the finish line this year.

Immigration rights activists are hoping a proposed law that would allow Georgia’s so-called Dreamers — recipients of the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals — to pay tuition rates more in line with other Georgia students will get a second look from the legislature in 2022.

“It’s obviously something we need to look at as a state,” said the bill’s author, Dalton Republican Rep. Kasey Carpenter. “An educated workforce is going to be paramount as we move through the 21st century. We’ve got these kids we’ve already invested in. It’s a no-brainer, but no-brainer does not always equal law.”

Under DACA, people who were brought to the U.S. as children can live and work in the country without being deported, provided they keep a clean criminal record. As of 2020, there were just under 21,000 DACA recipients in Georgia, according to United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.

A federal judge in Texas barred the government from accepting new DACA applications in July, setting up an ongoing battle with the White House.

DACA recipients are entitled to the same k-12 public education as Georgians who were born in the U.S., but when it comes time to apply to college, they are required to pay out-of-state tuition, which can be as much as three times higher than what their classmates pay.

A new report from FWD.us, a pro-immigration lobbying group, found that nearly 30,000 Georgians between 18 and 29 years old would immediately benefit from an expansion of in-state tuition to all undocumented students, and an additional 1,500 k-12 students who are undocumented would benefit each year over the next decade when they graduate from high school.

Undocumented students graduating from technical college would pay back the state’s investment within 10 years, and individuals earning bachelor’s degrees would pay it back within 16 years, via better-paying jobs, higher tax contributions and higher earning power, the report found, and in-state tuition for undocumented students could add as much as $10 million each year to the economy.

Carpenter’s bill would be more narrow, only applying to DACA recipients. And though Carpenter originally intended the students to pay the same as others, it was changed by the House Higher Education Committee this past session to allow universities to charge them between 100% and 110% of regular in-state tuition.

Universities would also be required to give priority to qualified in-state students who were not applying under this law, and schools could defer the enrollment of DACA students until all applications from other students are either accepted, deferred or rejected.

MORE: State House members to return to Gold Dome with masks, COVID testing

The revised bill also proposes to exempt universities that have not admitted all qualified applicants in the two most recent academic years, which would rule out the state’s most competitive colleges, including the University of Georgia and Georgia Tech.

Still, FWD.us estimates the bill would immediately benefit 15,000 students.

Jaime Rangel, a Dalton resident who works for FWD.us, urged the House Study Committee on Innovative Ways to Maximize Global Talent to consider the plan at the committee’s Thursday meeting.

“Twenty-one states have already extended in-state tuition across the country, Texas’ legislation, and Florida’s, is actually more open than the proposed legislation that Rep. Carpenter has,” he said. “It’s both a Republican and Democratic issue, an issue that lawmakers have come together to solve.”

Carpenter is hoping lawmakers in Georgia will come together this winter to move his bill forward, though he acknowledges that’s not a sure thing, especially in a pivotal election year, when his fellow Republicans may feel more inclined to play to the party’s base with legislation focused on conservative cultural issues.

“In an election year, politics is always a little bit wonky, no doubt about it,” he said. “I have a feeling it’s going to be an interesting year.”

But Carpenter said he feels pretty good about the bill’s chances. Businesses are looking to hire qualified workers, he said, and enrollment is down at several Georgia colleges. While the University System of Georgia expanded its enrollment by 2.4% overall between fall 2019 and fall 2020, the system’s nine state colleges saw their enrollment drop by an average of 7% during that time, both facts that could make the bill an easier sell to budget-minded conservatives, Carpenter said.

“If you spend money today to educate people, the state gets their money back in the form of higher taxes later on,” he said. “It’s bread and butter Republican politics, invest a little bit for a better return down the road.”

“I’m always optimistic, man,” he added. “I feel like, until day 40, I got a shot. So I feel pretty good about it. It’s good policy. And I think the more we educate people on it, let’s talk about things we can control as a state, let the feds not control what they don’t control. We don’t have to solve federal issues, but what we can do is make the best of the hand we’re provided as a state, and that’s what this law tries to do.”

Jury deliberation begins Friday in Eurie Martin murder trial

Attorney and civil rights activist Francys Johnson, right, talks with Helen Gilbert, the sister of Eurie Martin, during a break in the closing arguments in the murder trial of the three former Washington County Sheriff's Deputies in whose custody Martin died in 2017. (Grant Blankenship/GPB)

SANDERSVILLE — Closing arguments have been made in the murder trial of three white former Washington County sheriff’s deputies connected to the death of Eurie Martin, a Black man, in 2017.

Throughout the trial, arguments from the state and the defense have pivoted on one question: Did the deputies have a legitimate belief that the 58-year-old Martin had committed a crime that would give them the right to detain him as he walked down a rural, two-lane road?

In her closing statement, prosecutor Kelly Weathers argued the defense’s position that Martin broke state pedestrian safety law by walking in Deepstep Road amounted to “backfill,” or a search for a reason a bad stop could be seen as good.

“He’s walking down the roadway, like so many of us do,” Weathers said. Weathers went on to argue Martin walked in the safest place he could find on a rural road with little shoulder and no sidewalk.

“Unfortunately, he was out of place,” she said.

Martin was a 6’3” Black man in a state of untreated schizophrenia when Cyrus Harris, a white man, called 911, alarmed by Martin’s appearance. The deputies were then responding to a suspicious person call.

In their closing, the defense hewed to their position that Martin broke the law by walking in the road and that he had a responsibility to stop for officers.

“A law was broken, however small,” defense attorney Shawn Merzlak said.

And for the defense, that broken law meant Martin was fair game for an arrest, no matter how violent.

“People don’t always want to go with the police,” defense attorney Mark Shaefer said in his portion of the closing. “That does not make every arrest an assault.”

The prosecution continued to cast doubt on expert testimony that insisted stun guns are never lethal weapons given by experts, one of whom, Mark Kroll, made over $100 million in 2020 by selling shares of Axon, the company that makes the Taser brand of the weapon.

Martin died after all three deputies, Rhett Scott, Henry Lee Copeland and Michael Howell stun gunned him in turn. The medical examiner called Martin’s resulting death a homicide.

“I submit to you that what they did to him was torture,” Weathers said.

Scott, Copeland and Howell are charged with felony murder, involuntary manslaughter, false imprisonment, aggravated assault and an array of other charges in the July 2017 killing. If convicted, each could face life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Court resumes with jury deliberation at 9 a.m. Friday.


This story appears on Now Habersham through a reporting partnership with GPB News

State House members to return to Gold Dome with masks, COVID testing

Face masks, social distancing and regular COVID-19 testing kept the 2021 legislative session rolling so far. That strategy will continue for next month’s special session. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder (file photo)

ATLANTA (GA Recorder) — The process of law-making will continue to look a little different when state legislators return to the Gold Dome next month to draw new district maps.

House Speaker David Ralston, a Blue Ridge Republican, sent a memo to the 180 state representatives on Thursday saying face masks and routine testing will still be required, as lawmakers convene for the third time since the pandemic abruptly ended last year’s session.

Lawmakers will gather at the state Capitol starting Nov. 3 to redraw lines for congressional, state Senate and State House seats.

“In accordance with the CDC guidelines at the time the decision had to be made to prepare for session, masks must be worn by all Members and House staff while present in the House Chamber, the House Gallery, and any committee meeting,” Ralston wrote in the memo.

The Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has urged face masks indoors in areas of substantial or high transmission since late July. Overall, COVID-19 cases are on the decline in Georgia after a delta drove a surge rivaling last winter’s peak.

State representatives will continue to spread out across three areas at the Capitol to stay socially distanced, including in the gallery where members of the public would normally sit. They must also take routine saliva-based COVID-19 tests, regardless of their vaccination status.

Ralston has been a stickler for rules, often using the bully pulpit to remind lawmakers of the consequences for not following them. When one lawmaker refused, he was removed from the chamber and lost access to his office space.

Beauty queens, football players and other usual honorees, as well as the pages who help deliver messages to lawmakers, will still not make an appearance in the chamber, although faith leaders from across the state will continue to come and give a morning devotional.

The House safety protocols prompted kudos from across the aisle.

“Memo from Georgia House leadership just in: testing and masks will be mandated for members during the upcoming special session. Thank you, @SpeakerRalston, for continuing to ensure safety,” state Rep. Josh McLaurin, a Sandy Springs Democrat, tweeted.

Senate leadership, meanwhile, has not yet issued similar guidelines for senators and staff for the special session.

Face masks and routine testing were required in both chambers earlier this year. In the Senate, three senators tested positive in the first days of the session, including Senate Majority Leader Mike Dugan.

Senate staff did recently send out safety protocols for reporters, who will be allowed back into the press box after spending the last two sessions watching from above in the gallery. Members of the press who are unvaccinated are “strongly encouraged” but not required to wear a face mask, per the guidelines distributed last week.