Home Blog Page 1241

Feds OK ‘mix-and-match’ approach for COVID-19 booster shots

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has given a green light to Americans who want to receive a booster dose of a COVID-19 vaccine manufactured by a different company than the one that produced the initial shot they received.

The announcement Wednesday on allowing “mix-and-match” shots from different manufacturers will give more flexibility to state and local officials overseeing vaccination campaigns and to providers administering shots.

The decision was part of the agency’s decision to authorize booster doses of the COVID-19 vaccines from Moderna and Johnson & Johnson.

It’s likely not the last step in the national booster shot effort, which is intended to ensure better protection against infection and hospitalization.

In Wednesday’s statement announcing the newly authorized boosters, Peter Marks, director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, noted that the agency is gathering data to “further assess the benefits and risks of the use of booster doses in additional populations.”

An FDA advisory panel last week recommended a partial third dose of Moderna’s shot to older and higher-risk Americans between ages 18 and 64 who initially received the company’s two-dose vaccine. That booster dose would be given at least six months after receiving the last shot — the same eligibility requirements as the booster doses recommended of Pfizer’s two-shot vaccine.

The FDA panel also recommended a second dose of J&J’s one-shot vaccine for anyone over age 18, at least two months after their shot.

But while the companies have sought approval of additional doses of their own vaccines, some Americans have wanted to receive a different shot.

Some have had adverse reactions to a certain vaccine. Others have been concerned about the efficacy of the J&J shot, which studies have shown to have a lower efficacy against infection compared to the ones from Pfizer and Moderna.

The mRNA-based Pfizer and Moderna vaccines rely on a different approach than the J&J vaccine to spur the immune response.

A study from the National Institutes of Health found people who received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine produced stronger antibody levels after they got booster shots made by Moderna or Pfizer, than if they received a booster dose from Johnson & Johnson.

The FDA authorization moves the booster issue to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for that agency’s signoff. A CDC panel is expected to weigh in Thursday, and millions of Americans could be lining up for additional shots later this week.

TFS students make donations to Habersham County Animal Shelter

Shown, from left, are Garrett Dorsey (holding food), AJ Dills, Asa Popham, Tate Colston, Brody Irvin, Stella Rose Bowman, Madi Williams, Catherine Harris, Patrick Rowland, Veronica VerBerkmoes, Travis Mullis, Luke Thomson, Lincoln Hicks. (E. Lane Gresham/Tallulah Falls School)

The sixth-grade class of Tallulah Falls School is working to be the change they want to see, and last week, made a valuable delivery to the Habersham County Animal Shelter.

TFS students donated cat and dog food, as well as monetary donations they’d raised, to the shelter on Friday following a discussion about the lives of stray animals.

The community service project of raising food and funds for the animal shelter came from the TFS students’ study of Eric Knight’s book, “Lassie Come-Home.” The project was inspired by a conversation in the book, in which a girl asks an older man what happened to stray animals that go to the pound. TFS English Teacher, Travis Mullis, says that the response the girl gets isn’t one she wants to hear, and asks about adoption.

MORE: Families with financial hardship receive free veterinary care

“For the second year in a row, that fictional conversation has prompted my students to ask the same question about their communities: what happens to homeless dogs and cats where we live?” Mullis said in a TFS press release. “This year, the classes contributed a significant amount – more than $260 – in addition to food for the shelter animals.”

The students’ donations of both funds and supplies to the shelter helped cats from a recent hoarding case receive the medical care they needed.

“We look forward to Tallulah Falls visiting every year,” says Habersham Animal Care and Control Director Madi Nix. “The students are amazing young adults who are always looking to help. We are so grateful for their dedication to the community.”

Soque River Ramble offers Peachtree Road Race qualifying course

(Soque River Ramble/Facebook)

The Soque River Ramble is back and bigger than ever on Saturday, with three different courses along Northeast Georgia’s beautiful Soque River at the height of “leaf season,” and it’s all for a great cause.

“We’re super, super excited to come back this year, and be able to come back bigger and better,” says River Ramble organizer and Hope Thrives Director of Operations, Cameron Lopez.

Last year’s Soque River Ramble, like many events across the state and nation, was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. While canceling events wasn’t ideal for many organizations, the Soque River Ramble was able to expand to offer more racing opportunities.

The original race, which started 14 years ago, began as a 6K along the Soque River. But as the race has expanded, the Soque River Ramble has grown to offer more courses to run. Not only will the ramble have a “Fun Run” and opportunities to race completely virtually, but it will offer a 10K course that will serve as a qualifier for the Atlanta Peachtree Road Race.

“We are very, very excited about being able to have this race this year,” Lopez says. “And super excited about the 10K being an AJC Peachtree Road Race qualifying event.”

The 10K race that the Soque River Ramble will offer this year will serve as an Atlanta Peachtree Road Race qualifying course. (Soque River Ramble/Facebook)

The 10K course runs separately from the 6K course and “Fun Run” to meet the Peachtree Road Race’s qualification standards, which must be on paved road. Lopez says that even though these runners will be on a different path from the usual route, which is known for its beauty, 10K runners can still look forward to a scenic race.

“We’ve had to plot a brand new course,” Lopez says. “You still get the same beautiful scenery [on the 10K course], we’re just not following the river for the 10K.”

Aside from the race’s courses being a wonderful way for racers to see Northeast Georgia’s nature, funds generated by the race go to support a great cause.

The Soque River Ramble benefits “Hope Thrives,” a Christian organization providing care, support and resources to women who were victims of childhood sexual abuse.

“The mission of Hope Thrives is dependent on supporters, like the people who run this [race],” Lopez says. “The programs that we offer are completely free to the survivors of sexual abuse. We don’t charge, and we are totally dependent on God’s provision and on fundraisers and supporters.”

Event attendees can also look forward to vendors, food and live music alongside the run.

The Soque River Ramble is divided into three races, the “Fun Run,” a one-mile event, begins at 8:30 a.m., the 6K begins at 9:00 a.m. and the 10K begins at 10:30 a.m. at Wilbanks Farm in Batesville.

Anyone who wants to join the race can register online up until Saturday morning, the day of the race.

Fire call prompts fire safety reminders

(Red Bird Media)

CLEVELAND — Firefighters were dispatched Wednesday afternoon to a possible structure fire in White County.  Residents of the home at 272 Tulip Trail reported sparks coming from an electrical outlet.

White County Public Safety Director David Murphy advised in an email that when units from White County and the City of Cleveland arrived on the scene they found no fire and no damage. Units returned in-service shortly after arrival.

While things turned out well on this call, White County Fire Chief Seth Weaver says it’s a good reminder about winter heating safety.

When using a space heater, be sure to properly and safely use them according to the manufacturer’s directions. Do not overload electrical outlets with too many devices and use extension cords properly.

“This is the time of the year to make sure your chimney is clean and to burn only dry wood in your fireplace,” Weaver says. “Time is about to change, and with clocks rolling back, it’s time to check those valuable smoke and carbon monoxide detector batteries.”

If you have any questions or need guidance on improving your home safety, contact your local fire department or visit the Georgia Insurance and Safety Fire Commissioner’s website for winter safety tips.

Barbara Terrell Payne

Barbara Terrell Payne, age 88, of Clarkesville, Georgia passed away peacefully on Wednesday, October 20, 2021.

Mrs. Payne was born on August 29, 1933, in Duncan, South Carolina to the late Everett and Nathalie Allen Terrell. In addition to her parents she was preceded in death by her husband, John Howard Payne; and daughter, Jill Payne. She moved to the Habersham Mills Community as a child and was a lifelong member of Habersham Baptist Church. She also maintained many lifelong friendships from there. Barbara lived in Cornelia, Clayton, and Clarkesville with her family, including her husband of 64 years, John Howard Payne. She was appreciative of the loving care provided to her by Graceful Care of Clarkesville, The Oaks Assisted Living and The Oaks at Scenic View of Baldwin, and Pruitt Hospice Care at the end of her life here on earth. She cherished her friends including Hazel Allen of The Oaks Assisted Living.

Survivors include her son and daughter-in-law, Rev. Raymond H. Payne and Evelyn, of Cornelia; daughter and son-in-law, Kathy and Pete Mangano, of Ninety Six, SC; brother and sister-in-law, Stanley and Shirley Terrell, of Habersham; sister-in-law, Betty Payne Zinke, of Cornelia four grandchildren, Rev. Chad Payne, Kent Payne, Ashley Bishop, Peter Mangano; nine great-grandchildren, and many nieces and nephews.

Funeral Services will be held at 12:00 p.m., Saturday, October 23, 2021, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, North Chapel with Rev. Chad Payne and Rev. Doug Porter officiating. Interment will follow in Habersham Cemetery.

The family will receive friends from 10:00 a.m. to 11:45 p.m., Saturday, October 23, 2021, at the funeral home prior to the service.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, North Chapel at 245 Central Avenue, Demorest, Georgia 30535. Telephone: 706-778-1700

How ‘Sweet’ it is! Lady Indians move on in state tournament

Sarah Jennings (photo by Austin Poffenberger)

The Lady Indians made history on Wednesday evening, advancing to the Sweet 16 in back-to-back seasons for the first time. TFS took a dominating straight-set victory over visiting #3-seed Fellowship Christian to secure their 23rd win of the 2021 season.

In the opening set, the Lady Indians earned a come-from-behind 25-20 win. After struggling from the first serve and going down 2-7, Addy McCoy recorded a kill and back-to-back aces to pull within 7-9. Evette Corwin had a great save on a dig to get within 10-11 and force an early timeout for the visitors. Alba Romanos Gracia and Barrett Whitener recorded kills out of the timeout to take a 14-12 lead that TFS wouldn’t let go of. During the set, senior Allie Dalton recorded her eighth assist of the match, becoming the school’s all-time leader. She already owns the single-match and single-season marks.

In the second set, TFS won a thriller 28-26, though the girls had a chance to create much more distance. The teams played tug-of-war to an 11-9 TFS lead. A bit later, Whitener had a monster kill to push the lead to 14-9 before Fellowship Christian rallied to a 16-16 tie. The Lady Indians even fell behind, but Sarah Jennings recorded a timely ace to go back up 19-18 and eventually TFS padded the lead to 23-19. FC tied the set at 23, and once were a point away from evening the match. However, TFS held on for the second set win.

The third set saw TFS bounce out to a quick 11-3 advantage, forcing another Fellowship Christian timeout. From there it was all Tallulah Falls, as the girls cruised to the finish and won 25-13 to claim the match in straight sets.

The Lady Indians are now 23-11 overall on the season, and move on to the second round for the third time in program history. This is the seventh straight playoff trip for TFS.

SCORES:
TFS W 3-0 vs Fellowship Christian: 25-20, 28-26, 25-12

Testimony ends in trial of officers charged with murder of Eurie Martin

Rhett Scott, left, lifts Eurie Martin's shirt in order to get skin-only Taser contact as Henry Lee Copeland, center right, and Michael Howell talk to Martin during the 2017 encounter where Martin died. The three former deputies now face murder charges.

SANDERSVILLE — Testimony has wrapped up today in the murder trial of three white former Georgia sheriff’s deputies in the 2017 stun gun death of Eurie Martin, a Black man.

Throughout, attorneys for the deputies have claimed the use of stun guns against the 58-year-old Martin was justified because he physically threatened them. But that threat does not appear on the almost hourlong video of the encounter, captured from multiple cameras. The only evidence of that so far has been the claims of the deputies themselves.

Neither did eyewitnesses called by the defense testify they saw Eurie Martin become physically threatening. They did agree Martin appeared agitated as he tried to walk away from the deputies.

Witness Jasmine Williams described what she saw from her kitchen window in a recording of her 2017 interview with a GBI Investigator.

“He wasn’t fighting, but he wasn’t allowing them to handcuff him either,” Williams said.

Experts for both the state and the defense have testified that absent a reasonable suspicion Eurie Martin committed a crime, it was legal for him to resist being handcuffed.

But defense attorneys say there was a crime that deputies Rhett Scott, Henry Lee Copeland and Michael Howell could have reasonably suspected Martin of committing: illegally walking in the rural, two-lane highway where they encountered him. Martin had been walking down Deepstep Road on his journey from Milledgeville to Sandersville, a trip his sister Helen Gilbert says he made more than once.

During cross-examination of Deputy Michael Howell, prosecutor Kelly Weathers asked him why he never mentioned “illegal walking in the roadway” in the hourlong Georgia Bureau of Investigation interviews conducted the night Martin died.

“Isn’t it true that after Eurie Martin was motionless, on one of the audios of the cameras, you can actually be heard trying to figure out what to charge him with?” Weathers asked Howell.

“That is correct,” Howell responded.

“I believe that you say, ‘Hell, yeah, let’s charge him with trespassing,’” Weathers responded.

“I don’t remember saying that,” Howell said. “I mean, I don’t. But those cameras were rolling. If I said it, it’s on the camera.”

During direct questioning, Howell described Martin.

“I mean, it was like he could see through you,” Howell said. “What I felt like, like an evil look.”

Before Howell’s testimony, the defense spent a lot of time trying to establish that stun guns are not deadly weapons.

Its witnesses, presented as experts in the field, were both paid employees for Axon, the company that makes the stun guns actually sold under the brand name Taser. That included Mark Kroll, an adjunct professor of biomedical science at the University of Minnesota.

During cross-examination, Weathers said Kroll recently made over $100 million after selling Axon stock. That’s on top of the annual salary the company pays him.

“It was a windfall,” Kroll said. “I didn’t expect it. I don’t think I have to apologize for it.”

Former deputy Rhett Scott was the last to testify and was the last deputy on the scene. He said he didn’t know why Martin needed to be subdued and didn’t ask why.

Scott was also the first to ask what the charges would be against Martin once he was on the ground. Trespassing was the answer then. Walking in the road is the claim today.


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

Fall beauty with berries

In mid-autumn, when the floral display in the garden is winding down, shrubs and trees that bear colorful fruits and berries keep the show going well into winter. One plant stands out from the rest with its luminous purple berries. One look at the colorful berry display and it becomes abundantly clear how this shrub got its common name of beautyberry.

If any plant can provide much appreciated bling in the autumn garden, its beautyberry. It’s a showstopper that never fails to draw lots of admiring glances from passersby. Beautyberry is an ordinary looking shrub in spring and early summer. The simple flowers which bloom are charming but small and not particularly showy. From a distance, they are barely noticeable.

However, this plant undergoes an amazing transformation once the berries start to ripen in late summer. Little clusters of greenish-looking, pearl-like berries that grace the entire length of each branch start turning the most extraordinary shades of vibrant purple. Some people describe the color as metallic purple. 

I was gifted one. I’m quite sure the birds in my yard or neighborhood delivered it because there is no other explanation as to its presence. This is the first year I’ve seen the beautiful berries on this shrub that probably spans 5 feet wide and 5 to 6 feet tall and it is loaded with berries.

Caring for the beautyberry

Unless the birds deliver one to your yard, you could always visit a garden center and buy one or more to plant.

Beautyberries are long-lived shrubs and ideally should be planted in loose, fertile, well-drained soil in full sun. Once established, they are reasonably drought tolerant. However, under extreme drought conditions, they may drop their leaves and berries in order to compensate for the lack of moisture. Beautyberry does well in either partial shade or in sunny locations but the plant will have a denser habit and will produce more fruit in a sunny location. Give it plenty of room in the landscape. The weight of the berries can cause the branches to bend over, which may either shade or crowd other nearby plantings.

Beautyberry flowers on current year’s growth. For the best berry display, cut the shrub back in late winter or early spring to a low permanent framework about six inches high. This shrub may spread out or become rangy over time. If that becomes an issue, the plant will respond well to renovation pruning, in which all flowering stems should be cut back to the base of the plant.

Providing a feast

Catbirds and about 40 other bird species enjoy these berries.

The berries appear in the late summer or early fall and can persist into winter, providing visual interest for the landscape and food for birds and other wildlife. The berries are edible for people also and some even use them to make jelly and other foods. In the fall, beautyberry foliage turns yellow, though frost can cause the leaf color to pass directly from green to brown before the leaves drop for winter.

Perhaps this solves the mystery of the origin of my beautyberry bush. The birds that are attracted to my birdfeeders wanted an additional buffet going in to the colder months.

Herschel Walker’s Senate run is heavy on Fox News spots and curated, closed-door campaign stops

Former University of Georgia football standout Herschel Walker speaks at a rally in Perry, Ga. (Stephen Fowler/GPB News)

Herschel Walker has been no stranger to the limelight over the years, but his bid to become a U.S. senator so far has been a quieter, closed-door affair.

The former Heisman Trophy winner, U.S. Olympian and successful business owner has the endorsement of former president Donald Trump in the GOP race to challenge Sen. Raphael Warnock, but the opening weeks of his campaign have been largely conducted in private.

Apart from a prominent speech at a Trump rally in Perry, the former University of Georgia football star has largely juked typical campaign events, fundraisers and media interviews in favor of friendlier conversations on conservative media outlets such as Fox News.

A GPB News analysis finds Walker has done more than two dozen interviews in the eight weeks since launching his campaign, almost exclusively with Fox News personalities like Sean Hannity.

“The crop of 2022 Republican candidates just got a lot stronger tonight, as football legend Herschel Walker announced that he is jumping into the Georgia GOP Senate primary to take on incumbent Democrat Raphael Warnock,” Hannity said Aug. 25, the day Walker’s campaign officially launched. “We need leaders like you. You are a leader, a natural-born leader.”

The next morning, Walker joined Fox and Friends and said the key to Republicans winning in future elections is to “get out and see the people.”

“I think you’ve got to get out and you’ve got to see the people and let the people know who you are, let the people know what you can do for this state,” he said.

A few days later, Walker’s campaign skipped one of the largest Republican events of the year, the 8th District GOP fish fry in Perry.

Agriculture Commissioner Gary Black, one of three other Republicans vying for the party’s nomination, said showing up to events like the fish fry was important connect with the voters a senator is supposed to serve.

“Those folks are the personnel committee for the state of Georgia,” he said. “The United States Senate seat is a job, it’s not celebrity. There are people that need to be served because it’s a job under our Constitution. The personnel committee will hire who they want to do that job.”

Kelvin King, another candidate, recently visited all 159 counties in 30 days on a grassroots listening tour to introduce himself to voters and learn about their concerns. Latham Saddler has also crisscrossed Georgia, spoken with local conservative radio shows and held events covered by the press.

The race to challenge Warnock is seen as one of the biggest pickups for Republicans seeking to retake control of both chambers of Congress in the 2022 election, and comes as the party is in an identity crisis about how much of Trump’s legacy and focus the GOP should embrace moving forward.

For some conservatives, Trump’s endorsement of Walker is secondary to questions about what Walker actually believes and would do if elected.

Former U.S. Rep. Doug Collins, who endorsed Black, said on his radio show late August that Walker’s campaign was “heavy on coming from Wrightsville, Georgia, and very low on policies and beliefs.”

On the opening day of the University of Georgia football season, Walker chatted with Fox Sports personality Clay Travis — who has complained about ESPN mixing sports and politics — with most of the conversation about football.

One anonymous party insider supporting Walker’s campaign vented days later to the Washington Examiner that the former University of Georgia standout “appears to have gone back to the comfort of his war room” instead of blanketing the state with campaign appearances.

Democrats and Republicans alike have questioned Walker’s campaign strategy, arguing he is hiding from voters, the media and potentially hard questions about policy positions. Conservative radio hosts across Georgia and beyond have commented on Walker’s lack of presence.

“For me, the million-dollar question is, is ‘Herschel Walker a conservative? Yes or no?’ And then I like to see the record,” conservative commentator Todd Starnes said on his radio show in early October. “That’s all. And I think that is a fair thing to ask.”

Walker’s campaign website has five sentences of biography, an email sign-up list and a donate button — and no issues page. His interviews with national right-leaning media outlets have rarely dealt with policy questions pertinent to working in the Senate. The campaign has often deflected on questions of the day on topics ranging from vaccines to Mitch McConnell to abortion, and according to Facebook’s Ad Library, the Walker campaign has spent nearly $280,000 on ads that feature Trump and fundraising pleas with no mention specific issues or stances.

So at best, what kind of U.S. senator Herschel Walker would be is gleaned from soundbites that are publicly available, like his speech at the Trump rally in Perry, where he stayed positive and avoided the sorts of false claims of election fraud that the former president and other Republican speakers made throughout the night.

“I’m conservative because I like law and order; I’m a conservative because I like school choice; I’m a conservative because I like border control; I’m a conservative because I like a fair election,” he said before saying the country is not racist. “The Constitution is not just a piece of paper that we can wad up and throw away. The Constitution is a solid rock that we live by. Those are the foundations that this country was built on.”

Before the rally, Walker gave an interview to far-right outlet One America News, the day after the rally joined Fox and Friends to discuss Trump’s endorsement and days later told Bill O’Reilly that border control was the top issue the government needs to address.

On Oct. 6, Walker did a local interview, joining North Georgia conservative radio station Voice of Rural America to discuss the importance of his faith and said that while Trump’s endorsement is great, he would focus on running the campaign his way.

“Trump is not running, Herschel Walker is running, and I’ve already been out there on the campaign trail in different cities doing different things,” he said. “One of the things I said at the very beginning: The media is not going to run my campaign. And I’m not here for the media, I’m here for the people of Georgia.”

Getting out to Georgians is a recurring theme in his interviews, including two interviews during which Hannity asked Walker about a promise to go into “every town, every city and every church, any place you’re invited.”

“I don’t care whether you’re a Democrat or a Republican; I am here to represent you,” he said. “Everything that the Democrats want, I guarantee is what I want.”

Walker has also joined conservative Georgia-based radio shows in recent weeks, like The Morning Xtra and Word on the Street, and the campaign said he did interviews with local radio hosts in Augusta and Savannah.

“We’ve got to get out and vote,” Walker said on The Morning Xtra show. “You know, if you don’t vote, how in the world can you talk about something is wrong? We’re looking in the rearview mirror talking about the past. We’ve got to let the past go and move forward. We can’t stay back in the past. That’s the worst thing that we have to try to do.”

Beyond the highly managed campaign rollout, Walker’s past has dogged his candidacy from the start, from his self-reported struggles with mental health to his long residency in Texas to questions about the veracity of his business exploits.

Even the best-laid plans to stay under the radar can go awry, like last week when the campaign had to cancel a fundraiser in Texas following a report in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that the sponsor had a swastika made of vaccine needles as a profile picture on social media. A campaign spokeswoman initially defended the image as “clearly an anti-mandatory vaccination graphic” before backtracking and saying “the symbol used is very offensive and does not reflect the values of Herschel Walker or his campaign” — one of the few instances the campaign has shed light on Walker’s values.

Walker has apparently held a listening tour of stops across the state, such as a recent festival in Hiawassee with singer Lee Greenwood, visits to Savannah and Marietta. But these visits with businesses and small groups of voters have happened without advance notice, so the only record of his campaigning are curated photos and videos on social media.

New campaign finance reports show Walker raked in nearly $3.8 million in his first five weeks, with the majority of itemized cash coming from out of state, so the closed-door fundraisers, private events and national media interviews appear to be working.

As Walker is the most visible candidate in Trump’s slate of GOP challengers seeking to remake Georgia politics, it’s unclear how long a campaign for public office conducted largely in private will continue. But with more than six months until the Senate primary, the playbook seems to be settled for now.

This story was updated Oct. 21, 2021 at 7:00 a.m. to include more interviews Herschel Walker conducted with local conservative radio shows and an article in the Marietta Daily Journal.


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

U.S. Senate Republicans again block debate on voting rights legislation

Georgia’s two Democratic U..S. senators voted with 47 colleagues to approve voting rights legislation, but they were thwarted by a GOP fillibuster.

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — U.S. Senate Republicans blocked the advance of voting rights legislation Wednesday, the second time this year—thwarting again Democrats’ attempts to pass federal protections for voters amid a slew of new state elections laws.

“When we are faced with a coordinated effort across our country to limit the freedom to vote, we must stand up and do what is right,” Sen. Amy Klobuchar, (D-Minn.), who sponsored the bill, said on the Senate floor just before the party-line vote.

The Freedom to Vote Act would make Election Day a national holiday and set minimum standards each state must have for elections, including two weeks of early voting and an option for same-day voter registration.

Supporters of the legislation say it is necessary to protect American democracy from a recent push to restrict voting access.

Georgia and 18 other states have approved more stringent voting requirements this year. Republican state legislators pushed for the restrictions, partly in response to former President Donald Trump’s unsubstantiated claims of fraud in the 2020 election.

Georgia’s version restricts drop boxes to inside early voting locations except during a public health emergency, punishes people for casting out-of-precinct provisional ballots, and makes  it a crime to pass out water and snacks while voters wait in lines.

“If there is anything worthy of the Senate’s attention, it is unquestionably this,” said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, (D-N.Y.), who vowed to bring up the issue again.  “If there is anything that merits debate on this floor, it’s protecting our democracy from the forces that are trying to unravel it from the inside out”

But the 49-51 vote along party lines—with Schumer voting in opposition for procedural reasons—demonstrates the challenge Democrats face to advance their agenda in the evenly divided Senate. They need 60 votes and support from Republicans to get past a filibuster and move to debate and a vote on a bill.

“What does it say about the world’s greatest deliberative body that our colleagues refuse to have an open discussion about an issue Americans across the political spectrum are clamoring for Congress to address?” Georgia U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock

Even after moderate Democrats made concessions, no Republicans were willing to let the bill advance and for now it is stalled.

The failure likely will encourage those who want to change the Senate’s filibuster rule.

“Protecting the fundamental right to vote is not a partisan issue, and the Senate filibuster should not be used to block debate of this critical legislation,” said William Roberts, managing director for Democracy and Government Reform at the liberal-leaning Center for American Progress.

“Lawmakers should take immediate action to reform the arcane filibuster rules so the Senate can debate and pass this measure. The future of our democracy is at stake,” Roberts said.

The Manchin effect

House Democrats passed a more expansive voting rights proposal, called the For the People Act, last March.

But Republicans blocked debate on it in the Senate last summer.

In response, a group of Senate Democrats drafted a scaled-back proposal. They added a requirement for voter identification at the behest of West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin III, who had voted to advance the earlier bill but still had problems with it.

The new proposal also scaled back controversial provisions affecting the Federal Elections Commission and threw out some revisions to the ethics laws.

Klobuchar introduced the Freedom to Vote Act. Democratic Sens. Jon Tester of Montana, Tim Kaine of Virginia, Jeff Merkley of Oregon, Raphael Warnock of Georgia and Manchin were among the original cosponsors.

“There is wide agreement among Americans, Democrat and Republican, that something has gone awry with our democracy,” Warnock said in a statement Wednesday. “What does it say about the world’s greatest deliberative body that our colleagues refuse to have an open discussion about an issue Americans across the political spectrum are clamoring for Congress to address?”

Manchin was key in trying to gain GOP support for the bill, according to Schumer, and met with Republican senators over the past few weeks.

But in the end, Democrats were far from the 60 votes needed to defeat a filibuster.

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky remained staunchly opposed to the bill, which he described as a federal “election takeover.”

“This latest umpteenth iteration is only a compromise in the sense that the left and the far left argued among themselves about exactly how much power to grab in which areas,” McConnell said on the Senate floor Wednesday.

The Republican leader urged his colleagues to vote against the proposal and “continue to do the job the framers assigned it, and stop terrible ideas in their tracks.”

Schumer asked Republicans to support the cloture vote and said he would allow a “full-fledged debate” with amendments.

“What we can’t accept is a situation where one side is calling for bipartisan debate and bipartisan cooperation while the other refuses to even engage in a dialogue. If our Republican colleagues don’t like our ideas, they have a responsibility to present their own,” Schumer said.

There is a growing push from progressives to weaken or eliminate the filibuster.
“I have long maintained that voting rights is more important than preserving any Senate procedural rule,” Warnock said Wednesday, vowing to continue to press for voting rights legislation.More than 80 progressive groups have formed a coalition, Fix Our Senate, to call for filibuster reform. Eli Zupnick, a former Senate Democratic leadership aide who now works as spokesman for the group, called Wednesday’s vote a “moment of truth” for Democrats to overhaul the filibuster.

Democrats do not yet have enough votes to kill the filibuster altogether. At least two Democrats, Manchin and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona oppose eliminating it.

But some lawmakers have suggested changing Senate rules to exempt voting rights from the filibuster or altering the rules on debate and amendments so more members of the minority might be willing to proceed.

State voting restrictions

The federal effort comes amid a wave of new restrictions enacted this year in state legislatures across the country, most of them from Republicans.

The number of restrictive voting laws approved in states in 2021 was unprecedented: Nineteen states enacted 33 laws with provisions that will make it harder for some constituents to vote, according to a report from the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University’s School of Law.

State lawmakers in 49 states introduced more than 425 bills with provisions to restrict voting in the 2021 legislative sessions, according to the center.

Some other new state laws also include provisions to impose more stringent voter identification requirements, ban snacks or water to voters waiting in line, shorten the time frame for mail ballots or limit the number of mail ballot drop boxes.

Kaine said in a call with reporters Wednesday that his motivation to work on the bill was driven in part by the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, from rioters who wanted to overturn the presidential election.

“Those same lies are being used in states across the country to make it harder for people to vote,” Kaine said.

Likewise, Sen. Michael Bennet, a Colorado Democrat, urged his colleagues to protect voting rights.

“Most countries that have a January sixth never survive to a January 20th,” Bennet said.

Some advocacy groups pushing for federal protections for voting rights—including the NAACP—have said the Biden administration and Democrats should be working with more urgency.

Small groups of protestors stood outside the White House and the vice president’s residence this week with signs about voting rights.

Just before the voting rights vote, Vice President Kamala Harris came to the Senate floor to break the tie on a vote to confirm a nominee, and she stayed throughout the vote on the voting rights bill.

Biden and Harris this week called the Democratic senators who have been leading the effort, according to the White House.

In a press briefing earlier this week, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki pushed back against the notion that Biden has not done enough to support the bill, placing the blame on Republicans who will not allow it to move forward.

Biden called the party-line Republican opposition “unconscionable” in a statement released today asking for support of the bill.

“The right to vote—to vote freely, to vote fairly, and to have your vote counted—is fundamental. It should be simple and straightforward. Let there be a debate and let there be a vote,” Biden said.

Georgia Recorder Deputy Editor Jill Nolin contributed to this report. 

Families with financial hardship receive free veterinary care

This dog, who had been abandoned, was able to receive treatment for fleas and other sicknesses that the woman who saved him wouldn't have been able to otherwise afford, keeping him in a home instead of a shelter. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

The Habersham County Fairgrounds was lined once again with cars on Saturday, but not for COVID-19 vaccinations. Planned PEThood of Georgia returned to Habersham to offer free veterinary services to families with financial need, whose pets needed life-saving and important preventative veterinary care.

Habersham County Animal Care and Control delivered “golden tickets” to people in areas hardest hit by financial hardship in the county. Those tickets would make sure they had first access to veterinary care at the clinic.

Families, like this one, were able to receive free veterinary care at Planned PEThood’s need-based clinic in Habersham for their furry companions. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

“They [HCACC] went out to the areas that are hardest hit . . . [by economic struggles], and personally handed these out to people who had something tragic happen in the past year,” Tanya Weaver, Planned PEThood’s Transportation Coordinator says. “They lost their jobs because of COVID, their hours were cut for some reason, they were not able to take care of their pets— they hit them first to make sure that they were able to be seen today.”

HCACC Director Madi Nix gave other citizens experiencing financial struggles the opportunity to reach out to the shelter for help, offering entry to the clinic on a case-by-case basis.

The Oct. 16 event served 200 local animals and their families at the drive-up clinic. Planned PEThood provided vaccines, microchips, flea and tick treatment, dewormer and spay/neuter vouchers for pets to get fixed free of charge at Planned PEThood’s Duluth location.

Habersham Animal Care and Control and Planned PEThood of Georgia have worked together for years, and are happy to be able to offer resources to the community to keep animals safe and in loving homes. From left to right: Olivia Whitfield, Madi Nix, Tanya Weaver and Officer Chris Broadway. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

“We are so blessed to be able to partner with an agency such as Planned PEThood to do community outreach to our wonderful citizens,” Nix says. “We love being able to give back to the community. It’s what keeps us going day by day, and we just can’t thank everyone enough that showed, and we cannot wait to do this again.”

Habersham landfill could be full in the next 15 years

(Google Street View)

Habersham’s landfill could be full within the next 15 years, and is in need of an improved recycling facility, according to Habersham County Senior Public Works Director Derick Canupp.

At the county commission’s Monday meeting, Habersham Commissioner Bruce Harkness asked Canupp for his honest opinion on the life expectancy of the county landfill during his public works report.

According to Canupp, studies completed on the landfill estimate it has another 20 years of life left, but his experience says otherwise. He believes that the landfill has about 15 years left, based on how trash amounts have changed and the continued growth in the county.

Habersham County Senior Public Works Director Derick Canupp addresses the commission during his monthly report. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

“In my opinion, seeing what I’ve seen in eight and a half years, will it last that long? Probably not,” Canupp tells the commission. “I do think that in the next 5 to 7 years, I think the county really needs to start thinking about a transfer station and looking at a location for that.”

Canupp says that the county needs to revisit recycling options, too.

“When that planning starts in the next few years for a site, I would also consider getting a nice, robust recycling facility at the same location,” he says. “Our recycling has really outgrown [the facility]— I really should have done something a long time ago about it— it really has outgrown what it is.”

Canupp says Clarkesville’s recycling facility produces twice the amount of recycling as the Cornelia facility, and the county needs to consider better infrastructure to support it.

Commissioner Harkness tells Now Habersham that the county landfill currently takes in 120 tons of solid waste per day, and that the county is in “dire” need of a long-term plan to take care of the waste generated in Habersham.

“I really think [this is] another project this commission needs to look at seriously,” Commissioner Bruce Harkness said. “We can’t kick it down the road.”