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Joro spiders get the publicity, but Georgia hosts armies of invasive plants and critters

A Joro spider feeds on a bee in her Kennesaw web. (Photo: Ryland McGreevy, Instagram @cavemanwildlife)

(GA Recorder) — When Kennesaw State University environmental science student Ryland McGreevy is not studying, he’s often exploring Georgia’s wild spaces, shooting photos and video for a nature-focused Instagram called Caveman Wildlife.

He’s familiar with many of Georgia’s four, six and eight-legged residents, but one large yellow spider he kept meeting during his Kennesaw outings threw him for a loop.

“I had seen this female for about two weeks in her web as it continued to grow,” he said. “My curiosity eventually made me want to identify the species but didn’t recognize it to be the Joro spider. At first, I was a little shocked to see one where I lived, since I believed them to be more prevalent in northern Georgia.”

It’s been a bumper year for Joro spiders, a species of bright yellow orb-weaving arachnid that scientists believe hitched a ride to Georgia from its native Asia on a shipping container sometime around 2013 or 2014.

Reports of the invasive spider are up across the northern part of the state, said Richard Hoebeke, an entomologist and curator at the Georgia Museum of Natural History at the University of Georgia.

“Everybody who drops emails and images of the spider is saying they’ve not seen them as abundant in the past years as they have this year, and I’m noticing the same thing, so yeah, the Joro is doing just fine right now,” he said.

The Joro can look frightening, but unless you are a bug, it is not particularly dangerous, Hoebke said. Like all spiders, their bite can cause an allergic reaction in humans, but they are not aggressive and are more likely to flee than fight if accidentally disturbed by a person.

There has not been any data to suggest the Joro is taking food away from native spiders or otherwise upsetting the balance of the state’s ecosystems, Hoebeke said, which is good, because it looks like the little critters have found a permanent home in Georgia.

“This year, it’s very abundant, next year, it may not be so, but I think it’s here to stay,” Hoebeke said. “It’s going to become naturalized as a part of the population of orb-weaving spiders in our area.”

The best thing to do is just accept it and be thankful that as far as invasive species go, the Joro is an excellent neighbor.

“Spiders are beneficial, they are feeding on insects that a lot of people consider to be pests, yellow jackets, stink bugs, mosquitoes, other insects that people don’t want to see around the house, they would be happy to have them in their webs,” he said. “And a lot of them do end up in their webs. So I consider them beneficial, I would just simply leave them alone. Don’t get in their way. Don’t aggravate them. Just let them be.”

Other researchers say it is too soon to tell whether the introduction of this new species could have unexpected consequences in the future.

In either case, Georgia is home to a veritable rogues’ gallery of invasive critters that make the Joro spider look as harmless as a ladybug.

These creatures’ numbers are kept in check in their homelands, whether because predators there have adapted to feed on them or because the organisms they eat have developed specialized defenses. But when they come to a new place without those checks, they can spread massively, sometimes with devastating consequences.

“We already are pretty invaded by these invasive species,” said Chuck Bargeron, co-director for the Center for Invasive Species and Ecosystem Health, also known as Bugwood, at the University of Georgia. “There’s already major impacts to our lands, to our forests, to our parks, because of these species, but if we don’t all work together and recognize that invasive species is a huge environmental issue, then we’re going to lose some of our favorite tree species, some of our favorite habitats, or have a significant impact on crops and other things that would require more pesticides to be used and potentially require an increased cost because of those species.”

Georgia’s least wanted

The emerald ash borer digs winding pathways through ash trees and has the capability to do irreversible damage to Georgia’s trees. (Photo: David Cappaert, Bugwood.org) 

One pest with an appetite for Georgia’s trees, the emerald ash borer has a pretty green color that belies its danger. If left unchecked, this little beetle could completely wipe out entire tree populations.

“Usually within 10 years from the time the insect has been introduced to a region, it’ll essentially destroy all the ash that’s present,” Hoebeke said. “Pretty scary.”

Ash is important both for animals like squirrels and birds that eat its seeds and for humans who rely on the valuable wood these pests tunnel through.

The beetles have been found in 32 counties across north Georgia. Symptoms of infection include wilted foliage, D-shaped holes in trees, and an abundance of woodpeckers or woodpecker holes — the birds love to eat the beetles’ larvae.

Another import, the aphid-like hemlock wooly adelgid is easy to identify by the egg sacs it lays underneath hemlock needles, which look like tiny cotton balls.

“Up in the northern mountains of Georgia, they have been responsible for the decline and the death of almost all of our Eastern hemlock and some of our Carolina hemlock,” Hobeke said. “This insect was introduced in the United States back in the early 1950s in Virginia, and it has since spread to between northern Georgia and coastal Maine, all the way up to Nova Scotia, so it has a pretty broad geographic range that includes especially its host Eastern hemlock. It’s a bad one.”

These bugs were first spotted in Georgia in 2003, and by 2012, they had spread across the state’s entire hemlock range, which includes 14 counties. The needles on infested trees start to turn a sickly yellowish-green, and the insects can kill a healthy tree within four years.

The little cotton-like balls on these needles are egg sacs from the hemlock wooly adelgid. An infestation like this could kill a healthy tree within four years. (Photo: Edward H. Holsten, USDA Forest Service, Bugwood.org) 

Hemlocks are vital to the ecosystems in which they grow, not only for the songbirds and other species that nest in them but also because they help regulate the flow and temperature of streams, sheltering the aquatic life that lives beneath their shade.

The hemlock wooly adelgid rarely causes significant problems in their native continent because predatory bugs there have adapted to feed on them, keeping their numbers in check.

The Georgia Forestry Commission and partners are hoping to duplicate that effect here — they’ve released millions of predatory beetles in six areas they hope will keep the adelgids in check.

Homeowners who see the telltale white fluff on their trees should use insecticide to eradicate the pests, the forestry commission says.

But it’s not just bugs that are inadvertently being snuck into the state.

Topping the forestry commission’s list of problematic nonnative plants are privet and Nepalese browntop, also called Japanese stiltgrass, both of which grow thick and healthy in Southern soil but squeeze out native shrubs.

Because of efforts to find and eradicate them, those plants have seen their populations shrink slightly, according to a 2019 state forestry commission report. Another pesky plant, cogongrass, is no longer present in 27 of the 65 counties it was previously found in.

“Cogongrass is a huge problem in Florida, Alabama, and Mississippi,” Bargeron said. “What Georgia has been trying to do for the last 15 years is keep it from being as big a problem in Georgia as it is in those other areas. It is a major fire hazard, and it chokes out all the other vegetation when you get it established, especially under a pine stand, but even in open areas, it becomes the dominant species very quickly, so it is definitely one of the biggest problems the Forestry Commission has.”

And while insects and plant seeds are easy to accidentally transport, Georgia’s list of invasive species also includes large vertebrates like the Argentine black and white tegu, a South American lizard that can grow up to four feet long. Likely brought to Georgia as exotic pets, they’ve established breeding populations in Tatnall and Toombs counties in southeast Georgia, where they feast on bird eggs, vegetables, small animals and whatever else they can get their jaws around.

The Argentine black and white tegu is causing problems in parts of southeast Georgia by eating everything it can. (Photo: Rebekah D. Wallace, University of Georgia, Bugwood.org) 

“They pretty much eat everything,” Bargeron said. “It’s just introducing something new into the ecosystem that is going to disrupt things and cause problems that way, just another large species that will eat pretty much anything.”

Invasive species can be a vector for disease as well, and while sicknesses like the West Nile virus that affect humans get the most attention, people can inadvertently import pathogens that can decimate animal populations as well. A fungus from Europe is thought to be responsible for white nose syndrome, a disease that has spread among bats across the country, including in Georgia. A 2020 report from the Georgia Department of Natural Resources found that bat numbers were down 93% at cave sites tracked by the department.

Be on the lookout

Other native species of concern that have not yet reached Georgia include the spotted lanternfly and the Asian longhorn beetle, which has destroyed millions of trees in New York, Ohio, Toronto, Chicago and New Jersey, and is knocking on Georgia’s door, Hoebeke said.

“It was just found a year ago in the suburbs of Charleston, South Carolina, and it’s actually been determined that it’s probably been there a while. Thousands of trees have been found to be infested, and all they can do in those situations is to destroy the trees and to destroy the beetle that’s within. That’s what I worry about the most here in Georgia.”

An app is available on the Bugwood website that allows users to photograph and report sightings of invasive creatures.

Bargeron said he hopes the app will allow authorities to detect and respond to threats quickly, which could be key to keeping harmful creatures away from Georgia’s trees and crops.

“It’s something that everybody can participate in, and everybody can do something,” he said. “If you’re out in nature and you see something that you’ve never seen before or you see a new plant that has all of a sudden really expanded and taken over a patch of your favorite place outside, then it’s probably worth reporting to somebody, because that may be the first time that’s been found. And if something can be done quickly to it, then we can prevent another kudzu or prevent another chestnut blight.”

If you see this bug in Georgia, the Asian longhorn beetle, you should report it to the state Department of Natural Resources. (Photo: Gillian Allard, FAO of United Nations, Bugwood.org) 

The USDA’s National Invasive Species Information Center estimates invasive species have cost North America more than $26 billion per year since 2010.

Putting an exact price tag on the damage done to Georgia crops is next to impossible, said Mark McCann, assistant dean for the University of Georgia Extension.

Their costs come not only in the form of damaged crops, but also in preventative measures.

“Sometimes we spend as much trying to mitigate or prevent as we do in the damage part, and those numbers are hard to get,” he said. “We find that in agriculture, we spend a lot on damage by disease and bugs, but we also spend a lot of money trying to prevent them.”

The most effective way to keep foreign pests from destroying Georgia’s crops or ecosystems is by stopping them from making the journey over here in the first place.

That’s where supervisory Customs and Border Patrol agriculture specialist Rebecca Rhinehart and her team come in.

Last year, more than 34 million tons of goods came to Georgia through the Port of Savannah in shipping containers, and it’s their job to get rid of any hitchhikers.

That starts with outreach to shippers about regulations — avoid storing containers outside, lest they pick up nematode-contaminated soil, make sure wood packing material has been treated for wood-boring insects and store materials at the correct temperature on the voyage so any foreign critters will freeze to death.

Once the goods arrive, Rhinehart and her crew are the ones to give the final check.

“We work pretty close with USDA, FDA, EPA, all those agencies to make sure that we’re all on the same page, we are definitely the last line of defense for the majority of the things coming in because we’re the ones physically out there doing inspections,” Rhinehart said. “It’s a fast-moving port, so we have to really be selective, we have to be smart about it, we target things. Obviously, with the amount of containers coming in there’s just not enough, you know what I mean, people, so we have to be smart and target.”

Depending on the commodity and place of origin, goods could require inspections, fumigation, cold treatment and more. Agents pay close attention to things like wood packing materials, which can house wood-boring insects or their eggs. Sometimes, to the shippers, the rules can seem overburdensome, but Rhineheart said it’s worth the effort.

“People sometimes think it’s like, arbitrary rules, but they’re all there for a reason,” she said. “It’s to protect our agriculture and sometimes, with some of the pests, you don’t see the damage. It’s not like finding narcotics or guns. It’s something that if a pest gets in, it’s small. They can establish before you even realize there’s a problem, and that could take years.”

Gainesville couple accused of murdering toddler

Hall County Sheriff’s Office investigators have charged a husband and wife with felony murder following the death of a toddler they were babysitting.

Detectives arrested Juan Martinez, 31, and Nancy Martinez, 32, both of Gainesville, early Monday morning, October 11, at HCSO headquarters. In addition to the murder charge, they’re each charged with one count of first-degree cruelty to children.

According to the preliminary investigation, between noon and 2 p.m. Sunday, October 10, the couple “caused traumatic brain injury and other internal injuries to the child’s body, resulting in her eventual death,” the sheriff’s office says.

The two-year-old victim, Valeria Jordon Garfias, was in the couple’s care at their residence in the 2000 block of Bennett Circle while her parents were at work.

Hall County Fire Services was dispatched to a medical call at the residence around 1:50 p.m. Sunday. EMS transported Garfias to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville and from there she was flown to a Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta hospital where she later died.

Hospital officials notified investigators because of the nature of the girl’s injuries.

Juan and Nancy Martinez were booked into the Hall County Jail following their arrests. Each is being held without bond.

The body has been sent to the GBI Crime Lab for autopsy. The case remains under investigation by the sheriff’s office.

Mother of boy killed in Rabun County wreck dies from her injuries

Gretchen Echols and her son, Ian, died as a result of a wreck Oct. 6, 2021, in Rabun County. (Beck Funeral Home)

Three days after the two-vehicle crash in Rabun County that claimed the life of 8-year-old Ian Echols, his mother, who was severely injured in the crash, also passed away.

Gretchen Echols, 41, of Clayton, died Saturday, October 9 from her injuries.

The accident happened Wednesday afternoon, October 6, on U.S. Highway 76 West at Charlie Mountain Road. According to the Georgia State Patrol, Echols was driving west on Highway 76 in a 2014 Ford Taurus when she lost control and ran into the path of an eastbound 2018 Ford F150.

The truck hit the car’s right rear passenger side door, fatally injuring her son. The other backseat passenger, a 7-year-old, was also hurt. He was taken to the hospital by personal vehicle and then transported to Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta Urgent Care.

The driver of the pickup truck, 68-year-old Clyde Martin of Clayton, was transported to Northeast Georgia Medical Center with minor injuries.

Gretchen Echols suffered severe injuries in the wreck and was in the Intensive Care Unit at Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville before she passed away.

“Our hearts are broken,” Gretchen’s mother, Pat DeVarnass, tweets. “We will always love and miss you both.”

Ian and Gretchen leave behind father and husband Matthew, brother and son Bruce and sister and daughter Madison.

According to Echols’ obituary, there will be a joint celebration of Gretchen and Ian Echols’ lives on Friday, October 15 at 5 p.m. in the Chapel of the Beck Funeral Home in Clayton, Georgia. The family has asked for donations to be made in Ian’s memory to F.A.I.T.H or to Rabun County Bank Memorial Fund for the Echols’ family in lieu of flowers.

For those who would like to offer financial support to the Echols family, a GoFundMe has been set up to assist with funeral and medical expenses.

This article has been updated

Garland Stanhope Mullinax

Garland Stanhope Mullinax, age 83, of Mount Airy, Georgia, went to be with the Lord on Friday, October 8, 2021.

Mr. Mullinax was born on December 29, 1937, in Habersham County, Georgia, to the late Stanhope and Pauline Loudermilk Mullinax. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a brother, Wesley Mullinax and a sister, Betty Powell. He was a member of Hazel Creek Baptist Church. He was retired from Schandig Furniture Corporation with forty-six years and four months of loyal and dedicated service. Mr. Mullinax was a veteran having proudly served his country in the United States Air Force. He enjoyed spending time with his family and friends.

Survivors include mother of his children, Winnie Mullinax; son, Ronnie Mullinax, Mt. Airy, Georgia; daughter and son-in-law, Joan and Philip Jones, Mt. Airy, Georgia; brother, James Mullinax, Mt. Airy, Georgia; grandchildren: Emily Mullinax, Shane Jones, and Shonda Jones; great-grandchildren: Jarred Jones, Colby Jones, Creed Jones, Britton Jones-Leggett, Lindley Jones-Leggett, Lewellyn Jones-Leggett, and Beckett Jones-Leggett; several nieces and nephews also survive.

Funeral services will be held at 3:00 PM, Tuesday, October 12, 2021, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, North Chapel, with the Rev. Billy Burrell officiating. Interment will follow in the Hazel Creek Baptist Church Cemetery.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home on Tuesday from 1:00 PM until the funeral hour.

Arrangements are entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Home, North Chapel, and Crematory, 245 Central Avenue, Demorest, Georgia 30535. Phone: 706-778-1700.

Habersham 6-year-old reported abducted found safe in Northwest Georgia

A 6-year-old Habersham County girl was to be reunited with her mother after she and her older sister went missing for nearly a day. Deputies found the sisters safe on the side of the road in Northwest Georgia’s Walker County, more than 130 miles away.

Walker County deputies located Celesta and Estephanie Negrete Ramirez around 7:45 a.m. Monday, October 11, three hours after the GBI issued a statewide Levi’s Call for the girls. (Levi’s Call is Georgia’s version of an Amber Alert).

The Habersham County Sheriff’s Office requested the alert after the girls’ mother reported them missing around 1 a.m. Monday, October 11. She told deputies her older daughter took Celesta shopping around 11 a.m. the day before and had not returned home. She believed they went to Commerce or Buford but was unable to contact them because Estephanie did not take her phone with her.

The mother told deputies she was concerned about her older daughter’s recent “mental status,” according to a news release from the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office. The alert said the child was believed to be in “extreme danger.”

After locating the girls on the side of the road in Walker County, where HCSO Lt. Matthew Wurtz says their vehicle had broken down, deputies reported they were not injured. They took them to the Walker County Sheriff’s Office where Celesta was to be reunited with her mother.

Deputies charged Estephanie with interference with child custody in relation to the incident, says Wurtz. He says Estephanie will be transported to the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office and undergo a mental health evaluation.

6-year-old Celesta Ramirez reportedly was taken from a residence in Demorest around 11 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 10. The GBI issued a statewide alert about her disappearance early Monday at the request of the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office. (photo HCSO Facebook)
17-year-old Estephanie Ramirez is currently in custody on charges of interference with child custody. (source HCSO Facebook)

Adopt-A-Pet: Happy Octo-purr!

It’s October, and as the chilly winter months come, now is the perfect time to bring a cat into your home for warm snuggles to beat the cold. That’s why the Habersham County Animal Shelter is celebrating “Octo-purr,” to help find cats and kittens their forever homes.

Meet Bagheera

Bagheera, named after the panther from “The Jungle Book,” is a sweet kitty waiting on his forever family to bring him home. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

Bagheera is an adult male cat, who, for Halloween, will be dressing as Toothless from “How to Train Your Dragon.”

Bagheera has been at the shelter since August, and isn’t quite sure why.

“I’m a big cat, sure, but who doesn’t love to cuddle a big cat?” He says. “I’m a good kitty, and I’m ready to go home.”

Bagheera is a sweet and humble cat who doesn’t like to brag— but he’s the whole package. He’s cuddly, soft and has the sweetest face, and he’s great around other cats.

Bagheera can be found perched on top of the cat tree at the animal shelter, looking quite like the elegant panther he’s named after, waiting for someone to come give him some scratches.

“I’d be so happy to hang out in a window, or on the back of a couch, I don’t need a fancy cat tree,” he says. “I’m just ready to find a family to call my own. We could spend the winter all warm and cozy together, and maybe even share some snacks together during the holidays. I’d love to get my paws on some turkey next month.”

Meet Counter Holder-Upper

(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

Don’t let his silly name fool you, this orange kitten is ready for something serious, and the long-term relationship of his dreams starts today.

Counter Holder-Upper is an energetic kitty who loves wand toys and being scooped up for a post-playtime cuddle session, who, after months of waiting, has finally been adopted.

“I might be little, but I have a big heart,” he says. “I want to find a home with people who love me and want to help me grow up big and strong.”

For Halloween, he’s debating between dressing as a pumpkin or a can of Tang, but he’s hoping his new family can help him make that decision.

Counter Holder-Upper tells Now Habersham that his ideal forever home has new places to explore and room to chase toys.

“I can’t wait for the day I get to chase a ribbon or a red dot around a room,” he says. “And then, when I’m all tired out and my belly is full, to curl up next to someone who loves me.”

That day has arrived, and Counter Holder-Upper goes home to be with his forever family Friday.

Do you think Bagheera or any of the other animals at the Habersham County Animal Shelter could be your cuddle buddy this fall? If so, give them a call at (706) 839-0195, visit them in person Tuesday-Friday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., or check out more information on their Facebook page.

Funeral set for Alto police officer who died of COVID complications

(Facebook)

Funeral services will be held Wednesday for an Alto police officer who died after contracting COVID-19. Corporal Michael Tanksley died from complications of the disease on Friday morning, October 8, the Alto Police Department says.

The 40-year-old father of two served in law enforcement for nearly twenty years, according to his obituary. He served the past two years with APD. In an online tribute to Tanksley, the department says he “will be greatly missed.”

Alto PD Corporal Michael Tanksley passed away on Oct. 8 from complications of COVID.

Tanksley’s family and friends remember him as a very caring person and friend. “To know Michael was to love Michael,” his obituary reads.

Funeral Services are scheduled for 2 p.m. on October 13 at the Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel in Baldwin. Following the service, Corp. Tanksley will be buried with police honors at Yonah Memorial Gardens in Demorest.

Corp. Michael Tanksley obituary

 

Golden Ray wreck fished out of St. Simons Sound

The removal of the Golden Ray from St. Simons Sound is in its final stages more than two years after it capsized. Questions remain regarding the short and long-term effects of oil spills and other contaminants on the ecosystem. (Fletcher Sams/Altamaha Riverkeeper)

At 656 feet long and big enough to haul more than 4,000 automobiles, the hulking Golden Ray ship has been hard to miss in the St. Simons Sound, where it laid on its side for more than two years.

Now, after years of setbacks from oil spills, a fire, hurricanes and a change in contractors, a salvage crew is working to remove the last section of the South Korean car carrier.

This means the Golden Ray’s head-turning presence off the Georgia coast since September 2019 is nearing an end.

But environmentalists say the removal of the ship only clears the part of the wreckage most obvious on the surface. They are pressing for more details on what will come next to clean marshes and shores of the remaining oil and other contaminants that aren’t so visible.

Conservationists are concerned that agencies like the Georgia Department of Natural Resources might not require an in-depth analysis of the harm to invertebrates and up the food chain, other wildlife, and the local economy.

Fletcher Sams, executive director of the Altamaha Riverkeeper, fears the clock is running out before government agencies declare that there isn’t a need for a comprehensive investigation.

“It’s a no-brainer in my book,” Sams said. “It’s just ensuring that the resources on the coast which contribute in very large parts to the economy are intact in the future. I really feel like without a full assessment, it’s going to be hard for the stewards of that resource, the state Department of Natural Resources, to tell the public that everything’s safe with a straight face.”

Since the Golden Ray capsized in 2019, a Unified Command made up of salvage contractor Gallagher Marine Systems, the U.S. Coast Guard and the state natural resources department has overseen removal of the wreckage and environmental response plans.

The massive car carrier set sail for Baltimore out of the Port of Brunswick in the dark of night on Sept. 8. Federal investigations found vehicles loaded incorrectly caused the top-heavy ship to list allowing seawater to gush in an open door. All 24 crewmembers were rescued.

‘Lot of healing that needs to be done’

The environmental response to leaks from the Golden Ray included collecting water samples, testing air quality, cleaning up oil along the shorelines and collecting debris in emergencies. Data collected on water and sediment along with surveys of the sound and the marsh will be used as a baseline to determine a successful cleanup, according to the Unified Command website.

“It’s never too late to do it because this is an ongoing problem. And I really feel we have years to go before we even see healing, especially if there is oil on the bottom of our rivers and our estuaries. There’s a lot of healing that needs to be done, and that’s only going to take time. – – Susan Inman, One Hundred Miles coastal advocate

State and federal environmental agencies continue conducting natural resource damage pre-assessments throughout the wreck removal. Any decision regarding further remediation will be made by trustees appointed by Gov. Brian Kemp.

“Once the final section is removed and all potential sources of pollution have been mitigated, the state and other federal trustees will evaluate injuries as defined under the (Natural Resource Damage Assessment) process to determine if these injuries require further action and potential compensation,” a DNR commissioner’s office statement said.

Like Sams, Susan Inman, coastal advocate for Brunswick-based environmental group One Hundred Miles, is making the case for a formal damage assessment, even as the cleanup winds down along with a third hurricane season since the ship capsized.

Golden Ray shipwreck removal April 8, 2021 

“It’s never too late to do it because this is an ongoing problem,” Inman said. “And I really feel we have years to go before we even see healing, especially if there is oil on the bottom of our rivers and our estuaries. There’s a lot of healing that needs to be done, and that’s only going to take time.”

Over the last week, crews worked to get one of the ship’s final sections placed onto a barge to take to a facility near the Georgia Port Authority’s Mayor’s Point Terminal at Brunswick. The ship’s scraps are taken on a 1,200-mile trip to a Louisiana recycling facility.

“Lastly, as we finish the transload of Section Six and prepare to lift and remove the final section of the wreck, we continue a response posture that monitors for and will rapidly mitigate any potential debris and oil discharges,” U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer Michael Himes wrote in an email.

“At the same time, our assessment teams continue to survey over 190 miles of shoreline from the air, on the water and by foot each week,” said Himes, the spokesman for Unified Command.

Local officials question assessments

Inman said the cleanup seems mostly focused on removing debris, such as car parts that fell as the ship was sliced into sections. The shipwreck was named to the Georgia Water Quality “Georgia’s Dirty Dozen” list soon after it ran aground.

The Georgia Water Coalition’s ‘Dirty Dozen’ offenders list for 2019 includes the potential disaster from an oil spill from the Golden Ray. Kevin Austin/Contributed 

“No one is talking about contaminants, and that’s really concerning,” she said, referring to the oil from the ship, the fluids from the cars and even the lead paint from the ship.

Elected officials say they worry the environmental analysis will not be rigorous enough.

Brunswick Mayor Pro Tem Felicia Harris raised the issue of water quality monitoring at a recent commission meeting, when representatives from the U.S. Coast Guard and the command center gave a brief update and fielded questions from city officials.

“We don’t really know at this point what the actual damage is, could be potentially, or potential that could take place on our waterfront coming from the operations that’s pertaining to this particular incident,” Harris said.

“And so I asked that question proactively, so that two or three years from now, we won’t come back and say, ‘Oh, you found something that came from that piece of that wreckage being there,’” she said. “How proactive are we in looking at this and staying on top of this and monitoring this? Because remember now that’s our waterfront.”

Unified Command has collected water samples since the ship capsized and plans to continue until the removal process is complete. In response to Harris, Himes said the public can report oil sightings to the Coast Guard’s National Response Center hotline: 800-424-8802.

Commissioner Julie Martin also questioned how far out toward the ocean the salvage crew will collect debris.

“I was just wondering how someone fishing off of the St. Simons pier catches a whole fender system,” Martin said. “We’ve got huge tides. There’s a very dramatic pull with the tide. I’m not necessarily pointing fingers. I’m just trying to figure out how do you compensate for all of that over the last almost two years?”

In August, strong currents spread oily seawater beyond the retention barriers.

Himes said the hydrographic survey – which is like an underwater scan – will focus on the area near the wreck. There is an environmental protection barrier set up around the ship to try to contain oil and debris from the wreckage.

“While the hydrographic survey does not extend all the way to the shoreline, we’re fairly confident that the kinds of debris that is escaping the EPB is plastic in nature and therefore floats,” Himes said.

The plan, Himes said, is for a cleanup crew to stick around to collect what washes up on shore after the netting that was around the Golden Ray is removed.

“The way forward is that we want to leave this sound as close to the same condition as it was prior to the capsizing of the Golden Ray,” Coast Guard Lt. Commander Michael Metz told city commissioners.

“We want to make sure in accordance with the state that the beaches are as clean as we can make them prior to us demobilizing,” Metz also said. “And then after that, once the unified command and the state have come to an end to an agreement and have made the determination, all resources will be demobilized.”

Himes said the Ray’s barrier performed its job through complex circumstances that involved trying to contain pollutants with shifting tides and allowing marine life and removal crews to maneuver in and out.

“Even with all of the benefits of the EPB, we were sober in our disclosures to the public that wreck removal operations had the potential to produce fires, debris and oil discharges,” Himes said. “While each of those scenarios occurred, our response posture allowed us to quickly assess and mitigate any impacts to the environment as soon as it was safe for our personnel to access affected areas.”

But for Sams, July’s oil spill is another example of why it was a bad idea for the people in command of the salvage to switch contractors early on in an attempt to shave a month off the timetable. Two years are gone and the cleanup is ongoing. A hulking floating crane-saw still obscures the ocean view.

“They said they could carve one month out of the removal and I think that was an unacceptable risk to the Sound,” Sams said.

The Golden Ray shipwreck remains a costly venture for its owners and insurers with a trade industry magazine estimating in September it exceeded $842 million, well above the inflation-adjusted $597 million when the Exxon Valdez ran aground in Alaska’s Prince William Sound in 1989.

A recent ruling from the National Transportation Safety Board confirmed a 2020 Coast Guard investigation that the ship likely capsized because of an unbalanced load that was compounded by incorrect stability calculations.

Miguel Angel Fernandez Paramo

Miguel Angel Fernandez Paramo, age 21, of Baldwin, Georgia passed away on Sunday, October 10, 2021.

Mr. Fernandez Paramo was born on November 9, 1999, in Mexico. He was preceded in death by his paternal grandparents, Reynalda Lopez and Felix Fernandez. Miguel was a really lovely guy and was a very hard-working person. He was full of joy and had a huge heart, he was super caring and sentimental, he cared and loved his family deeply, especially his mother. Miguel was known for making jokes about everything and was always laughing. Miguel had said he had finally found the love of his life, Francisca; he was getting himself and everything ready to propose, including a poster he had ready for the proposal.

Survivors include his parents, Jose Luis Fernandez and Virginia Paramo; brothers and sisters, Jose L. Fernandez Paramo, of Lula; Mariaelena Fernandez Paramo, of Cornelia; Jesus Fernandez Paramo, of Baldwin; Dolores Fernandez Paramo, of Mt. Airy; Nancy Fernandez Paramo, of Alto; Virginia Fernandez Paramo, of Baldwin; Saul Fernandez Paramo, of Baldwin; Lupe Fernandez Paramo, of Alto; Rosie Fernandez Paramo, of Baldwin; Susy Fernandez Paramo, of Mt. Airy; girlfriend, Francisca Rolbes, of Cornelia.

Funeral Services will be held at 11:00 a.m., Friday, October 15, 2021, at the St. Mark Catholic Church with Father Jose Luis Ayala-Hernandez officiating. Interment will follow in Level Grove Cemetery.

The family will receive friends on Thursday, October 14, 2021, at the residence, 776 Willingham Avenue, Baldwin, Georgia 30511.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, South Chapel at 1370 Industrial Boulevard, Baldwin, Georgia 30511. Telephone: 706-778-7123.

Robert Lee Cody

Robert Lee Cody, age 73, of Alto, Georgia went to be with the Lord on Saturday, October 9, 2021.

Robert was born Aug. 27, 1948, in Saginaw, MI, to the late Shirley and Mary (Grabowski) Cody. Robert lived most of his adult life in Florida, where he enjoyed camping, hunting, and fishing. He always appreciated cooking for his family and friends. He was preceded in death by his wife of 35 years, Deborah (Roberts) Cody, and his partner Lynn (Melton) Kruger.

Robert is survived by his younger sister, Susan (Cody) Medeiros of Cleveland, GA; daughter, Cynthia (John) Hopper of Warner Robins, GA; son Robert Cody Jr. of FL; granddaughter, Mackenzie Hopper, and grandson, Aiden Hopper, both of Warner Robins, GA.

At Robert’s request, no formal services will be held.

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

Arrangements are entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Home, North Chapel, and Crematory, 245 Central Avenue, Demorest, Georgia 30535.Phone # 706-778-1700.

Hoyt Rudeseal

Hoyt Rudeseal, age 96, of Cornelia, Georgia, passed away on Saturday, October 9, 2021.

Mr. Rudeseal was born on April 13, 1925, in Habersham County, Georgia to the late James Henry and Nora Meeks Rudeseal. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by daughter, Patsy Rudeseal; brothers, Rev. Doyle Rudeseal, Homer Rudeseal, Comer Rudeseal, Wayne Rudeseal; sisters, Evelyn Wright, and Orpha Rudeseal. Mr. Rudeseal was the last of his immediate family. He was the oldest living member of Hazel Creek Baptist Church. Hoyt had a true passion for gardening, During the World War II Era, Hoyt was not drafted into the war, due to his responsibilities caring for the farm and for his family. Mr. Rudeseal was retired from Chicopee Manufacturing with 37 years of service. Hoyt was known to his grandchildren as “Papa”.

Survivors include his loving wife of almost 72 years, Lucille Wright Rudeseal, of Cornelia; son and daughter-in-law, Anthony “Tony” and LeAnn Rudeseal, of Cornelia; daughter, Glenda Davis and the late Larry Davis, of Gillsville; grandchildren, Chase Rudeseal and Chelsie, Joseph Rudeseal and Meredith, Paul Davis, Ashley Davis, Emily Kirby and Adam; and four great-grandchildren; and numerous nieces and nephews.

Funeral Services will be held at 1:00 p.m. Tuesday, October 12, 2021, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, North Chapel with Rev. Scott Smith, Rev. Billy Burrell, and Mr. Anthony Rudeseal officiating. Interment will follow in the Hazel Creek Baptist Church Cemetery.

The family will receive friends from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., Monday, October 11, 2021, at the funeral home prior to the service.

Flowers will be accepted or memorials may be made in Hoyt’s Memory to Habersham Soup Kitchen, 166 Ritchie Sreet, Clarkesville, Georgia 30523

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

Michael Tanksley

Michael Tanksley, age 40, of Cornelia, Georgia went to his heavenly home on Friday, October 8, 2021.

Mr. Tanksley was born on October 3, 1981, in Hall County, Georgia. maternal grandfather, Roy Lamb Keller; paternal grandparents, Oscar L. and Betty Tanksley; and step-grandfather, Bill Crook. Mr. Tanksley was a law enforcement officer for approximately 19 years, serving the past two with Alto Police Department. Michael loved his “babies”, Wyatt and Maci. Michael was a very caring person and friend, to know Michael was to love Michael. He was a member of the Clarkesville Masonic Lodge No. 325 F & AM.

Survivors include his mother, Donna Crook, of Carrollton; father, Tim Tanksley, of Habersham County; son, Wyatt Tanksley, of Cornelia; daughter, Maci Tanksley, of Cornelia; significant other, Kayla Maxwell, of Cornelia; step-father, Keelyn Crook, of Carrollton; maternal grandmother, Ethelene Keller, of Mt. Airy; uncle and aunt, Jerry and Nancy Tanksley, of Martin; cousins, Jessica Anderson and Jana Duncan; step-grandmother, Nancy Crook, of Lynn Haven, FL; and numerous friends.

Funeral Services will be held at 2:00 p.m., Wednesday, October 13, 2021, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel with Rev. Terry Rice, Rev. Mark Gerrells, and Chief Josh Ivey. Interment will follow in the Yonah Memorial Gardens with Honors by the Hall County Sheriff’s Office Honor Guard and Masonic Rites by Clarkesville Masonic Lodge No. 325 F & AM.

A Livestream of the Service will be available on the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory Facebook Page, facebook.com/whitfieldfh

The family will receive friends from 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. and from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., Tuesday, October 12, 2021, at the funeral home.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel at 1370 Industrial Boulevard, Baldwin, Georgia 30511. Telephone: 706-778-7123.