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Winter Weather Preparedness Week is Dec. 7-11

Georgia’s weather may be unpredictable at times, but taking the proper steps to prepare means getting ahead of any disaster. White County, in partnership with the Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency, is encouraging citizens to participate in Winter Weather Preparedness Week 2020 to learn how to take proper precautions for possible inclement weather emergencies.

“Winter Weather Preparedness Week is a great time for our residents and businesses to learn how to protect themselves and their loved ones against winter hazards,” says White County Director of Public Safety David Murphy. “We’re hopeful these tools will enable our citizens to fortify themselves and their homes for possible outcomes.”

Winter Weather Preparedness Week, from December 7-11, was created to raise awareness of winter weather hazards and reinforce understanding of winter weather terminology. Throughout the week, White County and GEMA/HS encourage all Georgians to prepare for severe weather and restock necessary supplies.

Each day concentrates on different aspects of severe winter weather and provides critical information for preparedness. The focus for each day is as follows:

Monday, Dec. 7: Winter Weather in Georgia — learn about winter weather hazards that can impact the state of Georgia

Tuesday, Dec. 8: Winter Weather Terminology — learn about winter weather “alerts” (watches, warnings and advisories) and what they all mean

Wednesday, Dec. 9: Winter Weather Preparation Tips — learn how to best prepare for winter weather events, and put together a “Ready Kit” while making a plan before winter weather strikes

Thursday, Dec. 10: Winter Weather Driving Tips/Safety — learn “best practices” for driving (if necessary) in winter weather conditions and how to pack a mobile “Ready Kit”

Friday, Dec. 11: Winter Weather Outlook for 2019-20 season

Families can visit gema.georgia.gov to learn how to prepare for emergencies, create family communications plans and more. To learn about specific risks in your area, contact us at 706-865-9500.

Governor says courts, not Legislature are last gasp for Trump’s campaign

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp and Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan – both Republicans – have rejected a small group of state senators’ call for a special session to subvert the state’s presidential election.

The pair issued a joint statement late Sunday that said four senators had requested the special session with the purpose of selecting a separate slate of presidential electors. Trump narrowly lost the election in Georgia to President-elect Joe Biden, although he continues to contest the results in court.

The release did not name the lawmakers, but a handful of senators said they supported a special session during a daylong hearing held Thursday.

President Donald Trump’s personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani, visited the state Capitol to make the case for legislative intervention. Trump announced Sunday that Giuliani tested positive COVID-19 just days after his visit.

Here’s the rest of the statement:

“State law is clear: the legislature could only direct an alternative method for choosing presidential electors if the election was not able to be held on the date set by federal law.

“In the 1960s, the General Assembly decided that Georgia’s presidential electors will be determined by the winner of the state’s popular vote. Any attempt by the legislature to retroactively change that process for the November 3rd election would be unconstitutional and immediately enjoined by the courts, resulting in a long legal dispute and no short-term resolution.

“The judicial system remains the only viable – and quickest – option in disputing the results of the November 3rd election in Georgia.”

Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan

Duncan has been increasingly outspoken about the need for Republicans to accept the results and turn their attention to the Jan. 5 runoffs for two U.S. Senate races.

“As the lieutenant governor and as a Georgian, I’m proud that we’re able to look up after three recounts and watch and be able to see that this election was fair. Was it perfect? Absolutely not. I don’t know that any election was perfect in the history of this country, but certainly, it’s only been nominal changes,” Duncan told CNN Sunday.

This article appears in partnership with Georgia Recorder

James “Jimmy” Randy Acrey

James “Jimmy” Randy Acrey, age 63 of Cornelia, passed away on Saturday, December 5, 2020.

Born in Demorest, Georgia, on January 25, 1957, he was the son of the late James Robert Acrey and Havis Louise Gerrin Acrey.

Surviving are his sister and brother-in-law, Nancy Acrey Crocker (Ronnie) of Alto; nieces, Christy Goss of Alto and Angela Catchings of Decatur.

The family will receive friends from 11 am until 1 pm on Tuesday, December 8, 2020, at the funeral home.

Those in attendance are asked to please adhere to the public health and social distancing guidelines regarding COVID-19.

An online guest register is available and may be viewed at www.mcgaheegriffinandstewart.com.

McGahee-Griffin & Stewart Funeral Home of Cornelia, Georgia (706/778-8668) is in charge of arrangements.

Sunday’s Loeffler, Warnock Atlanta Press Club debate to go nationwide

From top left, Sen. Kelly Loeffler, Rev. Ralph Warnock, Jon Ossoff, and Sen. David Perdue. (Photos by Georgia Recorder)

Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler and Democratic challenger Raphael Warnock will face each other again in a debate Sunday, and this time, they’ll have a national audience.

Georgia’s two high-stakes U.S. Senate runoff races on Jan. 5 will decide which party controls the upper chamber. A pair of wins for Democrats would split control 50-50, giving Vice President-elect Kamala Harris a tie-breaking vote.

Polls continue to show a competitive fight in both races, although a new 11 Alive/SurveyUSA poll shows Warnock with a slightly greater advantage at 52% to Loeffler’s 45%. Democrat Jon Ossoff is locked in a near tie with Sen. David Perdue, with 50% of respondents saying they favored Ossoff and 48% backing Perdue.

The candidates will debate each other the day after President Donald Trump visited Valdosta for a rally meant to fire up the base with just a week or so left until early voting begins. Former President Barack Obama headlined a virtual rally for Ossoff and Warnock Friday.

Ossoff, however, will appear alone at the debate. Perdue declined the Atlanta Press Club’s invitation to participate, and it is the organization’s policy to not let one candidate’s absence derail the debate.

Perdue will be represented Sunday with an empty podium. In a recent op-ed, Maria Saporta, who chairs the press club’s Loudermilk-Young Debate Series committee, offers background on its longstanding empty podium rule (and laments Perdue’s decision).

It’s a rule that is evenly applied. Republican Angela Stanton-King appeared alone in a virtual District 5 congressional debate after Democrat and Congresswoman-elect Nikema Williams declined to participate.

“That is not our preference,” the press club said in a press release. “The Atlanta Press Club works hard to provide a platform for all candidates running for public office. We believe it is an essential part of the democratic process for voters to have an opportunity to hear an exchange of ideas from the candidates so they can be better informed when they cast their ballots. In that spirit, we hope Sen. Perdue will change his mind.”

Ossoff and Perdue debated each other twice leading up to the Nov. 3 election. The two first squared off in a spirited showing on a virtual October APC debate, which can be viewed here. They clashed again in late October during a socially distanced in-person debate on WTOC-TV, available on demand here. Perdue pulled out of a third WSB-TV debate set to be held just days before the election.

“The people of Georgia deserve an open debate,” Ossoff told reporters last month. “They deserve to hear from their senator. And if Sen. Perdue doesn’t want to answer questions in public or debate his opponent, that’s fine. He just shouldn’t run for re-election to the United States Senate.”

Perdue’s campaign manager, Ben Fry, said this last month: “We’ve already had two debates in this election. We’re going to take our message about what’s at stake if Democrats have total control of Congress directly to the people.”

Perdue participated in a townhall Thursday hosted by the Laura Ingraham on Fox News that was shot in Atlanta with a small, socially distanced audience.

The debates will air live on Georgia Public Broadcasting TV and can also be watched on GPB.org and the press club’s Facebook page. National news networks like CNN, Fox News and CSPAN also plan to carry it.

The Ossoff-Perdue program will start at 5 p.m.; Loeffler and Warnock will debate for an hour starting at 7 p.m.

This article appears in partnership with Georgia Recorder

James Earl Tench

James Earl Tench, age 88, of Cornelia, Georgia, went to be with the Lord on Saturday, December 5, 2020.

Mr. Tench was born in Alto, Georgia, on December 22, 1931, to the late Ernest and Velma Woodall Tench. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a sister, Betty Robinson; three brothers, J. T. Tench, Lamar Tench, and Ernest L. Tench, Jr. Mr. Tench was a resident of Habersham County, Georgia for most of his life. He was a member of the Level Grove Baptist Church. Mr. Tench attended Cornelia School, Piedmont College, and Brenau College, receiving a BA degree. He worked a number of years in the consumer finance industry as a branch manager in the Northeast Georgia area and was also a licensed real estate agent. Mr. Tench retired from the United States Postal Service as a mail clerk with over twenty years of loyal and dedicated service. He was a Veteran of the United States Air Force, serving from 1948 to 1953, having proudly served his country in the Korean Conflict from 1951 to 1952. Mr. Tench loved his bird “Sunny” and also loved to feed his “outside birds” daily. He was a true lover of nature.

Survivors include his wife: Lucy Fricks Tench, of Cornelia; daughters, Sandra Hawthorne, of Cornelia; Teresa Lewallen and her husband Darryl, of Demorest; and Kela Daniels, Alto; six grandchildren and several great-grandchildren also survive.

Memorial services may be planned at a later date. Memorials in the memory of Mr. Tench may be made to the Level Grove Baptist Church Building Fund, 157 Old Level Grove Road, Cornelia, Georgia 30531

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

Stages of Development

This Barred Owl is a fledgling, one of several developmental stages it will go through on the way to maturity. (Photo by Craig Taylor)

I recently read an article in Birds&Blooms about the stages a bird goes through in life. I ask my birding friend Craig Taylor to send me photos of the growth process of birds. He sent me four that he had taken at the owl box he had in his backyard. As always, he captured extraordinary moments in the lifetime of the birds.

These young Barred Owl fledglings prefer staying in the nesting box waiting on food. (Photo by Craig Taylor)

We know that an owl’s journey begins in the egg. When the owl breaks the egg open, using a special tooth for that purpose, it has no feathers, cannot see and cannot take care of itself. It’s called a hatchling at that point. As it develops, the owl baby is a nestling, meaning it cannot leave the nest and has to be taken care of.

When the owl gets its downy feathers, it’s called a fledgling or juvenile. The fledgling can leave the nest and begins to learn how to survive, but it’s not able to fly yet. The parents will be somewhere close by, watching its baby carefully. As the feathers begin to change, the owl can be called a subadult, meaning it’s in-between the fledgling/juvenile and adulthood. At this stage, the owl can also be referred to as immature. The final stage is the mature or adult owl.

This beautiful Barred Owl is a mature adult female. (Photo by Craig Taylor)

Owls go through this process much faster than we do as adults and their life-expectancy depends on them successfully learning how to take care of themselves at each step.

This process has grabbed my attention because I just celebrated another birthday. Age has seldom mattered to me. Except for this year. This birthday–my 68th–has caused me to think about the stages I’ve been through, the life experiences I’ve had, and the success and the failures I’ve been through.

Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs is based on the idea that as we develop as humans, we have basic needs that must be met to survive and then thrive. Just like the nestlings and the fledglings, our basic needs of water and food and shelter and safety are necessary for us to live. After these basic needs, we humans need to feel loved and to feel like we belong to others. And we also need to feel like we’ve accomplished something–that what we do in and with our lives matter.

Maslow’s final level is that of self-actualization, which is defined as “achieving one’s full potential, including creative activities.” In plain terms, it’s the desire to know that we’ve done all we can do–that our lives have mattered.

I’ve been evaluating my life on this need of self-actualization. I’ve had many questions that have been swirling through my head in this process: Have I done all that I can do in my life and my faith? Have I faithfully responded to the doors that God has opened for me? Am I as passionate now about being used by God as I was when I was younger? Will this great big number that reflects the years I’ve lived also reflect the consistence with which I live my life for Him? What will God have for me to do next?

Birthdays aren’t a bad thing. They give us the opportunity to stop and reflect and consider how God can still use us. It’s all part of the developmental process of who we are in God, and that process will not end until our lives are over. That gives me something to celebrate about.

God continues to use Margie Williamson through her writing. Her new book A Christmas Story Promise Devotional: From Cradle to Crown is available through Amazon.com and ChristianBooks.com.

Buffalo Bill Brown

Buffalo Bill Brown, age 79, of Baldwin, Hollingsworth Community, Georgia, passed away on Saturday, December 5, 2020.

Mr. Brown was born in the Hollingsworth Community in Banks County on January 21, 1941, to the late Will C. and Lula Mae Gailey Brown. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his first wife, Reba Nell Clark Brown, and son, Wayne Alfred Brown.

Survivors include his wife of two years, Ida Christian Brown, Baldwin, Georgia; son and daughter-in-law, Danny and Angela Brown, Baldwin, Georgia; daughter-in-law, Debbie Yarber Brown, Baldwin, Georgia; step-daughters and step-sons-in law; Regina and Randy Moss, Jasper, Georgia, and Renita and Danny Roberts, Suches, Georgia; three grandchildren, four great-grandchildren, four step-grandchildren, and one step great-grandchild.

Funeral services will be held at 2:00 pm, Tuesday, December 8, 2020, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel, Baldwin, Georgia, with the Rev. Chad Parker and the Rev. Charles Grant officiating. Interment will follow in the Mountain View Baptist Church Cemetery, Baldwin, Georgia.

The family will receive friends from 5:00 pm until 8:00 pm on Monday, December 7, 2020, at the funeral home.

In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the Mountain View Baptist Church, 269 Mountain View Road, Baldwin, Georgia 30511.

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

To send flowers or a memorial gift to the family of Buffalo Bill Brown please visit our Sympathy Store.

Round 2 playoff scores and recaps

Things got serious in Round 2, where Commerce, Dawson, Jefferson, and Rabun all played for a shot at the quarterfinals. Here’s what happened on the big stage!

#1 Jefferson 35, #2 Hapeville Charter 0

The Dragons flexed on both sides of the ball and used a pair of Malaki Starks TD runs to shut down Hapeville Charter. It was a top-10 matchup in round two, but Jefferson also got TDs from Spencer Neese, Paxton Corkery, and Max Aldridge. The 35-0 win makes it 100-0 over the first two rounds of the playoffs.

#1 Rabun County 35, #3 Model 0

Rabun County marches back into the Quarterfinals with a convincing 35-0 win over Model. Gunner Stockton threw a few TD passes to Adriel Clark, including a 46-yarder in the first to give the Cats the early lead. Stockton ran one in from the 12 late in the first to go up 14-0, then threw a 50-yd TD to Clark in the final seconds of the first half to make it 21-0 going into the break. Late in the third, Stockton got a 15-yd TD pass to Clark, which gave the Cats a 28-0 lead and in the process tied the state record for receiving TD in a single season with 27. Lang Windham had a rushing TD later to cap the scoring. Stockton’s 3 TD passes give him 43 for the year, tying his sophomore season personal best. He now has 120 career TD passes.

#1 Commerce 28, #2 Gordon Lee 14

Commerce got an early TD by Trey Huff to take the lead, but Gordon Lee tied it up. A Dreylan Martin TD had the same effect, though the Tigers were up 14-7 into the break. Sammy Brown scored two second-half TDs to give Commerce a ticket to the quarterfinals.

#1 Oconee County 42, #3 Dawson County 7

#2-ranked Oconee County didn’t give Dawson much of a chance, as the Tigers saw their season come to a close on the road.

Other area playoff games

#1 Buford 42, #3 Cambridge 7
#2 Carver-Atl 23, #1 Cherokee Bluff 21
#1 Marist 24, #2 Flowery Branch 0
#1 GAC 33, #2 North Hall 0
#1 Collins Hill 17, #2 Denmark 6

Visit BLITZ Sports for the most comprehensive prep sports coverage in Northeast Georgia

The Croods: A New Age

The Croods was an animated hit back in 2013 which is really all you need to know about why we got a sequel. Did we need it? I don’t think so, but here it is.

We get the cast from the original back with Nicolas Cage and Catherine Keener as Grug and Ugga and they’re leading their family through prehistory only to come across a new family known as the Bettermans (Peter Dinklage and Leslie Mann). They have adapted to their surroundings and made adjustments to their living conditions that would be right at home in The Flintstones.

Ryan Reynolds and Emma Stone are also back as Guy and Eep and their characters are still madly in love even though Grug has a problem with Eep wanting to have a life of her own away from the pack.

Grug has a hard time adapting to the Bettermans lifestyle and inevitably there comes a conflict between the two families. Note: Don’t steal any of the Betterman’s bananas. They go bananas if you do.

We get some clever sight gags such as the Croods’ teenage son obsessed with a window that functions like a stone-age TV and there are other scenes that are colorful to look at such as when Eep meets up with the new tribe’s daughter (Kelly Marie Tran).

Eep tries to convince her to leave her home and venture off from her sheltered family. It provides some mildly funny moments.

That’s how I can best describe The Croods: A New Age. It’s only a mildly funny movie that will keep kids entertained and for anyone else who enjoyed the first, they’re certain to get their money’s worth.

The movie does drag in its climax as we get the obligatory finale where a gigantic monster wants some of those aforementioned bananas and that makes it amount to a standard action sequence thrown in to give it some energy.

I am recommending it for its jolly spirit, enthusiastic voice work, and the message of togetherness and willingness to accept change.

Grade: B

(Rated PG for peril, action, and rude humor.)

COVID cases hit daily Georgia and U.S. records

(Daniel Purcell/Now Habersham)

Georgia shattered its record for single-day increases of new COVID cases, with 6,601 reported Friday.

That total of people testing positive for the virus includes more than 1,500 people who took rapid antigen tests. Georgia lists these test results separately from its PCR test results, but most states combine the two figures in their reports.

The previous one-day record of 6,323 came in late November.

COVID-19 cases are spiking dangerously across the country. The United States recorded 217,664 new cases and 2,879 related deaths Thursday — the most infections and fatalities in the country in a single day since the pandemic began.

State Public Health officials have reported large increases in new infections this week. And hospital officials told GHN that they’re seeing steady and alarming rises in hospitalized COVID-19 patients.

Phoebe Putney Health System, based in Albany, had not seen that uptick until this week. Through the entire month of November, its Albany hospital averaged about two COVID-19 hospital admissions per day.

Steiner

“Over the last week, that number has more than doubled to about five admissions per day,’’ Scott Steiner, Phoebe Putney CEO, said in a statement Friday. “Systemwide, we went from 24 hospitalized patients last Friday to 45 today. That is deeply concerning and a sign that we must not be reckless during the holiday season.”

Phoebe Putney was a virus “hot spot” early in the pandemic.

The surge comes at the same time as good news about COVID vaccine distribution, with target dates for initial deliveries expected in mid-month.

Dr. Harry Heiman, a Georgia State University public health expert, said the state is “at the most dangerous point in this pandemic.’’

“While everyone should be excited about the beginning of vaccine rollout in the next couple weeks, for most of us, that will not make a real difference until sometime in the spring or summer,’’ he said. “In the meantime, we are seeing record numbers of new cases and associated rises in both hospitalizations and deaths due to COVID-19.’’

Heiman said the state’s political and public health leaders have failed to recognize the urgency of this moment, which he called “unconscionable and irresponsible.’’

“We need aggressive action to protect the public’s health today,’’ Heiman said.

Gov. Brian Kemp has encouraged public mask use but has not required it, though more than 30 other states have done so.

Amber Schmidtke, who publishes the Daily Digest, said Friday that Georgia’s 7-day COVID case rate “is now 18% higher than what we witnessed at our worst point in the summer.”

Schmidtke, a microbiologist, also noted that the state insurance commissioner, John King, issued a directive for insurance companies to expedite hospital discharge authorizations to nursing homes or long-term care facilities to free up space in hospitals.

Grim predictions

What comes next in the pandemic is probably the country’s “worst-case scenario in terms of overwhelmed hospitals, in terms of the death count,” Baltimore emergency medicine physician Dr. Leana Wen told CNN.

“There’s just so much virus in our communities right now,” she said.

Her words echoed a bleak forecast by CDC Director Dr. Robert Redfield, who warned Wednesday that the next three months are going to be “the most difficult in the public health history of this nation.”

The Georgia Department of Public Health tweeted Friday afternoon: “We’re all tired of COVID-19, but the fact is: COVID-19 is not tired of us. This pandemic isn’t over & cases are still rising across the U.S.’’

The agency tweet urged Georgians to wear masks, keep their distance from others in public spaces, wash their hands frequently, and “stay home if you can.”

The state dashboard at 3 p.m. Friday recorded 43 deaths and 212 hospitalizations.

Covid Exit Strategy on Friday listed Georgia as having “uncontrolled spread’’ The website said ICU capacity was severely constrained’’ and the percentage of people testing positive for the virus was increasing at 11.4 percent.

Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville

The Gainesville Times reported that Northeast Georgia Health System was treating 196 COVID-19 patients as of Friday. Friday’s count again breaks the health system’s record pandemic peak of 182 reported Thursday.

Steiner of Phoebe Putney said the health system hopes “to be able to begin administering COVID-19 vaccines within the next couple of weeks. That is an important milestone in our COVID-19 fight, but it is not an immediate fix.

“Vaccines will be administered in a phased approach over many months, so we must continue to wear our masks, wash our hands, and watch our distance to minimize the spread of the virus.”

RELATED

East Hall High switches to remote learning after COVID-19 spike

East Hall High switches to remote learning after COVID-19 spike

East Hall High School is moving its in-class students online due to an increase in positive COVID-19 cases.

The Hall County School District sent out a press release Friday stating it’s possible that “in a limited number of these cases transmission occurred at school.” As a precaution, East Hall High students currently under the in-person instructional model will be temporarily switched over to blended learning.

Students can access their classes through the CANVAS system and are expected to continue learning from home.

East Hall High School will undergo a deep cleaning tomorrow.

“We anticipate blended learning to last three days, through Wednesday, December 9,” says Hall County School Superintendent Will Schofield. Parents will be notified by noon Wednesday if it is extended.

School buses will deliver meals to students along the East Hall High School bus routes once a day, Monday through Wednesday. Buses will start delivery between 9-9:30 a.m.

Students may also pick meals up from East Hall High School between 10-11 a.m. Questions concerning meals should be directed to the school nutrition department at 770-534-1080.

Georgia hits all-time high for new COVID cases

The East Hall announcement comes on a day when Georgia shattered its record for single-day increases of new COVID cases.

The Department of Public Health reported 6,601 new cases on Friday. That figure includes 1,500 people who took rapid antigen tests. Georgia lists these test results separately from its PCR test results, but most states combine the two figures in their reports.

The previous one-day record of 6,323 came in late November.

Many public health officials warned of a post-holiday spike. Hospitals are dealing with dwindling bed capacity and with Christmas approaching, they fear things could get worse.

Health officials remind everyone to practice social distancing, wash hands often, and wear a mask when out in public to help slow the spread of the virus.

Moody’s upgrades Cornelia’s credit rating

Moody’s Investors Service announced today it has upgraded the City of Cornelia’s issuer rating and general obligation limited tax ratings to A3 from Baa2. That’s good news for a city that had to take out bond insurance to obtain a good interest rate when it built the new Municipal Complex.

Cornelia has approximately $11.3 million in rated GOLT bonds. Now, with the improved credit score, the city can secure better interest rates on any future bonds or loans it pursues.

City manager Donald “Dee” Anderson cites several factors that influenced the upgrade, including an expanded tax base due to increased development and a millage rate that’s “less than half of what we are allowed to charge.”

Previous ratings were adversely affected by the fact Cornelia derives roughly 75% of its revenue from a single source – Fieldale. In February 2019, Moody’s noted Cornelia’s “limited and very concentrated tax base, weak demographic trends, sound, albeit nominally narrow, financial position, and an elevated debt burden” as the basis for its Baa2 rating.

In assigning the new rating, Moody’s said, “The upgrade to A3 reflects the city’s improved financial position, prudent management, and moderately growing tax base.” The upgraded rating takes into account the city’s highly concentrated tax base and elevated poverty rates.

Stable outlook

Cornelia has received a clean audit each of the past 14 years. During most of those years, Anderson says, “our revenue has exceeded our expenditures so we have been able to build a strong fund balance.” Cutting spending without cutting services has also become a hallmark of Cornelia’s financial management. Next year’s budget is $936,230 less than this year’s.

Anderson attributes the city’s improved rating and strong financial situation to “excellent budgeting capabilities.”

“I just want to thank all of the Department Heads for treating this city’s money as if it were their own,” he says. “Governments are notorious for wasteful spending but not in Cornelia. We always look for the most cost effective way to do things and don’t operate under the mindset that ‘just because the money is there it has to be spent.'”

Lauding Cornelia’s elected officials, Anderson adds, “we know that if we truly need something they will allocate the necessary funding to make it happen.”