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NHMS chorus kicks off the holiday season with a talented and fun performance

Nearly 100 North Habersham Middle School chorus students performed for family and friends Thursday night at the Habersham Central High School Performing Arts Center. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The North Habersham Middle School Chorus, with nearly 100 students performing, delighted more than 200 family members and friends with a talented performance Thursday night, officially marking the start of the holiday season.

The concert took place in the Habersham Central High School Performing Arts Center, showcasing the talent and hard work of the school’s chorus students.

Directed by Sarah Glover, with Donna James providing accompaniment on the piano, the performance titled America! with a Touch of Holiday Cheer was an impressive display of the students’ musical abilities.

Musical groups

The evening’s program was divided into four sections. Each grade level performed two songs, followed by a grand finale that brought all the students together.

The sixth-grade chorus kicked off the performance with lively renditions of “Fifty States in Rhyme” and “Beautiful December.” Their energy and enthusiasm set the tone for the evening.

The NHMS 6th grade chorus performs “Fifty states in Rhyme.” (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The seventh-grade students followed, singing “Battle Above the Clouds,” accompanied by violinists Hunter and Heather Strachan. They also performed the festive “St. Nick at Night,” delighting the audience with their vocal talents.

The NHMS seventh grade chorus performs “Battle Above the Clouds.”(Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The eighth-grade students delivered an emotionally charged performance of “In Flanders Fields,” accompanied by cellist Naomi Woodbury. Their second song, “White Winter Hymnal,” was enhanced by a group performing hand percussion, as well as a small vocal ensemble, creating a magical and harmonious atmosphere.

The NHMS 8th grade chorus sings “In Flanders Fields”. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

After the eighth-grade performance, all grade levels came together for a powerful rendition of “Armed Forces—The Pride of America,” a tribute to veterans that the students had performed on Veterans Day.

Finale

The evening concluded with a festive twist as the chorus students performed the playful “You’re a Mean One, Mr. Grinch,” featuring seventh-grade student Jaysee Chambers as the Grinch. Soloists Noah Barron and Jaycee McCollum added their voices to the whimsical holiday favorite.

NHMS seventh grade chorus student Jaysee Chambers becomes the Grinch during Thursday night’s finale. (Jerry Neace/NowHaberham.com)

Chorus Director Sarah Glover expressed her pride in the students’ hard work and dedication. “They came here and worked really hard and pulled it together, and I’m really, really proud of them,” she said. “They really did a good job.”

The students began rehearsing for the concert in August when school resumed after summer break. A couple of songs were introduced just a couple of months ago. The months of preparation paid off. The chorus students demonstrated their growth and talent, leaving the audience full of holiday cheer.

For Housing and Urban Development, Trump taps Texan Scott Turner

(NowHabersham.com)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — President-elect Donald Trump late Friday announced his intent to nominate former NFL player and Texas state lawmaker Scott Turner to lead the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

“Scott will work alongside me to Make America Great Again for EVERY American,” Trump said in a statement.

Turner, if confirmed by the Senate, will administer a roughly $68 billion agency that provides rental assistance, builds and preserves affordable housing, addresses homelessness and enforces the Fair Housing Act that prohibits discrimination in housing.

Turner has some experience with housing. During the first Trump administration, he worked with then-HUD Secretary Ben Carson on Opportunity Zones, which were part of the 2017 law that provided tax breaks for investors who put money into designated low-income areas.

“Those efforts, working together with former HUD Secretary Ben Carson, were maximized by Scott’s guidance in overseeing 16 Federal Agencies which implemented more than 200 policy actions furthering Economic Development,” Trump said. “Under Scott’s leadership, Opportunity Zones received over $50 Billion Dollars in Private Investment!”

Turner will be tasked with addressing the housing shortage of about 3.8 million homes for sale and rent, according to 2021 estimates from Freddie Mac that are still relied upon. Homelessness has also hit a record high of 653,100 people since January of last year, according to a study by the Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University.

While on the campaign trail, Trump proposed opening up federal lands for housing, which would mean selling the land for construction purposes with the commitment for a certain percentage of the units to be kept for affordable housing. The federal government owns about 650 million acres of land, or roughly 30% of all land.

Trump has also opposed building multi-family housing, and has instead favored single-family zoning and while such land-use regulation is controlled on the local level, the federal government could influence it.

During Trump’s first term, he proposed slashing many of HUD’s programs, although those requests were not granted by Congress. However, for his second term he’ll have control of both chambers.

In all of Trump’s budget requests, he laid out proposals that would increase rent by 40% for about 4 million low-income households using rental vouchers or for those who lived in public housing, according to an analysis by the left-leaning think tank the Brookings Institution.

Trump also called for cutting housing programs such as the Community Development Block Grant, which directs funding to local and state governments to rehabilitate and build affordable housing.

The former president’s budget requests also would have slashed the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program, known as LIHEAP, which assists low-income families.

TMU students pack hundreds of boxes for Operation Christmas Child

(Madison Wyatt/TMU)

Students at Truett McConnell University (TMU) packed 800 boxes for Operation Christmas Child on Tuesday night. TMU’s Send Team organized the event where students eagerly served to make sure all the boxes were packed before the end of the night.

Over 700 stuffed animals were donated for the occasion. The gift boxes will be shipped to children in need around the world.

“Each box represents a single child. A child may now have a Christmas where they receive something for the first time. They may even be given the Gospel and come to know Jesus. A generation could be on fire for Jesus, all from a single box.” Send Team student leader Michael Gilmore explained.

“The Bible tells us that children are a heritage from the Lord, so using our resources and abilities to reach those less fortunate is imperative,” Charis Beck, junior Criminal Justice major, commented.

Operation Christmas Child is a ministry of Samaritan’s Purse that has been sending shoeboxes filled with gifts to children in need since 1992. Over 220 million children have received boxes, with many hearing the Gospel for the first time through this ministry.

Truett McConnell University is a private Christian liberal arts and sciences university located in Cleveland, Georgia.

All-Region 8-AAAAA

(Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

Region 8-AAAAA has named its All-Region teams for the 2024 season. Here are the Habersham Central players who earned the honors.

ATHLETE OF THE YEAR: Zeke Whittington – SR WR #5

All-Region
Paris Wilbanks – SO QB #7
Landyn Savage – SR OLB #21
Javonte Bowen – JR OL #60
Everett Rudeseal – SR ILB #19
Donovan Warren – JR RB #0
Camden Meads – JR P #48
Braydon Strickland – SR DB #3
Andru Kinnarath – JR OL #58

All-Region Honorable Mention
Antonio Cantrell – SR RB #8
Griffin Cunningham – SO LB #20
Jay Feltus – SO WR #12
Noah Harkins – SO LB #26

Georgia Senate study panel considers restrictions on trans women’s college sports participation

Republican members of the Senate Committee on Women’s Sports listen to testimony. From left, Chairman Greg Dolezal, Sen. Jason Anavitarte and Sen. Clint Dixon. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

(Georgia Recorder) — A Georgia Senate study committee that bills itself as tasked with protecting women’s sports met Thursday for the last time before it is set to release recommendations before next year’s legislative session, and transgender Georgians are bracing themselves.

At Thursday’s hearing, transgender women and allies argued that vanishingly few transgender women participate in school sports, and those who do are largely not at the top of the competitive heap. Many said the national focus is making life difficult.

“It’s so hard to face this kind of opposition,” said Aaron Baker, a transgender woman and activist. “It’s so hard to be at a hearing like this and hear the language. It’s so hard for you to hear people describe me as a biological man because it’s not true. I am hormonally female, I’m phenotypically female, I’m psychologically female, and that is a gross oversimplification of who I am and my identity, and it hurts.”

Aaron Baker. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

Committee Chair Greg Dolezal, a Cumming Republican, told members he would spend the next week or so reviewing testimony from the committee’s three hearings and plans to announce the date for presenting recommendations shortly after. Study committee recommendations could take the form of proposed legislation in time for the 2025 General Assembly, which is set to begin Jan. 13.

Dolezal indicated he is interested in considering regulations for college sports. A previous hearing featured testimony from cisgender women college swimmers who said they were placed at an unfair disadvantage when they had to compete against a transgender woman at a competition at Georgia Tech.

“A few years ago, I believe it was three years ago, the General Assembly passed a bill essentially prescribing the control to make decisions around transgender participation in sports to the Georgia High School Association, they passed a resolution that stated that participation in sports, high school sports, in the state of Georgia was based on the sex prescribed on a birth certificate. The law is currently silent on the collegiate competition level. So right now, we just have a law as it relates to high school associations,” he said.

Other Republicans on the committee suggested they would like to see legislation in K-12 schools, especially surrounding restrooms and locker rooms.

“As a father of two young daughters, we’ve got to protect women,” said Gwinnett Republican Sen. Clint Dixon. “We’ve got to protect their sports, we’ve got to protect them in changing rooms from what we heard from many of those athletes who testified, four or five of them who testified in the first committee hearing, having to change, which took 20, 30 minutes at a time, in front of a transgender female, but still had the genitalia of a male, which was horrific for them to witness that, some of them ended up changing in a storage closet, some of them waited until that athlete left the room, having to miss some of their competition, and that’s just at the college level, we’re not even talking about minors in K-12.”

Some activists indicated that they would oppose any kind of restriction on transgender participation, while speakers like Lambda Legal attorney Sasha Buchert urged the lawmakers to take a nuanced approach over a blanket ban, which could mean a committee including medical experts to consider safety or competitive concerns on a case-by-case basis. Others said such decisions should be left to athletic associations and leagues rather than politicians or political appointees.

Delfina Booth. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

“Sports are already managed by expert organizations like the NCAA, the International Olympics Committee, and professional leagues,” said Delfina Booth, a former Georgia Tech student and high school athlete who said she has lost transgender friends to police violence and suicide.

“These governing bodies have developed policies over decades that analyze fairness based on unique needs of each sport,” she added. “Contact sports have different rules than non-contact sports, children’s sports focus more on teamwork and development than adult sports, et cetera. These nuances cannot be addressed through broad government legislation. Additionally, decisions about athletic ability involve multiple complex factors, including the signs of physical development and the specific demands of each sport. These aren’t matters that lend themselves directly or easily to blanket rules.”

Former Florida AG Pam Bondi gets Trump’s latest nod for attorney general

Former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi addresses the Republican National Convention on Aug. 25, 2020 in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — President-elect Donald Trump said Thursday evening he plans to nominate former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi as his newest pick for U.S. attorney general.

Trump’s announcement came just hours after another Floridian, former Congressman Matt Gaetz, withdrew as Trump’s expected nominee for the country’s top law enforcement job.

Gaetz was tapped to be nominated eight days ago, but met strong opposition from Republican senators following years of investigations for alleged drug use and payments for sex.

“Pam was a prosecutor for nearly 20 years, where she was very tough on Violent Criminals, and made the streets safe for Florida Families,” Trump wrote on social media. “Then, as Florida’s first female Attorney General, she worked to stop the trafficking of deadly drugs, and reduce the tragedy of Fentanyl Overdose Deaths, which have destroyed many families across our Country. She did such an incredible job, that I asked her to serve on our Opioid and Drug Abuse Commission during my first Term — We saved many lives!”

Trump added that Bondi would “refocus the DOJ to its intended purpose of fighting Crime, and Making America Safe Again.”

South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, the top Republican on the Judiciary Committee, cheered her nomination.

“Well done, Mr. President. Picking Pam Bondi for Attorney General is a grand slam, touchdown, hole in one, ace, hat trick, slam dunk, Olympic gold medal pick,” Graham wrote on social media. “She will be confirmed quickly because she deserves to be confirmed quickly.”

Women as attorneys general

Bondi, if confirmed by the U.S. Senate, would become the third woman to serve as attorney general and the first during a Republican administration.

Janet Reno was the first woman to become attorney general, holding the role from 1993 to 2001 during the Clinton administration. Loretta E. Lynch became the second female attorney general from 2015 to 2017 during the Obama administration.

Bondi is a longtime Trump ally. In 2016, during the Republican National Convention, she led the “lock her up” chants at then-Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton.

Bondi defended the former president in his first impeachment trial and leads the legal arm of the pro-Trump think tank, America First Policy Institute. She also supported Trump’s baseless accusation that there was widespread voter fraud in the 2020 presidential election. She was present to support Trump outside his hush money trial in New York earlier this year.

She served as Florida’s attorney general, from 2011 until 2019, and in that capacity led opposition to the 2010 health care law.

Bondi background

Bondi graduated from the University of Florida and earned her law degree at Stetson Law School in 1990. She was admitted to the Florida bar in 1991.

Bondi is registered as a lobbyist for Ballard Partners LLC in Washington, D.C., where she’s lobbied on behalf of the Florida Sheriffs Association, Major County Sheriffs of America, Inc. and Florida Sheriffs Risk Management Fund, according to congressional lobbying records.

The attorney general is responsible for overseeing the U.S. Justice Department and the 115,000 federal employees who work throughout its dozens of components.

The DOJ consists of numerous federal law enforcement agencies, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Drug Enforcement Administration, as well as U.S. attorneys.

The Florida Democratic Party issued a statement in reaction to Trump’s announcement that underlined Bondi’s role in challenging the landmark health care law.

“Americans dodged a bullet with Gaetz’s withdrawal but Trump’s second choice for Attorney General is no better,” said state party Chair Nikki Fried. “Don’t forget — Pam Bondi tried to take healthcare away from millions of Floridians. She was the ring leader in the attempt to sue the Affordable Care Act out of existence and overturn the pre-existing conditions rule. She filed the original suit and was the lead plaintiff on the case seeking to dismantle affordable care. When Donald Trump says he’s going to end the ACA, believe him now that he’s nominated Pam Bondi to finish the job.”

Carolyn Wilder Byers

Carolyn Wilder Byers, age 83, of Mount Airy, Georgia, passed away on Wednesday, November 20, 2024.

Mrs. Byers was born on April 12, 1941, in Boaz, Alabama, to the late Walter Perry Wilder, Sr. and Thelma Herndon Wilder. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her grandson, Jeremy Paul Byers; brothers, Walter P. Wilder, Jr.; Thomas J. Wilder; Darrell E. Wilder; Melvin J. Wilder; and sister, Lynda Wilder.

Carolyn dedicated her life to serving others with grace, kindness, and love. She retired from Habersham Electric Membership Corporation (HEMC) after 20 years of faithful service, where she served as secretary and earned the respect and admiration of her colleagues. A member of Antioch Baptist Church, Carolyn found joy and fellowship as part of the Shepherd’s Sunday School Class. Carolyn had a gift for bringing people together, often through her exceptional cooking. She was best known for her famous bread pudding. Her creativity extended to sewing and crocheting, where she lovingly crafted clothing and gifts for her friends and family. Carolyn’s artistic spirit shone brightly in her paintings, drawings, and crafts. Above all, Carolyn will be remembered as a devoted family matriarch who found her greatest joy when surrounded by her loved ones. To her grandchildren and great-grandchildren, she was not just “Grandmama” but a source of endless love, wisdom, and encouragement.

Survivors include her loving husband of 63 and a half years, Jerry Byers, of Mount Airy; daughter and son-in-law, Sonia Byers Henson and Barry Henson, of Blairsville; son, Matthew Joel Byers, of Mount Airy; son and daughter-in-law, Gregory David Byers and Terri Byers, of Clarkesville; sisters, Joyce Warner, of Monticello; and Joan Waters, of Stockbridge; grandchildren and their spouses, Edward and Vanessa Henson; Holly and Joel Borbon; Jordan and Ashley Byers; Stephanie and Mitchell Jackson; Nathan Byers and Camila Rodriguez; Erin and Dawson Fricks; and 11 great-grandchildren.

Funeral Services will be held at 3:00 p.m., Sunday, November 24, 2024, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, North Chapel, with Rev. Chris Webb officiating. Interment will follow in the Yonah Memorial Gardens

The family will receive friends from 1:00 p.m. to 2:45 p.m., Sunday, November 24, 2024 at the funeral home prior to the service.

In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to Antioch Baptist Church Building Fund, 2175 Antioch Church Road, Mount Airy, Georgia 30563.

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

Cornelia PetSense announces grand opening on Saturday

The Cornelia PetSense store will hold its grand opening on Saturday, November 23, at 10 a.m. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Petsense by Tractor Supply, a pet specialty retailer and wholly-owned subsidiary of Tractor Supply Company, announced today a grand opening celebration at the newest Petsense store in Cornelia this Saturday, November 23.

Festivities will begin at 10 a.m. and will feature onsite adoption opportunities with the Habersham Animal Shelter. PetSense will also offer the chance to win valuable discount giveaways. The first 250 Neighbor’s Club rewards customers that arrive for the celebrations will receive a 10% discount card for their purchases made at the Cornelia Petsense for a limited time.

In attendance for the celebration will be store management, team members as well as WCON-FM “Country Formal” and additional local vendors.

Petsense is committed to providing an assortment of premium pet products and pet services that customers need like a full-service pet salon, pet food, supplies and more.

Petsense proudly caters to many animals including dogs, cats, fish, reptiles, birds and small pets.

“We know pets are a part of the family, and so we are excited to open a new store in Cornelia for our pet-loving customers,” said Chris Turzo, manager of the Cornelia Petsense store. “We not only have everything our customers need, but our Team Members also have the expertise to help ensure your pets are healthy and happy.”

Pet Supplies and services

Customers in Cornelia can now rely on Petsense for:

  • A large assortment of pet food, supplies and accessories from brands such as 4health, Fromm, Orijen, Purina Pro Plan, Diamond, Hill’s Science Diet, Victor, Zignature, KONG, NutriSource and more.
  •  Live reptiles, fish and small pet adoptions including guinea pigs, hamsters, mice, rats and rabbits.
  • Pet services including grooming, training, pet insurance, vet clinics, adoptions and WAG! Pet services. Petsense now offers upgrade packages with Skout’s Honor premium grooming products in their Pet Salons nationwide.
  • Convenient shopping options including buy online, pickup in-store, and same-day delivery, while earning rewards with Neighbor’s Club.

Rewards and discounts

The Neighbor’s Club Rewards program is free to join for new and current customers. Members earn points with purchases that can be redeemed for rewards, services and more. Members also receive exclusive benefits and offers. Learn more at NeighborsClub.com.

Tractor Supply Company and Petsense recently launched the Hometown Heroes benefit for active military, veterans and first responders. Learn more at www.tractorsupply.com/tsc/cms/military.

The Cornelia Petsense store is located at 277 Habersham Village Circle beside Big Lots. Its operating hours are from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sundays. To learn more about Petsense by Tractor Supply, visit www.Petsense.com.

Trump tells U.S. Senate Republicans they ‘must kill’ journalism shield law

Donald Trump campaigns in Evans, Georgia, in

(States Newsroom) — President-elect Donald Trump ordered congressional Republicans on Wednesday to block a broadly popular bill to protect press freedoms, likely ending any chance of the U.S. Senate clearing the legislation.

The measure would limit federal law enforcement surveillance of journalists and the government’s ability to force disclosure of journalists’ sources, codifying regulations the Department of Justice has put in place under President Joe Biden.

The House Judiciary Committee unanimously approved it last year and it passed the House by voice vote in January.

“REPUBLICANS MUST KILL THIS BILL!” Trump wrote on his social media site, Truth Social, in all capital letters on Wednesday, linking to a PBS segment about the measure.

Substantial floor time is generally required in the Senate to bypass the process that allows a single member to hold up the chamber’s business. With Democrats prioritizing confirmation of Biden’s judicial nominees before they lose their majority in January, it is unlikely they would bring a vote on the measure without the unanimous consent of all 100 senators.

Trump’s influence within the Senate Republican Conference makes reaching unanimous consent exceedingly unlikely.

The bill’s House sponsor, California Republican Kevin Kiley, accepted the bill’s defeat in a statement Thursday.

“Based on the feedback we’ve received from Senators and President Trump, it’s clear we have work to do to achieve consensus on this issue,” he said. “I’m looking forward to working with the new Administration on a great many areas of common ground as we begin a new era of American prosperity.”

A Kiley spokesperson declined to provide further details about senators’ feedback on the measure. A spokesperson for U.S. Senate Judiciary ranking Republican Lindsey Graham of South Carolina did not respond to a message seeking comment.

In the House, 19 members from both parties, including Republicans Barry Moore of Alabama, Darrell Issa of California, Russell Fry of South Carolina and Kelly Armstrong of North Dakota and Democrats Jamie Raskin of Maryland, Ted Lieu of California and Rashida Tlaib and Dan Kildee of Michigan, signed on as cosponsors.

Protection for local journalists

Jon Schleuss, the president of The NewsGuild-CWA, a national journalists’ union that has supported the bill, noted in a Thursday statement it would protect news sources across the political spectrum.

“Americans would not know about the corruption of former Democratic Senator Bob Menendez or former Republican Representative George Santos without the hard work of local journalists holding power to account,” he said. “All of us depend on journalism, especially local journalism, to shine a light and protect Americans from threats, both foreign and domestic. The PRESS Act protects all voices: news sources, whistleblowers and the journalists they talk to from media outlets across the spectrum.”

In a Thursday statement to States Newsroom, Gabe Rottman, policy director at the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, called the bill a “reasonable and common-sense measure” that enjoyed broad bipartisan support.

“Its passage would put an end to actions the Justice Department has taken under past administrations of both parties to target reporters’ confidential communications when investigating and prosecuting disclosures of government information,” he wrote. “We urge Congress to recognize that there is still a need for a legislative remedy here.”

Press advocacy groups have expressed worries about Trump’s return to the White House, citing a record in his first term that included surveillance of and legal threats against journalists and news organizations.

Seeking retribution

In the closing days of the presidential race, Trump fantasized aloud about reporters being shot.

Press freedom groups also worry that Trump’s promises to use the federal bureaucracy to seek retribution against perceived enemies would extend to journalists.

“In his second term, Trump will make good on these anti-press threats to try to destroy any news outlet, journalist, or whistleblower who criticizes or opposes him,” Seth Stern, the director of advocacy at the Freedom of the Press Foundation, wrote in a Nov. 6 blog post.

Stern added that Trump would “almost certainly repeal” the protections against surveillance the Department of Justice had put in place during President Joe Biden’s term.

Lawrenceville man charged in deadly head-on collision

fatal accident

A Lawrenceville man has been charged with vehicular homicide and other traffic offenses following a two-vehicle wreck on Old Cornelia Highway. The Wednesday night wreck killed 53-year-old Stephen Lee Wilson of Gainesville, authorities say.

According to the Hall County Sheriff’s Office, the crash happened on Nov. 20, just after 10:30 p.m. in the 2600 block of Old Cornelia Highway, north of Shady Valley Drive. When deputies arrived, they found two vehicles involved in a head-on collision. One driver was pronounced dead at the scene while the other was evaluated by Hall County EMS but refused medical treatment.

The Hall County Sheriff’s Office Accident Investigation Unit determined the at-fault driver, Aman Panjwani, 24, of Lawrenceville, was traveling north on Old Cornelia Highway when he missed his turn. Panjwani made a U-turn in the area of the crash site and, while negotiating a curve, crossed over into the oncoming lane and struck the victim’s vehicle head-on.

Panjwani has been charged with second-degree vehicular homicide, failure to maintain lane, wrong-way driving, and tire violations. The identity of the victim is being withheld pending notification of next of kin.

The Hall County Sheriff’s Office Accident Investigation Unit is still investigating the crash.

Georgia dismissed all members of maternal mortality committee after ProPublica reported two deaths

Dr. Kathleen Toomey, commissioner of the Georgia Department of Public Health at a Sept. 2021 Capitol press conference. This month, Toomey sent a letter dismissing members of the state’s maternal mortality review committee. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

This story was originally published by ProPublicaProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

Georgia officials have dismissed all members of a state committee charged with investigating deaths of pregnant women. The move came in response to ProPublica having obtained internal reports detailing two deaths.

ProPublica reported in September on the deaths of Amber Thurman and Candi Miller, which the state maternal mortality review committee had determined were preventable. They were the first reported cases of women who died without access to care restricted by a state abortion ban, and they unleashed a torrent of outrage over the fatal consequences of such laws. The women’s stories became a central discussion in the presidential campaign and ballot initiatives involving abortion access in 10 states.

“Confidential information provided to the Maternal Mortality Review Committee was inappropriately shared with outside individuals,” Dr. Kathleen Toomey, commissioner of the state Department of Public Health, wrote in a letter dated Nov. 8 and addressed to members of the committee. “Even though this disclosure was investigated, the investigation was unable to uncover which individual(s) disclosed confidential information.

“Therefore, effective immediately the current MMRC is disbanded, and all member seats will be filled through a new application process.”

A health department spokesperson declined to comment on the decision to dismiss the committee, saying that the letter, which the department provided to ProPublica, “speaks for itself.” Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp’s office also declined to comment, referring questions to the health department.

Under Georgia law, the work of the maternal mortality review committee is confidential, and members must sign confidentiality agreements. Those members see only summaries of medical records stripped of personal details, and their findings on individual cases are not supposed to be shared with the public — not even with hospitals or with family members of women who died.

The health department’s letter states that there could be new steps to keep the board’s deliberations from public view. The letter said officials might change “other procedures for on-boarding committee members better ensuring confidentiality, committee oversight and MMRC organizational structure.”

Maternal mortality review committees exist in every state. They are tasked with examining deaths of women during a pregnancy or up to a year after and determining whether they could have been prevented.

Georgia had 32 standing members from a variety of backgrounds, including OB-GYNs, cardiologists, mental health care providers, a medical examiner, health policy experts, and community advocates. They are volunteer positions that pay a small honorarium.

Their job is to collect data and make recommendations aimed at combatting systemic issues that could help reduce deaths and publish them in reports. The Georgia committee’s most recent report found that of 113 pregnancy-related deaths from 2018 through 2020, 101 had at least some chance of being prevented. Its recommendations have led to changes in hospital care to improve the response to emergencies during labor and delivery and to new programs to increase access to psychiatric treatment.

The health department’s letter states that the “change to the current committee will not result in a delay in the MMRC’s responsibilities.” But at least one other state has experienced a lag as a result of reshaping its committee. Idaho let its maternal mortality review committee legislation expire in July 2023, effectively disbanding the committee after lobbyist groups attacked members for recommending that the state expand Medicaid for postpartum women. Earlier this year, Idaho’s Legislature reestablished the committee, but new members weren’t announced until Nov. 15. There is now more than a yearlong delay in the review process.

Reproductive rights advocates say Georgia’s decision to dismiss and restructure its committee also could have a chilling effect on the committee’s work, potentially dissuading its members from delving as deeply as they have into the circumstances of pregnant women’s deaths if it could be politically sensitive.

“They did what they were supposed to do. This is why we need them,” said Monica Simpson, executive director of SisterSong, one of the groups challenging Georgia’s abortion ban in court. “To have this abrupt disbandment, my concern is what we are going to lose in the process, in terms of time and data?”

One objective of any maternal mortality review committee is to look at the circumstances of a death holistically to identify root causes that may be able to help other women in the future.

In the case of Candi Miller, the most prominent detail in a state medical examiner’s report of her death was that she had a lethal combination of painkillers in her system, including fentanyl. It attributed the cause of death to drug intoxication.

But the Georgia committee looked at the facts of the death with a different objective: to consider the broader context. A summary of Miller’s case prepared for the committee, drawn from hospital records and the medical examiner’s report, included that Miller had multiple health conditions that can be exacerbated by pregnancy, that she had ordered abortion pills from overseas and that she had unexpelled fetal tissue, which showed the abortion had not fully completed. It also stated that her family had told the coroner she didn’t visit a doctor “due to the current legislation on pregnancies and abortions.”

The committee found her death was “preventable” and blamed the state’s abortion ban.

“The fact that she felt that she had to make these decisions, that she didn’t have adequate choices here in Georgia, we felt that definitely influenced her case,” one committee member told ProPublica in September. “She’s absolutely responding to this legislation.”

For Miller’s family, the committee’s findings were painful but wanted. “It seems like that is essential information that you would share with the family,” said Miller’s sister, Turiya Tomlin-Randall, who was not aware of the committee’s work until ProPublica contacted her.

She also said it’s upsetting to hear that the committee’s members were dismissed partly as a result of her sister’s case being disclosed to the public. “I don’t understand how this is even possible,” she said.

The committee also investigated the case of Amber Thurman, who died just one month after Georgia’s six-week abortion law went into effect. The medical examiner’s report stated that Thurman died of “sepsis” and “retained products of conception” and that she had received a dilation and curettage, or D&C, and a hysterectomy after an at-home abortion.

When the committee members received a summary of her hospital stay, they saw a timeline with additional factors: The hospital had delayed providing a D&C — a routine procedure to clear fetal tissue from the uterus — for 20 hours, which Thurman needed for rare complications she’d developed after taking abortion medication. The state had recently attached criminal penalties to performing a D&C, with few exceptions. The summary showed doctors discussed providing the D&C twice, but by the time they performed the procedure it was too late. Committee members found that there was a “good chance” Thurman’s death could have been prevented if she had received the D&C sooner.

Doctors and a nurse involved in Thurman’s care did not answer questions from ProPublica for its September story. The hospital also did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

Thurman’s family also told ProPublica they had wanted the information about her death disclosed.

Some experts say that keeping the reports of maternal mortality review committees confidential is important for a committee to serve its purpose. They are set up not to assign blame but instead to create a space for clinicians to investigate broad causes of maternal health failures. But others say the lack of transparency can serve to obscure the biggest disruption to maternal health care in half a century.

“We know that the reports that have come out of that committee are anonymized and synthesized in order to provide a 50,000-foot view,” said Kwajelyn Jackson, executive director of Feminist Women’s Health Center in Atlanta, which provides abortion care. “But my worry is that in an effort to protect the state, there will be less information that will be available to people who could shift their actions, shift their protocols, shift their strategies, shift their behaviors in order to make a difference in maternal health outcomes.”

Two states did make shifts to their committees — Idaho, after members made a recommendation to expand Medicaid that Republicans opposed, and Texas, after a member publicly criticized the state.

In 2022, Texas committee member Nakeenya Wilson, a community advocate, spoke out against the state’s decision to delay the release of its report during an election year. The following year, the Legislature passed a law that created a second community advocate position on the committee, redefined the position and had Wilson reapply. She was not reappointed. The state instead filled one of the slots with a prominent anti-abortion activist.

Wilson said Georgia’s decision to dismiss its committee could cause greater harm.

“What message is being said to the families who lost their loved ones?” she said. “There’s going to be even less accountability for this to not happen again.”

Ziva Branstetter, Kavitha Surana, Cassandra Jaramillo and Anna Barry-Jester contributed reporting. Doris Burke contributed research.

Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr launches Republican bid in 2026 governor’s race

FILE - Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr speaks during a news conference to discuss the recent indictment of 61 defendants in Fulton County, Sept. 5, 2023, at the Georgia Department of Public Safety in Atlanta. (Natrice Miller/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP, File)

ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia’s Republican attorney general, Chris Carr, said Thursday that he’s running for governor in 2026, becoming the first major candidate from either party to announce a bid.

Prominent Republicans and Democrats are eyeing the seat, which will be open in two years after term-limited Republican Gov. Brian Kemp leaves office. Other potential Republican contenders include Lt. Gov. Burt Jones and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, while the Democratic field is less well-defined.

Carr is portraying himself as the best candidate to continue steady Republican leadership in the mold of the late U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson, former Gov. Nathan Deal and Kemp.

“I’ve seen what it takes to be successful,” Carr told The Associated Press in a phone interview. “And I want to run as the proven conservative who will create jobs for hardworking Georgians, keep our families and neighborhoods safe and vigorously defend our Constitution and freedoms.”

Carr has aligned closely with Kemp but could face opposition from President-elect Donald Trump and his supporters in a primary election. Jones has been close to Trump and would likely angle for his endorsement. By contrast, Trump endorsed primary opponents who ultimately lost to both Carr and Raffensperger in 2022, fueled by his displeasure that neither Carr nor Raffensperger backed Trump’s attempts to overturn his 2020 presidential election loss in Georgia.

Carr said he was confident that he could win on issues and appeal to enough voters to win a Republican primary despite his past differences with Trump.

“This race isn’t going to be about how loud somebody yells or screams, it’s going to be about a conservative record,” he said. “And I’m the one that has that.”

It’s exceptionally early to announce a 2026 political bid. Customarily, statewide candidates in Georgia would announce sometime after 2025’s legislative session. But Carr let it be known more than a year ago that he was lining up donors for a run. That’s in part because Jones and Raffensperger are much more wealthy than Carr.

Carr filed papers with the Georgia Ethics Commission Thursday, creating a campaign committee to raise money for the governor’s race. Announcing now could help Carr lock down donors, especially because he won’t be able to raise money for his state campaign account during the three-month legislative session that convenes on Jan. 13.

The attorney general’s office in Georgia traditionally has been preoccupied with defending civil lawsuits brought against the state and could only aid in a prosecution if a local district attorney requested help. But Republican lawmakers have given Carr increasing powers to directly prosecute criminals.

In 2019, lawmakers gave Carr the authority to create a human trafficking prosecution unit. Carr’s office says the unit has convicted 50 people, participated in 325 investigations and assisted more than 200 victims.

In 2022, lawmakers directed Carr to create a statewide gang prosecution unit that now has offices in Atlanta, Albany, Augusta, Columbus, Macon, and southeast Georgia. That unit has secured more than 40 convictions and indictments against more than 140 people.

“Nobody’s going to come here and locate a business or a job if they don’t feel safe,” Carr said, calling his office’s expansion of prosecutions “very successful.”

After working as a lawyer and the vice president of the conservative Georgia Public Policy Foundation, Carr got his entry into politics when he joined U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson’s staff in 2004 and became Isakson’s chief of staff in 2007.

Gov. Nathan Deal picked Carr to become Commissioner of Economic Development in 2013 after another old Isakson hand, Chris Cummiskey, left to work for the Southern Co., the Atlanta-based utility giant. Deal put a major emphasis on economic development as Georgia tried to dig out from the wreckage of the Great Recession, and Carr helped facilitate projects worth more than $14 billion in investment that helped create more than 83,000 jobs.

Deal promoted Carr to attorney general in 2016 after Sam Olens resigned to become president of Kennesaw State University. Carr hadn’t earned a living practicing law for years and had never personally tried a case. But he wasn’t challenged in the Republican primary in 2018 and narrowly beat Democrat Charlie Bailey in the general election.

In 2022, Carr demolished right-wing primary challenger John Gordon despite Gordon getting Trump’s endorsement and then beat Democrat Jen Jordan in the narrowest victory of any Republican on the statewide ballot that year.

Georgia’s attorney general doesn’t face term limits, meaning Carr could have chosen to run for reelection in 2026.

Jones didn’t say anything about his political plans Thursday but underlined his link to Trump.

“Georgians just endured a long election where the lieutenant governor was proud to fight alongside President Trump — now it’s time to get to work,” said Jones’ chief of staff, Loree Anne Paradise. “Burt is focused on delivering conservative solutions to the issues the General Assembly will tackle during the upcoming legislative session.”

Democratic candidates could include U.S. Rep Lucy McBath and outgoing DeKalb County CEO Michael Thurmond.

Republicans have won six straight governor’s races in Georgia since Sonny Perdue became the first Republican to be elected in modern times in 2002. Democrats had hoped to break that streak under Stacey Abrams in 2022 after she narrowly lost to Kemp in 2018, but Kemp defeated her by a comfortable margin in their rematch.