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State House study panel hears renewed arguments over solar power

(Georgia Recorder) — Georgia Power and solar industry representatives renewed their long-running debate before lawmakers Tuesday over whether setting up a new solar program would provide the same benefits to ratepayers as the existing renewable energy options.

The House Energy, Utilities, and Telecommunications Ad Hoc Committee on Community Solar meeting was another chance for legislators to hear from clean energy and utility experts about their opinions on the value of community solar.

Republican-backed community solar legislation failed to pass in the state Senate and House earlier this year. The proposals would have allowed small- and mid-scale developers to participate in a community solar program regulated by the state Public Service Commission and let them build small solar arrays on Georgia Power’s turf. Subscribers would receive a credit on their electricity bill for a portion of the generation output.

Georgia Power has criticized community solar programs, citing high costs and issues with the House Bill 1152 framework, legislation that stalled in this winter’s General Assembly. A new community solar program is expected to be introduced for the 2025 session.

Bob Sherrier, staff attorney for the Southern Environmental Law Center, disputed the longstanding cost-shift argument from the utility companies and other critics of community solar who argue that passing along savings to one class of customers would saddle ratepayers who don’t participate in the program with higher bills.

Several experts said Tuesday that it’s premature to even declare there will be a cost shift when a credit amount for solar power generation has not been set. Last year, community solar legislation would’ve given state regulators some discretion on determining the value of the credit for the program.

“In Georgia there is no data backing up this argument,” Sherrier said. “And really it’s simple: the utilities oppose customer driven third-party projects like solar because it threatens to supplant utility investments and take away from shareholder profits.”

Georgia Power’s director of renewable development, Wilson Mallard, tried to make the case that customers who are receiving solar power from a developer would face a higher burden on their utility bills.

“In the 2022 rate case, Georgia Power put forth a significant amount of information on the record that does actually show paying retail for a wholesale product causes rates to go up for everyone,” he said.

Mallard said Georgia Power opposed HB 1152 because it did not give the company the ability to sign long-term contracts with developers, a requirement for making the projects economically viable, as well as other provisions of the bill.

Mallard said it was unclear how much energy capacity it would need to support a third-party community solar, which is the most expensive form of solar electricity, he said.

“It’s been said that solar is the cheapest form of generation,” Mallard said. “Well, absolutely, but it depends what you pay for it. If you can pay 3, 4, 5, 6 cents a kilowatt hour through competitive procurement, that is a really good price. Georgia Power’s residential rate of cents per kilowatt hour, averages in the 12-cent range.”

Georgia’s Power redacted the data in supporting documentation as trade secrets, so critics disputed its claim that the company provided evidence that community solar isn’t cost effective.

Community solar can also provide benefits to the electric grid that in turn is a financial benefit for the power companies along with customers, Sherrier said.

“What Georgia Power was really arguing is they lose revenue and profit when people save on their bills. The loss of revenue is not the same thing as increasing the cost for other people,” he said.

“If someone buys an energy efficient fridge that uses less power that year, Georgia Power doesn’t get to add a charge to their bill to recover the money they thought they were going to recover at the beginning of the year.”

Karl Rabago, an independent consultant and former Public Utility Commission of Texas member, said electricity suppliers should establish a community solar program that encourages the efficient use of energy and the investment in it.

Community solar customers will pay all their full electric bills, including the fixed costs to provide their services, Rabago said.

“They are fully charged,” he said. “They don’t get a discount. they don’t shift any of their costs but they do earn a credit for making a good thing happen. And getting that credit right is the job of the utility with its evidence and the PSC with its judgment.”

Rep. Ruwa Romman, a Duluth Democrat, asked Mallard how much more expensive the cost would be for the solar community program consumers.

“Just so we can get an idea, are we talking cents, dollars, hundreds of dollars? What’s the range?”

Mallard said the ballpark prices when Georgia Power contracts for projects of a similar size of 3 to 6 megawatts, the costs to generate electricity averages about 6 cents a kilowatt hour.

“The construct here in this third-party community solar would provide for compensation based on the retail rate of Georgia Power residential customers,” he said. “That’s in the 12 to 13 cent range, so basically double the price that Georgia Power can procure solar from through our competitive solicitations.”

Jonathan Roberts is a vice president of development for independent renewable power producer Soltage. He credits state regulators and the power industry for helping Georgia to rank seventh in the nation for solar generation in 2023, according to the Solar Energy Industries Association.

“I think that’s incredible,” Roberts said. “It’s a testament to the PSC and their wisdom in guiding the state. It’s a credit to Georgia Power. They are doing good work in deploying solar. But what we’re asking here today is for the community solar to find a way to help ratepayers save more money.”

U.S. House Speaker Johnson bans trans women from women’s bathrooms at the Capitol

U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, answers reporters’ questions inside the Capitol building on Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2024. (Photo by Jennifer Shutt/States Newsroom)

(States Newsroom) — Transgender women will not be permitted to use women’s restrooms in parts of the U.S. Capitol complex, House Speaker Mike Johnson said Wednesday, following some House Republicans’ targeting of the first openly trans person to win a congressional election.

The three-sentence Johnson statement said public, single-sex facilities could be used only by “individuals of that biological sex.” It did not mention how the directive would be enforced.

“All single-sex facilities in the Capitol and House Office Buildings — such as restrooms, changing rooms, and locker rooms — are reserved for individuals of that biological sex,” Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, said.

“It is important to note that each Member office has its own private restroom, and unisex restrooms are available throughout the Capitol. Women deserve women’s only spaces,” he said, highlighting his objection to identifying trans women according to their gender identity.

There was no immediate reaction from most House Democrats, including leadership, but Rep. Mark Pocan questioned how the order would be policed.

“Will the Sergeant at Arms post officers in bathrooms?” asked Pocan, a Wisconsin Democrat, in a statement to States Newsroom. “Will everyone who works at the Capitol have to carry around their birth certificate or undergo a genetic test? This policy isn’t going to protect anyone—but it is going to open the door to rampant abuse, harassment, and discrimination in the Capitol.”

Delaware lawmaker

The order is a response to the election this month of Rep.-elect Sarah McBride, a Delaware Democrat who will become the first openly trans member of Congress.

As Congress returned to Washington this week, a vocal portion of the House Republican Conference objected to McBride’s gender identity and asked Johnson to constrict her bathroom usage.

South Carolina’s Nancy Mace introduced a resolution Monday with similar language to Johnson’s order. She made clear in social media posts and interviews she was targeting McBride.

“This is a person who’s threatened to come into women’s private spaces,” Mace said on Fox News Tuesday night. “I’m a survivor of rape, sexual violence and abuse and I know how deeply vulnerable women are in places where we feel we have a right to privacy.”

While opponents of trans rights often argue that letting trans women access women’s bathrooms puts cis women at risk, there is no evidence to suggest such access increases incidence of sexual assault.

2019 Harvard University study found that barring trans teens from bathrooms that conform with their gender identity increased the likelihood of sexual assault of trans people.

McBride disagrees but will comply

In a Wednesday statement, McBride said she would comply with the order even though she disagrees with it.

The statement continued McBride’s messaging on the issue that it reflected a misplaced focus by House Republicans on wedge issues that don’t meaningfully impact people’s lives.

“I’m not here to fight about bathrooms. I’m here to fight for Delawareans and to bring down costs facing families,” she wrote. “This effort to distract from the real issues facing this country hasn’t distracted me over the last several days.”

As the tumult at the Capitol gained attention Tuesday, House Democrats, reportedly with input from McBride, also framed it as a distraction.

In a short X thread on Monday, McBride called the GOP efforts “a blatant distraction from the fact that they have no real solutions to what Americans are facing” and said she would continue to focus on “making the American dream more affordable and accessible.”

House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, a New York Democrat, said in brief comments at a Tuesday press conference that Republicans were trying to“bully” McBride.

 Day of Remembrance

In a statement, former Houston Mayor Annise Parker, who leads the advocacy group LGBTQ+ Victory Institute, called Johnson’s order and Mace’s resolution “bigoted and transphobic policies at the Capitol” and noted Wednesday was Transgender Day of Remembrance.

“Announcing an ill-conceived anti-trans policy, on Transgender Day of Remembrance no less, not only serves to cause more distraction and division but is a harmful stunt with real impact,” she said. “This policy will harm many dedicated employees who work in the Capitol and is short-sided and dangerous.”

Some Democrats did post messages of support for Transgender Day of Remembrance that alluded to discrimination within the halls of Congress.

In a thread opposing a separate bill, the Equality Caucus’ X account said Republicans were “focusing on attacking the queer community.”

“Their obsession with performative stunts over actual solutions hurts Americans & benefits no one,” one post read.

HabCo Comm. tables gymnastics privatization and shelter finance options

The Habersham County Commission discusses the gymnastics program during its work session Monday, November 18. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The Habersham County Commission has delayed until December further talks about privatizing the county’s gymnastics program and how to pay for a new animal shelter. During their work session and monthly meeting on Nov. 18, commissioners tabled both matters.

Gymnastics privatization

Finance Manager Tim Sims addressed the commission about the request for proposal process to privatize the Rec. Department’s gymnastics program. He told the commission during the work session that only one company submitted a packet for staff to consider. Sims said that typically when there is only one submittal for an RFP, it is rejected and readvertised. However, since this was a specialized service, staff accepted the proposal and brought it before the commission.

North Georgia Reigns Gymnastics out of Cleveland, GA was the only company that submitted a bid for the gymnastics program. The amount submitted to transfer the program was $25,000. The company would receive the gymnastics equipment and take over the lease of the facility currently in use.

Sims clarified that this proposal does not include the sideline cheer program, only the gymnastics program. The sideline cheer program would revert back to the Rec. Department.

Owner of North Georgia Reign Gymnastics Neva Daniels addresses the commission. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Neva Daniels, owner of the company was present to discuss her intent for continuing the program and the need for the current facility.

Daniels told the commission that she and her daughter started the gymnastics program in Cleveland seven years ago after a search of the region for a facility to operate the program. However, her facility now is “busting at the seams.” “What has been a dream of mine my whole life has turned into quite an amazing gymnastics center. I would like to do that here in Habersham,” she told the commission.

She told the commission that the program in Cleveland can be easily duplicated in Habersham and still keep the prices the same as they are now. Daniels told the commission that she does not want to move the program to Cleveland. “I’m looking to stay here in Habersham with this gym.” She also intends to keep the staff that currently provides the service.

“We just want to make gymnastics affordable in Habersham County and make this easier on everybody that lives here and make this easier on you,” Daniels told the commission.

SEE RELATED: HabCo Comm. will discuss gymnastics privatization and shelter finance options

Shelter financing

The commission discussed the financing options for the construction of the SPLOST-approved animal shelter project. The project cost has been a source of contention for some in the community, with many supporters wanting to see it built now rather than later.

Estimated construction costs have soared over the last four years for the project that was originally budgeted for $1.75 million. Commissioners have admitted that the original amount budgeted for the project was grossly inadequate. Now the commission will consider funding the estimated $7,856,000 project by borrowing the money.

Two options were presented to the commission to fund the animal shelter project. One financing option is where the county could borrow the money as a lease/purchase option. The county did the same financing for the Administration Building. The county would repay the money as a certificate of participation (COPS). This option will cost more due to having a higher interest rate.

According to Sims, the interest rate for the COPS proposal will have a conservative interest rate of 5.15% interest rate. The ten year amortization schedule would see an average annual payment of $893,652.

The other financing option is reactivating an industrial development authority. This authority could give the county the flexibility to fund other projects by issuing bonds. The interest rate for the bonds is lower than the interest rate for certificates of participation.

According to Sims, a conservative interest rate for the bonds was estimated at 5%. However, he told the commission that other counties have recently received an interest rate closer to 4% under this option.

The ten-year amortization schedule would see an average annual payment of $887,050, a savings of more than $66,000 over the ten-year term compared to the COPS option.

Both financing options do not require a voter referendum and can be approved by the county commission.

Both items were also on the commission’s regular meeting agenda, where it was to consider moving forward with privatizing the program and financing the construction of the animal shelter, but they were tabled until the December meeting.

North Georgia Community Foundation grants $127,500 to local nonprofits

AMPED Kids Foundation (currently serving Hall County, primarily) will use its NGCF grant to expand into White County. The program serves foster children with music-based therapeutic programming. (Photo by NGCF)

The North Georgia Community Foundation (NGCF) has awarded $127,500 in Opportunity Grants to five nonprofits serving North Georgia, nearly all of which impact White and Habersham Counties. The grants aim to support the organizations in launching new services or expanding existing ones to address critical community needs.

According to Abi Carter, Senior Director of Strategic Initiatives at NGCF, these grants are crucial for enabling organizations to increase their impact, stating, “NGCF Opportunity Grants are an investment in pivotal changes or new ventures which enable organizations to increase their impact to not only individuals they directly serve but also for the broader community. Without this support, these initiatives may otherwise have remained unrealized due to funding constraints.”

Diverse needs and services

The recipient organizations represent a diverse range of needs in the region. AMPED Kids Foundation will use the funding to expand its music-based therapeutic programming into White County, specifically serving foster children. The Creative Learning Center will enhance its services in Rabun County by providing quality infant childcare and offering critical crisis care funding for low-income families.

The Creative Learning Center was awarded a grant to increase its impact in Rabun County by providing quality infant childcare and access to critical crisis care funding for low-income families.
(Photo by NGCF)

Addressing food insecurity, the Georgia Mountain Food Bank will utilize the grant to support its Client Choice Mobile Market. This initiative increases the distribution of fresh, refrigerated, and frozen food items to remote communities with limited access to traditional food pantries.

Georgia Mountain Food Bank for the Client Choice Mobile Market allows increased distribution of fresh, refrigerated, and frozen items in remote communities that do not have adequate access to traditional food pantries.
(Photo by NGCF)

Rape Response will direct the funding towards a rebranding initiative aimed at overcoming barriers preventing survivors from seeking help. By changing the perception of the word “rape” and its impact on the community, the organization hopes to expand its services and reach.

Rape Response will use its funding for rebranding, which will allow the agency to expand its services.
(Photo by NGCF)

Recognizing the need for expanded access to critical services, the South Enotah Child Advocacy Center will use the grant to open a satellite office in Lumpkin County. This expansion will provide families in the area with increased access to trauma-focused therapy and other essential services.

The South Enotah Child Advocacy Center (currently in White County) will open a satellite office in Lumpkin County.
(Photo by NGCF)

For more information about these organizations and their programs, visit NGCF online.

GBI: 2 more arrested after deadly shooting that left one teen dead

Two more people have been arrested after an Oct. 12 shooting at an Elbert County nightclub that left one teenager dead and several others injured.

Demarion Jamal Raiford, 18, of Jackson County and Zorion Tymal Sims, 19, of Oglethorpe County, were arrested after the Georgia Bureau of Investigation executed search warrants at Raiford’s home in Jefferson and at Sims’ home in Carlton.

Both men are charged with murder, four counts of aggravated assault, aggravated battery, and violation of the Georgia Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act for the death of Bryshun Treviyus O’Brien Jordan, 15, of Hartwell.

Jordan, a student at Hart Academy, was among multiple people shot outside 7 Grands nightclub on Evergreen Drive in Elbert County on Saturday, Oct. 12. At least seven others were injured during the incident.

Raiford was booked into the Jackson County Jail and Sims was booked into the Oglethorpe County Jail, according to GBI, and both await extradition to Elbert County.

More than a half-dozen people have now been charged by GBI for their alleged involvement in Jordan’s death. Jarquavious Demetriun Scott, 18, of Anderson, S.C., was the first to be charged with felony murder nearly a week after Jordan was killed.

Other arrests

The suspects’ charges indicate the shooting could’ve been gang related. Others charged in connection with the shooting include:

  • Christopher Bell, 19, of Anderson, S.C., is charged with murder, violation of the Georgia Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act, aggravated battery and four counts of aggravated assault.
  • Destanne Mathis, 20, of Anderson, S.C., is charged with murder, party to a crime, and violation of the Georgia Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act. Mathis was arrested on October 28.
  • Aanidras Parks, 18, of Anderson, S.C., is charged with murder, four counts of aggravated assault, aggravated battery, and violation of the Georgia Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act. Parks was arrested on October 28.
  • Jerimiyah Hughes, 19, of Anderson, S.C., is charged with murder, three counts of aggravated assault, aggravated battery, and violation of the Georgia Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act. Hughes was arrested on October 30.
  • Desmond Latimer, 18, of Anderson, S.C., is charged with murder, party to a crime, and violation of the Georgia Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act. Latimer was arrested on October 30.

The investigation is active and ongoing, according to GBI. Anyone with information is encouraged to contact the Elbert County Sheriff’s Office at 706-283-2421 or the GBI regional investigative office in Athens at 706-552-2309.

Raiders have five in double figures, remain unbeaten with win over Warriors [VIDEO]

One thing is for sure – the #7-ranked Habersham Central Raiders are dangerous. Five players scored in double figures for Hab Central in an 84-57 blowout win over White County Tuesday night in Mt. Airy.

The Raiders (3-0) outscored the Warriors (0-1) in every quarter, including a 29-13 final period that put the game away. White County had a brief lead in the third quarter before Habersham began to pull away.

David Boman scored the first 7 points for White County, and he found himself in a showcase with Habersham’s Enzo Combs. Both scored 10 in the first quarter, with Boman finishing with 21 and Combs 20.

Combs, Justus Gober, and Jake Mihalick had a string of three straight deep shots in the second, as Habersham started to create some distance. A Judge Wilbanks slam dunk made it a 6-point lead. By halftime, it was 34-29 in favor of the home team, though Boman (15 points in the first half) and the Warriors (6 3-pointers in the half) were right there.
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Cohen Michaud had a go-ahead 3-pointer for White County early in the third, but it was short-lived. Mihalick launched a 3-pointer and Combs had a 3-point play as part of an 8-point quarter for him. The Raiders were then up 55-44 heading into the final quarter.

JoJo McCurry came alive in the fourth, converting a ridiculous 3 3-point plays as Habersham put it in cruise control.
For the Raiders, Combs led with 20 points, with Mihalick closing with 18 (4 3-pointers). Wilbanks, McCurry, and Jalen Davis each had 13 points, while Gober had 4 and Caden Garrison 3. Overall, Habersham had 9 3-pointers.

The Warriors were led by Boman’s 21 and Blayne Gunter’s 12. Michaud closed shop with 9, Raymond Cai had 6, Dawson Oliver 4, Tripp Nix 3, and John Phillips 2. White County also had 9 3-pointers.

Lady Warriors double up Hab Central to win in Steve Shedd’s White County debut [VIDEO]

The Steve Shedd era at White County got off to a great start, as his #3-ranked Lady Warriors (1-0) doubled up Habersham Central Tuesday night in Mt. Airy, 56-28.

The Lady Raiders (0-3) held close in the second and third quarters, but White County’s strong start and even better finish was enough to secure the win.

The Lady Warriors went on an 8-0 run to open the game, with 6 of those points coming from Mya Yeh. Habersham’s Tessa Murdock scored the first 4 Lady Raider points. Ella Kate Shedd had a 3-point play to push White County up 15-4, and Emma Lightsey beat the buzzer with a basket to make it 17-4 after one.

Hab Central got a 7-3 run in the second, and Murdock had 9 points at the break. However, both Lightsey and Yeh had 10 apiece as White County had a comfy 29-11 advantage going into the locker room.

It was a low-scoring third quarter, though Daytona Underwood gave the Lady Raiders some life with 5 points in the quarter. White County outscored Habersham in every period, including 18-9 in the fourth.

Lightsey had a game-high 19 points, and was followed by Yeh’s 13 and Kylie Watkins’ 9. Also scoring for White County was Shedd (5 pts), Anijah Moss (3), Aslyn Burkett, Kiannah Dorsey, and #30 (not listed on Maxpreps roster), all with 2 apiece. Josselyn Burke had one point.
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Habersham was paced by Murdock with 14 points and Underwood 10. Sadie Chambers had 3 and Makenzie Gosnell had 2.

Men’s Basketball Loses Tight Contest 86-80 to Sewanee

(Photo by Jessica Scanners)

In a tight battle, the Piedmont men’s basketball team could not keep pace with Sewanee down the stretch in an 86-80 loss Tuesday evening. The two were knotted at 36 at the half, but Sewanee used a second-half surge to outlast Piedmont.

The Tigers’ first two shots from the floor were 3-pointers as Sewanee made nine triples to Piedmont’s five. In the first five minutes, Piedmont held a 7-6 lead, and an Israel Hall 3-pointer gave Piedmont a 19-15 advantage inside the 10:00 mark.

The Lions built as much as a seven-point lead in the first half, but the Tigers clawed back to tie it at 36 at the break.

Piedmont again pulled ahead by six in the opening minutes of the second half, but Sewanee kept fighting back as the two were tied at 50 with 10:00 to play.

Sewanee used a 14-1 run from that point on to pull ahead 64-51 as Piedmont was held scoreless from the floor for nearly four minutes until Fisher Darden connected from deep. The Tigers maintained a double-digit lead through much of the final minutes, despite the Lions’ best attempts to stay in it.

In the final 85 seconds of game action, 23 combined points were scored. Piedmont held Sewanee to just eight points off the bench while the Lions added 17.

Up next, the Lions will be in action at Covenant on Friday, taking on Greenville.

TURNING POINT:
–Sewanee used a 14-1 run midway through the second half to claim a 13-point lead and never surrendered it down the stretch.

STANDOUT PERFORMANCES:
–Fisher Darden led all scorers in the game with 22 points, while Piedmont had three starters in double figures.

INSIDE THE BOX SCORE:
–A pair of Lions posted career-bests for Piedmont as Javi Marlowe totaled 17 points while Dylan Patrick added 13.

Prosecution rests in trial over death of Georgia nursing student Laken Riley

Laken Riley murder suspect Jose Ibarra in Athens-Clarke County Superior Court on Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2024. (livestream image)

The prosecution rested its case Tuesday afternoon in the murder trial of the man accused of killing Augusta University nursing student Laken Riley. The 22-year-old Riley was killed on Feb. 22 while running at Lake Herrick on the University of Georgia campus.

During three days of testimony, prosecutors called more than a dozen law enforcement officers, Riley’s roommate, and a woman who lived in an apartment with Ibarra to testify.

Prosecutor Sheila Ross said during her opening statement that murder suspect Jose Ibarra had gone out “hunting for females” that morning in February and that he killed Riley after a struggle when she “refused to be his rape victim.” Law enforcement officers testified there was no evidence that Riley was sexually assaulted, the Associated Press reports.

The judge asked Ibarra if he wanted to testify, and he said no.

The defense began presenting its case Tuesday afternoon but quickly ran into snags when the defendant’s brother, Diego Ibarra, was pulled as a witness. In custody since pleading guilty in July to federal immigration charges, Diego Ibarra appeared in court, but his new defense attorney advised him not to testify.

Riley’s murder added fuel to the national debate over immigration when federal authorities said Ibarra illegally entered the U.S. in 2022 and was allowed to stay in the country while he pursued his immigration case.

Attorneys fielded testimony from three other witnesses in his defense, including a man who’d been out running the day Riley was killed and saw a suspicious man but described him as being taller and skinnier than Jose Ibarra.

WATCH Day 3: Lake Riley murder trial

Timeline

UGA Police Sgt. Sophie Raboud was among the final witnesses for the prosecution. She walked the court through a timeline of activity on Riley’s phone the morning of her death. Raboud read the text messages aloud.​

According to testimony, Riley called her mother at 9:03 a.m. that morning, and by the time her mother called back about 20 minutes later, Riley had encountered Jose Ibarra on a wooded running trail. Prosecutors said Ibarra killed Riley after a struggle, and data from Riley’s smartwatch shows her heart stopped beating at 9:28 a.m.​

After Riley failed to answer the phone, her mother, Allyson Phillips, texted her several times, casually at first but then with increasing concern, according to data pulled from Riley’s phone.​

At 9:37 a.m., her mother texted, “Call me when you can.” Phillips called twice, and when her calls went unanswered, she texted her daughter at 9:58 a.m., “You’re making me nervous not answering while you’re out running. Are you OK?” Phillips texted again at 11:47 a.m., writing, “Please call me. I’m worried sick about you.” She and other family members continued to call Riley.​

Final moments

Raboud also testified about video from surveillance cameras near the wooded trail, and Phillips and some other family members and friends cried as video played showing Riley running on the trail in her final moments.​

Dr. Michelle DiMarco, a GBI medical examiner, conducted the autopsy of Riley’s body and testified that Riley had injuries, including scrapes, bruises and cuts, to her head, neck, torso, abdomen, left hand and left leg. Her injuries included eight cuts to her head, including one that fractured her skull, DiMarco said.​

Jose Ibarra, 26, waived his right to a jury trial, meaning the case will be decided alone by Athens-Clarke County Superior Court Judge H. Patrick Haggard.​

Trump picks Dr. Oz to run mammoth Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services

President-elect Donald Trump on Tuesday announced his intent to nominate Dr. Mehmet Oz as administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. In this photo, Oz speaks at a March 15, 2022 press conference in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Pennsylvania Capital-Star).

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — Former TV personality and onetime U.S. Senate candidate Mehmet Oz could become the next administrator for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, an expansive government agency that is responsible for large swaths of the country’s health care.

President-elect Donald Trump announced his intent to nominate Oz on Tuesday, writing in a statement “there may be no Physician more qualified and capable than Dr. Oz to Make America Healthy Again.”

Oz won the Republican primary in the 2022 Pennsylvania U.S. Senate race but was defeated during the general election by Democratic Sen. John Fetterman.

Trump wrote that Oz would “work closely” with Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who will be nominated for Health and Human Services secretary, “to take on the illness industrial complex, and all the horrible chronic diseases left in its wake.”

“He will also cut waste and fraud within our Country’s most expensive Government Agency, which is a third of our Nation’s Healthcare spend, and a quarter of our entire National Budget,” Trump wrote in the announcement.

The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services manages the country’s largest health care programs, including Medicare, Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, or CHIP, and the health insurance marketplaces created by the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare.

There are 67.7 million people enrolled in Medicare, with nearly 90% of those enrollees over the age of 65. The program also provides health care coverage for younger people with severe illnesses or disabilities.

Medicaid, a state-federal program that provides health coverage for low-income people, has about 72.4 million enrollees.

There are 7.1 million CHIP program participants.

And 21.3 million people purchased health insurance through the ACA marketplace during the 2024 open enrollment period.

When added together, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services provides health care coverage to 1 in 4 Americans, according to its latest financial report.

The agency spent about $1.516 trillion during the last fiscal year and has more than 6,700 federal employees as well as contractors to handle the workload.

“CMS and its contractors process over one billion Medicare claims annually, monitor quality of care, provide the states with matching funds for Medicaid benefits, and develop policies and procedures designed to give the best possible service to beneficiaries,” according to the report.

“CMS also assures the safety and quality of medical facilities, provides health insurance protection to workers changing jobs, and maintains the largest collection of healthcare data in the United States.”

Oz received his undergraduate degree from Harvard University before earning a joint M.D. and MBA from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and Wharton Business School.

He starred in the daytime show “Dr. Oz,” which ran from 2009 until 2022.

Oz’s nomination is subject to Senate confirmation and is under the jurisdiction of the Finance Committee, currently led by Oregon Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden and Idaho Republican Sen. Mike Crapo.

Oz’s confirmation hearing won’t be the first time he’s testified before a Senate committee. More than 10 years ago, he testified in front of a Senate panel that his comments on his TV show about certain weight loss supplements were “flowery.”

Trump to nominate transition co-chair Linda McMahon as Education secretary

President-elect Donald Trump said Tuesday he would tap Linda McMahon as Education secretary in his second administration. In this photo, McMahon, at the time the head of the Small Business Administration, speaks during a rally with GOP lawmakers at the U.S. Capitol Nov. 28, 2017 in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

(States Newsroom) — President-elect Donald Trump said Tuesday night he plans to nominate Linda McMahon, the co-chair of his transition team, to lead the Education Department in his second administration.

“We will send Education BACK TO THE STATES, and Linda will spearhead that effort,” Trump said in a statement, referring to his pledge during this campaign to abolish the Department of Education.

McMahon, a decades-long executive with World Wrestling Entertainment and the head of the Small Business Administration during Trump’s first presidency, has served on the Connecticut Board of Education. The statement said she has also served as a member of the Board of Trustees at Sacred Heart University in Fairfield, Connecticut, for two stints totaling over 16 years.

She twice ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate in Connecticut and has been a major fundraiser for Republicans, including Trump.

McMahon led the SBA from 2017 to 2019 and took a position with a Trump political action committee ahead of his 2020 reelection bid. She later became chair of the board of the America First Policy Institute, a pro-Trump think tank.

McMahon and her husband, Vince McMahon, the founder and longtime leader of WWE, grew the professional wrestling company into a multi-billion-dollar enterprise. A recent lawsuit also alleges that WWE and Vince McMahon failed to stop the sexual abuse of underage “Ring Boys,” Axios recently reported. Linda McMahon is a co-defendant in the suit.

Trump’s Education secretary in his first term was Betsy DeVos, another wealthy donor. DeVos resigned from the administration on Jan. 7, 2021, the day after a pro-Trump mob attacked the U.S. Capitol.

In a statement, National Education Association President Becky Pringle said McMahon is unqualified for the post.

“During his first term, Donald Trump appointed Betsy DeVos to undermine and ultimately privatize public schools through vouchers,” Pringle said. “Now, he and Linda McMahon are back at it with their extreme Project 2025 proposal to eliminate the Department of Education, steal resources for our most vulnerable students, increase class sizes, cut job training programs, make higher education more expensive and out of reach for middle class families, take away special education services for disabled students, and put student civil rights protections at risk. ”

Benjamin Michael Smith

Benjamin Michael Smith, Ph.D., age 88, of Clarkesville, passed away Monday, November 18, 2024.

Born in Gainesville on August 26, 1936, Dr. Smith was the son of the late Bennie and Aldean Glaze Smith. He was a 1954 graduate of Gainesville High School, where he was a trumpeter in the marching band. Mike attended Georgia Institute of Technology, where he earned Bachelor, Master and Doctorate degrees and was a member of Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity. He served as a commissioned officer in the US Public Health Service, using his engineering expertise in agencies all across the Southeast. As a professor of physics at Gainesville Junior College, Dr. Smith instructed for seven years and was the advisor to the Circle K Service Organization. Mike was the founder and president of Smith Engineering Firm in Gainesville for 35 years and was the 1977 President of the Hall County Chamber of Commerce. He was a member and deacon at Pleasant Hill Baptist Church and later First Baptist Church of Gainesville.

In addition to his parents, Dr. Smith is preceded in death by his beloved wife, Carolyn Elliott Smith, and sister, Lestina Smith Tebo.

Survivors include his loving wife, Judy Warren Smith of Clarkesville; daughter and sons-in-law Happy and Mike Mason and Muffet and Eric Frische; grandsons Lex Mason, Jr. and wife Cassie, Elliott Mason and wife Daisy and Ben Mason; great-granddaughters Georgia Mason, Mackenzie Mason, Maggie Mason and Juliette Mason all of Dallas, Texas. Also surviving are Judy’s family: son and daughter-in-law Blake and Melissa Scott of Cleveland, daughter Kelli Scott Dunlap of Clarkesville, and grandchildren Katie Nanney, Ella Scott, Charlie Dunlap, and Cash Dunlap.

Private graveside services will be held at Pleasant Hill Baptist Church Cemetery on Friday, November 22, 2024. The family will receive friends at Pleasant Hill Baptist Church, Gainesville, from 2:00 to 3:00 PM.

The family is especially grateful to Elise Purdy, Bonnie Canup, Alison George, and Hospice of Northeast Georgia Medical Center for their loving and compassionate care.

An online guestbook is available for the family at HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

Arrangements are in the care and professional direction of Hillside Memorial Chapel & Gardens, Clarkesville.