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Voter trust, turnout keys to SPLOST success

SPLOST VI Committee member, Wade Rhodes, gives an overview of SPLOST VI projects during a town hall meeting in Baldwin.

Proponents of Habersham County’s proposed 1% special local option sales tax referendum say voter trust and turnout are crucial to the measure’s success.

SPLOST VI projects

This video provides an overview of the projects included in Habersham County’s proposed SPLOST VI referendum.  For more information visit the Habersham County Chamber of Commerce.

Tag Team Parenting

 

Cross-Country is my new, favorite sport. I find it tremendously exhilarating and fun, waiting with anticipation to see the first orange running shoes to come around the corner or out of a wooded area. Saturday was no different as the Habersham Raiders took on several high school teams in Jefferson, Georgia, a 45 minute drive from our home in Clarkesville. The course intertwined between two soccer fields at Lamar-Murphy Park and a male prison – razor wires and all. Spectators joked that such an event should be entitled “Freedom Run” or “Jail Break Race.”  I couldn’t help but wonder what it must be like for these teenage boys and girls to run beside those fences, and if it made an impact in any way.

It is rare if I do not see her, my friend and confidant, Cindy Corbett. Her son John and my son Will are friends. From an early age the boys decided Cindy would win the “best mom” award, and I would be a close second. (It is the story of my life). In khaki shorts, an orange t’shirt, white cap, and a camera around her neck, I spotted her just as my husband and I pulled in. Her bright smile and light mood always attract me. Cindy is an elementary school teacher. Her husband Don serves on the Board of Education; but, her most important position for me is “Tag-Team Parent.”

As a mom of six, I’ve tagged team with some of the best – Bo Hemmer, our daughters, Tara and Collier, danced together; Sarita Davidson, our sons, Bo and Tavarres, played ball together; Allison Brewer, our sons, Ben and Mitchell, did everything together; Lori Monroe, our daughters, Megan and Hart, played soccer together; Kim McClurg, our daughters Madeline and Dory, dance together; and now Cindy.

We’ve watched these boys grow into young men, supporting and loving them, disciplining and worrying over them, and spending countless hours chatting and advising one another. Raising children is all about community. From parents, to teachers, coaches, friends, and even people we don’t know, it is an all-encompassing job. Our children glean something from us all.

It isn’t about who crosses the finish line first, though to watch us jumping and screaming one might think so. It isn’t even about whose kid is hers and whose is mine. (Any spectator out there would not be able to tell from our enthusiasm for both). It is simply about sharing responsibility in parenting young men and women.

I would dare to guess, but that’s probably what God meant for it to be.

 

SPLOST VI meeting schedule

Want to learn more about SPLOST VI?  Have questions?  Here’s a list of upcoming town hall meetings and public forums scheduled through October.

5-day weather forecast

Habersham County 5-day weather forecast:

Here’s the current 5-day forecast:

Today: Mostly sunny with occasion bouts of partly cloudy. Highs 77-80º

Tonight: Clear. Lows 55-58º

Thursday: Mostly sunny, a few clouds possible by late afternoon. Highs 76-79º.

Thursday night:  Clear to partly cloudy. A stray shower is possible. Lows 55-58º.

Friday: Partly cloudy with a stray shower possible. Highs 74-76º.

Friday night: Partly cloudy. Lows 55-59º.

Saturday: Partly cloudy with a stray shower possbile. Highs 75-77º.

Saturday night: Clear to partly cloudy. Lows 55-59º.

Sunday: Sunny to partly cloudy. Highs 75-78º.

Sunday night: Clear to partly cloudy. Lows 55-59º.

Deadly accident investigated

Authorities say no charges have been filed in connection with a four-vehicle accident on Highway 365 in Cornelia that left one man dead.  Sgt. David Lunsford of the Georgia State Patrol says investigators are waiting on the results of a blood alcohol test run on one of the drivers involved in last week’s fatal crash before determining what, if any, charges will be filed.

The grey cat at my window

A grey cat came into our lives 6 years ago, independent and alone. After all this time, she still refuses the affection we offer.  She tolerates my other cats as long as they eat from their own bowl and not hers. They dare not glance in her direction or sleep in her bed. Life for my grey cat is on her terms, and her terms only.

In the mornings she waits for me at  my back porch door to  follow my footsteps as I feed the other animals. Like a dog she is at my heels when I retrieve the mail at the end of the driveway or take the trash for collection. When our car pulls into the garage, she runs to greet us; but, if we should kneel to pet her, we are quickly reprimanded with a few scratches.

“Smokey,” as we call her, makes trips to the vet like a glimpse of Armageddon. The kids and I start at least an hour in advance to entice her into the carrier. Our vet gears up as if administering aid to a lion and affectionately calls her “the shark.”

But of  my cats, she is my favorite. There is a sweetness about her I cannot explain only to say it is there. I love to watch her wait under the bird feeder or balance on the porch railing in hopes of catching a squirrel off-guard.  She refuses to come in the house even when it is cold.  I forced her in once which resulted in a pure panic attack, requiring me to set her free. She spends most of her day, perched in the kitchen window, watching us from the outside.

Romans 8:38 “For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”

Several years ago I worked with a group of people administering aid to children who lived on the streets of Russia. A grueling life for these orphaned teenagers, most spent their nights working in prostitution or selling drugs as the ‘grunts’ for middle men. Days existed in the underground tunnels trying to find a dry spot to sleep. If the night brought in enough money to pay-off the pimps who controlled them, they liked to jump on the freight train and ride across the countryside. One young man who once lived that life told me, “It is a momentary escape from hell.”

I was asked to help a girl around 15 who was sick from infections caused by cigar burns on her legs. My job was to clean her wounds and apply an antibiotic ointment – nothing too difficult – and yet when I saw that she was bruised from her knees to her hips, my heart was torn in half. She looked at me inquisitively. “They told me you were from the States,” she stated without emotion, “but you look Russian.”

I smiled at her, suddenly very embarrassed by my nice  clothing and showered appearance.  Before I ventured out with this group, I believed I understood the plight of these people but at that moment, I struggled understanding just where God’s love played a part in this young girl’s life.  The flash light I had asked her to hold for me caught the reflection of the Cross that dangled around my neck. Against the underground cemented walls, it seemed larger than life. Her fingers reached up to stop the gold Cross from swinging and she looked away. “How long before I can return to work?” she asked taking a deep draw on something I was told resembled glue.

“You know there is a place for you at the mission’s house. You’d be able to go to school and you’d be protected,” I began slowly, knowing my friends had tried for sometime to bring her in.

She gathered up her things and without another word, moved back to the cemented “cubbie” she called home. My interpreter helped me gather up my supplies. “She’s a tough one,” he whispered.

“…neither death nor life… neither height nor depth…”

Before we left I removed the chain and Cross from my neck, a gift from a special friend when I graduated from high school and took it to her. For what seemed minutes, she pondered whether to take the offering I extended to her, before quickly grabbing it from my hand and shoving it in her bag.

“…neither the present nor the future, nor any powers…”

No thing. No lifestyle. No hardship. No struggle. No sickness. No drug. No sin. No stubbornness

The leader of the group prayed for the teenagers and then offered his home, as he does each time he leaves, for them to come and be a part.  “We wait for you to join us.”

“…not anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God.”

My son asked me recently if I considered Smokey a part of our family. “Yes, I do,” I responded, “but we are waiting for her to join us.”

be still be free

A weekly podcast co-hosted by Habersham County native, Amber Watson Miller, Sara Goede and Monica Steely.

Virginia Coffee Robinson

VIRGINIA COFFEE ROBINSON, age 79, of Cornelia, Georgia, passed away on Sunday, September 14, 2014 at her residence.

A trip to Osage Farms …..

This week the pickings were slim at the Clarkesville market with many vendors busy with school and other weekend activities and in that between summer and fall crop time. Instead of sighing and heading home empty handed, I decided to head to Osage Farms in Rabun County. It is a great time to take a little drive up the mountains and with the four-lane complete, no worries of getting caught behind meandering tourists…

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Fresh day’s harvest of cabbage

Osage Farms is located outside of Mountain City just beyond Clayton on 441 North. There is always a busy parking lot of people anxious to get their market bags full of mountain grown goodies. Osage grows much of its produce and I love looking out over the cabbage fields with the mountains looming in the background. They look a bit like a blue lake and as the leaves begin to color it is a gorgeous sight.

There are two things I really enjoy at Osage during the season. The first is corn. As a good Georgia girl, I am partial to Silver Queen, but I must admit that last year I discovered Osage’s early bi-color super-sweet variety and it is equally as good. The other must buy is the heirloom tomatoes. Osage grows their own heirlooms and at the height of the season, it is a gorgeous display of 20 or more varieties. As a disclaimer, when Osage’s tomatoes are not in, they will sell South Georgia grown tomatoes, but they are clearly marked as such.

My market basket included both of my favorites and I will be enjoying the last of the season’s bounty tonight. I like to take the corn off the cob and sautee it in butter with some chopped up chives, thyme and basil from my little garden. Add a dollop of cream at the end and it is perfect! One of my other favorite dishes is a recipe of my Mother’s. Take the gorgeous eggplant like you see in my basket, peel and slice it into rounds about 1/2 inch. Place on a cookie sheet (greased) and cook for about 15 minutes in a 350 degree oven until fork-tender. Place the slices in  a greased casserole dish and place sliced tomatoes over the eggplant and then sprinkle liberally with chopped vidalia onion. Take shredded cheddar cheese and coat the top of the dish and then place all back in the oven for about 25 minutes or until the cheese is nice and bubbly with a crisp edge on the sides. Even the most ardent eggplant hater will enjoy this dish.

While enjoying the last of the summer bounty, I also enjoyed seeing the early fall harvest. Apples are coming in as well as the autumn favorites of pumpkins, winter squash and gourds. Other items not to miss are the grits ground by a teacher at Rabun Gap that are some of the best I have ever had. They are a little coarser grind but with a rich, creamy base…truly delicious….They also carry a full array of breads from Our Daily Bread that you can also get at Jaemor Farms. My fall favorite is the sourdough apple. Toast it with butter for a taste of fall in the morning.

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Fall Squash
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Stephen Johnson and Margaret Ashby look over the bounty.
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Honey Crisp apples
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My basket of goodies

Pictured above, holding a tomato is Randi Williams, a senior Psychology Major at Piedmont College. Selecting veggies are members of the Johnson family of Sautee and pictures are courtesy of Tim Lytle of Clarkesville. Osage Farms are owned by Ricky and Clint James. The market is open from May through October when the James brothers head off to get their Christmas Tree Farm ready for the holiday. The address is 5030 North Highway 441 and the phone is 706-746-7262.

Every good and perfect gift

When I asked him what his life verse would be, Pastor Mike Thomas of The Torch thought for a moment, “It changes over time but over the past few years I’ve focused more on ‘where things come from.'”

As I sat in his office, I noticed many pictures: his children, his wife, various mission trips, but he handed me one in a simple frame. The photo was of a woman, carrying a baby, pushing a stroller filled with food.

“James 1:17, ‘Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows,” he smiled, “that’s my life verse.”

The photo I held in my hands held great significance to him. It was taken the first day The Torch opened the Food Pantry in Cornelia at 236 Level Grove Road, just before Thanksgiving.  The single mom had walked from her home and was the first person that day. Thomas remembers her well. “We probably put 100 pounds of food in her stroller, and I just watched as she walked away with her baby on her hip, pushing that stroller towards home.”

The Torch at 800 Cannon Bridge Road in Demorest, Georgia, began their Food Ministry 15 years ago, feeding 5 to 10 families per month. Today, The Torch, under the direction of Lead Pastor Mike Franklin, feeds 800 to 1000 families  a month. “It is incredible what God is doing,” Thomas echoes with confidence.

Staffed by volunteers, the Food Pantry operates with hours that will help working families and single moms. The hours of operation are Mondays and Saturdays from 10:00am to 12:00pm and Wednesdays from 5:00pm to 7:00pm. “We try to accommodate various schedules,” Thomas explained. “When those days don’t work, we have a food give away the first Saturday of every month. Without our volunteers, we could not do it.”

When Pastor Mike Thomas was a child, his home burned down. His mom was attempting to raise three children as a single mom. If it were not for the churches in the area who supplied them with food and clothing, Thomas does not know how they would have made it. “Even though we did not attend church regularly,” he commented, “it was the churches who helped us out and made us whole again. I’ve never forgotten where our help came from.”

The process is simple enough. Each family receiving food is required to fill out an application in order to comply with USDA regulations; but, unlike other charities, The Torch does not ask for I.D. or a Social Security number. “The USDA specifies that families must meet certain economic levels; other than that, we at The Torch just desire to help people.”

On September 7, 2014, The Torch added a clothing ministry. 100 families were served and over 500 garments were given out.

“It is all for His glory,” Thomas stated. “When we have a surplus of food, we call other ministries and donate the food to them. It all comes from Him; we just move it around.”

If you are interested in donating to The Torch Food Ministry or need more information regarding their services, please call 706-778-4063.

 

Faith Matters

Welcome Habersham! I hope you will join us daily to find inspiration, hope and a smile. From daily devotionals by Pastor Mike Franklin of The Torch, to articles of faith in action throughout our community, to notes written to brighten your day, we want you to know, this page is for you. Make us a habit and spread the word! Faith matters.