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‘Domestic incident’ near Stephens County High School triggers ‘precautionary measures’

(Stephens County Sheriff's Office)

A 911 call of shots fired during a “domestic dispute” involving a school employee placed Stephens County High School on high alert early Tuesday morning, according to authorities.

Stephens County deputies responded to the call just before 7 a.m. and arrived at an address near the high school. During the investigation, deputies “learned the shots were fired in response to a domestic dispute which occurred between neighbors by phone contact only,” according to a news release from the sheriff’s office.

The subject of the investigation, Brystal Bohannon, a cafeteria worker at Stephens County High School, allegedly left the scene before deputies arrived. Due to the circumstances and the incident’s proximity to the high school, deputies notified school resource officers and administrators as a precautionary measure.

Police said Bohannon returned to the scene at 8 a.m. before she was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct.

Nobody was injured during the incident, according to the Stephens County Sheriff’s Office.

“While Bohannon was never a threat to the high school, deputies, SROs and school administration took precautionary measures to ensure the safety of students within the high school this morning,” the release from the sheriff’s office said. “The Stephens County Sheriff’s Office, along with Stephens County High School, is committed to ensuring the safety of students, teachers, faculty and staff at the high school.”

Stephens County School System officials said the high school “was never in a lock down” but did delay students Tuesday morning. School and Community Engagement Coordinator April James did not say whether Bohannon would face disciplinary action.

Now Habersham has reached out to the Stephens County Sheriff’s Office for more information.

Habersham County E-911 seeks donations for Hurricane Helene relief

Habersham County is joining forces with the Georgia Association of Public Safety Communications Officials (APCO) to collect essential supplies for Georgia communities grappling with the aftermath of Hurricane Helene. Donations will be delivered to heavily impacted 911 centers across the state, including those in Augusta-Richmond County, Columbia County (Evans area), and Burke County.

“Our hearts go out to everyone affected by Hurricane Helene,” says Habersham County Emergency Management Agency / E-911 Director Lynn Smith, expressing sympathy for the loss of life and devastation. “We are incredibly grateful to the men and women who continue to serve their communities, especially the Communications Officers who are still answering calls despite suffering personal losses.”​

Some of the essential supplies needed are bottled water, sports drinks, non-perishable foods and snacks, pet food, toiletries and diapers, first-aid kits, tarps, and cleaning supplies. Clothing and linens will not be accepted.

Residents of Habersham County and surrounding areas are invited to contribute supplies at two designated locations: the Habersham County E-911 Center, 175 EOC Drive (off Chase Road), Cornelia, and the Habersham County Ruby Fulbright Aquatic Center, 120 Paul Franklin Road, Clarkesville. The collection area at the Aquatic Center is the activity room near the swimming pool entrance.

All items must be received by 3 p.m. Saturday, October 12. Donors are welcome to include cards or messages of encouragement for the dispatchers.

The needed supplies are listed below; you can click here to download the list. Those who prefer to donate monetarily may Venmo the Georgia Association of Public Safety Communications Officials (GA APCO) at @georgiaAPCO.

List of needed supplies:

Food items

• Bottled / gallon water
• Shelf-stable milk
• Instant coffee/tea
• Non-perishable food (no heating required)
• Baby food and formula
• Disposable plates, bowls, utensils

Household items

• Dish soap
• Cleaning supplies (bleach and disinfectant spray are in high demand)
• Laundry detergent (powder or liquid, no pods)
• Trash bags
• Work and dish gloves
• Paper towels
• Toilet paper
• Gallon Ziploc bags
• Buckets
• Batteries
• Flashlights/lanterns
• Matches/lighters
• Duct tape
• Tarps
• Rope

Personal care items

• Hand sanitizer
• First Aid supplies
• Dust/face masks
• Bar soap
• Toothbrushes/toothpaste
• Hand lotion
• Chapstick
• Shampoo
• Deodorant
• Baby wipes
• Diapers
• Feminine hygiene products

Pet supplies

• Dog/cat food (canned or dry)
• Dog/cat treats
• Cat litter

Opposing sides of Georgia’s anti-abortion law speak out after judge rules ban unconstitutional

Kianta Key placed a hair bead on a makeshift altar set up as a tribute to Amber Nicole Thurman and Candi Miller on Saturday near the state Capitol. Key said the hair bead represents the “beauty of who they were.” (Jill Nolin/Georgia Recorder)

(Georgia Recorder) — Abortion rights advocates are cheering Monday’s court ruling that brought back expanded services in Georgia, even as they brace for the likelihood that further judicial action could make it short-lived.

And supporters of Georgia’s six-week abortion ban hope they are right.

Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr’s office is appealing a Fulton County judge’s ruling that the law conflicts with the Georgia Constitution, putting it back in the hands of the Georgia Supreme Court. Carr’s office has not said whether the state will ask the state’s highest court to allow the ban to be enforced while an appeal is pending.

That’s what happened in 2022, when the ban was back to being enforced within a week of a Fulton County ruling that the law was unconstitutional.

“Unfortunately, we have lived through this many times before. We know that our communities have unfortunately been jerked around by changes in the law that happened overnight,” said Kwajelyn Jackson, executive director of Feminist Women’s Health Center.

State Rep. Dar’shun Kendrick, a Lithonia Democrat, speaks at a press conference Tuesday after a Fulton County judge ruled that Georgia’s abortion ban is unconstitutional. (Jill Nolin/Georgia Recorder)

Georgia’s 2019 law bans most abortions once fetal cardiac activity is detected, which is about six weeks into a pregnancy and before most women know they are pregnant.

Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert C. I. McBurney’s ruling that the law is unconstitutional comes just weeks before early voting starts in Georgia, including for state legislative races and the presidential election, where access to reproductive care has been a dominant issue.

And the decision was also issued two weeks after ProPublica published stories about two pregnant women, Amber Nicole Thurman and Candi Miller, who died after trying to have an abortion shortly after Georgia’s law took effect in 2022.

Both deaths were officially deemed preventable by the state’s Maternal Mortality Review Committee, according to ProPublica, which also reported that the committee that reviews maternal deaths has only examined deaths through the fall of 2022.

Their deaths have galvanized supporters of reproductive rights, who have long warned of dire outcomes. Advocates gathered outside the state Capitol Saturday to pay tribute to Thurman and Miller and to rally people to act, both during this election but also when lawmakers return to the Gold Dome in January when there will be a fresh push to repeal the law.

Vice President Kamala Harris visited the Atlanta suburbs just days after the stories were published to give a speech focused on reproductive rights, and Democratic vice presidential candidate and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz cited Thurman’s death during Tuesday night’s debate when making the case that having state-by-state abortion laws is wrong.

“The fact of the matter is, how can we as a nation say that your life and your rights – as basic as the right to control your own life – is determined on geography? There’s a very real chance that if Amber Thurman lived in Minnesota, she would be alive today.”

Rep. Dar’shun Kendrick, a Lithonia Democrat, said she immediately thought of the two women when she heard about McBurney’s ruling.

“We won’t stop as your Georgia Democrats until abortion access is throughout the nation,” Kendrick said Tuesday at a press conference called by House Democrats to applaud the ruling. “We won’t go back, as Vice President Harris said.

“It might be too late for Amber and Candi, but their legacy and their story continue. Her and others give us the strength we need to carry on,” Kendrick said.

But anti-abortion advocates have blasted the attempts to tie the women’s deaths to the controversial 2019 law and accused Democrats of trying to capitalize on the tragedies. Women Speak Out PAC, a partner of Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, announced it would spend $500,000 on digital and TV ads in Georgia countering what it says is misinformation about the law.

State Rep. Lauren Daniel, a Locust Grove Republican, and Georgia U.S. Congressman Rich McCormick and state Sen. Ed Setzler pushed back on claims that the deaths of two Georgia women were the result of Georgia’s six-week abortion ban. (Jill Nolin/Georgia Recorder)

“As policymakers, we should be presenting policy that improves outcomes rather than fear-mongering and lying to women about a law that does not prevent lifesaving care,” state Rep. Lauren Daniel, a Locust Grove Republican, said at a Tuesday press conference to defend the six-week ban that was already in the works before Monday’s ruling.

“It does not limit care for miscarriages, and it provides exceptions for medically futile babies and in cases of rape and incest,” said Daniel, who said she experienced a miscarriage last month and was presented three options, including a dilation and curettage, or D&C.

Backers of Georgia’s 2019 law argue the women’s deaths highlight the risks attached to abortion medication, and they say Thurman’s medical providers failed her when they waited 20 hours to perform a D&C since her twin fetuses did not have a heartbeat at that point.

Complications from medication abortion, which has been the most common way to terminate a pregnancy since 2020, are rare.

“Chemical abortion followed by malpractice from her health care providers is what killed Amber Nicole Thurman,” said state Sen. Ed Setzler, an Acworth Republican who sponsored the 2019 abortion measure.

Setzler said Thurman’s “health care providers had every mechanism they needed within our law to save her life.” And he called McBurney’s ruling “naked judicial activism.”

U.S. Congressman Rich McCormick, a Suwanee Republican and emergency room physician, argued Thurman’s death cannot be pinned on Georgia’s ban because her fetuses were already dead when she showed up at an Atlanta area hospital with sepsis that resulted from an incomplete abortion.

“There’s no application to this law to this case, unless you can tell me there was a heartbeat,” McCormick said. “It is a misused story to try to scare people to think that this law causes death, when in fact, it is the opposite.”

Kendrick, who is also an attorney, dismissed those objections. She said the law is ambiguous and forces doctors to wait until a patient’s life is clearly at risk before they intervene.

“They can claim all they want to, but the law is poorly, poorly written and never should have passed in the first place,” Kendrick said.

Cornelia approves 2025 budget, millage rate

Cornelia City Commission (Brian Wellmeier/Now Habersham)

The city of Cornelia approved its 2025 budget and millage rate on Tuesday, Oct. 1.

The $8.2 million budget, an increase of about $2.4 million from last year, included a 5% pay raise and cost of living adjustment for all city employees. The recent amphitheater project accounted for a majority ($2 million) of the budget’s increase.

Top expenses in the budget include the police department ($2.2 million), the fire department ($1.5 million), the recreation division ($2 million), general government operations ($803,787) and the city manager’s office ($452,940).

The city’s primary revenue sources include: taxes ($4.2 million), intergovernmental revenues ($1.6 million) and grants ($1 million).

The general fund operating costs increased by $326,796, most of which is due to rising personnel and insurance costs. The city utilized $794,682 from the general fund and $1.5 million from the water and sewer fund for a balanced budget.

Cornelia officials are likely to call for a 5% increase in water fees as well as a 12% rate hike in garbage fees for next year, according to city documents.

Growth and the millage rate

Cornelia’s City Commission voted to maintain the current millage rate of 9.5 mills.

A mill is equal to $1 per $1,000 in taxable property value. In Cornelia, property is taxed at 40% of its value.

City officials reported solid growth numbers in Cornelia in 2024, with a gross tax digest of more than $333 million – an increase of over $38 million from last year – which comes as a result of an inflationary increase of existing property owners ($20 million), new growth ($4.6 million) and personal property growth ($12 million).

Parkside backs out of deal to redevelop old courthouse building

The old Clarkesville courthouse, opened in 1964, has sat empty for years. (Margie Williamson/NowHabersham.com)

The old courthouse building in Clarkesville will remain vacant after commercial real estate firm Parkside Partners terminated an agreement to redevelop the structure Monday.

County spokesperson Rob Moore said in a news release that attorneys for Parkside notified the Development Authority of Habersham County on Monday, September 30, of the firm’s decision to cease a memorandum of understanding that had been in effect since May 31.

Clarkesville City Manager Keith Dickerson said the city as a whole was “disappointed” that the deal failed.

“We’ll just try and stay positive and figure out where this heads and what we’re going to do to move forward,” Dickerson said. “We’re disappointed it’s not going through after this long of a period of time, but I’m sure (Parkside) has their reasons.

“Something needs to happen,” he added. “I think I said at the beginning, ‘How many times have we done this?’ And here we are doing it again.”

Habersham County Commission Chairman Ty Akins told Now Habersham that Parkside’s decision caught county officials by surprise.

“We weren’t really given any questions or comments or information that led us to believe they were ready to walk out, especially at the last minute,” Akins said.

Future of the courthouse

The future of the former courthouse is now mired by uncertainty.

Since the announcement Tuesday afternoon, Akins went on to say that he’d be inclined to favor demolition of the structure.

Before the recent MOU with Parkside Partners, a previous option for the fate of the former courthouse had Habersham’s Development Authority and the city of Clarkesville each allocating $250,000 for demolition of the structure. That sum, as proposed, could then be recouped with interest upon the sale of the property to a potential investor.

“I would think that we might give it a week or so, just to see what happens,” Akins said. “But if I had to guess, (demolition) would be the next likely step.”

Under the MOU, Parkside Partners would’ve purchased the old courthouse and surrounding 2.07 acres for $500,000 with plans to repurpose the building for 21 luxury residential and condominium-style units that would overlook the downtown square.

With the deal now dead, Parkside has also requested the release of more than $200,000 in earnest money “due to unsatisfactory title conditions,” according to Moore. That request is now under review by legal counsel.

“Parkside unilaterally terminated the memorandum of understanding that would have led to the sale of the old courthouse,” Habersham County Development Authority Chairman Jim Butterworth said Tuesday. “We look forward to finding out their concerns as we move forward.”

As a message to the public, the news release from Moore stressed that: “There were no concessions and no tax incentives in the deal, and the gazebo, Habersham County Killed in Action Memorial (also known as the Habersham County Veterans Memorial), and the Habersham County Agriculture Services Building were remaining under county ownership, with ample parking for offices and 4-H programs contained in that building.”

Habersham County Manager Alicia Vaughn said all parties were in agreement and had approved a 15-day extension of due diligence before Parkside ended the deal.
“I am proud of the collaboration between the county/development authority and the city of Clarkesville,” Vaughn said. “We are disappointed but will move forward and continue to work together as we determine next steps.”

Vance and Walz keep it civil in a policy-heavy discussion: VP debate takeaways

Viewers in the spin room watch the CBS News vice presidential debate, Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Vice presidential hopefuls Tim Walz and JD Vance focused their criticism on the top of the ticket on Tuesday as they engaged in a policy-heavy discussion that may be the last debate of the 2024 presidential campaign.

It was the first encounter between Minnesota’s Democratic governor and Ohio’s Republican senator, following last month’s debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump. It comes just five weeks before Election Day and as millions of voters are now able to cast early ballots.

Tuesday’s confrontation played out as the stakes of the contest rose again after Iran fired missiles into Israel, while a devastating hurricane and potentially debilitating port strike roiled the country at home. Over and again, Walz and Vance outlined the policy and character differences between their running mates while trying to introduce themselves to the country.

Here are some takeaways from Tuesday’s debate.

With Mideast in turmoil, Walz promises ‘steady leadership” and Vance offers ’peace through strength’

Iran’s ballistic missile attack on Israel on Tuesday elicited a contrast between the Democratic and Republican tickets on foreign policy: Walz promised “steady leadership” under Harris, while Vance pledged a return to “peace through strength” if Trump is returned to the White House.

The differing visions of what American leadership should look like overshadowed the sharp policy differences between the two tickets.

The Iranian threat to the region and U.S. interests around the world opened the debate, with Walz pivoting the topic to criticism of Trump.

“What’s fundamental here is that steady leadership is going to matter,” Walz said, then referenced the “nearly 80-year-old Donald Trump talking about crowd sizes” and responding to global crises by tweet.

Vance, for his part, promised a return to “effective deterrence” under Trump against Iran, brushing back on Walz’s criticism of Trump by attacking Harris and her role in the Biden administration.

“Who has been the vice president for the last three and a half years and the answer is your running mate, not mine,” he said. He pointedly noted that the Hamas attacks on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, happened “during the administration of Kamala Harris.”

Vance and Walz punch up rather than at each other

Vance and Walz trained the bulk of their attacks not on their on-stage rivals, but on the running mates who weren’t in the room.

Both vice presidential nominees sought to convey a genial men as they lobbed criticism at Harris and Trump, respectively.

It was a reflection of the fact that most voters don’t cast a ballot based on the vice president, and on a vice presidential nominee’s historic role in serving as the attack dog for their running mates.

Walz pointedly attacked Trump for failing to meet his pledge of building a physical barrier across the entire U.S.-Mexico border at the country’s southern neighbor’s expense.

“Less than 2% of that wall got built and Mexico didn’t pay a dime,” Walz said.

Underscoring the focus on the top of the ticket, during a back-and-forth about immigration, Vance said to his opponent: “I think that you want to solve this problem, but I don’t think that Kamala Harris does.”

It was a wonky policy debate, with talk of risk pools, housing regulations and energy policy

In an age of world-class disses optimized for social media, Tuesday’s debate was a detour into substance. Both candidates took a low-key approach and both enthusiastically delved into the minutiae.

Walz dug into the drafting of the Affordable Care Act when he was in the House in 2009, and pushed Vance on the senator’s claim that Trump, who tried to eliminate the law, actually helped preserve it. Vance, defending his claim that illegal immigration pushes up housing prices, cited a Federal Reserve study to back himself up. Walz talked about how Minneapolis tinkered with local regulations to boost the housing supply. Both men talked about the overlap between energy policy, trade and climate change.

It was a very different style than often seen in presidential debates over the past several election cycles.

Vance stays on the defensive on abortion

Walz pounced on Vance repeatedly over abortion access and reproductive rights as the Ohio senator tried to argue that a state-by-state matrix of abortion laws is the ideal approach for the United States. Walz countered that a “basic right” for a woman should not be determined “by geography.”

“This is a very simple proposition: These are women’s decisions,” Walz said. “We trust women. We trust doctors.”

Walz sought to personalize the issue by referencing the death of Amber Thurman, who waited more than 20 hours at the hospital for a routine medical procedure known as a D&C to clear out remaining tissue after taking abortion pills. She developed sepsis and died.

Rather than sidestep the reference, Vance at one point agreed with Walz that “Amber Thurman should still be alive.”

Vance steered the conversation to the GOP ticket’s proposals he said would help women and children economically, thus avoiding the need for terminating pregnancies. But Walz retorted that such policies — tax credits, expanded childcare aid, a more even economy — can be pursued while still allowing women to make their own decisions about abortion.

Both candidates put a domestic spin on climate change

In the wake of the devastation of Hurricane Helene, Vance took a question about climate change and gave an answer about jobs and manufacturing, taking a detour around Trump’s past claims that global warming is a “hoax.”

Vance contended that the best way to fight climate change was to move more manufacturing to the United States because the country has the world’s cleanest energy economy. It was a distinctly domestic spin on a global crisis, especially after Trump pulled the U.S. out of the international Paris climate accords during his administration.

Walz also kept the climate change focus domestic, touting the Biden administration’s renewable energy investments as well as record levels of oil and natural gas production. “You can see us becoming an energy superpower in the future,” Walz said.

It was a decidedly optimistic take on a pervasive and grim global problem.

Walz, Vance each blame opposing presidential candidate for immigration stalemate

The two running mates agreed that the number of migrants in the U.S. illegally is a problem. But each laid the blame on the opposing presidential nominee.

Vance echoed Trump by repeatedly calling Harris the “border czar” and suggested that she, as vice president, single-handedly rolled back the immigration restrictions Trump had imposed as president. The result, in Vance’s telling, is an unchecked flow of fentanyl, strain on state and local resources and increased housing prices around the country.

Harris was never asked to be the “border czar” and she was never specifically given the responsibility for security on the border. She was tasked by Biden in March 2021 with tackling the “root causes” of migration from the Central American countries of Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador and pushing leaders there and in Mexico to enforce immigration laws. Harris was not empowered to set U.S. immigration policy — only the president can sign executive orders and Harris was not empowered as Biden’s proxy in negotiations with Congress on immigration law.

Walz advanced Democrats’ arguments that Trump single-handedly killed a bipartisan Senate deal to tighten border security and boost the processing system for immigrants and asylum seekers. Republicans backed off the deal, Walz noted, only after Trump said it wasn’t good enough.

Both candidates leaned on tried-and-true debate tactics — including not answering tough questions

Asked directly whether Trump’s promise to deport millions of illegal immigrants would remove parents of U.S.-born children, Vance never answered the question. Instead, the senator tried to put his best spin on Trump’s plan to use the military to help with deportations and pivot to attacking Harris for a porous border. Asked to respond to Trump’s having called climate change a “hoax,” Vance also avoided a response.

The debate kicked off with Walz being asked if he’d support a preemptive strike by Israel against Iran. Walz praised Harris’ foreign policy leadership but never answered that question, either.

And at the end of the debate, Vance would not answer Walz’s direct question of whether Trump indeed lost the 2020 election.

Walz has stumbles and lands punches in uneven night

Walz had several verbal stumbles on a night in which he admitted to “misspeaking” often. In the debate’s opening moments, he confused Iran and Israel when discussing the Middle East.

At one point, he said he had “become friends with school shooters,” and he stumbled through an explanation of inaccurate remarks about whether he was in Hong Kong during the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre. ( He was not.)

But the governor noticeably put Vance on the defensive over abortion and, near the end of the debate, with a pointed question about whether Trump won the 2020 election.

Vance stays on a limb on Jan. 6 insurrection

The candidates went out of their way to be polite to each other until the very end, when Vance refused to back down from his statements that he wouldn’t have certified Trump’s 2020 election loss.

Vance tried to turn the issue to claims that the “much bigger threat to democracy” was Democrats trying to censor people on social media. But Walz wouldn’t let go.

“This one is troubling to me,” said Walz, noting that he’d just been praising some of Vance’s answers. He rattled off the ways Trump tried to overturn his 2020 loss and noted that the candidate still insists he won that contest. Then Walz asked Vance if Trump actually lost the election.

Vance responded by asking if Harris censored people.

“That is a damning non-answer,” said Walz, noting that Trump’s former vice president, Mike Pence, wasn’t on the debate stage because he stood up to Trump on Jan. 6, 2021, and presided over Congress’ certification of the former president’s loss.

“America,” Walz concluded, “I think you’ve got a really clear choice on this election of who’s going to honor that democracy and who’s going to honor Donald Trump.”

 

Lady Indians finish as Region Runner-Up

Shelby Whisnant (Photo by Austin Poffenberger)

The Lady Indians took a quick win over Lakeview on Tuesday night to advance to the Region 4-AAA Championship, where they fell in a 3-set thriller to #4-ranked Loganville Christian.

In the Lakeview match, TFS won 19-25, 25-11, 15-12. It took a big comeback for #8-ranked Tallulah Falls to win their 11th straight match, which was two wins shy of tying the school record.

“We started very slowly, never really waking up in the first set,” says coach Matt Heyl. “Then Margalida’s [Amengual Sanchez] serve came alive in the second set and really got us in motion.”

Everyone got going, including Laura Ruiz Rendon, Becca Heyl, and Julia Smith passing well. Sanchez and Chesney Tanksley set well. Lily Smith, Heyl, Shelby Whisnant, and Ca’Rin Swinton hit well, and Jace Ibemere was solid at the net.

“At the end of the third set, we struggled to put it away, but finally did,” added Heyl.

In the Region Championship match, TFS won 25-13 in the opening set, but dropped the second 13-25 and the third 5-15.

“We played probably our best set of the year in the first set,” says Heyl. “Shelby started us off with some strong serves and that got us rolling. Everyone else caught the serving fever and we had one of the best serving performances I’ve ever seen.”

Lily Smith, Swinton, and Ibemere did a great job putting up a block on LCA’s star hitter to slow them down and let the TFS defense make a lot of digs. In the second set, LCA got off to an equally impressive start, and TFS couldn’t find its way back into the match.

The Lady Indians are now 23-15 on the season and make it seven straight years with a Region Runner-Up or Region Championship.

US dockworkers strike over wages and automation in fight that could lead to shortages

Tens of thousands of dockworkers went on strike from Savannah to Maine on Tuesday to demand higher wages and a ban on all automation at ports (Photo courtesy of Georgia Ports Authority/Jeremy Polston)

(States Newsroom) — Tens of thousands of dockworkers went on strike from Savannah to Maine on Tuesday to demand higher wages and a ban on all automation at ports in a move that could snarl supply chains only a month ahead of the presidential election.

The International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) union and United States Maritime Alliance (USMX), which represents employers in the longshore industry, were unable to reach a new contract agreement. This is the union’s first strike since 1977 when dockworkers stopped work for several weeks.

More than 500 union members gathered at the gates of Maher Terminals in Elizabeth, New Jersey early Tuesday for the start of the strike. Harold Daggett, International President of the ILA, rallied the crowd as he spoke at one of the main container terminal operators at Port Newark–Elizabeth Marine Terminal, an important facility for goods entering the New York Metropolitan area.

“These greedy corporations, everything they got, they got from us. We’re the ones who worked through the pandemic to make them the money they got,” Daggett said in an interview.

When asked how long the strike would last, Daggett said that union members will stay on strike “until the end.”

On Monday, the ILA said employers were price-gouging customers by charging much more for containers, which would lead to higher prices for consumers. It stated that the wages offered by USMX were still too low to accept.

“The Ocean Carriers represented by USMX want to enjoy rich billion-dollar profits that they are making in 2024 while they offer ILA Longshore Workers an unacceptable wage package that we reject,” the union said in a statement.  “ILA longshore workers deserve to be compensated for the important work they do keeping American commerce moving and growing.”

Scott Weiss, a member of ILA Local 1804-1, inspects containers that come off of ships entering at Port Newark–Elizabeth Marine Terminal, as well the chassis of the trucks that then carry the containers filled with goods away to destinations all along the East Coast.

Weiss said that the union is asking for wage increases that can cover the cost of inflation and that a human eye is still needed to do his job right, even in the face of increasing automation.

“Employers push automation under the guise of safety, but it’s really about cutting labor costs to increase their already exceptionally high profits. Automation of our nation’s ports should be a concern for everyone,” he said. “The truth is robots do not pay taxes, and they do not spend money in their communities.”

The union said it will continue to handle military cargo and work passenger cruise ships.

USMX filed an unfair labor practice complaint Wednesday with the National Labor Relations Board, accusing the union of refusing to bargain.

“We have demonstrated a commitment to doing our part to end the completely avoidable ILA strike,” USMX said in a statement Tuesday afternoon. encouraging the union to come to the bargaining table. “Our current offer of a nearly 50% wage increase exceeds every other recent union settlement while addressing inflation and recognizing the ILA’s hard work to keep the global economy running. We look forward to hearing from the Union about how we can return to the table and actually bargain, which is the only way to reach a resolution.”

USMX said before the strike began that their latest offer retained the same language on automation.

Voters remain laser-focused on the economy heading into the Nov. 5 election. Eighty-one percent of registered voters say the economy is very important to their vote for president this November, according to a poll published last month from the nonpartisan Pew Research Center.

Lauren Saidel-Baker, a speaker and economist at ITR Economics, a nonpartisan economic research and consulting firm based in New Hampshire, said that the longer the strike goes on, the greater the impact will be on inflation. Inflation cooled significantly enough for the Federal Reserve to cut the federal funds rate by half a percentage point last month.

“If this is just a week, again, there will be short-term disruptions and maybe things take a little bit longer to get where they’re going. That could be a risk for perishable items,” she said.

The supply chain issues that affected retail prices at the beginning of the pandemic may have prepared businesses for some disruption, she said, and this could mitigate some of the effects for consumers in the short term.

“We’re in a very unique situation where we just had this major, major supply chain disruption that caused a lot of American businesses to make contingency plans in a way that they just haven’t in the past. We have creativity and increased flexibility that will help us if this is just a brief disruption,” she said. “We still have elevated inventories in some sectors, so there might be a little bit more buffer in certain goods getting where they’re going.”

Aside from the economic effects on consumers, strikes can have spillover effects on other groups of workers. If dockworkers secure a strong contract as the result of this strike, it could affect other industries. Alexander Hertel-Fernandez, associate professor of international and public Affairs at Columbia University, and former deputy assistant secretary for research and evaluation at the U.S. Department of Labor, said the success of auto worker strikes and the Hollywood strikes may have emboldened union dockworkers.

“I think you’re likely to see other industries, particularly those most closely aligned with, um, transportation and logistics, really pick up the baton on that, especially if the economic and political environment continues to be favorable to them,” Hertel-Fernandez said.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has called on the Biden administration to invoke the Taft-Hartley Act, which allows presidents to intervene in strikes if it creates a national emergency. President Joe Biden has said that he won’t.

Biden’s position is unlikely to change, Hertel-Fernandez said, because of the politics of the timing.

“I think you would see a pretty negative response from the labor movement if they were to do so,” he said. “Given that it’s so close to the election, where labor is such an important constituent for the Democrats, that they would be unlikely to do it.”

Biden released a statement in support of striking dockworkers Tuesday and urging USMX to “present a fair offer” to the union.

“Now is not the time for ocean carriers to refuse to negotiate a fair wage for these essential workers while raking in record profits,” Biden said. “My Administration will be monitoring for any price gouging activity that benefits foreign ocean carriers, including those on the USMX board.”

Former president Donald Trump used the strike to take a jab against Kamala Harris, who he is seeking to defeat in the race for the White House.

“The strike was caused by the massive inflation that was created by the Harris-Biden regime,” Trump said to Fox News Digital.

Economists have pointed to various possible causes of inflation, which peaked in 2022, including supply chain problems, the war in Ukraine and price-gouging from corporations.

Mark J. Bonamo reported in Elizabeth for New Jersey Monitor, part of States Newsroom. Casey Quinlan reported from Washington.

Jimmy Carter and his hometown of Plains celebrate the 39th president’s 100th birthday

A sign wishing former President Jimmy Carter a happy 100th birthday sits on the North Lawn of the White House in Washington, Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2024. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

PLAINS, Ga. (AP) — Longtime friends, family and fans of Jimmy Carter milled around his hometown of Plains to celebrate his 100th birthday on Tuesday, the first time an American president has lived a full century and the latest milestone in a life that took the Depression-era farmer’s son to the White House and across the world as a Nobel Peace Prize-winning humanitarian and advocate for democracy.

Living the last 19 months in home hospice care, the 39th president keeps defying expectations, just as he did through a remarkable rise from his family peanut farming and warehouse business to the world stage. The Democrat served one presidential term from 1977 to 1981 and then for four decades led The Carter Center, which he and his wife Rosalynn co-founded in 1982 to “wage peace, fight disease, and build hope.”

“Not everybody gets 100 years on this earth, and when somebody does, and when they use that time to do so much good for so many people, it’s worth celebrating,” his grandson Jason Carter, chair of The Carter Center governing board, said in an interview.

“These last few months, 19 months, now that he’s been in hospice, it’s been a chance for our family to reflect,” he continued, “and then for the rest of the country and the world to really reflect on him. That’s been a really gratifying time.”

James Earl Carter Jr. was born Oct. 1, 1924 in Plains, where he lives in the same one-story home he and Rosalynn built in the early 1960s, before his first election to the Georgia state Senate. The former first lady, also from Plains, died last November at 96.

About 25 family members filled his home Tuesday, enjoying cupcakes on the front lawn while antique World War II planes flew over in his honor. At night, they planned to gather around the TV to watch the vice-presidential debate.

Chip Carter said his father’s next goal is to make it to Election Day.

“He’s plugged in,” Carter said in an interview. “I asked him two months ago if he was trying to live to be 100, and he said, No, I’m trying to live to vote for Kamala Harris.”

Chip Carter sat in the front row of a naturalization ceremony held annually on his father’s birthday for 100 new citizens at Plains High School, which his father attended. The building is now a museum.

A person holds a program after a naturalization ceremony one hundred people to become U.S. citizens at the high school attended by former President Jimmy Carter on Carter’s 100th birthday Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2024, in Plains, Ga. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)
One hundred people take the oath to become American citizens during a naturalization ceremony at the high school attended by former President Jimmy Carter on Carter’s 100th birthday Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2024, in Plains, Ga. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

Jill Stuckey, superintendent of the Jimmy Carter National Historic Park, recalled that a teacher once told Carter’s class that one of the students would be president someday. She said Carter “took it to heart.”

“One thing I’ve learned is to never underestimate Jimmy Carter, because if you do, he will prove you wrong,” Stuckey said.

President Joe Biden, the first sitting senator to endorse Carter’s 1976 campaign, praised his longtime friend for an “unwavering belief in the power of human goodness.”

“You’ve always been a moral force for our nation and the world (and) a beloved friend to Jill and me and our family,” the 81-year-old president said in a tribute video, recorded in front of Carter’s White House portrait. Carter asked Biden to eulogize him at his state funeral when the time comes.

But even on Carter’s 100th birthday, Donald Trump could not pass up repeating his longstanding jab at the Georgia Democrat. Trump labeled Biden “the worst president,” and said Carter is “the happiest man because Carter is considered a brilliant president by comparison.” It was hollow praise for the one-term president who was defeated by Ronald Reagan in 1980 but went on to become a respected world figure.

Georgia’s Republican Gov. Brian Kemp, for his part, declared Tuesday “Jimmy Carter Day” to recognize his legacy as the state’s 76th governor. Other birthday events have included a musical gala in Atlanta with dozens of artists, airing Tuesday evening on Georgia Public Broadcasting, that has raised more than $1.2 million for The Carter Center. Townspeople in Plains planned another concert Tuesday evening.

Volunteers build houses during Twin Cities Habitat for Humanity’s 2024 Jimmy & Rosalynn Carter Work Project at the site of the former Hillcrest Golf Course in St. Paul, Minn. on Monday, Sept. 30, 2024. (Leila Navidi /Star Tribune via AP)
Volunteers build houses during Twin Cities Habitat for Humanity’s 2024 Jimmy & Rosalynn Carter Work Project at the site of the former Hillcrest Golf Course in St. Paul, Minn. on Monday, Sept. 30, 2024. (Leila Navidi /Star Tribune via AP)

And Habitat for Humanity volunteers are devoting this week to build 30 houses in his honor in St. Paul, Minnesota. The Carters served as ambassadors for the organization, hosted annual building projects into their 90s.

Minister Barbara Green and Deacon William Le Green of Americus came to Main Street in Plains to honor Carter, who helped build their Habitat for Humanity home in the early 2000s. Le Green recalled how Carter gave the couple hammers to keep, along with their keys.

“He didn’t mind getting his hands dirty, or anything of the kind,” Le Green said.

Jimmy Carter was last seen publicly nearly a year ago, visibly diminished and silent as he used a reclining wheelchair to attend his wife’s two funeral services. Jason Carter said the family hadn’t expected to enjoy his 100th birthday after she died. The former president’s hospital bed had been set up so he could see and talk to his wife of 77 years in her final days and hours.

“We frankly didn’t think he was going to go on much longer,” Jason Carter said. “He’s really given himself over to what he feels is God’s plan. He knows he’s not in charge. But in these last few months, especially, he has gotten a lot more engaged in world events, a lot more engaged in politics, a lot more, just engaged, emotionally, with all of us.”

He said the centenarian president, born four years after women were granted the constitutional right to vote and four decades before Black women won ballot access, is eager to cast his 2024 presidential ballot for the Democrat who would be first woman, second Black person and first person of south Asian descent to reach the Oval Office.

“He, like a lot of us, was incredibly gratified by his friend Joe Biden’s courageous choice to pass the torch,” the younger Carter said. “You know, my grandfather and The Carter Center have observed more than 100 elections in 40 other countries, right? So, he knows how rare it is for somebody who’s a sitting president to give up power in any context.”

Early voting in Georgia begins Oct. 15, two weeks into Carter’s 101st year.

Fulton County judge says he’ll rule before Election Day on new State Election Board rules

Members of the Georgia Election Board met Sept. 20, 2024. The members singled out for praise by Donald Trump were Janelle King, second from left, Rick Jeffares, second from right, and Janice Johnston on the far right. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

(Georgia Recorder) — Georgia Democrats urged a Fulton County judge Tuesday to throw out changes made by the Republican-controlled State Election Board ahead of next month’s presidential election.

There are two new rules at the center of the case, the first requires county elections boards to conduct a “reasonable inquiry” into election results before certifying them, and the second allows county board members to examine election-related documents before certification.

The rules were passed by three Republican-appointed members, all of whom were thanked by name by former President Donald Trump at an Atlanta rally in August. Trump called members Janice Johnston, Rick Jeffares, and Janelle King “pit bulls fighting for honesty, transparency, and victory” but said the other two members of the board “aren’t so good.”

Trump’s refusal to accept his loss in Georgia in 2020 and his efforts to overturn that loss have some Democrats worried the election board could set the groundwork for an attempt to nullify a potential loss in 2024.

Lawyers representing the state and national Democratic Parties sought to convince Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney that the rules are too vague and could add chaos to the counting process in what is expected to be a close race between Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris. Democrats want McBurney to override the rules or to clarify that they do not allow election board members to delay certification past the Nov. 12 deadline.

“The uncertainty that the challenged rules inject in the certification process creates a risk that the county board of elections might not certify their votes, might not certify at all, or might not certify in time,” said attorney Kurt Kastorf.

Lawyers representing Democrats also argued that a lack of definition for a reasonable inquiry means local election boards would not know when they had finished doing one. And such an inquiry could be very different in a small county or a large one.

“The reasonable inquiry rule provides all kinds of flexibility but no direction,” said attorney Ben Thorpe. “There is no definition in the rule that helps superintendents understand when reasonable inquiry has been satisfied, and so it is then left to the determinations of individual actors.”

McBurney questioned whether the correct understanding of the rule is that a reasonable inquiry means doing as much as you can within the timeframe.

“You could add a note saying, ‘I wish I had more time,’ and then the Legislature could change it, but the deadline is the deadline; get done what you can, and what is reasonable to one person might not be reasonable to another, but you’re making your inquiry, and then it’s wheels up at 5 p.m. on the 12th of November,” he said.

Attorneys for the state election board agreed with that characterization of the rule and said the court should defer to the expertise of state and county election board members.

“Nobody is arguing that these rules were meant to be or can be read to suggest to anybody that their certification duty under the law has been called into question,” said Elizabeth Young, an attorney with the Georgia Attorney General’s office, which is charged with representing state agencies. “And it’s a fundamental principle in declaratory judgment types of cases like this that we’re going to assume public officials are going to fulfill their duties in good faith, and I will say, from the people that I’ve met, that worked in elections that do a thankless and difficult job, that presumption is very valid in this case.”

McBurney also pushed back against that idea.

“I happen to live in a county where a member of a board didn’t certify, so I’m just wondering when we need to set aside that presumption,” he said.

Young said the rules would allow flexibility within the current law, but ultimately, county boards must meet their deadlines or be forced by a court order to do their jobs.

“There are all kinds of things that can and do happen in an election world that might cause a superintendent to have a question. You know, ‘I heard lightning struck this precinct and the machines went down. I don’t know that everything was correct. I’d like to ask some questions to the precinct leader over there.’”

“Those are the types of questions that should be able to be resolved within the time period,” she added. “But if there isn’t, there is a provision … where, as you’re coming up to that deadline, you do your best, and you certify, and you turn whatever issue is that is not quite resolved over to the district attorney.”

Following the hearing, McBurney presided over a separate election-related case involving a member of the Fulton County Board of Elections. The question, in that case, is whether board members’ certification duties are discretionary – meaning they have the responsibility to vote against certification if they believe there are mistakes or fraud – or ministerial, meaning their duty is to certify the results and let any problems be ironed out by the proper authorities.

Speaking after that case, McBurney said he has cleared his plate of other obligations and plans to rule swiftly on both matters given the closeness of Election Day.

Max Weldon Medley, Jr.

Max Weldon Medley, Jr., 82, of Clarkesville, Georgia, passed away on Friday, September 20, 2024.

Mr. Medley was born on May 17, 1942, in Starkville, Mississippi, to the late Max W. Medley, Sr., and Marguerite Pugh Medley. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his sister, Alice M. Sohn.

Max served in the U.S. Army in Germany in the early 1960s during the time of the Berlin Wall construction. He then attended the University of Florida and graduated in 1967 with a BS in Electrical Engineering and spent the next 25 years in his chosen field, which included teaching, writing a book, and receiving a patent. After retirement, he applied his analytical skills to the culinary arts, creating the perfect breads, pizzas, and cheesecakes. He was active in his church, Cornelia Christian Church, most recently serving on the missions committee. Before moving to Georgia in 2016, he raised a family with his wife, Alice in Largo, Florida.

Survivors include his loving wife of 57 years, Alice H. Medley, sons, Todd Medley, Sammamish, WA; Michael Medley, Adairsville, GA; granddaughter, Ashleigh; sister, Ella, of Apalachicola, FL; brother, Walter, of Pensacola, FL; niece, Chris Andrews, nephew, Eric Andrews, both of Marietta; and brother-in-law, Jesse, Pensacola, FL.

Military Honors will be rendered at 11:00 a.m., Friday, October 4, 2024, at the Crematorium at Baldwin Mountain at Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel.

A Celebration of Life will be held at 2:00 p.m., Saturday, October 5, 2024, at Cornelia Christian Church with Rev. Greg Miller officiating.

In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to Cornelia Christian Church, 1244 441 Bypass, Cornelia, Georgia 30531, or to a charity of one’s choice.

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

Former Commerce police officer accused of arresting innocent drivers hired by Oglethorpe County Sheriff’s Office

Oglethorpe County has hired former Commerce police officer Jacob Cody Wood. (Oglethorpe County Sheriff's Office)

A police officer dismissed by the Commerce Police Department earlier this year for alleged misconduct has been hired by another North Georgia law enforcement agency.

Jacob Cody Wood, who became the subject of statewide media coverage after he was accused of charging drivers who were not impaired with DUIs, is now employed as a deputy with the Oglethorpe County Sheriff’s Office.

As reported by state and local media outlets, Wood faced an impending departure from the Commerce Police Department until a separation agreement was reached between the city and Wood’s legal team.

Under that agreement, the city of Commerce agreed “to allow (Wood) to resign in lieu of termination.”

Language in the separation agreement, which was obtained by Now Habersham, states:

“The city further agrees to designate employee’s separation as a ‘voluntary resignation’ for all purposes…as part of this separation agreement, the city waives all claims for reimbursement.”

Wood joins Oglethorpe County

Wood joined Oglethorpe’s Sheriff’s Office in May, according to Georgia’s Peace Officer Standards and Training Council (POST). Now Habersham has confirmed that POST has an active investigation into Wood stemming from the allegations in February.

Sheriff David Gabriel could not be reached despite multiple inquiries for comment.

“Mr. Wood’s investigation is pending,” said Christopher Lee, an investigator with POST District 7. “I do not have a date on when it will be reviewed by the POST council.”

Fox 5 Atlanta reported in February that Wood “made twice as many DUI arrests in 2023 as the rest of the (Commerce Police) Department combined.” Wood would often charge a driver with DUI/drugs despite the absence of drugs in the vehicle, according to a Fox 5 I-Team investigation, and no drugs or illegal substances were found in the systems of a number of people who submitted to blood tests after their arrests. 

More than a dozen DUI cases of individuals who’d been charged by Wood were later dropped by the solicitor’s office, Fox 5 reported.

In 2018, the Oglethorpe County Sheriff’s Office hired former Athens-Clarke County police officer Taylor Saulters, who was terminated by ACCPD after he’d been accused of intentionally hitting a fleeing suspect with his vehicle.