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Area road closures

A lineman cuts up a tree at the intersection of Stonepile Road and Sutton Mill Road. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

A current list of area road closings in Habersham and surrounding areas.

Updated 3:58 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 28

Habersham County

County roads, not including Georgia DOT-maintained highways or city streets

Closed roads

Closed roads due to trees with power lines:

This information was updated last by the county at 11:45 a.m.

Thacker Road
Maybrook Drive
Roberts Creek Rd
Marvin Pitts Road
Bear Gap Road
Dicks Hill Parkway near Stephens County
Tech School Road
Hollywood Hills Estates
Hollywood Church Road
Crane Mill Road
Lucius Yearwood Road
Mountain Ranch Road
Col. Hough Road
Tugalo Village Road (gravel portion)
Stonebank Road
Skyland Drive (gravel portion)
Kitchens Road
Simmemon Road
Roberts Road
Frank Lovell Road
Canyon Point Drive

Deer Path Road, one lane open

All other county-maintained roads are passable.

Roads recently cleared

Waco Smith Road
Early Sundown Road
Carl Moore Road
Chimney Mountain Flats

White County

For an updated list of White County road closings, click here.

Egleston to close Sunday as new children’s hospital opens in Atlanta

The new hospital named after Home Depot founder Arthur M. Blank, sits on the 70-acre Children's Healthcare of Atlanta (CHOA) campus on North Druid Hills in Atlanta. (Image courtesy CHOA)

Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta plans to close its Egleston Hospital on Sunday and move more than 300 patients to the brand-new Arthur M. Blank Hospital.

The healthcare system says thousands of employees have been rehearsing for the move, a logistical challenge, for two years. It will involve 56 ambulances, many police officers, and what hospital officials expect from the public: patience from drivers on the route between the Emory and Druid Hills campuses on Sunday.

Designed by clinicians

The new 446-bed children’s hospital is on the Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta (CHOA) 70-acre North Druid Hills campus. Chief Nursing Officer Linda Cole said at a press conference on Aug. 6 that clinicians designed the 2-million-square-foot facility for their patients.

“We brought in hundreds of front-line staff and providers to a hospital made with cardboard,” Cole said. “And although it may have been a fake hospital, we learned a lot of really good lessons.”

As construction neared completion, more than 1,200 staff and providers participated in dress rehearsals, where they ran multiple simultaneous scenarios — just like what happens on an average day in the hospital, Cole said. They tested their workflow, the new facility, and its technology to be ready for Sept. 29.

Moving day

Cole said a minute-by-minute rundown for moving day is prepped and ready to go. At 7 a.m., Egleston closes and Arthur M. Blank Hospital opens.

“We’ll also transfer patients from the Scottish Rite Aflac Cancer and Blood Disorders Center,” she said, “because we’re going to consolidate our inpatient hematology services at Arthur M. Blank.”

Staff expect to have all of the patients settled within 10 hours.

“It will take about 56 ambulances,” Cole said, some of which will come from community partners in Georgia and surrounding states. CHOA will use their own transport vehicles and, weather permitting, helicopters.

About the new hospital

The hospital has private patient rooms with sofas where family members can sleep. Kitchenettes and laundry facilities are also located on every floor. (Image courtesy CHOA)

The Arthur M. Blank Hospital has 116 more beds than Egleston. It features private patient rooms with double sofas for family members to stay and sleep nearby.

For added comfort, kitchenettes, washers, and dryers are accessible on every floor. Multiple gardens, games, and getaway play centers are also available.

When it opens on Sunday, Children’s Arthur M. Blank Hospital will be the only Level 1 Pediatric Trauma Center in Georgia with a 24/7 emergency department.

Football games rescheduled due to hurricane

(Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

Hurricane Helene forced schools across Georgia to reschedule their football Friday schedules. In Northeast Georgia, games are being pushed to this weekend and the first part of next week.

Below is a list of rescheduled games.

Local games rescheduled

#3 Cherokee Bluff @ #8 Oconee County (OCT 17)
#10 Commerce @ #10 Elbert County (SAT 1 PM)
Dawson County @ Greater Atlanta Christian (SAT 1 PM)
East Hall @ #5 Monroe Area (SAT 11 AM)
East Jackson vs #2 Hebron Christian (SAT 12 PM)
Flowery Branch vs East Forsyth (SAT 12 PM)
#5 Gainesville 48, Johns Creek 0 (WED)
Habersham Central @ Winder-Barrow (SAT 12:30 PM)
Jackson County vs. Alcovy (SAT 12 PM)
#2 Jefferson vs. West Hall (SAT 11 AM)
Johnson vs. Chestatee (SAT 10 AM)
North Hall vs. Pickens (SAT 12:30 PM)
#6 Rabun County vs. Providence Christian (SAT 11 AM)
#4 Stephens County @ Franklin County (MON SEPT. 30 6:30 PM)
Towns County vs Dixie (SC) (Canceled, will not be rescheduled)
Union County @ Lakeview-Ft Oglethorpe (MON 6 PM)
White County vs Lumpkin County (MON 7 PM)

Other area games

Lakeview vs. Riverside
Hart County @ Prince Avenue Christian (SUN 11 AM)

BYE: #1 Buford
BYE: Banks County

Hurricane Helene death toll in Georgia reaches 15 as recovery efforts continue

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - SEPTEMBER 27: People toss buckets of water out of a home as the streets and homes are flooded near Peachtree Creek after hurricane Helene brought in heavy rains over night on September 27, 2024 in Atlanta, Georgia. Hurricane Helene made landfall late Thursday night as a category 4 hurricane in the pan handle of Florida and is working its way north, it is now considered a tropical storm. (Photo by Megan Varner/Getty Images)

This story was updated at 5:45 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 27, 2024. 

(Georgia Recorder) — Hurricane Helene has killed at least 15 people in Georgia, including a first responder, and others were still trapped inside of buildings midday Friday in the hardest-hit areas.

“At this time, this has been a deadly storm,” Gov. Brian Kemp said during a briefing Friday. “When we ask people to stay off the roads and be patient, it’s because we are trying to get to people. It’s a very dangerous environment, and one of our finest has lost his life trying to save others.”

Kemp said there are “multiple structures” where people are trapped inside. In Valdosta, 115 buildings have been identified that were heavily damaged, some with people still inside as of midday Friday.

“We’ll have to literally cut our way into situations like this,” he said.

Kemp declined to provide details about the state’s fatalities, other than to say they were all in the storm’s path. Next of kin is still being notified, he said. The state’s death toll had reached 15 as of Friday evening, said the governor’s spokesman, Garrison Douglas.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp gives an update on hurricane preparations Thursday ahead of Hurricane Helene making landfall in Florida. (Jill Nolin/Georgia Recorder)

The first responder who died was a part-time assistant fire chief in Blackshear named Vernon “Leon” Davis who was killed when a tree fell on his truck, Jacksonville-based First Coast News reported. He had been clearing downed trees and power lines.

At least 40 people died across four states, according to the Associated Press.

“I had to get out and see what was going on in my community and y’all, it has been devastating,” U.S. Rep. Rick Allen, an Augusta Republican, said at a Friday press conference in Augusta, adding that a “dear friend” had been killed by a tree that fell on their home.

Helene barreled through Georgia during the night and left about 1 million locations without power in the state.

The storm made landfall as a Category 4 hurricane at a little after 11 p.m. in Taylor County, Florida, with 140 mile-per-hour winds. It remained a hurricane until 5 a.m. Friday – about six hours after landfall, said Ken Graham, director of the National Weather Service.

“At six hours, it was still a hurricane, doing quite a bit of damage into Georgia as well,” Graham said. “The tropical storm force winds were sustained all the way to upstate South Carolina, which is really just amazing, the extent of the winds in the storm. At several times, the tropical storm force winds extended 350 miles or so away from the center, which is pretty staggering.”

Preliminary analysis shows as much as 11 inches of rain in parts of the affected area, including Georgia.

The full scope of the storm was still being assessed in Friday’s daylight, but Kemp said that initial reports suggest the damage will likely be worse than Hurricane Michael, which devastated the state’s agriculture industry in 2018.

“We know it’s one of the widest wind fields ever in the Atlantic, which made it a statewide event for us here in Georgia. We’ve got a lot of work to do. We’ve got a lot of damage to assess,” Kemp said.

Agriculture Commissioner Tyler Harper said Friday that “east of I-75 we’re seeing significant damage to agriculture in all commodities.”

Kemp urged people to stay home if possible while crews work in the storm’s aftermath and warned Georgians not to become complacent as the skies clear.

“For people in the metro area, it is still very dangerous out there. The loss of life that we’ve seen, a lot of it has been by falling trees because of saturated ground, and even though the winds are starting to die down, there’s still trees literally falling,” he said.

To illustrate the point, Kemp said a tree fell across the driveway at the governor’s mansion shortly after he left for the state operations center.

In north Georgia, the risk of flooding also remains as the state’s waterways continue to rise for the next day or so.

Georgia Recorder reporter Ross Williams contributed to this report. 

Update: Crews clear GA 197 north of Clarkesville

Georgia Power and Georgia Department of Transportation crews work to remove a large tree blocking GA 197. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Update at 8:04 p.m. Sept. 27

Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) and Georgia Power crews spent several hours Friday afternoon clearing a large oak tree that fell across GA 197 just north of Wall Bridge Road.

The tree blocked both lanes and took down power lines Friday morning. Traffic was flowing smoothly again and power was restored to the area by 7 p.m.

Previous story

GA 197 is completely blocked at the intersection of Wall Bridge Road, just past Bethlehem Baptist Church. Drivers are encouraged to take an alternate route.

GA 197 is one of many roads across north Georgia that have been blocked by large trees due to the effects of Hurricane Helene.

Storm damaged their vehicles and house but this Demorest family says they feel ‘fortunate’

Randy Mobley (right) tells his neighbor Daniel Jiminez how the tree was laying across his vehicles Friday morning. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

A Demorest family was awakened Friday morning to discover that a tree had fallen across two of their vehicles and was against their house. The Mobley’s never heard the tree fall. A Demorest police officer performing a welfare check on the family alerted them to the incident.

“Demorest PD woke me up this morning and told me there was a tree down and it was on both my vehicles,” Randy Mobley said.

The tree fell across the front of a 2024 Nissan Sentra and a 2018 Ford F-150 pickup truck. Mobley had cleared the tree from the car but was still clearing the tree from the truck and his house when Now Habersham caught up with him.

Mobley’s 2024 Nissan Sentra receives noticeable damage from the fallen tree. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

He estimates the damage to the vehicles at $5,000 but follows that with “It’s just a guess.” Mobley said he will know more once he removes the tree.

Unsure about the damage to his house, it appeared it was centered around the garage.

“It might have busted the window on the garage door,” Mobley said.

The family said they feel fortunate it was one of the smaller trees near their house that fell. Numerous large trees remained standing after the worst of the storm passed by.

The Mobleys are one of many families across Florida, Georgia, and the Carolina’s that have suffered property damage due to Hurricane Helene’s wrath as the storm marched across the southeast Thursday into Friday.

Hurricane Helene: Clean up efforts wrap up as reports of damage come in

Hurricane Helene leaves trees down in Banks County. (Steve Nichols/Chief of Banks County Fire and EMS)

Update: Cleanup efforts in North Georgia are nearly complete as most of the roads are passable.

In Hart County, 14 residents reported damage to their homes from fallen trees caused by profuse winds brought by Helene. By early Saturday morning, only six road closures remained in Hart County as crews continued remove obstructions and debris.

Banks County reported one home damaged, a total of 86 trees down on roadways, 15 downed power lines and 104 calls for storm related issues.

On Monday, Rabun County Emergency Management Director Brian Panell said roads throughout the county have mostly been cleared and are now passable, though several Rabun County homes were damaged by fallen trees.

“We’re still gathering information on what extent those damages are,” Panell said. “I’m not aware of any total losses at the moment.”

Around 15% of the county remains without power, according to Panell, as utility providers work to restore service to those areas.

Downed trees obstruct the roadway in Banks County after Helene. (Steve Nichols/Chief of Banks County Fire and EMS)
A downed power line burns across a Banks County roadway following Helene. (Steve Nichols/Chief of Banks County Fire and EMS)

 

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At 3:30 p.m. Friday, most of the roads in Habersham and White counties had been cleared of debris left by Hurricane Helene. But recovery efforts in Rabun County are still underway.

According to Rabun County Emergency Management Director Brian Panell, a list of roads in the county are still “impassable” as a majority of residents remain without power.

“We’re still assessing the damage,” Panell said. “At one point this afternoon, we were 80% out of power. Now, that number has decreased to 60%. All three providers are working diligently to restore service.”

Panell said the severe weather earlier Friday morning also disturbed “a number of flood gates” – especially one along the Mathis Dam on Lake Rabun. This has led to significant flooding on the southern end of the county.

East Glade Creek Bridge Clarkesville, GA (Nora Almazan/NowHabersham.com)

“It is flooding roads and blocking the ability of homeowners to access their homes,” said Panell, who added that the county is actively working to correct the breach in the dam.

Officials have confirmed so far that a total of four homes have been destroyed by fallen trees – two in White County and two in Habersham. White County spokesperson Bryce Barrett said two White County homes were struck earlier this morning.

“But both have no injuries,” he said. “We’re working with the families to make sure all needs are met and that they have places to stay throughout the night.”

The full extent of the damage in Rabun has not yet been determined, Panell said.

Barrett said “a majority” of the roads in White County are now passable, though he and other officials urge residents to stay home as cleanup efforts continue.

A lineman cuts up a tree at the intersection of Stonepile Road and Sutton Mill Road. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

“Hurricane Helene has moved out of our area, but we will continue to experience rain showers and remain under a wind advisory,” Barrett said. “Road crews and power companies are actively working to clear roadways and restore power. We recommend staying sheltered for the rest of the day to allow these crews to work safely. Additional road closures and power outages may occur.”

Panell said an emergency shelter will be available in Rabun County for those impacted by the storm at 6 p.m. this evening. The shelter will be located at Clayton Baptist Church (87 South Church St.) in Clayton.

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As the last bands of Hurricane Helene exit North Georgia, people throughout the region are breathing a cautious sigh of relief.

The storm shifted eastward overnight, pushing the worst of the winds into the Carolinas.

As of mid-morning Friday, 98% of Spartanburg County, SC, was without power and 90% of Greenville County, SC, was in the dark.

Still, Habersham and Northeast Georgia saw their share of damage.

Regional damage

Roads throughout Northeast Georgia are strewn with fallen trees and debris and at least two Habersham County homes are possibly destroyed in the wake of Hurricane Helene.

Clean-up efforts to clear roads are underway in Habersham, according to Emergency 911 Director Lynn Smith, who said the full extent of the damage is still unknown.

“It’s widespread,” Smith said. “It’s everywhere. We’ve got trees down. We’ve had crews out all night long. We’ve got roads that are flooded. Power lines that are wrapped up in some of the trees. We’re trying to stay on top of everything.”

Smith said two or three homes in the county were destroyed by fallen trees overnight.

“I’m going to say they’re probably destroyed because they’re going to have to be rebuilt because of the trees going through them,” she said.

A Georgia Department of Transportation crew member places cones around a downed tree blocking the northbound lane of GA 197 South in Mt. Airy on Friday morning, Sept. 27, 2024. (Joy Purcell/NowHabersham.com)
The swollen creek at Loudermilk Mill off GA 197 South in Mt. Airy flooded adjacent property early Friday morning, Sept. 27, 2024. (Joy Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

White County spokesperson Bryce Barrett described a similar picture and said a “majority of the damage” he’s seen is downed trees and power lines.

“There’s a good number of roads that are impassable,” he said. “I would say that’s the extent of our damage – that and power outages. We came out a lot better than we thought we were going to.”

Rabun County Emergency Management Director Brian Panell said trees have fallen and roads are flooded in Rabun County, although there have been no reports of significant damage to homes so far.

As the eye of the storm passed over Habersham soon after sunrise, the weather calmed and damage assessments began. They will continue throughout the weekend as the full scope of Helene’s impact hits home.

At least 3 storm deaths reported

Helene rumbled into Georgia as a Category 1 hurricane. Within hours of landfall, the state’s first deaths were reported.

Some Atlanta residents had to be evacuated by boat from their apartment complex due to rising floodwaters.

Gov. Brian Kemp confirmed early Friday that two people died after a suspected tornado touched down in Wheeler County, about 88 miles southeast of Macon. Emergency management authorities in neighboring Jeff Davis County urged people to shelter in place due to high winds in the area.

At least one death was reported in Florida when a vehicle was struck by a falling sign.

Officials caution that rivers and creeks could still flood from storm runoff, and trees could topple in the rain-soaked soil. They urge people to stay off the roads, especially in areas where trees and power lines are down. If you encounter a flooded road while traveling, do not attempt to cross it, turn around.

RELATED

Area road closures

Scenes of Helene: Storm images from around Northeast Georgia

The swollen creek at Loudermilk Mill off GA 197 South in Mt. Airy flooded adjacent property early Friday morning, Sept. 27, 2024. (Joy Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

Photojournalists and residents have spent the day capturing images of Tropical Storm Helen’s impacts on Northeast Georgia.

If you have an image to share, please post it to our Facebook page and include the location.

Click on images to enlarge

 

State Leaderboard: 10 on updated list

In Week 7, the official state leaderboard by the AJC and Georgia High School Football Daily (GHSFD) published the fourth of 10 editions of state leaders. Ten local players are on the list (previously 13).

RUSHING LEADERS (min 500 yds)

STATE LEADER – Zayden Cook – Chattooga – 1,328 yds

  • Tysean Wiggins (Commerce) – 755 yds (16th; high of 4th) [former 1A DI State Leader]
  • Reid Giles (Rabun County) – 572 yds (60th; high of 39th)

CLOSE (300+): Dustin Barrett (Towns County) – 485 yds (high of 64th); Nolan Matthews (Lumpkin County) – 481 yds (63rd); Jacari Huff (Commerce) – 426 yds [prev 82nd]; Connor Schuknecht (Union County) – 398 yds; Donovan Warren (Habersham Central) – 377 yds; Cal Faulkner (Lumpkin County) – 359 yds; Javin Gordon (Stephens County) – 357 yds [prev 76th]; Cody McBrayer (Dawson County) – 325 yds

PASSING LEADERS (min 800 yds)

STATE LEADER – Kade Smith – Trion – 1,409 yds

  • Tripp Nix (White County) – 1,233 yds (13th)
  • Tripp Underwood (Stephens County) – 1,171 yds (15th; high of 7th)
  • Kamden Kendrick (Union County) – 885 yds (71st)

CLOSE (400+): Paris Wilbanks (Habersham Central) – 742 yds (high of 74th); Cal Faulkner (Lumpkin County) – 717 yds; Preston Bannister (Dawson County) – 622 yds; Peyton McGaha (Towns County) – 572 yds; Gavin Markey (Jefferson) – 552 yds

RECEIVING LEADERS (min 325 yds)

STATE LEADER – Cody Bryan – Heritage-Ringgold – 701 yds

  • Maddox Young (Union County) – 411 yds (47th; high of 42nd)
  • Zeke Whittington (Habersham Central) – 374 yds (59th; high of 32nd)
  • Gaines Clark (White County) – 352 yds (76th)
  • Davon Swinton (Stephens County) – 350 yds (77th; high of 21st)
  • Javin Gordon (Stephens County) – 348 yds (79th; high of 35th)

CLOSE (200+): Chatham Burnett (Dawson County) – 295 yds; AJ Scott (Lumpkin County) – 243 yds; Brayden Roach (White County) – 239 yds; Jonah Swinton (Stephens County) – 235 yds; Noel Lammers (White County) – 217 yds; Zach Godfrey (White County) – 209 yds; Dustin Barrett (Towns County) – 206 yds; Dylan Edwards (Dawson County) – 203 yds

The story in the storm

Responses from Now Habersham readers as Tropical Storm Helene made her way through Georgia.

If you have a comment, photo, or video you’d like to share, email [email protected].

Katie Dixon: We are in the eye now and it’s totally clear. You can see stars. (Dublin, GA)

Katie Dixon: Whatever they tell you to expect…expect worse. It’s starting to slow down FINALLY here (Dublin, GA). That was the scariest thing I have ever experienced in my life.

Katie Dixon: I think we are about to be in the eye wall. It’s bad here. (Dublin, GA) Wind and rain and I can’t see but I can hear trees or branches or whatever falling. Power keeps going in and out probably about to go out completely. Its very loud outside.

Debbie Freeman: I am in Valdosta, trying to survive this horrible hurricane. Trees have fallen and things have hit my house. I’ve never been so scared. The eye should be coming over us any time now. I’m in the closet with my dogs.

Marsheila Bush-Rhodes: I’m 70 miles to the right of Cedar Key, FL. We are getting 80 mph winds now. It’s going to be a long night! Prayers from Florida to Georgia.

Roxie Barron: Sarasota. Got slammed, (and continuing to get slammed) with storm surge. Monster storm.

Ann Randall Reese: I’m concerned! All my siblings and their families live in southwest GA and I just have to trust God to see them all through this storm! I’m concerned for all of us in other parts of GA possibly in the eye of the storm. Our God is in control.

Debbie Freeman: It’s going to come right over me. I’m scared to death! The dogs and I will be hunkering down in my bedroom closet.

Sandy Wyatt Cox: I hate wind. Because we have so many trees in our yard we are going to the church.

Katie Dixon: Middle Georgia is calm again…some gusts but nothing crazy at the moment.

Stephanie Miller: I am not nervous for us, but I am for my children and grands and friends who are scared. I have always been a storm lover and sleep best when it rages, but I don’t like being without power. My thoughts are that to be afraid is to not have faith. We do have a lot of huge 60-plus-year-old pines all around our house, and I am praying that they stay strong.

Amber Gilbert: I plan to do FB lives during it! LOL

Gaylon Palmer: My vacation home is in Lanark. I’m sure I’ll get some pics.

 

 

Georgia’s state officials, farmers brace for damage from fury of Hurricane Helene

Gov. Brian Kemp (left) and Will Lanxton, who is the state meteorologist, briefed the media on the threats posed by Hurricane Helene on Thursday. (Jill Nolin/Georgia Recorder)

This story was updated at 11:10 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 26, 2024. 

(Georgia Recorder) — What remains of Hurricane Helene is expected to leave Georgia by midday Friday, likely leaving widespread – and potentially extended – power outages and a sprawling debris field in the massive storm’s wake.

On Thursday, state and local officials, agriculture leaders and residents from south Georgia to the Tennessee line were bracing for the worst as forecasts continued to paint a dire picture of what is to come.

Schools across the state closed ahead of the storm, and meetings and events – like GOP vice presidential nominee and Ohio U.S. Sen. J.D. Vance’s planned visits to Macon and Flowery Branch – were scuttled as Hurricane Helene barreled toward the Big Bend of Florida with an apparent path toward metro Atlanta. Some cities, like Valdosta, implemented a curfew.

Fast-moving Hurricane Helene made landfall as a Category 4 storm late Thursday evening with a 400-mile girth that is expected to dump as much as a foot of rain in some areas of Georgia, bring powerful winds farther inland than usual and potentially even cause landslides in the mountainous areas of north Georgia.

“This is one of the biggest storms we’ve ever had,” Gov. Brian Kemp said Thursday afternoon during a storm briefing at the state operations center in Atlanta. “It may not be the strongest category, but from a wind field perspective and the amount of damage that it has the potential to do statewide, it’s better to be safe than sorry.

“It’s literally going to affect all 159 counties,” he added.

Kemp declared a statewide state of emergency on Tuesday, deploying personnel and resources across Georgia in advance of the storm. As of Thursday afternoon, Kemp said there was nothing more to do but wait.

“We’re as ready to go as we can but there’s just not much more we can do until the storm hits, the winds die down and we can come in there behind and start clearing roads and get power back on,” Kemp said.

The governor urged people to stay off the roads during and after the storm to give utility workers and recovery crews room to work.

Not your typical storm

Hurricane Helene is unusual among Georgia storms partly because of its reach, with it threatening tropical storm-strength winds – at a minimum – in areas of the state that are often spared such hurricane season rituals.

Lindsay Marlow, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Peachtree City, said this marks one of only a few times metro Atlanta has ever been under a tropical storm warning in modern history.

“So, it’s fairly rare in terms of history for our forecast area, and you can kind of certainly see that translate to the types of impacts that we’re expecting,” Marlow said Thursday.

“This is a fairly anomalous storm, both in how broad its wind field is, and also in how quick its forward speed is. And the combination of those two factors is why we’re expecting kind of the magnitude of the inland impacts that we are.”

Marlow said an upper level low pressure system is pulling Hurricane Helene forward, giving the hurricane a faster than normal speed and less time to weaken as it travels through the state.

Since Hurricane Helene poses multiple threats that may occur during the night, knowing what to do and when to spring into action can be challenging.

“Kind of an insidious threat that comes with tropical systems on top of the potential for flooding and damaging wind gusts would also be the potential for short-lived fast-moving tornadoes, primarily on that eastern side of the storm,” Marlow said.

“So, it can be difficult to kind of process in that situation where you may already kind of be preparing for these stronger winds, having a tornado warning be issued on top of that.”

Meteorologists urge residents to make sure they can receive weather alerts, preferably in multiple ways – and make sure the volume on the devices is turned up.

“If you’re under a flash flood warning, you need to seek higher ground. If you’re in a tornado warning, you need to seek lower ground,” said Will Lanxton, who is the state meteorologist. “That’s two different things, two different actions to take, but you really need to be weather aware.”

State Rep. Will Wade, a Dawsonville Republican, said he feared Hurricane Helene might end up being one of the worst storms to hit Georgia in three decades.

“We’re preparing for what could be several days without power. We’re very concerned with the amount of saturation already on the ground here in my area,” Wade said.

‘We just have to pray that the miracle can happen for the farmers’

Before Hurricane Helene made landfall Thursday, it was already conjuring painful memories of Hurricane Michael and its devastating impact on the state’s agriculture industry, particularly its pecan orchards, in 2018.

Helene is moving into Georgia at a time when farmers are still gathering pecans and only starting to harvest cotton and peanuts.

But Helene’s likely statewide impact posed an even greater potential threat than Michael, stirring concerns throughout Georgia’s agriculture community.

“We’re talking about hurricane-force winds upwards to Macon and Forsyth. When have we ever had hurricane-force winds in that part of the state?” said the state’s agriculture commissioner, Tyler Harper.

“Now we’re talking tropical storm force winds in North Georgia. In that part of the state, you still have row crops, but you also have livestock and you have poultry facilities, and so it does cause a lot of concern,” he said.

Helene’s arrival also comes at a time when the agricultural economy is already under duress, Harper said.

“We have high input costs, high interest rates, low commodity prices,” he said. “So, as an ag economy, without a hurricane, we were going to be in a very tough place as is this year regardless. You throw a hurricane on top of that, it makes it a lot worse.”

Before a severe storm arrives, Georgia’s poultry farmers are advised to make sure that power generators are working and that propane tanks are topped off in case the electricity goes out. The Georgia poultry group also recommended supplying extra feed in case weather-related disruptions restrict the ability to feed animals.

“You take all (Hurricane) warnings very seriously, but this one appears to have the potential to impact a very large area of land,” said Georgia Poultry Federation President Mike Giles. “The width of the storm is such that anywhere in Georgia, no matter where you are, could be potentially impacted.”

Don Koehler, who is the executive director of the Georgia Peanut Commission, said he is most concerned about the state’s cotton crop, which peanut farmers also commonly grow.

The cotton has already started shedding leaves, leaving the white bolls exposed to the elements. And with a harvest season that usually lasts a couple months, there was only so much cotton that could be quickly gathered ahead of the storm.

“When you take and you let that lint in that boll get wet and then you put 60 miles an hour wind on it, you know what’s going to happen. It’s going to blow it out. It’s going down to the ground,” Koehler said. “So, I’m fearful that the worst impact in our row crops is going to be cotton.”

Koehler said he is bracing for damage that is at least as bad as Hurricane Michael. But he knows if the forecasts are right and this storm maintains strength as far inland as expected, the impact could be far worse.

“The farmers know that it’s the risk that they take, but economically, we were already in a struggle,” Koehler said. “Too many bankers have told me that farmers were really in trouble this year because they carried debt. They really haven’t made any money for about three years now. They’ve carried debt forward and haven’t paid all their bills.

“So we were certainly needing a good crop this year, but we just have to pray that the miracle can happen for the farmers and that we make it by somehow,” he said.

Postal chief insists to Congress that mail-in ballots will get delivered in time

United States Postal Service Postmaster General Louis DeJoy testified before Congress Thursday that mail delivery problems that plagued Georgia’s primaries will be corrected for ballots mailed in this fall. (John McCosh/Georgia Recorder)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — United States Postal Service Postmaster General Louis DeJoy testified before Congress on Thursday that voters can “absolutely” trust their mail-in ballots will be secure and prioritized, though he emphasized they must be mailed at least a week ahead of the various state deadlines to be delivered on time.

DeJoy’s testimony to House lawmakers became heated at times, as members questioned whether delays in general mail delivery and previous issues with mail-in ballots in swing states could disenfranchise voters this year.

DeJoy also brought USPS’s facilities into question, calling them “ratty” twice during the hour-long hearing.

His various comments about the management of the USPS and how the agency plans to handle election mail appeared to frustrate some members of the House Financial Services and General Government Appropriations Subcommittee.

For example, in response to a question from Wisconsin Democratic Rep. Mark Pocan about the pace of mail delivery in his home state, DeJoy responded that “the first rockets that went to the moon blew up, OK.”

Pocan then said: “Thanks for blowing up Wisconsin,” before DeJoy gave a lengthier answer.

“We’re going to do a series of transactional adjustments and service measurement adjustments and service metric adjustments as we move forward with this that are going to get your service to be 95% reliable,” DeJoy said.

Millions of ballots in the mail
The hearing came as state officials throughout the country are preparing to, or have already, sent out millions of mail-in ballots that could very well decide the results of elections for Congress and potentially even the presidency.

Mail-in voting surged during the COVID-19 pandemic as a central part of the 2020 presidential election and has remained a popular way for voters to decide who will represent their interests in government.

Voters can also cast ballots in person during early voting and on Election Day.

Lawmakers focused many of their questions during the hearing on how USPS keeps mail-in ballots secure and whether the agency can deliver them on time, though several members voiced frustration with DeJoy’s plans to change operations at USPS.

When asked specifically whether Americans could trust in USPS to handle their election mail, DeJoy said, “Absolutely.”

“I don’t know why you wouldn’t,” he testified. “We’ve delivered in the heightened part of a pandemic, in the most sensationalized political time of elections, and … we delivered it 99 point whatever percent, I mentioned earlier.”

DeJoy had previously said USPS delivered 99.89% of mail-in ballots within seven days during the 2020 election.

DeJoy wrote in testimony submitted to the committee ahead of the hearing that not all state laws consider the speed of the USPS when deciding when voters can request mail-in ballots and when those are sent out.

“For example, some jurisdictions allow voters to request a mail-in ballot very close to Election Day,” he wrote. “Depending on when that ballot is mailed to the voter, it may be physically impossible for that voter to receive the ballot mail, complete their ballot, and return their ballot by mail in time to meet the jurisdiction’s deadline, even with our extraordinary measures, and despite our best efforts.”

‘I see horror’
DeJoy brought up the state of USPS facilities on his own at several points during the hearing, implying that they aren’t clean or up to his standards as a work environment.

“I walk in our plants and facilities, I see horror. My employees see just another day at work,” DeJoy said.

Following a question about whether USPS employees had the appropriate training to handle and deliver mail-in ballots on time, DeJoy said leadership was “overwhelmingly enhancing our training,” before disparaging the facilities.

“We’re on a daily mission to train over 600,000 people across 31,000 ratty locations, I might say, on how to improve our operating practices across the board and at this time most specifically in the election mail area,” he testified. “We’re doing very well at this, just not perfect.”

No members of the panel asked DeJoy to clarify what he meant by “ratty” or followed up when he said separately that he was “sitting on about $20 billion in cash.”

A USPS spokesperson said they had nothing to add to DeJoy’s characterization when asked about the “ratty” comment by States Newsroom.

“If you are listening to the hearing, you just heard him describe the condition of postal facilities further,” Martha S. Johnson wrote in an email sent shortly after DeJoy made his “horror” comment. “I have nothing to add to that.”

Deliveries for rural Americans
Pennsylvania Democratic Rep. Matt Cartwright questioned DeJoy during the hearing about how plans to “consolidate resources around regions with higher population densities” under the so-called Delivering for America plan will affect delivery times overall for rural residents.

DeJoy disagreed with the premise of the question, saying he believed it was “an unfair accusation, considering the condition that the Postal Service has been allowed to get to.”

DeJoy said the USPS had committed to a six-day-a-week delivery schedule and pledged that it would not take longer than five days for mail to arrive.

“It will not go beyond five days, because I’ll put it up in the air and fly it if I have to,” DeJoy said.

Cartwright mentioned that 1.4 million Pennsylvania residents requested to vote by mail during the 2022 midterm elections, a number he expected to rise this year.

The commonwealth has numerous competitive U.S. House districts, a competitive U.S. Senate race and is considered a crucial swing state for the presidential election. Several of those races could be determined by mail-in ballots arriving on time.

Ohio Republican Rep. David Joyce, chairman of the subcommittee, asked DeJoy about issues with the Cleveland regional sort facility during the 2023 election. The secretary of state, Joyce said, found that some mail-in ballots sent as early as Oct. 24 didn’t arrive until Nov. 21.

“These voters are disenfranchised because of the USPS failures,” Joyce said. “How specifically have you enhanced the all-clear procedures you referenced in response to the National Association of Secretaries of State? And can you assure us that these procedures will ensure that that doesn’t happen in this upcoming election?”

DeJoy responded that he would “need the specifics of Cleveland,” but said that USPS procedures are “extremely enhanced.”

Georgia primary problems
Georgia Republican Rep. Andrew Clyde, who isn’t on the panel, submitted a question for DeJoy about how a new regional processing and distribution center in Atlanta had “a negative impact” on mail delivery just weeks ahead of the GOP presidential primary earlier this year.

DeJoy said the USPS was investing more than $500 million into the region, but conceded “what went on in Georgia was an embarrassment to the organization, okay, and it should not have happened.”

“We are correcting for it aggressively,” DeJoy said. “Specifically with regard to the primary election, we got through that because I put a whole bunch of people down there and a whole bunch of double-checking processes in place.”

DeJoy added that “the performance was good on election mail for Georgia” and that USPS would deliver Georgia’s mail-in ballots in the weeks ahead “just fine.”