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Spending deal averts a possible federal shutdown and funds the government into December

FILE - Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., walks to a meeting at the Capitol in Washington, Sept. 11, 2024. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Congressional leaders announced an agreement Sunday on a short-term spending bill that will fund federal agencies for about three months, averting a possible partial government shutdown when the new budget year begins Oct. 1 and pushing final decisions until after the November election.

Lawmakers have struggled to get to this point as the current budget year winds to a close at month’s end. At the urging of the most conservative members of his conference, House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., had linked temporary funding with a mandate that would have compelled states to require proof of citizenship when people register to vote.

But Johnson could not get all Republicans on board even as the party’s presidential nominee, Donald Trump, insisted on that package. Trump said Republican lawmakers should not support a stop-gap measure without the voting requirement, but the bill went down to defeat anyway, with 14 Republicans opposing it.

Bipartisan negotiations began in earnest shortly after that, with leadership agreeing to extend funding into mid-December. That gives the current Congress the ability to fashion a full-year spending bill after the Nov. 5 election, rather than push that responsibility to the next Congress and president.

In a letter to Republican colleagues, Johnson said the budget measure would be “very narrow, bare-bones” and include “only the extensions that are absolutely necessary.”

“While this is not the solution any of us prefer, it is the most prudent path forward under the present circumstances,” Johnson wrote. “As history has taught and current polling affirms, shutting the government down less than 40 days from a fateful election would be an act of political malpractice.”

Rep. Tom Cole, the House Appropriations Committee chairman, had said on Friday that talks were going well.

“So far, nothing has come up that we can’t deal with,” said Cole, R-Okla. “Most people don’t want a government shutdown and they don’t want that to interfere with the election. So nobody is like, ‘I’ve got to have this or we’re walking.’ It’s just not that way.”

Johnson’s earlier effort had no chance in the Democratic-controlled Senate and was opposed by the White House, but it did give the speaker a chance to show Trump and conservatives within his conference that he fought for their request.

The final result — government funding effectively on autopilot — was what many had predicted. With the election just weeks away, few lawmakers in either party had any appetite for the brinksmanship that often leads to a shutdown.

Now, a bipartisan majority is expected to push the short-term measure over the finish line. Temporary spending bills generally fund agencies at current levels, but some additional money was included to bolster the Secret Service, replenish a disaster relief fund and aid with the presidential transition, among other things.

Woman drowns in Lake Hartwell

A 31-year-old woman is dead after she went missing while swimming in Lake Hartwell, according to Stephens County Chief Deputy Coroner Lee Woody.

According to the coroner’s office, a 911 call was placed around 5:20 p.m. Saturday, September 21, for a possible drowning at the jumping rock near Jenkins Ferry. First responders determined that Chelsea Cole went under while swimming to the rock about 20 feet from shore and never resurfaced, Woody says.

Georgia Department of Natural Resources game wardens and dive teams from Stephens and Oconee counties were dispatched to the scene and began searching for Cole. A sonar search was conducted. Around 8:27 p.m., DNR game wardens located Cole’s body in about 19 feet of water near where she went under, says DNR Public Affairs Officer Mark McKinnon.

Divers were able to immediately locate Cole’s body. Woody says the coroner’s office took possession of the body and will contact the GBI Crime Lab in Atlanta for an autopsy.

Cole was a resident of Stephens County.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with Cole’s family during this tragic time,” says Woody, who expressed his gratitude to all of the agencies involved, including the Stephens County Sheriff’s Office and EMS, for their fast recovery efforts.

American Government 101

Louise Owen, known to her students as Ms. Owen, taught me the fundamentals of what it means to be an American.

There is an urgent need for a life raft, a boat we might have missed, or simply more room in our brains for common sense. We can’t afford to be too busy, selfish, or jaded to discern who we are as Americans. Have we been led into murky waters or encouraged to believe senselessness is better than brain power? And, most importantly, do we care enough to make a change?

Instead of studying someone else’s governing ideas, let’s urgently return to the fundamental principles of American Government 101. In our study, we might recall a group of individuals who gathered and contemplated the future for all the citizens who call America home.

Those who run for office in our land or hold positions of power should urgently go back to school and study the first profound words in the Preamble to our Constitution. It’s crucial that we remember the message and apply it to our governance.

Today, gunshots ring in my ears, along with a string of lies, threats, and hateful rhetoric. Pets being eaten, children being murdered, and wars being fought are enough to rattle our minds and depress even Santa. Using any or all of it to gain political power is immoral and against our founding principles.

Winning, for many, has become more important than doing what is right. We all know it, but when in murky water, we can’t see clearly, much less have enough sense to swim out.
The threats of civil war, riots in the streets, election interference, burned books, hate-filled social media, and bias have twisted themselves into a web of distrust and malfeasance, causing many of us to fear tomorrow. We should all shout from our rooftops, “STOP! ENOUGH!”

The Preamble is an introduction to our Constitution. It is not a law, but it should be an oath we must preserve.

“We, the People of the United States, in order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.”

Every senior in my high school was required to take Government. We couldn’t graduate into the world without the knowledge Ms. Owen, our teacher, provided us. By the time we left her class, we understood the framework of the three branches of government and all the checks and balances they offered. We comprehended the horror associated with dictators, rogue regimes, and violent civil unrest.

When I cast my first vote at age 18, I thanked Ms. Owen for helping me understand the importance of the freedom to place a check by the person I preferred to lead.

We need a Ms. Owen in the halls of Congress and in every state to re-teach Government. Our elected officials, from city councils to state and national legislatures, should remember that their job is to provide equality, tranquility, welfare, defense, and liberty to the people they represent. They must prioritize stability and provide leadership, not for political gain but for the citizens who trust them to do what is right.

Our two-party system must return to the table of common sense and common good, or they need to flunk out of legislatures everywhere. The far right and the far left should move toward the center, establishing a government that works for all and not for a few who agree with their pitiful, uncompromising, self-serving behaviors.

God gave us this land of the free to show the world that thankfulness, kindness, ruefulness, and compassion can reign in a nation. He also gave us free will to determine right from wrong, lies from truth, and concern from apathy.

“We the people” in order to form a more perfect union… How do we do that when we disparage each other in the name of politics? How do we provide tranquility when we threaten our security or intimidate anyone who disagrees with us? Each citizen is responsible for promoting the general welfare of all people and maintaining dignity by using respectfulness.

Justice is only found in truth, not based on the lies one prefers to believe. It is incredible how many folks spread conspiracy and fables instead of taking the time to research the facts. Isn’t our posterity worth the time?

Ms. Louise Owen passed away long ago. Today, we must proudly advocate for common-sense government and peace to secure our freedom. We must rise above the murky waters of hatred and divisive, confrontational competition to do what is honorable for the benefit of all citizens. We should all uphold the Constitution and obey the laws of God.

Let’s stop swimming in the murky water of fear, hatred, and distrust. Otherwise, we may never reach the shore.

TMU nursing students take oath at White Coat Ceremony

Nine TMU nursing students were presented with white coats to recognize their entry into the profession during a ceremony at the school in Cleveland on September 17, 2024. (TMU photo)

The Rielin & Salmen School of Nursing at Truett McConnell University (TMU) recently held its annual White Coat Ceremony. This event is a significant milestone for nursing students as they begin their careers.

Class of 2026 members honored during the September 17 ceremony include Alexandria Bullard, Lydia Clack, Zachary Davidson, Kaitlyn Fernandez, Kason Gooch, Johan Newton, Ella Richardson, Jenna Wilson, and Kalen Yarbrough.

The school says the ceremony symbolizes the student’s commitment to patient-centered care and lifelong learning.

“To become a Truett nurse is to recognize nursing as a ministry to serve others with compassion and humility,” said TMU President Emir Caner.

This year’s keynote address was delivered by Dr. Mael L. D. S. Disseau, Vice President for Academic Services at TMU and the Charles F. Stanley Endowed Chair of Theology. Disseau encouraged the students to uphold the highest standards of ethical and compassionate care, rooted in the Christian faith’s Great Commission.

The nursing students pledged to “serve humanity with excellence and integrity” in their future nursing careers.

The ceremony ended with a benediction by TMU’s Dean of the College of Health and Sciences Dr. Rick Austin.

Baldwin to consider construction contract for new solid waste building

Baldwin City Council (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Baldwin City Council will consider approving two items during its council meeting Monday, September 23.

WWTP building

Under consideration will be approving the award for constructing a new solid waste building and a screw press at the wastewater treatment plant (WWTP). The building will house the new screw press that will reduce the amount of liquids in the sludge that the WWTP produces. By removing the liquids from the sludge, the process will reduce the cost of dumping the sludge at the landfill.

Personal Property ordinance

The second item under consideration is the second reading of the Personal Property Sale ordinance. The city has several items it needs to surplus. Chief Administrative Officer (CAO) Emily Woodmaster explained to the council during the first reading of the ordinance that one such item in need of surplus were cellphones. Due to the city’s contract with Verizon, the city receives new cell phones every 12 to 18 months without having to turn in the old phones. Over the last several years, the city has accumulated numerous cell phones that are still in good working order and have value.

The ordinance will designate someone to set the values of the equipment and move forward with surplussing the equipment. At the first reading, the council designated that the individual would be the CAO.

Reports

Public Works Director Scott Barnhart will address the council. He will give it an update on the street and water departments that he oversees.

The Baldwin City Council will meet Monday, September 23, at 6:30 p.m. The meeting will be held in the Baldwin Municipal Courtroom at 155 Willingham Avenue in Baldwin.

Transformers One

Transformers One is a surprising animated delight. Most live-action versions are content to bombard the audience with mindless action and zero semblance of a character story. Thankfully, this movie doesn’t have those issues; instead, it supplies a fine balance of action, humor, and heart to carry it through.

The movie serves as a prequel that focuses on the relationship between Optimus Prime and Megatron, or, as they’re called in this movie, Orion Pax and D-16. Chris Hemsworth and Brian Tyree Henry provide the voices. They work as minors on the planet Cybertron, with D-16 always having to save Orion’s bacon as he proves to be a mischievous machine.

Jon Hamm is the voice of Sentinel Prime, the leader of Cybertron, who wants to find a device known as the Matrix of Leadership, which could lead to the survival of the entire planet.

The movie introduces other colorful characters, such as Scarlett Johansson’s Elita-1, who is no-nonsense throughout, and Keegan Michael Key, who provides a lot of the comic relief as B-127, a.k.a. Bumblebee.

Laurence Fishburne is the voice of Alpha Trion, who tells the robots the whereabouts of the Matrix. Given that Fishburne keeps using the word “Matrix” in his speeches, it’s impossible not to think of his role as Morpheus.

Transformers One is crammed with dazzling animated sequences and wall-to-wall action. There’s a race scene early in the film that Orion and D-16 compete in, and it could’ve been nothing but noise without a purpose, but it’s convincing due to the crisp clarity of the animation, and it serves the story.

Hemsworth and Henry have a lot of fun with their voice work, and so does the rest of the cast. Each character is fleshed out more in animation than in live-action, and that’s a plus.

Of course, the action is front and center at every opportunity, especially during the climax, and there’s little to no intrinsic suspense because we know the plot is a loophole for the inevitable sequel.

However, Transformers One achieves something that almost none of its live-action counterparts could do: a sense of fun and wonder.

If this is the beginning of a series of movies, I’d say there’s more than meets the eye in animation.

Grade: A-

(Rated PG for sci-fi violence and animated action throughout, and language.)

 

Racing toward Election Day, control of U.S. Senate and House up for grabs

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — The country’s next president will need a friendly Congress to make their policy dreams a reality, but control of the two chambers remains deeply uncertain with just weeks until Election Day — and whether the outcome will be a party trifecta in the nation’s capital.

Recent projections tilt in favor of Republicans taking the U.S. Senate, an already closely divided chamber that is sure to be near evenly split again next Congress.

And though Vice President Kamala Harris injected a jolt of energy into the Democratic Party, prognosticators still say the prizewinner of the House is anybody’s guess.

“The House is highly close and competitive, and really could go either way.  And I say the same thing about the presidential race,” Kyle Kondik, managing editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball at the University of Virginia Center for Politics, told States Newsroom on Thursday.

A ‘district-by-district slugfest’

Control of the 435-seat House remains a toss-up, with competitive races in both the seven swing states and in states that will almost certainly have no bearing on who wins the top of the ticket.

Sabato’s, an election prognosticator, currently ranks nine Republican seats of the roughly 30 competitive races as “toss-up” seats for the party — meaning the GOP incumbents are locked in competitive races.

The GOP has held a slim majority this Congress, and Democrats only need to net four seats to gain control.

“It really is right on the razor’s edge,” Kondik said. “It’s pretty crazy that, you know, we’ve had two straight elections with just 222-seat majorities. And it’s pretty rare historically for there to be, you know, majorities that small twice in a row — unprecedented.

“Usually, you’d have one side or the other breaking out to a bigger advantage, and I think both sides are viewing this, really, as a district-by-district slugfest.”

Sabato’s adjusted its ratings on five races Thursday, including moving Democratic Rep. Mary Peltola of Alaska to the “toss-up” category from a safer “leans Democratic.” Kondik also nudged the race for Republican Rep. Mike Lawler of New York to “leans Republican” from “toss up.”

“The big ones are probably Peltola, and then Mike Lawler, who holds one of the bluest seats held by a Republican, but I moved him to ‘leans R.’ It seems pretty clear to me that he’s in a decent position,” Kondik said.

The National Republican Congressional Committee, the party’s fundraising arm for House races, announced in June nearly $1.2 million in ad buys in Alaska. The organization launched a new ad in the state this month that accuses Peltola of not supporting veterans.

It’s always about Pennsylvania

In addition to Peltola, Kondik ranks nine other Democratic incumbents — of the nearly 40 competitive races — as toss-ups.

Among the toss-ups is the seat currently held by Rep. Matt Cartwright of Pennsylvania, a key swing state in the presidential race. Cartwright’s Republican challenger, Rob Bresnahan, runs an electrical contracting company in the northeastern Pennsylvania district that he took over from his grandfather.

Democrats are investing in the seat: Cartwright is running a new ad featuring union workers praising him, and just last week Harris hosted a rally in the district, which includes Scranton.

But the NRCC thinks they have a pretty good chance of flipping his seat.

Breshnahan’s company is “a union shop,” said NRCC head Rep. Richard Hudson of North Carolina. “So he can talk union talk. He’s a great candidate for us.”

“Matt Cartwright is in trouble,” Hudson said on the conservative “Ruthless Podcast” on Sept. 12.

“I think the way we’ve structured it, the type of candidates we recruited across the country, from Maine to Alaska, from Minnesota to Texas, regardless of top of the ticket, we’re going to pick up seats,” Hudson said.

Van Orden targeted in Wisconsin

But Sabato’s also nudged three seats toward the Democrats’ favor on Thursday.

Kondik moved Rep. Derrick Van Orden of Wisconsin from the safety of “likely Republican” to the weaker “leans Republican” category.

Rep. Suzan DelBene, chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, sees an “important opportunity” in Van Orden’s district. The GOP congressman, who represents central and western Wisconsin, became known for his profanity-laced outburst at young Senate pages for taking photos of the Capitol rotunda.

The Democrats are running challenger Rebecca Cooke, a small business owner, in the hopes of unseating him.

“We have an incredible candidate in Rebecca Cooke (against) one of the most extreme, which is saying a lot, Republicans in the House,” DelBene told reporters on a call Monday.

“We have put Rebecca Cooke on our Red-to-Blue list and are strongly supporting her campaign. She’s doing a great job, and this absolutely is a priority for us,” DelBene said, referring to the DCCC’s list of 30 candidates that receive extra fundraising support.

DelBene said she’s confident in the Democrats’ chances to flip the House, citing healthy coffers and revived interest.

“We have seen huge enthusiasm all across the country. We have seen people, more and more people turning out to volunteer, to knock on doors, to make phone calls,” she said.

Democrats’ cash ‘flooding,’ NRCC chief says

Erin Covey, a House analyst with The Cook Political Report with Amy Walter, wrote on Sept. 5 that Democrats have a brighter outlook after Harris assumed the top of the ticket, though November remains a close call.

“Now, polling conducted by both parties largely shows Harris matching, or coming a few points short of, Biden’s 2020 margins across competitive House districts,” Covey wrote.

The NRCC has taken note. During his interview on the “Ruthless Podcast,” Hudson compared Harris becoming the Democrats’ new choice for president as a “bloodless coup,” and said the enthusiasm she’s sparked is a cause for concern for Republicans. Democratic delegates nominated Harris, in accordance with party rules, to run for the Oval Office after Biden dropped out in late July.

“A lot of people, even Democrats, you know, just weren’t comfortable voting for Joe Biden. With Kamala on the ticket, we saw a surge in Democrats coming home and having the enthusiasm,” Hudson said.

Hudson said he also worries about Democrats’ fundraising numbers.

“The one thing that keeps you awake at night is the Democrat money. It’s flooding,” Hudson said. “The second quarter this year I was able to raise the most money we’ve ever raised as a committee, and the Democrats raised $7 million more. I mean, it’s just, they just keep coming. It’s like the Terminator.”

“But we don’t have to match them dollar for dollar,” Hudson said. “We’ve just got to make sure we’ve got the resources we need. And so we’ve just got to keep our pace.”

The DCCC announced Friday it raised $22.3 million in August, bringing its total for this election cycle to $250.6 million.

Senate map tilts toward GOP

Republicans are inching closer and closer to flipping the Senate red during this year’s elections, thanks to a map that favors GOP incumbents and puts Democrats on the defensive in several states.

West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice is widely expected to win his bid for the upper chamber, bringing Republicans up to 50 seats, as long as they hang on in Florida, Nebraska and Texas.

But Democrats will need to secure wins in several challenging states, including Arizona, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin — and break the 50-50 tie through a Democratic presidency — if they want to remain the majority party.

That many Democratic wins seems increasingly unlikely, though not entirely out of the realm of possibility.

Montana, where Sen. Jon Tester is looking to secure reelection against GOP challenger Tim Sheehy, has been moved from a “toss-up” state to leaning toward Republicans by three respected analysis organizations in the last few weeks.

The Cook Political Report wrote in its ratings change earlier this month that several “public polls have shown Sheehy opening up a small, but consistent lead.”

“Democrats push back that their polling still shows Tester within the margin of error of the race, and that those are exactly the type of close races he’s won before,” their assessment said. “Tester, however, has never run on a presidential ballot in a polarized environment of this kind before — and even with his stumbles, Sheehy is still the strongest, best financed candidate he’s ever faced.”

Republicans winning Montana’s Senate seat could give them a firm, though narrow, 51-seat Senate majority.

Florida, Texas, Nebraska

That, however, would require the Republican incumbents in states like Florida and Texas — where it’s not clear if evolving trends against Republicans will continue — to secure their reelection wins.

And it would mean holding off a wild card independent candidate in the Cornhusker state.

The Cook Political Report says it’s “worth keeping an eye on a unique situation developing in Nebraska, where independent candidate Dan Osborn is challenging Republican Sen. Deb Fischer.”

CPR also noted in its analysis that Democrats’ best pick-up opportunities, which could rebalance the scales a bit, are Florida and Texas.

“Today, the Lone Star State looks like the better option because of the strengths and fundraising of Democrats’ challenger there, Rep. Colin Allred,” CPR wrote.

If Democrats do hold onto 50 seats, through whatever combination of wins and losses shakes out on election night, majority control would depend on whichever candidate wins the presidential contest.

Given the close nature of several Senate races, it is entirely possible control of that chamber isn’t known until after recounts take place in the swing states.

Chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee Gary Peters, D-Mich., said during a Christian Science Monitor breakfast this week that he’s known all along Democratic candidates will be in “very right races.”

“In a nutshell, I’m optimistic,” Peters said. “I believe we’re going to hold the majority. I feel good about where we are. We’re basically where I thought we would be after Labor Day in really tight races. None of this is a surprise to us. Now we just have to run our playbook, be focused, be disciplined.”

The National Republican Senatorial Committee, led this cycle by Montana Sen. Steve Daines, is confident the GOP will pick up the Senate majority following November’s elections.

The group highlighted a Washington Post poll this week showing a tie between Democratic Sen. Bob Casey and GOP candidate Dave McCormick in the Pennsylvania Senate race.

NRSC Spokesman Philip Letsou sent out a written statement after the poll’s release that Casey is in the “race for his life…because Pennsylvania voters know Casey’s lockstep support for Kamala Harris and her inflationary, anti-fracking agenda will devastate their economy. Pennsylvanians have had enough of liberal, career politicians like Casey and Harris.”

No change in filibuster in sight

The GOP acquisition of a handful of seats would still require the next Republican leader to constantly broker deals with Democrats, since the chamber is widely expected to retain the legislative filibuster.

That rule requires at least 60 senators vote to advance legislation toward final passage and is the main reason the chamber rarely takes up partisan bills.

A Republican sweep of the House, Senate and White House for unified government would give them the chance to pass certain types of legislation through the fast-track budget reconciliation process they used to approve the 2017 tax law.

How wide their majorities are in each chamber will determine how much they can do within such a bill, given Republicans will still have centrist members, like Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski and Maine’s Susan Collins, balancing the party against more far-right policy goals.

Toccoa man arrested, charged with failure to appear in court on molestation charge

A Toccoa man who was previously charged with aggravated child molestation was arrested early Friday morning after he allegedly missed his court date, according to the Stephens County Sheriff’s Office.

Timothy Lee Johnson, 41, of Toccoa, was taken into custody at 4:26 a.m. on Friday, Sept. 20 after officers with Stephens County Sheriff’s Office and the Toccoa Police Department served an arrest warrant at Johnson’s last known residence. Johnson was wanted for failure to appear in court on the aggravated child molestation charge, according to authorities, and was transported to the Stephens County Jail without incident.

Johnson was charged with felony for failure to appear and remains in the Stephens County Jail without bond.

Perry Marwell Shubert

Perry Marwell Shubert, age 83, of Alto, Georgia passed away on Friday, September 20, 2024.

Mr. Shubert was born on March 31, 1941 in Alto, Georgia to the late Vermon and Alice Parker Shubert.

Perry was a member of BC Grant Baptist Church. Perry worked with Perry Gas Company for several years before devoting 44 years to Mount Vernon Mills until his well-deserved retirement. He was an enthusiastic supporter of the Georgia Bulldawgs, and found joy in cheering them on throughout the seasons. He also had a passion for golf that spanned many years. In his younger years, Perry deeply enjoyed western square dancing, a pastime that brought him much happiness. However, his greatest joy in life came from his role as a loving and devoted father and grandfather, affectionately known as “Pop.” He took immense pride in his family, actively participating in their upbringing and leaving an indelible mark on their lives. Perry will be fondly remembered for his infectious smile and his sense of humor.

Survivors include his wife of 62 years, Doris Wade Shubert, of Alto; daughter and son-in-law, Pondalisa Alice and Michael Forbes, of Buford; son, Payson Marwell Shubert, of Alto; grandchildren, Christian Shubert, Alice “Ali” Shubert, Giles Marwell Shubert, and Michael Perry Forbes.

Funeral Services will be held at 2:00 p.m., Wednesday, September 25, 2024 at the Whitfield Funeral Home, North Chapel with Rev. Scott Ledbetter and Rev. Terry Rice officiating. Interment will follow in the Yonah Memorial Gardens.

The family will receive friends from 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m., Tuesday, September 24, 2024 at the funeral home.

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

Habersham EMS employee recognized for spearheading mental health awareness

Habersham County EMS employee Joel Norton is recognized by Habersham County EMS Director/Chief Jeff Adams for his efforts in bringing attention to mental health awareness to the department. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

A Habersham County Emergency Medical Services employee was recognized Monday for spearheading mental health awareness among the department.

Habersham Emergency Medical Services Director/ Chief Jeff Adams recognized Joel Norton for taking on the task to ensure public safety personnel stay healthy mentally due to the rigors of their chosen profession.

Burying the bad

Adams told the commissioners, “In Habersham County, our personnel responded to approximately 10,000 requests last year. We are called upon to care for all ages, all types of illnesses and injuries, from the infant needing CPR to traffic accidents with multiple patients with varying injuries to chronic medical conditions, to those at the end of their life.”

He pointed out that many in public safety come from a line of “tough guys and gals”. Those same people tend to bury the bad stuff that they encounter and just forget it, rather than talk about it. “The burying of the memories, feelings, and experiences build up over time and leave their mark on individuals, families, and communities,” Adams said.

Adams explains that the mental strain of the profession takes on toll and that the body can only see, hear, and experience so much despite the training. Everyone agrees that the mental health for first responders needs to be implemented and addressed. It’s an easy topic for someone to say, ”yes we need to do this”, but hopes that someone else will take on the responsibility.

Norton addresses mental health

Norton is responsible for making sure public safety personnel in Habersham and the surrounding areas are taken care of after their tough calls are completed. He has created a support group for first responders and arranged for critical incident stress management classes with the Department of Public Health. He also helped spearhead the creation of Mental Health Day for Public Safety Personnel, which was held on August 21.

The event, titled Breaking the Silence – Time for Change, brought together speakers, vendors and professionals to discuss mental health challenges in the public safety community and celebrate the victories within the community.

The work of Norton is helping to take care of the public safety community and their families. He is showing what can be achieved when one person takes a stand for a better future.

Adams thanked Norton for his efforts in addressing first responders’ mental health. “Joel, thank you for your hard work and diligence in keeping this matter in the forefront so we can take care of our folks, their families, and the community.”

Hector Sanchez Fabian

Hector Sanchez Fabian, age 68, of Cornelia, Georgia, passed away on Thursday, September 19, 2024.

Mr. Sanchez Fabian was born on June 3, 1956, in Mexico. He was preceded in death by his parents, Benjamin Sanchez and Esperanza Fabian; son, Benjamin Sanchez; grandson, Francisco Sanchez; brother, Mario Sanchez Fabian; and sister, Anna Sanchez Fabian.

Survivors include his loving wife of over 50 years, Oralia Sanchez, of Cornelia; sons, Mario Sanchez and Miguel Sanchez of Cornelia; daughters, Blanca Esperanza Sanchez and Rosa Sanchez and Bertha Sanchez of Cornelia; seventeen grandchildren and one great-grandchild; and brother, Jesus Sanchez Fabian.

A Funeral Mass will be held at 11:00 a.m., Monday, September 23, 2024, at the St. Mark Catholic Church. Interment will follow in the Yonah Memorial Gardens.

The family will receive friends at the residence of 211 Ivie Street, Cornelia, Georgia 30531 beginning at 11:00 a.m., Sunday, September 22, 2024 until the funeral mass on Monday.

Arrangements have been entrusted to Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, South Chapel, 1370 Industrial Boulevard, Baldwin, Georgia 30511. Telephone: 706-778-7123.

Good turnout marks 36th Big Red Apple Festival

BRAF is Cornelia's biggest event of the year, attracting thousands of visitors from around Northeast Georgia and beyond. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Summer-like temperatures and sunny skies drew festivalgoers to Cornelia on Saturday. The city hosted its 36th Big Red Apple Festival.

Thousands turned out for the event, which spotlights the city’s apple-growing heritage. The downtown gathering centers around the eponymous monument and all sorts of family fun and apple-themed flavors.

Vendors were scheduled to pack their tents at 4 p.m., but the fun didn’t end there. Fender’s Alley continues with its lineup of live entertainment until 10 p.m.

Vendors fill downtown city streets selling art, t-shirts, merchandise, food, and more. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)
Kids enjoy the petting zoo in the shade of Commercial Executive Suites on Larkin Street in Cornelia. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)
Festivalgoers mill around the Big Red Apple in downtown Cornelia. The eponymous structure is a monument to the city’s apple-growing history. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)