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Big Red Apple Festival Sept. 21

File photo (Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

The Big Red Apple Festival returns to Cornelia on Saturday with a long lineup of vendors and activities the whole family can enjoy.

What to expect

This year’s event takes place September 21 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Artisan and food vendors will be located throughout downtown Cornelia. Apple-loving festivalgoers can delight in a variety of desserts and drinks, from apple pound cakes and apple pies to apple cider and apple chai latte.

The Key Club will host a car show at the Historic Train Depot. Other activities include hay rides to Chenocetah Tower ($1 per person), free tours to the top of the tower, a kiddie train ride through town, and a carnival-like kid’s zone with bouncy houses and games.

RELATED Cornelia Main Street Manager readies for Big Red Apple Festival

(Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)
Sharon Umberhant of Habersham County watches as her son, Greyson, tries his hand at the softball throw during the Big Red Apple Festival in Cornelia on September 23, 2023. (NowHabersham.com)
(Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

Disney’s Rapunzel will be on hand for meet-and-greets and photo ops from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Other events include a library book sale, self-guided tours of Cornelia’s train museum, axe throwing, dining, and shopping. Live bands will perform from the Fenders Alley Stage into the night – long after the festival ends.

Where to park

In preparation for the festival, the city will begin closing downtown streets to through traffic beginning Friday evening, September 20.

Parking for the Big Red Apple Festival will be available on the day of at the Cornelia Post Office, Cornelia City Hall, Cornelia Library, Community House, Georgia United Credit Union, and Historical Society Museum. Public parking will also be available on Wells Street.

Handicap parking will be at the rear of Sugartopia at 188 North Main Street. Limited on-street parking may also be available. Cornelia Main Street Director Noah Hamil warns that vehicles not parked in designated parking spots will be towed at the owner’s expense.

For an event schedule and map, click here.

(Source: Cornelia Main Street)

7th Annual Christian Literature Drive September 21

File photo - Volunteers pack boxes of donated Christian literature in preparation to ship the material overseas. (Photo by Luke Canup)

Now in its 7th year, the annual Christian Literature Drive wants your help, on September 21 at Hills Crossing Baptist Church. Partnered with Love Packages, the Word of God is distributed to give others access to materials they may not have the opportunity to read.

Since the drive began, over 50 tons of literature have been collected and distributed all across the world.

Drop off your used Christian Literature at Hills Crossing Baptist Church located at 3569 Toccoa Hwy, in Clarkesville between 9 a.m. and 12 p.m. You can also come and help sort through and pack the literature at 8 a.m. Donations are also needed to help defray the costs of shipping.

Hills Crossing Baptist Church is located at 3569 Toccoa Hwy. in Clarkesville, Georgia. (Hills Crossing/Facebook)

Items to contribute:

  • Bibles (new or used)
  • Daily Devotionals & Tracts
  • Non-fiction Christian Books & Paperbacks
  • Christian Magazines (Excluding Guideposts or Missions Magazine)
  • Sunday School Supplies (Can have writing in them. No handiwork or crafts)
  • CD’s, DVD’s, BluRay’s (No VHS or cassettes

Luke Canup, coordinator for the event, said, “The stats show that each piece of Christian literature we send out is likely to touch around 20 people. With the 50 tons we’ve gathered at this small church, that means we’ve potentially reached over 4 million lives. You can’t beat those numbers anywhere that I know of.”

Canup added that it is by far the easiest way to reach the world with God’s Word.

Come to Hills Crossing and be a part of spreading the Word through literature. If you have any questions, contact Luke Canup at (706) 716-0031 or [email protected]

 

Women’s Tennis Outlasts Pfeiffer, Dominates LaGrange Friday

(Mooreshots LLC)

DEMOREST, Ga. – Piedmont women’s tennis opened its 2024-25 dual match slate with a pair of victories at home on Friday morning and evening against Pfeiffer and LaGrange.

The Lions outlasted the Falcons in a hard-fought 6-1 victory in the morning before dispatching the Panthers in 7-0 fashion to close the evening.

The win against the Falcons gave Piedmont Head Coach Trey Martin 115 for his career, making him the all-time winningest head coach in Piedmont women’s tennis history.

Match 1: Piedmont 6, Pfeiffer 1

To begin the day, the Lions were able to take the doubles point and added a doubles sweep for good measure. First, it was the No. 3 doubles team of Dannie Evans and Sarah Row that cruised to a 6-1 victory, leaving Piedmont needing just one of the two matches at No. 1 and No. 2 to take a 1-0 lead.

In a back-and-forth battle, the duo of freshman Caroline Morrison and sophomore Brooklyn Bolch were able to get a critical break at 5-4 to take the match and clinch the point.

With the 1-0 lead already secured, the No. 1 team of Alyssa McSpadden and Bri Laidman made sure the momentum stayed on the Lions’ side with a comeback win in a tiebreaker 7-6 (3).


The Falcons showed serious fight in singles action, winning three first sets in relatively quick fashion.

However, it was Piedmont that put the first points on the board, with Olivia Carpenter rolling to a 6-1, 6-3 win at No. 6 and McSpadden cruising to a 6-2, 6-2 triumph to make it 3-0 Lions.

Moments later, Jordan Ballard won a demanding first set in a tiebreaker at No. 3, flipping momentum squarely to the Lions.

Then, after a Pfeiffer win in a third-set breaker at No. 4,  Laidman fought back at No. 2 after dropping the first set to win the second and then won a grinding tiebreaker 10-8 to earn the clinch for Piedmont.

With the match in hand, Ballard won 7-6 (4), 6-3 at No. 3 before Evans won a second set tiebreaker and then a marathon match tiebreaker 15-13 to end the match on a high note for Piedmont.

Match 2: Piedmont 7, LaGrange 0

With several lines defaulting due to the number of athletes competing for the Panthers, Piedmont rolled to a 7-0 win over LaGrange in the evening slot.

The Lions picked up the doubles win taking a default at three for starters and securing a 6-2 win at No. 1 and a 6-0 win at No. 2.

The duo of Hollan Rabensdorf and Jordan Ballard got the job done swiftly at No. 1 while it was Abby Gayle Moody and Amanda Allenbach handling business at No. 2.

It was a quick clinch as the No. 4 singles match was played on the remaining open court giving Kameron London the clinch with a 6-0, 6-1 win.

The Lions saw Drea Robinson earn an 8-5 win at No. 1 singles (due to time constraints) while Sarah Sanabia went 6-0, 6-1 at No. 2 and Amanda Barrett earned a 6-0, 6-0 win at No. 3.

INSIDE THE NUMBERS:
— With the first win of the day, Piedmont’s Trey Martin secured his 115th win as head coach of the women’s tennis program, becoming the winningest coach in program history.

White County Chamber of Commerce celebrates 40th birthday

Former State Senator Carol Jackson and friends celebrate the White County Chamber of Commerce Birthday Bash at NoFo Brew Company in Cleveland, GA. (Nora Almazan/Now Habersham)

Turning 40 isn’t always fun but for the White County Chamber of Commerce, it was a moment to step back in time and remember the 1980s and celebrate how much it has evolved over the past four decades.

White County Chamber of Commerce President Beth Truelove came dressed in true 80s attire. “The Chamber was organized in 1984 and what better way to have a mid-life crisis birthday party than at NoFo Brew Company, who brewed us some mid-life crisis beer,” Truelove laughed.

NoFo Brew Company hosted the 40th birthday of the White County Chamber of Commerce. (Nora Almazan/Now Habersham)

The event, hosted by the Chamber of Commerce, was held at NoFo Brew Company located at 1939 Helen Hwy, Cleveland, Georgia, on Thursday, September 19.

Participants sported eighties attire and talked about “big hair”, leg warmers, off-the-shoulder sweaters, Flashdance, and more.

Board Member Elizabeth Goad, dressed in aerobic attire and the perfect hair said, “What more fun than to deck out in the 80s? I’m an 80s kid. This is a time to get together and talk with friends and meet new people.” Goad owns four businesses in Cleveland with family, one of which is Livi Lou’s Sweets & Treats.

Tiffany Long, Lesia Long, Bonnie Abernathy, Dana Murray, and Jennessa Sabella in 80s fashion. (Nora Almazan/Now Habersham)

Owners and members from all over White County came to show their support and wish the Chamber a Happy Birthday. Jeremy Spradlin of Georgia Power talked about the important role the Chamber plays for businesses throughout the community. As one of the founding partners of the Chamber, Georgia Power has been an active member for 40 years.

Chamber members enjoying NoFo Brew Company in Cleveland Georgia. (Nora Almazan/Now Habersham)

Former State Senator Carol Jackson, who is also a charter member of the Chamber, stressed the significance of being a Chamber member.  “The first few years, we mostly did business after hours, then we started putting more to it. Now, the Chamber is all about helping businesses in White County grow. I think if you want a very successful business, you need to be a member of the Chamber.”

For more information about the White County Chamber of Commerce call (706) 865-5356 or become a member at the White County Chamber of Commerce.

“The Chamber resembles its community and as the community grows, the Chamber evolves to meet the needs of the businesses as they have need. I hope that is always the way the Chamber looks,” Truelove added.

 

 

Secret Service acknowledges ‘failures’ in protection of Trump in Pennsylvania shooting

Ronald Rowe Jr., Acting Director of the U.S. Secret Service, speaks to journalists at the agency's headquarters in Washington, Friday, Sept. 20, 2024. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis, Pool)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — The U.S. Secret Service has taken responsibility for the failures that resulted in the July assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump in Pennsylvania and is asking for more resources going forward, a top official said Friday.

Acting Director Ronald Rowe briefed reporters on the agency’s findings following an investigation into how a gunman was able to scale a nearby roof and fire multiple shots at Trump during a July 13 campaign rally in Butler. Trump sustained an injury to his right ear, and one spectator was killed while two others were seriously injured.

“It’s important that we hold ourselves accountable for the failures of July 13 and that we use the lessons learned to make sure that we do not have another failure like this again,” Rowe said.

The investigation revealed communication “deficiencies” between law enforcement personnel and an “overreliance on mobile devices, resulting in information being siloed,” Rowe said, highlighting that vital information about the shooter was transmitted via phone instead of over the Secret Service radio network.

The investigation also uncovered “complacency” among some staff members who visited the site ahead of time but did not escalate to supervisors their concerns over “line of sight issues,” Rowe said.

“The findings of the Mission Assurance review have prompted the Secret Service to move into the accountability phase of this process,” he said, referring to the agency’s title of its investigation.

“What has become clear to me is we need a shift in paradigm in how we conduct our protective operations. As was demonstrated on Sunday in West Palm Beach, the threat level is evolving,” Rowe said.

“This increased operational tempo requires additional resources to not only account for costs being incurred today but ensure that we have the tools, technology, and personnel needed to meet these new requirements and execute our mission going forward,” he said.

Second attempt to harm Trump

The investigation’s conclusions were revealed less than a week after a second attempt on Trump’s life. On Sunday, the Secret Service thwarted a gunman’s attempt to aim a high-powered rifle at the former president while he was playing golf on his West Palm Beach, Florida, property.

The incidents prompted unanimous U.S. House support for a measure to grant presidential and vice presidential candidates the same security level as the officeholders. The proposal sailed through the lower chamber Friday in a 405-0 vote.

On Monday, a bipartisan congressional task force investigating the July attempted assassination in Pennsylvania announced an expansion of its purview to also probe Sunday’s attempt in Florida. The task force will hold its first hearing on Thursday.

Rowe said the agency has been providing the “highest levels” of protections for presidential candidates since the July 13 assassination attempt.

That increased level of protection is working, Rowe told reporters, recounting how an agent swept the area ahead of Trump and “took steps to neutralize that threat.”

“No shot was fired at the former president. The former president was not exposed to where he was on the golf course,” he said.

Extending that level of protection means the agency is “burning through a lot of assets and resources.”

“This isn’t pie in the sky, trying to say, ‘Hey, we want this now.’ We are not capitalizing on a crisis,” Rowe said.

Rowe would not disclose an additional dollar amount the agency is seeking and said conversations with congressional appropriators are “ongoing.”

“The threat is not going to evaporate anytime soon, and so we have to be prepared for this. And that is the argument that we have been making. We have certainly made some inroads, and we’re having these productive conversations with the Hill,” he said.

Rowe was appointed as the agency’s acting director after former Director Kimberly Cheatle heeded loud cries for her resignation, stepping down 10 days after the attempt on Trump’s life in July.

Rowe would not detail who or how many in the agency will face discipline, citing federal regulations preventing him from discussing it further.

“What I will tell you is that I have not asked for anybody to retire. I know some of that was reported. That is false,” Rowe said. Rowe said the agency’s offices of Integrity and Professional Responsibility will together decide any discipline in accordance with the agency’s “table of penalties.”

Harris pins blame for deaths of two pregnant women on Georgia’s strict abortion law, Trump

Democratic presidential nominee and Vice President Kamala Harris condemned “Trump abortion bans” in Atlanta days after ProPublica linked two maternal deaths in 2022 to Georgia’s six-week abortion ban that took effect after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. (Jill Nolin/Georgia Recorder)

Vice President Kamala Harris blasted the strict abortion laws that have passed in GOP-controlled states just days after the first maternal deaths tied to Georgia’s six-week abortion ban became public.

Harris announced a visit to the Atlanta suburbs after ProPublica reported that at least two preventable deaths occurred in the months after Georgia’s law took effect in 2022. The stories have reignited debate over an exception in Georgia’s law that purports to protect the life of the mother during a medical emergency.

“Now we know that at least two women – and those are only the stories we know – here in the state of Georgia died – died – because of the Trump abortion ban,” Harris said to the crowd gathered in a ballroom at the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre.

Harris put particular emphasis on the story of 28-year-old Amber Nicole Thurman, who attempted to terminate her pregnancy using abortion medication from a clinic in North Carolina. When she experienced a rare complication and went to an Atlanta-area hospital for care, the doctors waited 20 hours to perform a dilation and curettage, or D&C, to treat sepsis that resulted from an incomplete abortion.

“Understand what a law like this means: Doctors have to wait until the patient is at death’s door before they take action,” Harris said.

“We’re saying that we’re going to create public policy that says that a doctor – a health care provider – will only kick in to give the care that somebody needs if they’re about to die? Think about what we are saying right now. You’re saying that good policy, logical policy, moral policy, humane policy is about saying that a health care provider will only start providing that care when you’re about to die?”

Thurman’s mother and sisters were special guests at Harris’ event with Oprah Thursday night in Michigan.

“Initially, I did not want the public to know my pain,” said Thurman’s mother, Shanette. “I wanted to go through in silence, but I realized that it was selfish. I want y’all to know Amber was not a statistic. She was loved by a family, a strong family, and we would have done whatever to get my baby, our baby, the help that she needed. You’re looking at a mother that is broken.”

Harris has pledged to sign a bill restoring the right to terminate a pregnancy if elected and if Democrats can gain control of the U.S. House and hold onto the U.S. Senate, and she has put reproductive freedom at the center of her campaign.

“This is a health care crisis, and Donald Trump is the architect of this crisis,” Harris said Friday.

At last week’s debate, Trump hailed the Supreme Court justices — three of whom he appointed — for giving full control of abortion laws to state governments. Georgia’s law took effect a month after the Supreme Court overturned the constitutional right to an abortion.

Trump’s running mate, Ohio U.S. Sen. J.D. Vance, celebrated the 2022 decision overturning Roe v. Wade during a recent visit to Georgia, calling it a “victory.”

Supporters of Georgia’s law, though, argue that the deaths are not a failing of the state’s law but instead highlight the risks attached to abortion medication. They also argue that the doctors should have intervened sooner in Thurman’s case.

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

‘That shouldn’t be happening in the United States of America’

Tamara Stevens, who is a longtime reproductive rights advocate and a campaign volunteer for the Harris campaign, said she believes the loss of choice in Georgia has broader impact than some may assume.

It’s at least her top issue. Stevens had an abortion when she was 17 years old after she says she was raped on a college campus in Georgia and became pregnant.

“Without it, nothing else matters,” Stevens said. “If you don’t have rights over your body, the price of bacon and eggs doesn’t matter, housing prices don’t matter. If you don’t have control of your body, what do you have control over?”

Martha Zoller, who is a conservative radio host, pundit and Georgia Life Alliance board member, shrugged off Harris’ Friday visit to Georgia to talk about reproductive freedom.

“It’s all she has to talk about,” Zoller said the day before Harris’ speech. “This is the only issue they think they have. And I think women are smarter than that. And I think that women understand that there are bigger issues they have to vote on.”

A recent poll from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution found that abortion access is a top issue for about 1 in 10 Georgia voters and that those survey respondents tended to identify as moderate or independent.

That same poll continues to show a tight race in Georgia, which is a must-win state for Trump and a major part of Harris’ strategy to keep a Democrat in the White House. President Joe Biden narrowly won Georgia by less than 12,000 votes in 2020.

A Cobb County woman who came to see Harris speak Friday, who would only identify herself by her first name, Juliet, said reproductive rights have become her top issue for the otherwise swing voter. She said she is thinking of her two daughters and four granddaughters.

“Women are dying in all those states like Georgia that have those strict laws,” she said. “And I won’t vote for a Republican until we get that fixed.”

Vyanti Joseph, who lives in Marietta, said she was appalled by the stories about Thurman and 41-year-oldCandi Miller, who also died in 2022 after experiencing a complication after taking abortion medication.

“It’s 2024. That shouldn’t be happening in the United States of America,” she said.

Kellye Cleveland and Nia Williams, who are both Spelman College students who are set to graduate in 2027, said they were unnerved by the reports of the two maternal deaths in Georgia and said they were heartened to see Harris quickly visit to confront the issue.

“It is very scary to be a woman and live in this state,” said Williams, who said she also likes Harris’ economic message. “I think her coming here so suddenly and addressing that speaks volumes to who she is and what she stands for.”

Corbin James “Chub” Frady

Corbin James “Chub” Frady, age 85, of Clarkesville, passed away on September 20, 2024.

Born in Habersham County on November 27, 1938, Chub was the son of the late Hezzie and Della Mae Benfield Frady. He was a retired truck driver for C. P. Wilbanks Lumber Company with 61 years of loyal service. Mr. Frady was an avid Atlanta Braves fan and also enjoyed watching the Georgia Bulldogs. Mr. Frady loved spending time in the outdoors hunting and fishing. He was of the Baptist faith.

In addition to his parents, Mr. Frady was preceded in death by his wife, Lavinnie Lee Simmons Frady, children Barry Belford, Randy Belford, and Deborah Pitts, grandchildren Sabrina Frady and Audrey Pitts, great-grandchildren Jenna Canup and Jeremiah Harris, and siblings J.C. Frady, O.H. Frady, Lewis Frady, Lloyd Frady, Doris Frady, Oma Jean Callaway, and Jewell Joyner.

Survivors include sons Larry Frady (Faye) of Toccoa, Doug Frady (the late Wanda Frady) of Toccoa, Jimmy Frady of Clarkesville, and Michael Frady of Clarkesville; daughter Cathy Stover (the late Jerry Stover) of Clarkesville; brother Bobby Frady (Gladys) of Mt. Airy; 20 grandchildren; 38 great-grandchildren; one great-great-grandchild; and numerous extended family members.

Funeral services will be held at 3:00 PM on Sunday, September 22, 2024, at Chopped Oak Baptist Church, with interment following in the church cemetery. The family will receive friends at the funeral home on Saturday, September 21, 2024, from 5-8 PM.

An online guest book is available for the family at hillsidememorialchapel.com.

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

Habersham Central students stage walkout in stand against gun violence in schools

Over 200 Habersham Central High School students walked out of class Friday. They joined thousands more across Georgia who staged walkouts to honor the victims of the Apalachee High School shooting and to demand gun reform. (Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

With approval from school officials, hordes of Habersham Central’s students walked out of class Friday morning in support of the victims of the Apalachee High School shooting in early September that left four dead and nine injured.

The demonstration came as students across the state held similar walkouts organized by March for Our Lives – a group dedicated to legislative efforts to reduce gun violence.

Just after 10 a.m. Friday, more than 200 students exited the main building and followed Elloree Chambers, the 16-year-old junior who organized the walkout, across campus before they filed into the school’s gymnasium.

Chambers said she’d decided to lead the movement to raise awareness of a specific message – an end to gun violence in schools.

Students stream out of Habersham Central High School into the parking lot at 10 a.m. on September 20, 2024. They walked out in solidarity with thousands of other students across the state of Georgia pushing for gun reform and an end to school violence. (Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)
A student waves an American flag during the walkout. (Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

In the days leading up to the demonstration, she’d met with Principal Adam Bagwell to discuss security measures the school could take – such as metal detectors and additional resource officers – to prevent such tragedies on Habersham’s campus. Chambers pitched the idea of a walkout, which she said Bagwell supported.

Chambers spoke with Now Habersham several days before the walkout.

“The day of the Apalachee shooting – I felt it really deeply,” said Chambers, who spread word of the walkout by mouth and through social media. “I really felt like I wanted to do something about it. I just thought (the walkout) was something I could do to really make some noise about the situation…maybe some lawmaker somewhere will say, ‘Oh, these kids are willing to miss school for this cause.’ Maybe, they would look at that and say, ‘I need to make a law that (prevents) kids from getting guns in their hands, so this doesn’t happen again.’ I just really want it to make some noise.”

Despite prior clearance from school administrators to attend the event, Now Habersham was denied entry into the gym for reasons Bagwell declined to disclose in person. Bagwell, who requested questions be sent via email, could not be reached for comment regarding potential future plans for heightened security or his decision to bar the media from Friday’s event.

Now Habersham obtained video footage of the demonstration from Elloree’s mother, Neile Chambers, who was among those in attendance on Friday.

Standing between bleachers packed with students, Neile watched as her daughter did, in fact, make some noise – first through a prayer and then a moment of silence for the two students and two teachers who lost their lives on Sept. 4.

Standing in the center of the gym floor, Elloree spoke through a microphone to her fellow students.

Habersham Central junior Elloree Chambers speaks to fellow students in the school gym during a walkout Friday morning (Photo submitted by Neile Chambers)

“We need to foster a community of safety through conflict resolution, emotional management and the importance of kindness,” she said. “By building strong support in school communities, we can reduce the likelihood of violence and create environments where every student feels valued and safe. Ending gun violence in schools requires action from all of us…to ensure our schools remain places of hope and opportunity.”

Elloree’s remarks were followed by a wave of applause.

“I was just incredibly proud,” Neile Chambers told Now Habersham after the walkout. “As a parent, you hope to raise humans who are kind and who think of others. This was a real credit to her character and a glimpse into the smart, funny and kind young woman she is becoming.”

Following in sisters’ footsteps

As the third of four siblings, Elloree Chambers’ instinct for activism appears to run in the family: Her sister, Duren, was involved in a walkout in 2020 during nationwide protests sparked by the death of George Floyd.

Before that, Elloree’s eldest sister, Avery, also led a walkout at Habersham Central in 2018 after a mass shooting claimed the lives of 17 people at Parkland’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida.

“I’m so, so proud of Elloree for wanting to do this,” said Avery Chambers, now a 22-year-old student at the University of Georgia. “It’s really, really hard – especially in Habersham County where it’s a primarily red group of people. It’s hard to be in high school and have some political views that are different from the people around. I’m so honored that she cares about this as much as I do and that she’s also willing to stand up for this big, important (issue) that we both care about.”

Habersham Central students fill bleachers of the school gym during a walkout Friday morning (Photo submitted by Neile Chambers)
(Photo submitted by Neile Chambers)
(Photo submitted by Neile Chambers)

Elloree credited her sisters and her family for her efforts to stand against gun violence.

“Something that has always been preached in my home is kindness,” she said. “I think this is just a way of spreading that. There are people that went home (from Apalachee) that day who will be impacted for the rest of their lives.”

Now, two years from graduation, Elloree said she plans to continue her education at the college level, and while she doesn’t yet know exactly what field she’ll pursue, she’s confident about what she wants to do.

“I want to do something that ends up with me helping people,” she said. “I don’t know exactly where that leads me right now, but I just know I want to help people.”

As students returned to class Friday, Bagwell said he was “incredibly impressed” by his students. Earlier in the week, he’d conveyed a similar message.

“Our students are amazing,” he said. “I support our students when they want to do things that are positive. I wanted to support (Elloree), and I want to support our kids when they’re doing good things.”

Chestatee High School student arrested for alleged shooting threats against school, teachers

Gainesville Regional Youth Detention Center (Source: Google Maps)

A student at Chestatee High School (CHS) was arrested Thursday, September 19, for making threats against the school and teachers at the facility.

According to a news release from the Hall County Sheriff’s Office, the 15-year-old male student was reported to school officials by other students. They allegedly overheard the teen commenting at the bus stop Thursday morning that he was tired of school and wanted to “shoot up” the school and his teachers.

“The CHS school resource officer (SRO) traveled to the student’s home and seized a laptop and tablet that contained evidence corroborating the threat reports overheard by the other students,” says Hall County Sheriff’s Public Information Officer B.J. Willilams.

Williams says the accused teen was subsequently arrested and charged with making terroristic threats and disrupting school. Law enforcement transported him to the Gainesville Regional Youth Detention Center (RYDC).

More than a dozen area youth have been detained at RYDC on similar charges in multiple school threat incidents since the fatal shooting at Apalachee High School in Winder on September 4.

Local veterans honor POW/MIA Recognition Day

The Grant Reeves VFW combined Honor Guard performs a ceremony for POW/MIA Recognition Day at the KIA war monument in downtown Clarkesville Friday morning. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Veterans from local veterans organizations honored POW/MIA Recognition Day at the KIA war monument next to the gazebo in downtown Clarkesville Friday morning.

Captain of the Grant-Reeves VFW combined Honor Guard Jim Morgan addressed those in attendance about the importance of honoring those veterans that are still missing and were prisoners of war. “An aspect of our Veteran Service Organizations is to lend our voice to support America’s prisoners of war and those still missing. They are owed every ounce of gratitude we can summon as a nation.” Morgan said.

More than 81,000 missing

More than 81,000 American soldiers remain missing since World War II. The Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency travels to battlefields around the world to bring the fullest accounting possible for America’s missing in action. The organization “works to reunite families with their loved ones,” he said.

The Honor Guard performs at 21 gun salute during the ceremony at the KIA war monument in downtown Clarkesville. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

For some of the prisoners of war and the missing in action, “They are still waiting on their final flight home. As the years pass and the memories of those sent off to war become more distant for many, we must keep in mind those whose personal experiences make it ever present, Those who lived it and those who continue to wait and wonder about the ultimate fate of their loved one.” Morgan said.

He concluded, “We hope you will all join our organizations in keeping in your heart our nation’s POW’s and our missing in action.”

The Honor Guard provided a twenty-one gun salute as Kenneth Franklin performed Taps at the KIA war monument.

Recognition across the country

After the ceremony, Morgan spoke with Now Habersham about the POW/MIA Recognition Day. ”All over the county, other honor guards, other veterans service organizations are paying tribute to the missing in action,” he said.

He explained the significance of the day. “It’s just a day we try to set aside to keep their memories alive, in hopes that we can someday, find their remains, then bring them home for a proper burial and for the relief of their families.”

Kenneth Franklin plays Taps during the POW/MIA Recognition Day ceremony Friday morning. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The Grant Reeves VFW combined Honor Guard is made up of members from several veteran organizations. Those organizations include Cornelia and Clayton Veterans of Foreign War posts, the Cornelia and Clayton American Legion posts, and the local Disabled American Veterans chapters.

For more information about the combined Honor Guard, please go to grantreevesveteran.center/honor-guard.

Battleground state election officials lay out plans and concerns heading toward Election Day

Bartow County, Ga. Election Supervisor Joseph Kirk and Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger at a Sept. 19, 2024 panel on election safeguards in Ann Arbor. (Kyle Davidson/ Michigan Advance)

(Michigan Advance) — Bipartisan election officials from multiple battleground states met in Michigan Thursday and discussed their election day concerns and plans to make sure Election Day runs safely and smoothly.

Officials from Michigan, Wisconsin, Arizona, Georgia, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania gathered in the Gerald R. Ford Library in Ann Arbor for a string of panel discussions hosted by the nonpartisan group Keep our Republic, which focuses on providing education on threats to the U.S. election system and building trust in the electoral system.

Panelists began the day discussing the safeguards in place to protect from double voting, ballots being cast by dead individuals and noncitizen voters, alongside the ways they ensure accurate voting results before discussing the steps they’re taking to ensure Election Day goes smoothly for election workers, poll watchers and voters.

When asked what efforts the clerks on the panel were taking to support the well-being of permanent and volunteer election workers, Karen Brinson Bell, the executive director of the North Carolina Board of Elections, said physical and mental wellness has been a priority for their office.

Alongside extensive de-escalation training and training on wellness and resiliency, North Carolina has also held sessions with a doctor through the U.S. Department of Defense with an understanding that many election officials are experiencing post-traumatic stress disorder, who they plan to have back before Election Day.

In Pennsylvania, Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro has organized an election threat task force with federal, state and local partners, and there is also a training unit created in response to the large turnover of election workers in the state and across the nation, Pennsylvania Secretary of the Commonwealth and former GOP elections official Al Schmidt said. The unit is led by an experienced county election director who will train new election directors to ensure a smooth election.

Joseph Kirk, the election supervisor for Bartow County, Georgia, said there’s been more communication from the state in recent election cycles surrounding the landscape of threats to election workers. Additionally, the state has partnered with a wide number of organizations to get the word out about mental health, physical safety and any other knowledge election workers may need. Kirk is also ensuring his staff has training on physical threats and mental health that prioritizes the people in these situations, whether it’s an angry person at the polls or a natural disaster.

Additionally, election work is a community, Kirk said, and other organizations have made efforts to offer mental health support to members of that community.

Justin Roebuck, the Republican clerk for Ottawa County, Mich., said he underscored Kirk’s point on community.

“Something that I don’t want to get lost in this discussion is the fact that, you know, we sign up to do this for a reason, and there’s joy in this process. We are a part of this incredible, long history, right, of allowing people to engage in the democratic process and choose their government,” Roebuck said.

In addition to discussions on resilience and taking advantage of resources provided by the state, Roebuck said he and his team have been encouraging each other with positive stories.

“We have so many positive stories, so many like first-time voters walking into precincts and getting high fives and cheers from election workers when they vote. We go out into communities and I’m talking to fourth-grade class next week, and we’re doing a mock election with Oreos,” Roebuck said. “We’re using, you know, taste testing an Oreo and voting for your favorite Oreo. And these kids are coming up and asking legitimate questions that some adults are not asking about voting, so all of these things I think are so important to remind ourselves of.”

As election officials continue to adapt to a new landscape that includes threats and harassment, Wisconsin Election Commission Administrator and Chief Official Meagan Wolfe said all clerks have been an inspiration.

“They’ve shown that we’re not going to let fear rule us. We’re not going to let bullies or harassment dictate how we operate, that we are stronger than that, we are more resilient than that, and we’re going to keep doing our job the way that we’ve always done it, with integrity in mind,” Wolfe said.

As election workers charge forth, the focus has been on empowering them, Wolfe said, ensuring they have relationships with law enforcement and security assessments of their offices and polling places.

With election clerks facing increased scrutiny in recent years, panelists also discussed procedures for poll watchers and poll challengers in their states.

Schmidt noted the important role poll watchers played in ensuring transparency in Pennsylvania’s elections but noted it’s just as important that they understand what they can’t do as far as interfering with the voting process, harassing or intimidating voters, or advocating on behalf or against a candidate.

In Arizona, these observers are designated by county party chairs, Arizona State Election Director Lisa M. Marra. However, unlike poll workers who are required to be trained by state law, there are not the same requirements for observers, who may or may not have been trained on the basic rules.

“A lot of times, individuals say they’ve seen all these things that are illegal, happening that are not, but they don’t know because they don’t know the laws because they’re not trained,” Marra said, noting her support for something like an hour-long class to ensure poll watchers know the basic rules around their position.

Georgia has that type of class, Kirk noted, as poll watchers are required to go through training from the entity that appointed them, with many officials offering optional trainings about their local election processes.

It’s also important for these watchers to understand what they’re seeing and what to do if something’s not going right, Kirk said, noting that poll watchers are different in Georgia from poll challengers in other states.

“In Georgia, poll watchers observe what’s going on. If they see something wrong they alert who appointed them or the election office, not the poll manager, where[as] other states, they have more of a role of challenging what poll workers should do,” Kirk said.

Additionally there is also a public area where members of the public can observe if there is space, but if they want to go beyond the check in area, they have to be trained, Kirk said.

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, a Republican, also encouraged those interested in the process to join them as an election worker, rather than participating as a poll watcher, with another member of the panel joking, “Then you’re complicit.”

“The question is to the voter out there, do you want to make a difference? They could be a watcher, or you could be a poll worker. I’m a worker, not a whiner, so come join us,” Raffensperger said.

Michigan Bureau of Elections Director Jonathan Brater noted that the state has not had trouble with poll challengers that have been trained, regardless of the political party that has trained them.

“Where we have problems are when people show up, you know, because they got an email or at the last second and they’ve been told something’s going wrong, they come into the middle of an election process they know nothing about, and then they start causing trouble,” Brater said.

While Michigan has updated its challenger guidance to make things more clear for election officials, the state also has laws making it a crime to threaten an election worker, Brater said.

Lisa Posthumus Lyons, the clerk for Kent County, Mich., and a former GOP member of the state House of Representatives echoed the importance of training poll challengers and advocated for setting expectations for poll workers.

“I think we need to make sure that our election inspectors have an expectation set, that they understand that you could encounter poll challengers at your precinct. And so rather than have this unexpected, almost combative relationship, it’s a ‘This is part of the process. I know what they are able to do, and I know that role, I know what’s coming and we’re really all a part of the process together,’” Posthumus Lyons said.

Georgia State Election Board approves rule requiring hand count of ballots

Georgia's State Election Board members discuss proposals to a full room for election rule changes at the state capitol, Friday, Sept. 20, 2024, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia’s State Election Board on Friday voted to approve a new rule that requires poll workers to count the number of paper ballots by hand.

The board voted 3-2 to approve the rule, going against the advice of the state attorney general’s office, the secretary of state’s office and an association of county election officials. Three board members who were praised by former President Donald Trump during a rally last month in Atlanta voted to approve the measure.

In a memo sent to election board members Thursday, the office of state Attorney General Chris Carr said no provision in state law allows counting the number of ballots by hand at the precinct level before the ballots are brought to county election superintendent for vote tallying. As a result, the memo says, the rule is “not tethered to any statute” and is “likely the precise kind of impermissible legislation that agencies cannot do.”

The new rule requires that the number of paper ballots — not the number of votes — be counted at each polling place by three separate poll workers until all three counts are the same. If a scanner has more than 750 ballots inside at the end of voting, the poll manager can decide to begin the count the following day.

Several county election officials who spoke out against the rule during a public comment period preceding the vote warned that having to count the ballots by hand at polling places could delay the reporting of election night results. They also worried about putting an additional burden on poll workers who have already worked a long day.