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Crandall promoted to principal at NHMS; HABCO BOE approves budget

Habersham County Board of Education approves Dr. Renee Crandall as NHMS Principal and the FY 2025 budget during its regular board meeting Monday, June 17. (Habersham County Board of Education livestream.)

North Habersham Middle School Assistant Principal Dr. Renee Crandell has been promoted to principal. The Habersham County Board of Education announced her promotion at its meeting Monday night.

According to county school superintendent Matthew Cooper, an anonymous survey was distributed to staff at the middle school. Of those surveys, 41 were returned, and 39 respondents recommended Dr. Crandall for the job. She has served as assistant principal for the past three years.

Dr. Renee Crandall. (Habersham County Board of Education)

Crandall succeeds Adam Bagwell, who is taking over as principal at Habersham Central High School.

Cooper told board members that the school system has a “robust leadership pipeline,” giving them the opportunity to promote from within.

In addition to Dr. Crandall’s promotion, the board unanimously approved Cooper’s other personnel recommendations for resignations, transfers, and new hires.

Budget

Also at their June 17 board meeting, school board members approved the school system’s budget. Ahead of the vote, Chair Doug Westmoreland said the board worked on the budget with Chief Financial Officer Staci Newsome.

RELATED Habersham County BOE receives final budget; millage rate to remain the same

Referencing a criticism raised during May’s HABCO Primary debate, Westmoreland said, “I know it seems like on a regular board meeting that we just quickly go through this, but all of the work has been done. All of the work, all the discussion, and all the questions have been done.” He adds, “We want to make sure we are very transparent on that information.”

Westmoreland said board members and Newsome discussed all funds in work sessions and held two public hearings before unanimously approving the spending measure. The total budget for Habersham County Schools for FY 2025 is $126,806,511.

SEE ALSO

HABCO Commission receives budget, holds first public hearing

Pregnant woman, 3 others injured in wreck during police chase in Hartwell

A man wanted in Anderson County, South Carolina, led deputies on a chase that ended in a multi-vehicle wreck in Hartwell, officials say. Four people were injured in the wreck, including a woman who had to be airlifted from the scene.

The crash also injured a pregnant woman, and Hart County’s top government official, the Georgia State Patrol reports.

Shale Remien, with the Anderson County Sheriff’s Office, told reporters they were looking for a man wanted out of Iva, South Carolina. The suspect drove off, and deputies followed in a chase down Highway 29, according to WYFF News.

Anderson County deputies stopped pursuing the vehicle when it crossed into Georgia, Remien said. As the chase entered Georgia, Hart County deputies took the lead. State troopers were called to assist.

Multi-vehicle pileup

Troopers say the fleeing Hyundai Sonata ran a red light as the pursuit approached Hartwell city limits. A Ford Expedition struck the front passenger side of the Sonata, which then struck two other vehicles.

Following the crash, authorities arrested Holcombe. EMS transported him by ambulance to St. Mary’s Sacred Heart in Lavonia with non-life-threatening injuries.

21-year-old Chasity Hannah Gentry of Anderson was a passenger in the Sonata. Paramedics airlifted her to Greenville Memorial Hospital with serious injuries, according to GSP.

Troopers say the Expedition driver, 26-year-old Molly Byrum Tucker of Hartwell, is 33 weeks pregnant. An ambulance transported her to St. Mary’s Hospital in Athens as a precaution.

Hart County Administrator Terrell Partain, 69, was driving a Ford Explorer that was struck by the fleeing driver. An ambulance transported him to AnMed Health Medical Center with non-life-threatening injuries.

The other driver, Jimmy Anthony Terrell, 66, of Hartwell, was not injured.

The State Patrol says Holcombe faces various charges, including felony fleeing and serious injury by vehicle.

Scientists argue over the origins of COVID-19 before U.S. Senate panel

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — Scientists debated the origins of COVID-19 on Tuesday, trading barbs over whether the bulk of evidence available points to a natural spillover event from a wild animal or a virus designed in a lab and then let loose through an inadvertent leak.

The hearing in front of the U.S. Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee was part of ongoing efforts in Congress to apply the lessons learned during the pandemic to prevent or blunt the next outbreak.

Gregory Koblentz, associate professor and director of the Biodefense Graduate Program at George Mason University in Virginia, said during the two-hour hearing that debate continues in the scientific community about the origins.

“The possibility that SARS-CoV-2 was deliberately developed as a biological weapon has been unanimously rejected by all U.S. intelligence agencies,” Koblentz testified. “While the intelligence community is divided on the origin of the pandemic, most of the agencies have determined that the virus was not genetically engineered.”

Residents in Wuhan, China, were first diagnosed with “an atypical pneumonia-like illness” in December 2019, according to a COVID-19 timeline from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Initial cases all appeared linked to the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market at the time, though there has since been much speculation about the types of research taking place at the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

Koblentz said he believes the available evidence points to a spillover event from an animal, though he added a “research-related accident can’t be ruled out at this time.”

The lack of transparency and data from the Chinese government has significantly hindered scientists’ efforts to unify around the origin of COVID-19, he said.

Scientists battle over lab vs. spillover

Richard Ebright, board of governors professor of chemistry and chemical biology and laboratory director at the Waksman Institute of Microbiology at Rutgers University in New Jersey, testified he believes a “large preponderance of evidence indicates SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, entered humans through a research incident.”

Ebright also leveled criticism at fellow panelist Robert Garry, who, along with a handful of co-authors, published an opinion article in the journal nature medicine in March 2020, titled “The proximal origin of SARS-CoV-2.”

In the commentary, Garry and the other scientists wrote, “we do not believe that any type of laboratory-based scenario is plausible.”

Ebright said during Tuesday’s hearing that the opinion article represented “scientific misconduct up to and including fraud,” a characterization that Garry rejected during the hearing.

“The authors were stating their opinion, but that opinion was not well-founded,” Ebright said. “In March of 2020, there was no basis to state that as a conclusion, as opposed to simply being a hypothesis.”

Garry, professor and associate dean of the School of Medicine at Tulane University in Louisiana, argued on behalf of the spillover event during the hearing, testifying that the virus likely didn’t move directly from a bat to humans, but went to an unidentified intermediary animal.

“The bat coronaviruses are viruses that are spread by the gastrointestinal route,” Garry said. “For a virus like this to become a respiratory virus — it’s just going to require too many mutations, too many changes for a bat virus to spill directly over to a human being. That could only really happen in nature with replication through an intermediate animal.”

Garry also defended gain-of-function research during the hearing, arguing that it has had some beneficial impact, though he noted that it does need “appropriate safeguards and restrictions.”

Lawmakers and pundits have used several, often evolving, definitions for gain-of-function research in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. The American Society for Microbiology defines it as techniques “used in research to alter the function of an organism in such a way that it is able to do more than it used to do.”

When research is “responsibly performed” on highly transmissible and pathogenic viruses, it can lead to advances in public health and national security, Garry testified.

“Without gain-of-function research, we’d have no Tamiflu. Without gain-of-function research, we wouldn’t have a vaccine to prevent cancer caused by infection by the human papilloma virus,” Garry said. “And without gain-of-function research, we won’t be able to identify how novel viruses infect us. And if we don’t know how they infect us, we cannot develop appropriate treatments and cures for the next potential pandemic creating virus.”

Oversight of funding, research

New Hampshire Democratic Sen. Maggie Hassan raised several questions about whether there’s enough oversight of how the United States spends research dollars as well as what mechanisms are in place to monitor how private entities conduct certain types of research.

“While their research has the potential to cure diseases and boost our economy, unless they accept federal funding, there is very little federal oversight to ensure that private labs are engaged in safe and ethical research,” she said.

Koblentz from George Mason University said there is much less oversight of biosafety and biosecurity for private research facilities that don’t receive federal funding.

“In order to expand the scope of oversight to all privately funded research, (it) would require legislative action,” Koblentz said.

Congress, he said, should establish a national bio-risk management agency that would have authority over biosafety and biosecurity “regardless of the source of funding.”

“At the end of the day, it shouldn’t matter where the funding comes from in terms of making sure this research is being done safely, securely and responsibly,” Koblentz said.

Kentucky Republican Sen. Rand Paul, ranking member on the committee, said the panel will hold an upcoming hearing specifically on gain-of-function research, including what steps Congress should take to ensure it doesn’t put the public at risk.

The next pandemic

Committee Chairman Gary Peters, a Michigan Democrat, said during the hearing that lawmakers “must learn from the challenges faced during this pandemic to ensure we can better protect Americans from future potential biological incidents.”

“Our government needs the flexibility to determine the origins of naturally occurring outbreaks, as well as potential outbreaks that could arise from mistakes or malicious intent,” Peters said.

Utah Republican Sen. Mitt Romney, after listening to some of the debate, expressed exasperation that so much attention is going toward what caused the last pandemic and not on how to prepare for the next one.

“Given the fact that it could have been either, we know what action we ought to take to protect from either,” Romney said. “And so why there’s so much passion around that makes me think it’s more political than scientific, but maybe I’m wrong.”

The United States, he said, shouldn’t be funding gain-of-function research and should “insist” that anyone who receives federal funding follow the standards of the International Organization for Standardization.

HABCO Commission holds first public budget hearing

Habersham County Commission heard the FY 2025 budget and held the first public hearing Monday, June 17. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Habersham County Chief Financial Officer Tim Sims presented the FY 2025 budget to the County Commissioners during its Monday, June 17, regular meeting. Immediately following the presentation, the floor was open for public comments.

Sims presented a balanced budget to the commission. During the budget process, he explained that management had made several cuts to the budget. Many of those cuts were set aside for the commission to decide if those items should be placed back into the budget.

The total budget for FY 2025 as presented is $84,862,928, an increase of 15.8% or $11,546,723 over the FY 2024 budget. The general fund budget for the county makes up 46.2% of the total budget or $39,171,485.

Budget challenges

Sims outlined some of the challenges in the general fund budget. He stated that inflation was still higher than it was four years ago, raising the cost of goods and services the county purchases. Sims gave some examples of those cost increases. He tells the commission that in 2021 the Rec Department could purchase a football jersey for $36.42. Today, that same jersey costs the county $50.25, an increase of 38%. Another example he gave was for road paving in the county. In 2021, it cost the county $114,435 to resurface one mile of roadway. Last year, the same project cost the county $210,000 per mile. He warned that the county has not received what it would cost to pave roads this year.

Other than inflation, Sims told the commission that property and casualty insurance increased by 24%. The second phase of the Tax Assessment contract would be due in this budget year costing the county $383,000. The county’s phone system was at its end of life and needed to be replaced. Another increase was for the IT Department. The department has seen over the last year maintenance services and licensing costs increase that will affect the budget for the coming year.

Chief Financial Officer Tim Sims presents the FY 2025 budget to the Habersham County Commission Monday, June 17. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Also in the budget was a 4% merit increase for employees. That cost for FY 2025 will be approximately $653,000.

Sims told the commission that there was a capital improvements component of $1.6 million built into the budget. No new positions are in the current budget but the commission will look at what has been requested over the next week and make a decision on whether to fill those positions or not. They will also have the same opportunity with capital improvements.

Rollback

He told the commission that as the budget stands, it would allow for a full rollback on the millage rate. However, that is based on preliminary numbers from the tax digest. Sims informed the commission that it will be a few more days before the final tax digest numbers will be released. The current proposed millage rate rollback would be .911 mills, reducing the current millage rate from 12.682 to 11.771 mills.

Sims did tell the commission that depending on what they agreed to add to the capital improvements component or new positions, it could reduce the full rollback to a partial rollback.

Public hearing

Only one citizen spoke in opposition of the budget during the scheduled public hearing. Paula Hanington addressed the commission with her concerns about the budget, starting with inflation. “The people here have had to deal with inflation by cutting expenses,” she tells the commission. She adds, “Unfortunately, that doesn’t seem to be the same route that’s being taken by this proposed budget.”

Paula Hannington of Clarkesville spoke in opposition of the FY 2025 budget. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Hanington reminded the commission, “You all write the checks that we have to cover.”

“As a taxpayer, it’s harder for me to think about how my taxes are going to increase when my spending ability is consistently going down,” she said.

Hanington pointed out to the commission that there were certain functions of the government that were required. However, it appears that the county is providing more and more services that are in direct competition with private businesses. She gave the gymnastics program as one example.

She concluded her opposition by saying, “We cannot afford to tax ourselves out of existence.”

The Habersham County Commission will have a special called meeting on Monday, June 24, at 6:00 p.m. for its second public hearing for the FY 2025 budget. The meeting will be held in the Jury Assembly Room in the Habersham County Courthouse at 295 Llewellyn Street in Clarkesville.

SEE ALSO

HABCO Commission receives budget, holds first public hearing

White County Radio Club to host Amateur Radio Field Day

Join the Gateway Amateur Radio Club's annual Radio Field Day on June 22nd. It is sure to be a fun day. (Photo by GARC)

It is a hobby that many people around the world enjoy. Often called “ham” radio, operators make friends “on the air” that last a lifetime. You can join in on the fun whether you are a ham radio operator, interested in getting involved, or just want to learn more about it.

On Saturday, June 22, starting at 8 a.m., White County’s Gateway Amateur Radio Club (GARC) is hosting an Amateur Radio Field Day adjacent to the NoFo Brew Company at 1939 Helen Highway in Cleveland, Georgia. GARC is a nonprofit organization that continues to provide a service vital for backup communication.

Popular event

Ham Radio operators in Cleveland GA are holding a Amateur Radio Field Day June 22. (GARC)

Field Day is the single most popular on-the-air event held annually in the US and Canada.

On the fourth weekend of June of each year, thousands of radio amateurs gather with their clubs, groups, or simply with friends to operate from remote locations. The object of Field Day is to communicate with as many stations as possible and, in doing so, to demonstrate the ability to operate in abnormal situations in less than optimal conditions.

Global friends

Ham radio is a unique opportunity to make global friends and learn about their lives, event organizers say. It can also be a way to help others in distressed situations if necessary.

Time and again, ham radio has been called into action to provide communications in crises when it mattered.

Enthusiasts call it an “adventure” and “fun” and say becoming a licensed ham radio operator is worth the time. There are online courses for beginners. Some courses specify that you will receive your money back if you pass your exam on the first try. That is an incentive.

The Amateur Radio Field Day is a great way to learn about ham radios and become an operator. (GARC)

If this is a hobby that interests you, come out to the Amateur Radio Field Day on June 22 and talk to some of the ham radio operators. They’ll be available to answer your questions and can also help you find the right equipment so you can communicate with other radio operators around the world.

All ages participate

The Amateur Radio Service has been around for a century. In that time, it’s grown into a worldwide community of licensed operators using the airwaves with every conceivable means of communication technology. Operators range in age from youngsters to grandparents.

There are people from all walks of life who are in the ham ranks. Most people become operators to enjoy learning and being able to transmit voice, data, and pictures through the air to unusual places, both near and far, without depending on commercial systems.

The annual Field Day is one of the highlights for many clubs. There is a contest to contact as many other stations as possible and to learn to operate radio gear in abnormal situations and less-than-optimal conditions.

Ham Radio Operators communicate with other operators globally. (GARC)

Public meetings

If you are interested in learning more, contact [email protected] or visit Gateway Amateur Radio Club.

GARC is headquartered in Cleveland. Meetings are open to the public. The club meets on the second Tuesday of every month at 7 p.m. at the White County Seniors Center, 1239 Helen Highway, north of downtown Cleveland.

The club’s weekly net meets on Sunday nights at 8:30 pm local time on the K4GAR repeater. The repeater transmits on 146.910 MHz with a negative offset of 600 kHz and a PL tone 100.

Habersham County Commission District 1 runoff election today

Eric Holbrooks and Kelly Woodall face each other in the Habersham County Commission District 1 race. (Photo by: Jeremy Cooper.)

Habersham County voters have one last chance to vote for their candidate of choice in the Habersham County District 1 runoff election. Polls will opened Tuesday morning, June 18 at 7:00 a.m. and will close at 7:00 p.m. All six precincts will be open.

Eric Holbrooks and Kelly Woodall were placed in the runoff when incumbent Commissioner Bruce Palmer requested a recount and that recount did not change the results of the May 21 primary election. Palmer finished third in the primary.

Early voting totals for the June 18 runoff election were 1,286 in-person votes cast for the one week of early voting for the commission race. In comparison, for the three weeks of early voting prior to the May 21 primary election, there were 3,061 in-person votes cast.

With Tuesday being election day for the runoff, Now Habersham contacted both candidates for comments related to the election.

Eric Holbrooks reiterated his platform of “common sense conservative solutions.” He tells Now Habersham, “I hope to work together with the county employees and the taxpayers of Habersham to find common sense conservative solutions to the problems we face in our community.” He believes that “there is a balance between the citizens that pay the bills and those that provide the services.”

He addresses the citizens of Habersham County, “I promise to do the work and ask the tough questions.” he tells Now Habersham.

Kelly Woodall tells Now Habersham about his conservative approach to government, “I have not been shy about my belief that we need to be more fiscally conservative in our county budgets, to limit the growth of government, and lessen the burden on taxpayers.”

During his time on the campaign trail, Woodall says, “I’ve been able to see firsthand the love and devotion people have for Habersham County,” He adds, “If elected, I promise to do all I can to protect the natural beauty and culture of our community.”

Both candidates encourage voters to get out and vote.

Demorest accident sends driver to hospital

A driver was taken to the hospital following a 2-vehicle accident in Demorest on Monday.

A preliminary report by the Georgia State Patrol (GSP) says Mary Ferguson, 90, of Clarkesville, was driving a Hyundai Accent east on Austin Drive. After stopping at the stop sign, troopers say she failed to yield and pulled into the path of a Honda CR-V on GA 385/Historic US Highway 441.

The Honda, driven by Destiny Stapler, 23, of Dahlonega, hit the Hyundai. Ferguson told the investigating trooper she did not see the Honda before moving out into the road.

Habersham County Emergency Services transported Ferguson to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Demorest with a possible complaint of injury.

Stapler and her passenger were not injured.

According to GSP Public Information Officer Courtney Lund, Ferguson received a warning for violation of right of way.

Biden to unveil protections for some undocumented spouses, easier DACA work visas

President Joe Biden will formally make an announcement about protections for undocumented spouses and speedier work visas for DACA recipients during an afternoon White House event to celebrate the 12th anniversary of the DACA program on June 18, 2024. (Official White House Photo by Cameron Smith)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — The Biden administration Tuesday will announce deportation protections for long-term undocumented immigrants married to U.S. citizens, along with quicker approval of work permits for those in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.

President Joe Biden will formally make the announcement during an afternoon White House event to celebrate the 12th anniversary of the DACA program. The initiative was launched during the Obama administration and was meant to temporarily protect undocumented children brought into the United States without authorization.

The new policies were previewed by senior administration officials to reporters late Monday.

The new DACA policy will allow those recipients who have graduated from an accredited university and have an offer by a U.S. employer for a highly skilled job to quickly qualify for one of the existing temporary work visas, such as an H-1B visa.

The new policies came two weeks after Biden enacted his harshest crackdown on immigration with a partial ban on asylum proceedings at the southern border. Immigration remains a top issue for voters and for Biden’s GOP rival, former President Donald Trump.

Democrats and immigration advocates have long pressed the Biden administration to instill permanent protections for the nearly 579,000 DACA recipients as they await a decision from the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals that could deem the program unlawful. The legal dispute is likely to head to the Supreme Court.

Many immigration policy experts have called DACA outdated, because there are now thousands of undocumented people who are not eligible for the program because they were not even born yet. To qualify, an undocumented person needs to have continuously resided in the U.S. since 2007.

Biden pushed to take action

Americans with undocumented spouses have expressed their frustration and pushed for the Biden administration to use executive action to grant relief for the more than 1.1 million Americans who fear their undocumented spouses could face deportation.

The deportation protections to those married to a U.S. citizens are a one-time action expected to allow roughly 500,000 noncitizen spouses and their children to apply for a lawful permanent residence — a green card — under certain requirements.

To qualify, a noncitizen must have resided in the U.S. for 10 years as of Monday, June 17, 2024, and be married to a U.S. citizen since that date as well. That spouse who is a noncitizen also cannot be deemed a security threat.

The Department of Homeland Security will consider those applications, which are expected to be open by the end of summer, on a case-by-case basis, a senior administration official said.

This move is also expected to affect roughly 50,000 children who are noncitizens and have an immigrant parent married to a U.S. citizen.

For those children to qualify, they have to be 21 or younger, unmarried “and the marriage between the parents has to have taken place before the child turned 18,” a senior administration official said.

Under current U.S. immigration law, if a noncitizen enters the country without authorization, they are ineligible for permanent legal status and would be required to leave the U.S. and reenter legally through a green card application by their U.S. spouse, which is a lengthy process that can take years.

“The challenges and uncertainty of this process result in many eligible spouses not applying for permanent residence,” a senior administration official said.

Application info coming

More information on the application and eligibility process will be published in the Federal Register in the coming weeks, a senior administration official said.

The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, which oversees the legal immigration system, has a similar program that allows noncitizens who are immediate family members of U.S. military service members to obtain green cards without leaving the country.

“This announcement utilizes existing authorities to keep families together,” a senior administration official said. “But… only Congress can fix our broken immigration system.”

Any immigration reform from Congress is unlikely, with Republicans in control of the House and Democrats controlling the Senate. A bipartisan border security deal fell apart earlier this year. There was no pathway to citizenship in that deal for DACA recipients or longtime immigrants.

The closest Congress came to bipartisan immigration reform was in 2013, when the “Gang of Eight,” made up of four Republican and four Democratic senators, crafted a bill that would create a pathway to citizenship for millions of undocumented people.

It passed the Senate, but Republican House Speaker John Boehner never brought the bill to the floor for a vote.

Georgia voters return to the polls Tuesday to settle runoffs for Congress, state Legislature

(Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

(Georgia Recorder) — How influential is a Trump endorsement in 2024? Will southwest Georgia Republicans advance a congressional candidate convicted of a Jan. 6 offense to the November election?

Those are two of the big questions lingering as voters across the state head to the polls Tuesday to settle two GOP congressional runoffs, eight legislative races and a smattering of local races.

Polls across the state are open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday.

The marquee match-up is playing out in west Georgia as voters choose the successor for outgoing Congressman Drew Ferguson.

Brian Jack was the top vote-getter last month with nearly 47% of the vote, coming close to winning the five-way race outright. Jack was an aide for former President Donald Trump and has Trump’s endorsement in the race.

Jack is up against former state Senate Majority Leader Mike Dugan. The Carrollton Republican finished last month with about 25% of the vote.

The winner of the runoff will go into the Nov. 5 general election as the heavy favorite to represent the district in the U.S. Congress.

Another congressional GOP runoff is underway in a sprawling southwest Georgia district that begins in Macon and stretches down to the Florida line.

That race had been relatively low key before last month’s second place finisher, Chuck Hand, attracted national attention for abruptly walking out of the Atlanta Press Club’s recent debate just minutes after it started inside Georgia Public Broadcasting’s Atlanta studio.

Hand, a construction superintendent, won 32% of the vote in last month’s first round of voting. He trailed former Trump administration official Wayne Johnson, who won nearly 45% of the vote.

Hand is one of at least four people convicted of Jan. 6 offenses running for Congress this year. He has been open about his role in the breach of the U.S. Capitol as Congress worked to certify the results of the 2020 presidential election, saying he and wife were there as “peaceful, nonviolent protesters.”

But some of his rivals have accused him of basing his campaign on Jan. 6 while raising questions about how peaceful he intended to be that day when he entered the Capitol.

Johnson has fended off criticism for not living in the district, though he says he lives near the district boundary line. The Macon businessman, who says his residence is near the district boundary line, argues that he employs people and owns properties in the district. He has said he will move to a home he owns in Plains if elected, though it is not required.

The Republican winner will go into the fall as the underdog when he goes up against longtime Congressman Sanford Bishop, an Albany Democrat, in the Democratic leaning district.

On the Democratic side, there is a primary runoff in northwest Georgia’s 14th congressional district featuring Clarence Blalock and Shawn “General” Harris, who evenly split the vote last month. But the GOP incumbent, Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene of Rome, is the heavy favorite to win in November.

There are also eight unsettled legislative primaries after no candidate clinched 50% of the vote in last month’s election, with some candidates barely falling short of that threshold.

Tuesday’s legislative runoffs feature two intraparty fights from both sides of the aisle, including a race for a metro Atlanta Senate seat that has opened up for the first time in two decades and a coastal matchup where a GOP House incumbent is fighting to keep his seat.

Ribbon cutting ceremony in Sautee for Amped Kids Foundation

(photo Amped Kids Foundation)

It is an opportunity to change the lives of those most vulnerable – children in the foster care system and at-risk youth.

A ribbon cutting ceremony is scheduled for Thursday, June 27, from 11:30 a.m. until 12 p.m. at the Amped Kids Foundation, 2276 GA-17 Suite C, Sautee Nacoochee, GA.

Amped Kids Foundation is a 501(c)3 organization with a vision to impact children through music. Many children in foster care have been through trauma. Music education is used to help build creative and critical thinking skills, but also, self-esteem and life skills. Music is attributed to success academically as well. For those in foster care, adopted, and at-risk youth, it can be a key element in the healing process and a way to transfer anger and hurt. AMPED will provide access to children in these areas of life with free private music instruction.

April Rooks, a singer and songwriter and survivor of domestic violence, founded the Amped Kids Foundation. According to the Amped website, Rooks believes in the power of music to transform children’s lives because it has helped her in her own life. Rooks’ vision is to invest in children who have been abused, neglected, and endured trauma.

Amped Kids partners teach students of every level from beginner to advanced. There are vocal, guitar, piano, and percussion lessons available. The lesson program includes recitals to showcase what the children have learned. Music lessons are free of charge to foster, adopted children and children in the DFCS system. Amped covers the cost of the musical instrument, lessons, and instruction materials.

The lesson programs consists of 30-minute lessons every week with the school calendar. Children are evaluated to determine the child’s progress at the end of each year to make sure the child is interested in continuing musical lessons.

For more information call 678-283-0743 or visit AMPED Kids Foundation.

Health Dept. to close in observance of Juneteenth

Habersham County Health Department (NowHabersham.com)

The Habersham County Health Department and Environmental Health Office will be closed Wednesday, June 19, in observance of Juneteenth.

According to county officials, all other Habersham County offices will be open as usual.

Juneteenth is a federal holiday. Below is a list of remaining federal holidays in 2024:

• Independence Day – Thursday, July 4
• Labor Day – Monday, Sept. 2
• Columbus Day – Monday, Oct. 14
• Veterans Day – Monday, Nov. 11
• Thanksgiving Day – Thursday, Nov. 28
• State holiday – Observed Friday, Nov. 29
• Christmas Day – Wednesday, Dec. 25

Rabun County Sheriff’s runoff election tomorrow, June 18

Rabun County voters will vote for Sheriff Tuesday, June 18. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Voters in Rabun County will have an opportunity tomorrow, June 18, to vote who the top cop in the county will be. The June 18 runoff is between Mark Gerrells and incumbent Sheriff Chad Nichols.

The runoff resulted from a three candidate race with none of the candidates securing 50% of the vote. In the May 21 primary, Gerrells finished first, securing 45% of the vote with Nichols finishing second, receiving 38% of the vote. In the three candidate race, candidate Marty Talley finished a distant third with 17% of the vote.

The sheriff’s race has been clouded due to the recent arrest of Sheriff Nichols, just 10 days after the May 21 primary election. He was arrested for sexual battery, indecent exposure, and violation of oath of office. Just prior to his arrest, Nichols appointed Major Beth Darnell to oversee the Sheriff’s Office in his absence. As part of his bond conditions, Nichols is prohibited from engaging in or directing any law enforcement activities.

SEE RELATED: Rabun County Sheriff arrested, accused of sexual battery

Now Habersham has reached out to both candidates in the Sheriff’s runoff. We have been unsuccessful in contacting Sheriff Nichols.

However, Now Habersham did speak to candidate Mark Gerrells for his comments. He outlines two things important to him. “I definitely want to strengthen community relationships with the Sheriff’s Office and being more active in the community.” he tells Now Habersham. He adds, “I want to provide a better workplace for the deputies.”

Gerrells also sends a message to the voting community. “I ask the public for their support and their vote for their next Sheriff.” He understands that there are those that will vote for someone other than him. For those voters, he tells Now Habersham that if he wins, “I hope in the next four years that I will win their trust and their support.”

According to the Rabun County website, the county only has one polling place for voters to cast a ballot. Polls will open at 7:00 a.m. and will close at 7:00 p.m. Voters can vote at Rabun County Voting Center, located at 184 South Main Street, Suite 102 in Clayton.