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Presidential campaign moves to the border, as Biden urges Trump to back immigration deal

President Joe Biden delivers remarks during a visit to Brownsville on Feb. 29, 2024. (Eli Hartman/The Texas Tribune)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump on Thursday afternoon paid competing visits to the nation’s southern border, where Biden called on Congress to reconsider a bipartisan border security deal that Republicans tanked at Trump’s direction.

Biden traveled to Brownsville, Texas, while Trump journeyed to Eagle Pass, highlighting how immigration policy has risen in importance as the 2024 presidential race takes shape. Biden is seeking reelection and Trump is the GOP primary front-runner.

“Here’s what I would say to Mr. Trump,” Biden said. “Instead of telling members of Congress to block this legislation, join me, or I’ll join you in telling the Congress to pass this bipartisan border security bill. We can do it together.”

Senate Republicans earlier this month walked away from that deal they brokered with the White House, following Trump’s objection to the plan that would drastically overhaul U.S. immigration law and bolster funding.

Biden said that the Senate needs to reconsider the bipartisan border security bill and that Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson should bring the measure to the floor for a vote.

Johnson has refused, arguing that the House already passed its own measure in H.R. 2, and that Biden has the executive authority to take action to address high levels of immigration. Democrats object to many of the policies in that bill.

Accompanying the president was U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, who was impeached by House Republicans over policy disputes in early February, and Democratic Rep. Vicente Gonzalez of Texas, whose district includes Brownsville.

During his visit, Biden met with U.S. Border Patrol agents, law enforcement, frontline personnel and local leaders, the White House said.

“I just received a briefing from the Border Patrol at the border as well as immigration enforcement asylum officers and they’re all doing incredible work under really tough conditions,” Biden said. “They desperately need more resources.”

Mayorkas said only Congress can help DHS fund more Border Patrol agents, immigration enforcement agents, asylum officers, immigration judges and support personnel, facilities and technology.

“You can see the impact these resources will have on our ability to strengthen our security, advance our mission to protect the homeland and enforce our nation’s laws quickly and effectively,” he said. “Though Congress has not yet provided the resources we need, DHS will continue to enforce the law and work to secure our border.”

Migrant encounters

As the Biden administration deals with the largest number of migrant encounters at the southern border in more than 20 years, Trump’s reelection campaign has centered on stoking fears surrounding immigration — as he previously did in his 2016 presidential campaign.

Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a visit to the Texas-Mexico border at Eagle Pass, on Feb. 29, 2024. (livestream image)

More than 300 miles away from Biden in Eagle Pass on Thursday, Trump criticized the Biden administration and touted how he managed the border during his first presidency.

He highlighted his “Remain in Mexico” program that required asylum seekers to stay in Mexico while waiting for their asylum cases to he heard — a move that many advocates documented resulted in harm, separation and deaths to those migrants who had to comply.

“The best was ‘Remain in Mexico,’” Trump said. “You stay in Mexico.”

Trump implemented the program in 2019 and the Biden administration sought to terminate it in June 2021.

But the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas determined in Texas v. Biden that the termination memo from the Biden administration was not issued in compliance with the Administrative Procedure Act, so the court ordered the Department of Homeland Security to keep the program in place.

It took a Supreme Court ruling for the Biden administration to finally be allowed to end the program.

Trump also praised Texas GOP Gov. Greg Abbott, who is at odds with the Biden administration over who wields authority over the border, most recently when Abbott defied U.S. Supreme Court orders to remove razor wire along the border.

Abbott has also sent migrants on buses and planes to Democratic-led cities without warning local officials, putting strains on those cities.

“He’s in some sanitized location,” Abbott said of Biden’s visit to Brownsville. “It just goes to show that Biden does not care about either Texas or the border and what’s going on.”

GOP on the attack in D.C.

U.S. House Republicans at the Capitol also criticized Biden’s visit to the border, calling it a “photo op” and arguing that Brownsville is not a busy area that encounters many migrants.

“The border is the issue for every American no matter where they live, no matter where their state is, because every state is a border state,” Johnson said during a Thursday press conference.

Johnson also pressed for Biden to take executive action on immigration, something Biden has argued he cannot do without congressional authority.

Utah’s Blake Moore, the vice chair of the House Republican Conference, argued that El Paso, Texas, and Tucson, Arizona, are busier than Brownsville in terms of immigration.

“Brownsville can hardly be considered one of the most challenging immigration areas,” Moore said.

Moore said that this should not be just the second time in Biden’s presidency he has visited the border, and that Trump’s visit on the same day made it seem like Biden was trying to compete with Trump. Biden’s first visit to the border was in January 2023.

“That is what the American people will take from this, and it’s disheartening to know that that is the case,” Moore said.

NBC has reported the White House says Trump’s visit had nothing to do with Biden’s trip to Texas.

Growth may close county landfill sooner than expected

(Rob Moore/Habersham County)

The Habersham County Landfill is no longer accepting construction and demolition debris (C&D). The county stopped accepting C&D waste at the end of business on Friday, Feb. 29. The move is part of an effort to expand the life of the landfill, which once was projected to last well into this century.

With the C&D cell now closed to the public, how long can county residents expect the landfill to last?

To answer that question, the county commissioned a study in August. According to the engineering firm of Hodges, Harbin, Newberry, and Tribble, Inc. (HHNT) of Statesboro, the municipal solid waste (MSW) cells have approximately 17 years remaining before they reach full capacity. The engineering report estimates the landfill will be at capacity in May 2040.

An email from HHNT engineer Ryan Willoughby to Interim Solid Waste Director Johnnie Vickers dated September 15, stated that the anticipated life of the landfill was calculated using the remaining volume, a five-year average density achieved, the reported tonnage for the year, and assumes 281 operating days per year.

SEE RELATED: Engineers: Habersham County landfill will be full within 17 years

However, the survey did not break out anticipated growth. Instead, engineers used a large number for annual tonnage to factor in growth.

Documents from the county show that two growth models were generated. The first model was based on the amount of MSW brought to the landfill over the last 11 years and averaged out over that period. Growth was factored year over year for that same period.

The 11-year model puts the life expectancy of the landfill at approximately mid-January of 2039. The 11-year model factored in an average annual growth rate of 5.75%.

The second model averaged the MSW brought to the landfill over the last four years. Growth was averaged over that same period. This model matches the life expectancy that the engineers presented to the county last September. The four-year model saw the landfill grow at an average rate of 4.59%.

The county anticipates the population to grow over the next several years due to the development of the inland port in Hall County. Should the landfill exceed 4.6% growth year over year due to the anticipated population growth, the Habersham County Commission will have less than 15 years to put a plan in place to meet the solid waste management needs of the county.

A day ahead of shutdown, Congress works on advancing stopgap spending bills

U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-Louisiana, speaks at a GOP press conference at the U.S. Capitol on Feb. 29, 2024. With Johnson are, left to right, GOP Reps. Blake Moore of Utah, Beth Van Duyne of Texas and Steve Scalise of Louisiana. (Ariana Figueroa/States Newsroom)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — The U.S. House, on a bipartisan vote, passed a short-term funding extension Thursday intended to give lawmakers a bit more time to wrap up work on the annual spending bills — trying to dodge a shutdown despite election-year politics and narrow margins.

The stopgap spending bill sometimes called a continuing resolution, or CR would keep funding mostly flat for programs funded in six of the full-year bills through March 8 and for programs in the other six bills through March 22. That means Congress will face another deadline just next week for action.

The House voted 320-99 to approve the stopgap bill, which now goes to the Senate, where any one lawmaker can slow down the approval process, pushing it past the Friday midnight deadline.

A Senate failure to send the bill to President Joe Biden before then would result in a partial government shutdown for the Departments of Agriculture, Energy, Housing and Urban Development, Transportation, and Veterans Affairs.

Other agencies, like the Food and Drug Administration and military construction projects, would also be closed except for essential staff until a stopgap bill is enacted.

“While at the time of passing our last continuing resolution, I had hoped we would not need this measure, we owe it to the American people to do our due diligence in reaching the end of this process,” the top Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee, Rep. Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut, said on the House floor. “I appreciate the respectful bipartisan cooperation that took place to put forward this continuing resolution and move us closer to the finish line.”

GOP Rep. Chuck Fleischmann of Tennessee, an appropriator, acknowledged that many of his Republican colleagues would be upset with another CR, but he noted the slim majority in the GOP and that the bill gives Congress more time to pass the remaining appropriations bills.

“We are where we are,” he said. “This negotiation has been difficult, but to close the government down at a time like this would hurt people who should not be hurt.”

Border security

Republicans like Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona and Bob Good of Virginia expressed their frustration about border security and said House Republicans have not leveraged the threat of shutting down the federal government to push for changes in immigration policy.

“We just keep spending money, and we keep the policies that are in place,” Biggs said.

House Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana said during a Thursday press conference that the bill texts for the first package of six spending bills will be released this weekend, and members will be given at least 72 hours to read the bills before voting.

“This is a bipartisan agreement in the end, but it sticks to the numbers, the agreement on spending, it does not go above that,” Johnson said. “It will increase a bit, defense spending, but there will be real cuts to non-defense discretionary spending.”

Johnson added that after the remaining appropriations bills are done by the March 22 deadline, he wants to quickly move on to fiscal year 2025, as well as other issues, such as immigration.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, said Thursday morning the only way for Congress to accomplish anything during divided government is through bipartisanship.

“This agreement is proof that when the four leaders work together, when bipartisanship is prioritized, when getting things done for the American people takes a high priority, good things can happen, even in divided government,” Schumer said. “And I hope this sets the stage for Congress to finish the appropriations process in a bipartisan way very soon.”

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, said he appreciated the “commitment to see this process through and make good on this essential governing responsibility.”

“As I said earlier this week, government shutdowns never produce positive outcomes. That’s why Congress is going to avoid one this week,” McConnell said. “Leaders in both parties and both houses have agreed to a plan that would keep the lights on while appropriators complete their work and put annual appropriations bills on a glide path to becoming law.”

Congress has used a series of these stopgap funding measures to extend its deadlines for passing the dozen annual appropriations bills after failing to meet an Oct. 1 deadline.

Deep disagreements

House Republicans and Senate Democrats have had fundamental disagreements about spending levels and the policy that goes into the bills for months.

Those differences began after Biden submitted his budget request for fiscal year 2024 in March 2023, starting off the annual process.

The disputes appeared to abate a bit after Biden and then-Speaker Kevin McCarthy reached agreement on total spending levels in May 2023 at the same time they brokered a bipartisan agreement to address the nation’s debt limit.

House GOP appropriators moved away from that agreement after McCarthy experienced pressure from especially conservative members to significantly cut spending on domestic programs below the agreement.

The original batch of House spending bills also included dozens of very conservative GOP policy initiatives, drawing rebukes from Democrats and impeding the path toward a final bipartisan agreement.

A faction of far-right House Republicans ousting McCarthy of California in early October and then spending weeks disagreeing about who should lead them also delayed the process.

Johnson, after becoming speaker, renegotiated the spending levels for defense and domestic discretionary programs with Biden in January, starting off the process of merging the GOP bills from the House with the broadly bipartisan bills approved by the Senate Appropriations Committee.

The spending deal sets spending on defense programs at $886.3 billion and provides $772.7 billion for non-defense discretionary spending.

Congressional leaders and the four lawmakers that lead the Appropriations committees in both chambers announced Wednesday they’d reached final agreement on six bills and had an agreement for another stopgap spending bill to bridge the gap.

Those bills, which will make up the first so-called “minibus,” include Agriculture-FDA, Commerce-Justice-Science, Energy-Water, Interior-Environment, Military Construction-VA and Transportation-HUD.

March 22 deadline

The remaining six bills, the toughest to negotiate, haven’t yet garnered bipartisan, bicameral agreement, but the statement said they “will be finalized, voted on, and enacted prior to March 22.”

That spending package is supposed to include the Defense, Financial Services and General Government, Homeland Security, Labor-HHS-Education, Legislative Branch and State-Foreign Operations government funding bills.

Should Congress approve all dozen of the bills before the March 22 final deadline, and Biden signs them, that would place lawmakers 174 days behind their deadline.

That would be the latest members have completed work on all the bills since fiscal 2017, when they wrapped up work 216 days into the fiscal year, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service.

Congress wrapped up work on all the bills during fiscal 2018 by March 23, but that was 173 days behind their deadline. The difference between this fiscal year and then is due to leap day.

The process of funding the government is expected to start anew on March 11 when Biden submits his budget request for fiscal 2025.

80-year-old Clarkesville man charged with child molestation

William Donald Allen (Habersham County Sheriff's Office)

An 80-year-old man is out of jail on bond following his arrest earlier this week for child molestation.

Habersham County Sheriff’s deputies took William Donald Allen of Clarkesville into custody on Feb. 26. They charged him with two counts of child molestation.

According to the initial incident report, the victim was a young girl under the age of 16 whom Allen knew. Investigators say the case was brought to light after the girl’s parents found a note she wrote about the alleged abuse.

According to the report, the abuse reportedly took place over several years, between 2016 and 2022.

Following his arrest, Allen was booked at the Habersham County Detention Center and was later released on a $46,000 bond.

In clash over immigration, Biden and Trump both bound for the U.S.-Mexico border today

A U.S. Border Patrol agent stands guard in the Rio Grande Valley. President Biden and former President Trump will both travel to the region on Feb. 29, 2024, focusing the presidential campaign on immigration. (US Border Patrol RGV Sector/Facebook)

(States Newsroom) — Surrogates for President Joe Biden dismissed former President Donald Trump’s scheduled visit to the U.S.-Mexico border Thursday as a political stunt, adding that the likely Republican presidential nominee was exploiting an issue that he has shown no desire to fix.

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker and U.S. Rep. Robert Garcia of California, both Democrats, told reporters on a Wednesday conference call organized by the Biden reelection campaign that Trump’s record — recently and throughout his public life — showed he was anything but serious about addressing the myriad issues resulting from a recent surge in migration across the southern border.

Trump is scheduled to visit the border town of Eagle Pass, Texas, on Thursday to call attention to Biden’s record on border security.

Biden separately will pay a visit to Brownsville, about 300 miles southeast of Eagle Pass.

Trump has no credibility on immigration after tanking a bipartisan agreement to strengthen border enforcement, Pritzker and Garcia said Wednesday.  Trump reportedly asked Republicans in Congress not to support the deal to avoid handing Biden a victory in an election year, they noted.

“Republicans frankly just do not care about solving the challenges facing this country,” Pritzker said. “They only care about saving their own skin. This could have been a press call touting a bipartisan path forward. Instead, Donald Trump wanted a campaign slogan.”

In a campaign statement Wednesday, Trump commended his own record on immigration, noting he signed executive orders calling for a wall on the southern border, declaring a national emergency on the border and sending police and military resources to the region.

Trump “created the most secure border in history,” the statement said, and would reinstate several policies that Biden dropped.

Trump would end a policy that allows migrants to live freely in a U.S. community as they await immigration hearings, cease birthright citizenship for the children of migrants in the country without legal authorization — even though an amendment to the U.S. Constitution is interpreted to guarantee that right — and use the military to combat drug cartels, the statement said.

Trump said in a speech to the Conservative Political Action Conference, or CPAC, on Saturday that he would seek to enact the “largest deportation in the history of our country” if elected.

“The first and most urgent action when we win will be the sealing of the border, stopping the invasion, drill baby drill, send Joe Biden’s illegal aliens back home,” Trump said. “We’ll do all of those things and we’re gonna have to do them fast because no country can sustain what’s happening in our country.”

Garcia, who immigrated to the country as a child, said Trump’s history of racist rhetoric showed he had misplaced priorities on immigration policy.

Trump has used what critics say are racist generalizations of immigrants since his entrance into national politics, a 2015 speech announcing his first White House run in which he made derogatory comments about immigrants from Mexico.

Trump believes “preying on immigrants is his path to reelection,” Garcia said.

“This is a cruel man with a cruel agenda,” he said.

Trump’s “extremism” on immigration would go even further than in his first term, Garcia said.

The former president has talked about returning to the family separation policy at the border, which attracted major controversy in his first term, has expressed support for ending birthright citizenship and said he would act as a dictator for the first day of a potential second term to enact extreme border policies, Garcia said.

Trump and other Republicans have harshly criticized the Biden administration’s approach to immigration, with House Republicans impeaching Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas this month over his supposed failure to enforce immigration laws.

Garcia called Trump’s approach to the issue “fearmongering.”

“Donald Trump doesn’t give a damn about border security,” he said. “All he cares about is stirring up pain, stirring up division.”

Protesters decry Athens as sanctuary city; mayor says it’s not

A press conference in Athens on Wednesday turned tense as protesters shouted loudly over the mayor, dismissing his claims that Athens is not a sanctuary city.

The gathering was meant to be an opportunity for Athens Mayor Kellie Girtz to address new public safety initiatives the city is considering in the wake of Laken Riley’s murder. The Augusta University nursing student was killed by an illegal immigrant living in Athens, police say. Jose Ibarra is now in jail, charged in Riley’s death.

Flashpoint in immigration debate

Ibarra’s immigration status has become a flashpoint in the ongoing debate over U.S. immigration policy. The small group of protesters that showed up Wednesday in Athens were intent on making their point.

“Who voted to make Athens-Clarke County a sanctuary city, sir,” one male protester yelled from the audience. He then demanded, “Who? What’s their name.”

Jose Antonio Ibarra is charged with murdering Laken Riley on the UGA campus. HIs illegal immigrant status has become a flashpoint in the ongoing debate over immigration in the U.S. (Clarke County Sheriff’s Office)

Mayor Girtz responded, “There’s been no legislation from this government that has created sanctuary city status,” to which protesters responded, “8/20/2019,” and then called the mayor a “liar.”

The date, August 20, 2019, was in reference to a resolution signed on that day in support of Athens-Clarke County’s immigrant and Latinx communities.

The resolution states, “The Athens-Clarke County Unified Government is welcoming to people from all lands and backgrounds and strives to foster a community where individuals and families of all statuses feel safe, are able to prosper, and can breathe free.”

The document, formally expressing the governing body’s opinion, also denounces white supremacy.

Mayor Girtz said the resolution was passed at a time when “We had hate activity toward members of this community, and we wished to indicate that we didn’t want to embolden that hate activity.”

Sanctuary City

Georgia law prohibits sanctuary policies and requires local governing bodies to submit a document to the state verifying adherence to the law.

Athens-Clarke County Police Chief Jerry Saulters and Mayor Kellie Girtz field questions from reporters during a press conference on Feb. 28, 2024. (Athens-Clarke County Unified Government livestream image)

“We contribute a document to the Georgia Department of Audits annually indicating that we do not correspond to these definitions under state law,” said Girtz. “There is no legislation from this government that has created sanctuary city status.”

Pressed on whether the city was to blame for Ibarra’s living in Athens as an undocumented immigrant, Girtz expressed sorrow for what happened but said, “The responsibility for this crime rests solely upon the perpetrator.”

READ: Athens-Clarke County immigrant resolution

Police chief: No warrants or holds

Athens police arrested Ibarra for shoplifting in October, but he was cited and released. That’s common practice for certain misdemeanor offenses, said Athens-Clarke County Police Chief Jerry Saulters during the Feb. 28 press conference.

Saulters said the police department ran background checks on Ibarra through the state and national crime information centers, but nothing came back to indicate he should be held in jail.

“If there was any warnings or anything that had come back from the federal government — holds, warrants — then we would have held him at that time, and that was checked, and there was not any warrants at that time,” said Chief Saulters. “We can’t look on our computer and tell you the status of someone’s immigration. We don’t have that information.”

Republican lawmakers have focused on the Riley murder to push for tougher immigration laws, including a proposed bill in Georgia that would require sheriffs to cooperate with the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) division.

SEE ALSO

Georgia lawmakers push immigration bills in response to UGA murder

Leap Day 2024: what’s all this jumping about?

It’s leap year yet again, but what exactly is all this jumping about?

To get to the start of leap years, you have to go way back to the year 45 B.C. Julius Caesar was on a quest to create a calendar that could be used by everyone that wouldn’t fluctuate with the moon or the sun, known as a solar calendar. The intent is to keep the seasons from moving throughout the year. When building this calendar, he realized that a year wasn’t quite 365 days exactly, but instead 365.2422 days long. To correct this, he added one day to the month of February every four years. But even this wasn’t quite perfect. That extra 0.0022 days means that every 400 years, the calendar will still drift by three days.

The story wouldn’t change again until 1600 years later when the Catholic Church became concerned about the drift — by this point, a full ten days — and began work on the Gregorian Calendar. The main concern was over the drift of the March equinox, which is important in the calculation of Easter Sunday. It had drifted well off its average March 21 date. So, in 1582, the church decided to skip forward from Thursday, October 4, to Friday, October 15, and instate a new rule for leap years going forward.

New rule

The new rule was that every year that is exactly divisible by four is a leap year, except for years that are exactly divisible by 100, but these centurial years are leap years if they are exactly divisible by 400. For example, the years 1700, 1800, and 1900 are not leap years, but the years 1600 and 2000 are.

This new rule approximates each year to be 365.2425 days long, much closer to the 365.2522 days it actually is. Thus, the calendar drift is reduced to nearly nothing over long periods of time.

The term “leap” year likely refers to the fact that between two regular years in the Gregorian Calendar, any given day will shift by 1. For example, Christmas Day fell on a Sunday in 2022 and Monday in 2023. For 2024 it will “leap” over Tuesday and fall on a Wednesday.

Since the creation of the special day, February 29 has taken on a life of its own outside of scientific necessity. It has become the focal point of many traditions around the world. In Ireland, Britain, Finland, and various other countries, it is tradition that a woman may propose to a man only on Leap Day. In Finland, if the man refuses the proposal, he is required to buy the woman the materials for a skirt. In Greece, marriage during a leap year is considered unlucky, leading many couples to avoid it. In France, a special newspaper called La Bougie du Sapeur is published only on Leap Day.

Here in the US, the town of Anthony, Texas, has declared itself the “leap year capital of the world.” It is the home of an international “leapling” birthday club.

Speaking of birthdays… a special HAPPY BIRTHDAY to anyone who was born on February 29th! It is unknown exactly how many people share a birthday with you, but the estimate lies around only 5,000,000. That’s only 0.06% of the Earth’s 8 billion people. Throughout most of the world, people born on February 29th commonly celebrate their birthday on February 28th in a non-leap year. In many countries, this has been written into law to erase any confusion.

So, on this Leap Day, be sure to do a quick jump on the way to work or school and remember you get one extra day this year, so make it count!

Getting the most out of online auctions

(NowHabersham.com)

The Savvy Picker travels around the Southeast looking for vintage merchandise to stock her brick-and-mortar and online shops. And she is returning to the North Georgia Mountains next week! But while she is waiting to tour more Georgia shops (and find great merchandise), she’s discussing online auctions in this installment. Keep reading to check out her hauls and pick up a few tricks of the trade. And don’t forget to check in next month to see what she finds in North Georgia. 

While I love traveling and discovering great items in shops, every now and then, I decide to shop from the comfort of home through online auctions. Why would I do this when there are so many great finds out there to be seen in person? There are basically two reasons:

  1. I am looking for something specific.
  2. I have found a large volume of desirable items listed in the same auction.
This antique Italian Cupid was an online find. (TheSavvyPicker.com)

In my online shop, I consistently sell Japanese and Chinese antiques. Therefore, when I run out of inventory, I occasionally search online auctions for quality items to fill this niche.

Where to start

CTBids, HiBid, or Ebay are good places to start if you are looking for something specific that you haven’t been able to pick up locally. All three sites have search bars, making it easy to bop by and do a quick search for specific things.

These antique wooden chests were all acquired from the same auction. (TheSavvyPicker.com)

Since I am always looking for Blue Willow to sell in my brick-and-mortar shop and Japanese collectibles to sell in my online shop, I usually do a quick search for these items, among other things.

A search on the CTBids site will yield photos of all available items in your desired category nationwide. Then, it is up to you to discern which ones are the practical ones to bid on. Are the items shippable? Is the auction close enough to drive to for pick up? Are there enough desirable items in the auction to make it worth the drive if pick up is required?

For me, if the items are small enough to be shippable and close enough to ensure shipping won’t be astronomical, I will bid. I will also bid if I think I can win enough items to make the drive to get them worth it.

Watch, wait, bid

About two weeks ago, I hit the jackpot on one of these searches. I typed “Japanese” in the search bar of the CTBids site and discovered an online auction full of beautiful Japanese and Chinese antiques, including the boxes and cupid pictured above. This auction required pick up from a location two hours away from where I live. This meant I needed to go big or stay home. After scrolling through the items offered, I knew I was going big.

Speaking of big, look at these huge Chinese Rice Wine Vases I scored at this auction! See the Coke can between them for reference. 
(TheSavvyPicker.com)

Once the GO BIG decision was made, I put a watch on all items I was interested in, so I could watch them for a few days to make sure the prices didn’t get too high. I also set an alarm on my phone to remind me to bid.

By the time bidding day came, I had researched the items I was interested in and made a list of the highest amount I was willing to bid on each one. I do this to keep myself from getting caught up in the bidding and spending more than intended.

Thus prepared, when the alarm sounded, I commenced to bidding, winning… and, of course, losing.

This hand-carved swan is one of the items I won. (TheSavvyPicker.com)

Hubby’s haul left behind

By the end of the night, I had amassed enough stuff to make it worth the two-hour drive. The problem was that my husband got caught up in bidding on items he wanted too. So, the following Saturday, when I strapped the cartop carrier on my car, hit the road, and started loading up some amazing antique pieces….it all wouldn’t fit!

Let’s just say it was a lucky day for the young lady who was parked nearby. I put everything that didn’t fit into my car into hers, and she drove away smiling with a bunch of free stuff. (But just the stuff my husband bought – ha!) Luckily, I drove away smiling, too, because enough awesome stuff DID fit into my car.

That’s the way to do auctions!

TSP Takeaway

Who should visit online auctions: People looking for very specific items.

Score of the day: Antique Chinese Wine Jars

Predicted profit on Wine Jars: $1,000 – $1500

Re-seller takeaway: Bid on auctions where you want multiple items. It saves on shipping if you need shipping, and if you have to pick it up, it makes it worth the trip.

The Savvy Picker and her car and cartop carrier will be returning to North Georgia next week. If you have a suggestion for a great place for her to shop, make sure to note it in the comments on the Facebook Page beneath this article.

Click here for more great reads and finds. For additional tips on tracking vintage treasures, visit The Savvy Picker website.

It’s Leap Year Day!

It is Leap Year Day – February 29, 2024 – a day some of us will recognize and others just allow to pass by.

Have you ever wondered what the deal is behind the extra day every four years? The answer is actually simple in some ways – MATH.

NASA tells us that the Earth’s orbit isn’t exactly what we are told in 3rd grade science class. The trip around the sun takes a bit longer – six hours longer. We will see the next Leap Year Day in 2028.

Without it, after a few hundred years, our summer would be in November, and Christmas would be in the summer. That is what Younas Khan, a physics instructor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham believes.

One need only research the history of the calendar to understand how it all evolved. As a civilization, we have been adjusting the calendar since the Bronze Age to accommodate this phenomenon. Most credit Julius Caesar back in 45 BC for adding the extra 24-hour day. Others, the Pope. It seems the Pope was concerned without a Leap Year, we would interfere with important religious holidays such as Easter and Christmas.

Besides the math, what else is there about this special day?

Women can propose to men. Some like to call it “Ladies’ Privilege” Day. It is a tradition of the Irish going back to the fifth century. The story goes that Saint Bridget persuaded Saint Patrick to have a day when women could propose to their beloved when they became tired of waiting for him to propose. Interestingly, the tradition holds that if a female is denied by a male suitor she has proposed to, he must lavishly shower her with gifts or he will never marry anyone. One such gift is gloves. Twelve pairs of gloves to hide her hand with no ring on it.

In other cultures, it is a bad luck day. One would never want to get married on a Leap Year Day because it would lead to divorce.

In Texas, there is a Leap Year Capital! Anthony, Texas, has a claim to fame. The city has a Leap Year Festival. Like most festivals, the city entertains people with food, music, and activities for the whole family. Carnival-style games and vendors galore are among the favorites for those who attend. There is recognition of those whose actual Birthday is February 29th.

In France, Leap Year is celebrated by a once-in-four-years publication La Bopugie du Sapeur newspaper. Translated, this means The Sapper’s Candle. The newspaper started in 1980 and has sold over 2,000,000 copies.

Taiwan has bad news for the elderly. There is a superstition which believes bad luck will fall upon those who are older. To counter it, a married daughter must return home and prepare pig trotter soup. This will bring good luck to their parents’ home.

To make this enticing dish you will need: pork trotters (2), black pepper – (15 grains), carrots (2), and onions (1 head).

There are two thickening agents – The first needs yogurt 4/5 cup and flour (1 TBSP). The second: grated garlic (1 head), vinegar 2/3 tbsp, and cayenne pepper (2 pinches).

Boil the pork trotters discarding the water twice. Add the onion head sliced into fourths; the carrots cut in half, and add the black pepper. Boil this until the meat comes off the bone. Put on low heat. Pour in the first thickening agent. Stir in the second thickening agent. Allow to come to a boil again. Bon appetite!

(If you actually make this, please send us pictures or videos and your review!)

However you celebrate this once in four year day, it is a special day. If it is your Birthday – Happy Birthday! Enjoy!

 

 

 

Athens mayor unveils plan to improve public safety after UGA murder

Athens Mayor Kellie Girtz outlines a series of new public safety initiatives the city is planning in the wake of Laken Riley's murder. (Athens-Clarke County Unified Government livestream image)

More security cameras, ATVs to patrol trails, and real time crime information updates are just a few of the initiatives Athens-Clarke County leaders are considering to beef up security in the college town.

Athens Mayor Kellie Girtz held a press conference on Wednesday to discuss the proposed public safety measures. The initiatives are in direct response to security concerns in the Classic City brought on by last week’s murder of 22-year-old Laken Riley.

The Augusta University nursing student was killed by an illegal immigrant living in Athens, police say. Jose Ibarra is now in jail, charged with her murder.

“We are all grieving the loss of Laken Riley, just as we’ve grieved so many tragedies over the years in Athens,” said Girtz. “Our anger at these murders and other criminal activities will drive us to continue to improve our community safety as we’ve been pursuing for so many years. I empathize with the frustration and anger so many are feeling right now.”

A small group of protesters showed up at the press conference to denounce what they claim is Athens’ status as a sanctuary city. Mayor Girtz denied their claims, saying the commission has not adopted any policies resulting in sanctuary city status.

New public safety initiatives

During the press conference, Girtz outlined the proposed public safety initiatives, including those that build upon existing and previously funded efforts.

One of the first things commissioners will consider is a plan to advance the city’s Real Time Crime Center. The center ties in all of the Athens’ publicly accessible cameras and the private cameras of those who have agreed to participate so that police can rapidly pursue cases.

Under the proposal, the city would invest $90,000 in mobile closed-circuit television surveillance trailers that can be used for daily operations and major community events. The plan also calls for the purchase of four all-terrain vehicles police can use to patrol the expanding Athens-Clarke County trail system.

Athens would also install camera arrays in high-traffic and high-crime areas.

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SEC comparison

As home to Georgia football, Girtz compared Athens’ crime rate to those of the other 12 Southeastern Conference (SEC) communities.

Based on crime statistics between 1992-2023, the mayor said Athens-Clarke County ranks 8th among the 13 communities for all offenses per 1,000 people, 10th for crimes against property, 6th for crimes against people, and 10th for crimes against society.

Athens city leaders are considering other initiatives outside of law enforcement to make the city safer.

“Public safety doesn’t rest with policing alone,” Mayor Girtz said. “Public safety involves fair and quality housing; it involves good work with youth; it involves community outreach, and so many provisions that just give people a good solid platform for which to exist.”

The proposal calls for nearly $7 million in new spending to improve youth development, housing, and employment opportunities in Athens.

Georgia Democrats push for state laws protecting reproductive rights following Alabama court ruling

Carrie McNair of Mobile holds a sign saying "You can't cuddle an embryo" at a rally in support of in vitro fertilization access at the Alabama Statehouse in Montgomery, Alabama on Feb. 28, 2024. The rally took place before scheduled committee hearings in the Alabama Legislature on legislation to protect IVF. (Brian Lyman/Alabama Reflector)

(Georgia Recorder) — Georgia Democrats are pressing their Republican colleagues to protect access to in vitro fertilization after the Alabama Supreme Court recently ruled that fertilized eggs are children under that state’s law.

“Georgians need certainty to know that that level of terror will not be inflicted upon them,” said Sen. Elena Parent, an Atlanta Democrat who is the lead sponsor of the bill and the Senate minority caucus chair.

“Probably right now there are couples here in Georgia questioning whether they should spend the money to embark on that journey knowing that that ability could be ripped from them at any time,” she said.

Democrats from both chambers held a press conference Wednesday to encourage the majority party to act on just-filed bills that would protect access to IVF and contraception, including condoms, birth control pills and IUDs.

Sen. Elena Parent, an Atlanta Democrat, speaks at a Wednesday press conference where Democrats and reproductive rights supporters called for the Georgia General Assembly to protect access to IVF treatment and contraception. (Jill Nolin/Georgia Recorder)

“Our reproductive rights are fragile,” said Rep. Teri Anulewicz, a Smyrna Democrat who co-sponsored a bill in the House that would protect access to contraception. “We know that IVF is on the chopping block, and we know that it is just a matter of time for contraception. It is not a question of if, but when.”

In Alabama, IVF programs have been put on hold after a Feb. 16 Alabama Supreme Court decision that declared frozen embryos children and said parents could collect damages for their destruction under an 1872 state law, according to the Alabama Reflector.

The fallout from the ruling has spurred Alabama Republicans to push forward bills designed to protect access to IVF. One bill would provide civil and criminal immunity to providers following commonly accepted practices of care, and another would provide civil and criminal immunity for the “death or damage to an embryo” related to IVF.

RELATED: U.S. Senate Republicans block IVF protection bill

In Georgia, Senate Democrats have proposed spelling out in state law that any human egg or human embryo that exists outside of the uterus “shall not, under any circumstances, be considered an unborn child, a minor child, a natural person, or any other term that connotes a human being for any purpose under state law.”

Georgia’s 2019 abortion law defines an unborn child as “a member of the species Homo sapiens at any stage of development who is carried in the womb.” IVF is a process in which an egg is removed from a woman’s body, fertilized in a laboratory and then returned.

But supporters of reproductive rights have said they are not confident the law will protect patient access and say clarity is needed, particularly after what has played out next door.

Parent, who is an attorney, argued that some of the language in Georgia’s abortion law is confusing. In addition to a six-week ban on abortion, Georgia law also includes a tax break for expecting parents and other so-called personhood provisions.

“Our code is riddled with all kinds of places where there are question marks, and therefore, we need this strong, very clear, very simple statement that embryos outside of the uterus are not children,” she said Wednesday.

But Senate Majority Leader Steve Gooch dismissed the need for the bill Wednesday.

“It doesn’t take a lawyer to understand that a ruling by an Alabama court applies to Alabama. Democrats are disingenuously presenting their so-called solutions to problems that simply do not exist in Georgia,” Gooch said in a statement.

The Dahlonega Republican also criticized Parent for filing the bill too late for consideration through the normal legislative process.

Thursday is Crossover Day, which is the deadline for a bill to leave at least one chamber to have a chance at passage this year. But Democrats said with Republican support, the protections could be added to a related bill through a legislative maneuver.

FILE PHOTO – Sen. Steve Gooch. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

But Gooch shot down any chance of that happening in the Senate.

“The most dangerous thing we can do as state lawmakers is to hastily address an issue not present in our state,” Gooch said.

Democrats also pointed to the lack of congressional action to enshrine access to contraception last year in response to a section of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas’ concurring opinion in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization abortion case.

Thomas wrote the court should reconsider precedent-setting cases that used the same logic applied in Roe v. Wade, specifically that justices “should reconsider all of this Court’s substantive due process precedents, including Griswold, Lawrence, and Obergefell.” Griswold v. Connecticut ruling in 1965 recognized married couples’ right to use contraception.

Last year, the Georgia Supreme Court sided with the state on the question of whether Georgia’s 2019 law was constitutional since it was passed when Roe v. Wade was still in place. But the rest of the lawsuit challenging the law is still pending in Fulton County Superior Court.

U.S. Senate Republican blocks legislation protecting in vitro fertilization

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — U.S. Republican Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith of Mississippi blocked a bill from passing Wednesday that would have preserved access to in vitro fertilization nationwide, stalling a push by Democrats following a landmark Alabama state Supreme Court decision.

The court ruled earlier this month that frozen embryos counted as children under state law and parents could collect damages for their destruction, putting IVF programs in the state on hold.

Illinois Democratic Sen. Tammy Duckworth asked for unanimous consent to pass the IVF bill, a process that allows any one senator to prevent it from moving to the House.

Duckworth has said she’ll press for a roll call vote on the bill at a later point to put every senator on record.

“My girls are my everything,” Duckworth said, referring to her two daughters. “They likely would have never been born if I had not had access to the basic reproductive rights that Americans, up until recently, had been depending on for nearly a half century.”

Duckworth said that after her service in Iraq, she struggled with infertility.

Hyde-Smith argued that the bill was “overreaching,” and contained provisions with which she disagreed.

“I support the ability for mothers and fathers to have total access to IVF and bring new life into the world, and I also believe that human life should be protected,” Hyde-Smith said.

She also argued that the Alabama case did not ban IVF. However, clinics in the state have paused treatments following the ruling.

Duckworth defended her bill, saying that it protects individuals who are seeking IVF technology without fear of being prosecuted, protects the rights of physicians to provide that treatment and allows insurance companies to cover reproductive technology.

“It simply says you have a statutory right, should you choose to pursue assisted reproductive technology, that you would be able to do so,” Duckworth said.

In Georgia, a group of Democratic state lawmakers called for state legislation to clarify that IVF is legal following the Alabama court ruling, but a GOP leader cast doubt the effort could succeed this year.

RELATED: Georgia Democrats push for state laws protecting reproductive rights

These women have had their dreams shattered

Washington state Democratic Sen. Patty Murray slammed Republicans for blocking the unanimous consent request to pass the bill.

“These women have had their dreams shattered because Republicans believe a frozen embryo kept in storage at an IVF clinic is the same and should have the exact same rights as a living, breathing human person,” Murray said.

Sen. Tim Kaine, a Virginia Democrat, said that the first child born through IVF in the United States was in 1981, in Norfolk, Virginia. He added that it’s estimated that 12 million people were born through IVF.

“She’s raising her own family today,” Kaine said. “What could be more pro-life than in vitro fertilization?”

Oregon Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden said that the repeal of Roe v. Wade has led to an “onslaught of court rulings just like this one in Alabama.”

Nevada Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto said that when the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, “we could see from a mile away that IVF was in danger.”

“It will not stop with Alabama,” Cortez Masto said. “Attacking IVF was yet another chance for anti-choice Republicans to erode women’s rights in this country.”

Britt: Alabama taking action

Alabama Republican Sen. Katie Britt said in a brief interview with States Newsroom on Wednesday afternoon that her home state should be left to address the issue.

“So Alabama is, right now as we speak, working to protect IVF,” she said.

Alabama state lawmakers advanced three bills out of committee on Wednesday that would protect access to IVF in that state.

The U.S. Senate’s debate over access to IVF came just hours after the Senate Budget Committee held a hearing on “the economic harms of restricting reproductive freedom,” which included testimony on access to the procedure.

Caitlin Myers, John G. McCullough professor of economics at Middlebury College in Vermont, told the committee that access to “reproductive autonomy isn’t just about young people avoiding parenthood until they’re ready, it’s about all people being able to become parents when they want to.”

“The economic evidence suggests that it allows women to spend more time seeking the right partner, investing in education and investing in their careers,” she said. “And in a country and moment when we’re increasingly seeing people delay parenthood, a lack of access to IVF is very concerning from an economic perspective.”

44 co-sponsors with Duckworth

The Duckworth bill, dubbed the Access to Family Building Act, is nine pages long and aims to provide protections for patients and health care providers.

Duckworth introduced the bill in mid-January with Wisconsin Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin, Washington state’s Murray and New York Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand as original co-sponsors.

Support for the legislation began increasing this week, with the number of co-sponsors rising to 44 as of Wednesday.

The bill says that it would bar limitations on “assisted reproductive technology services” that are “more burdensome than limitations or requirements imposed on medically comparable procedures, do not significantly advance reproductive health or the safety of such services and unduly restrict access to such services.”

Assisted reproductive technology is defined in the legislation as what’s included in Section 8 of the Fertility Clinic Success Rate and Certification Act of 1992.

That law’s definition says it encompasses “all treatments or procedures which include the handling of human oocytes or embryos, including in vitro fertilization, gamete intrafallopian transfer, zygote intrafallopian transfer, and such other specific technologies as the Secretary may include in this definition, after making public any proposed definition in such manner as to facilitate comment from any person (including any Federal or other public agency).”

GOP senators reject congressional action

Republican senators, speaking briefly with States Newsroom on Tuesday, all rejected the idea of Congress stepping in now to set a nationwide policy on access to IVF. And some expressed concerns with how the bill was written.

Utah Republican Sen. Mitt Romney said he would need to look over Duckworth’s bill in detail, but said his “understanding is it’s just substantially broader than dealing with IVF.”

On IVF access generally, Romney said, he didn’t believe that federal lawmakers had “enough of a window on that at this stage in that it’s not been an issue for any state other than Alabama.”

“And the Alabama Legislature, as I understand it, is attempting to deal with this legislatively, so I don’t think it’s an issue elsewhere,” Romney said.

West Virginia Republican Sen. Shelley Moore Capito said that while she supports everyone having access to IVF, she’s not sure Congress should approve legislation.

“I think we need to preserve access to IVF for families and folks suffering from infertility,” she said. “But I think this is, right now, a state issue in Alabama. And I think they ought to fix it there first.”

Indiana Republican Sen. Todd Young said access to IVF “has to be protected” and that he would look into supporting legislation to do just that, though he said he hadn’t yet read Duckworth’s bill.

“I would consider any proposals that are put forward here,” Young said. “I have not read through the particulars on that. Some have characterized it as overbroad.”

“But I would entertain legislation to preserve that important prerogative for women and families,” Young said.

GOP senators say it is a state issue

Kansas Republican Sen. Roger Marshall said he believes the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which overturned the constitutional right to an abortion, sent issues like IVF to state lawmakers.

“I think that the Dobbs decision clearly states that this should be a decision made at the state level,” Marshall said. “I encourage the state legislators to support IVF. It’s a beautiful thing, hundreds of babies are delivered every day across the country because of IVF.”

The U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in Dobbs said the “Constitution does not confer a right to abortion; Roe and Casey are overruled; and the authority to regulate abortion is returned to the people and their elected representatives.” That includes Congress.

Marshall said that Republicans throughout the country should “all lean into it that we are the pro-family party, and we should celebrate IVF.”

“It’s an incredible technique, something that I’ve participated in… close to 100 or more cycles and just lots of beautiful children I know from IVF,” Marshall said.

Iowa Republican Sen. Joni Ernst said that it’s “not yet” time for Congress to step in with nationwide legislation on IVF, though she said it’s important that Americans have access to the process.

“I think the message that we have is that families should have access to IVF. That’s extremely important,” Ernst said. “I have a friend who has twin daughters because of IVF. So I hope we can work through this.”

Alabama Republican Sen. Tommy Tuberville said the issue should be left to state lawmakers.

“Let them do it, just like they’re doing abortion. Let everybody get a chance to vote on it,” Tuberville said. “I think it will work a lot better than people complaining up here. We need to get our act together and worry about all the things that we can control.”