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Flowery Branch man charged with child sexual exploitation

Mario Javon Lindsey (Hall County Sheriff's Office)

Mario Javon Lindsey, 19, of Flowery Branch has been arrested in an ongoing investigation into possession of child sex abuse materials (CSAM).

According to Hall County Public Information Officer B.J. Williams, investigators executed a search warrant at the residence on Tuesday, April 9, 2024. Lindsey was arrested on three felony counts of sexual exploitation of a minor. Investigators also seized electronic devices belonging to Lindsey.

Investigators with the Hall County Sheriff’s Office (HCSO) recently received cybertips from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force indicating someone at a residence on Parks Road had downloaded videos of children engaged in sexual acts.

The videos had been downloaded between April 10 and April 28, 2023.

Additional charges are expected after forensic processing of the electronic devices.

Lindsey is currently being held without bond at the Hall County Jail.

City of Cleveland looking at new noise ordinance

Owner of Atlanta Hardwoods Jim Howard speaks during noise ordinance hearing . (Dean Dyer/WRWH.com)

The Cleveland City Council held a second public hearing Monday night on amendments to the city’s noise ordinance. The city’s Economic Development and Planning Director Tom O’Bryant said they began looking at the current ordinance following growing complaints from residents. He said the current ordinance is vague and broad.

Primarily the update concentrates on the sound decibels and how to measure them. The ordinance sets separate standards for residential, commercial, and industrial areas within the city.

Most if not all the complaints the city has received have come from residents of Pine Hill Drive, who live adjacent to White County Molding, a division of Atlanta Hardwoods, Inc., located at 176 Appalachian Trail. There were some of those resident who made comments during the public hearing.

Kimberly Hale who represents the company said since the company has been in operation they have been following the city’s 85 decibels sound level for noise the new regulations would require them to meet a residential level of 60 decibels.

Also, Jim Howard, Owner of Atlanta Hardwoods was present at the hearing and spoke to the council telling them it would be difficult for them to meet the 60 decibel levels proposed in the new ordinance. He also said they are working on a joint venture with a finish company that would bring a 6- 8 million dollar investment to the Cleveland location along with more jobs. He said they could put that at their Tennessee location and it would be a “tremendous loss” if it gets moved.

Howard told the council, “We know this ordnance was written with us in mind but I think you’re going to find other places like Ingles loading their trucks at night and other things is going to be a problem for you at the decibel levels.”

Even though the council did not take any action on the proposed update Council Member CJ McDonald, who lives in the Pine Hill Drive area said he was not sure where the 60 decibel limit came from he was thinking 65 nighttime and 70 daytime decibel levels for the new regulations.

King Me: HCHS soccer hands North Forsyth 1st loss, takes region crown

Habersham Central High School's varsity boys soccer team poses with the Region 8-AAAAAA championship trophy while holding cards spelling out "Campeones" ('Champions' in Spanish) after being North Forsyth High School to win the title Tuesday, April 9 in Mt. Airy. (Zack Myers/NowHabersham.com)

Two weeks to the day since watching the varsity girls win their first region championship in program history, Habersham Central High School’s varsity boys soccer team knocked off previously unbeaten North Forsyth High School, 1-0, Tuesday to earn its first region title since 2019.

After falling 1-0 to North Forsyth (16-1, 11-1 Region 8-AAAAAA) in Cumming on March 8, HCHS (13-2, 11-1) had to get a win in the contest to snatch the region crown away from the visitors.

Coming into the contest, North Forsyth was ranked No. 2 in Class 6A, No. 9 in the state among all classifications, and No. 21 nationally among all classifications. HCHS was ranked No. 7 in Class 6A, No. 33 in the state among all classifications, and No. 97 nationally among all classifications.

After an intense first half ended scoreless, HCHS was able to get the breakthrough goal with 19:08 left in the contest as senior Owen Wallace went after a ball in the 18-yard box of North Forsyth.

As a defender tried to clear the ball away and kicked his foot to head height, Wallace dropped to the ground holding his face to draw the foul. Since it was in the 18-yard box, the Raiders were awarded a penalty kick.

Juan Lara stepped to the spot and lined up his left-footed kick. The senior had no issues slotting the ball past the North Forsyth keeper and pandemonium ensued as Lara and the rest of the squad sprinted to a raucous crowd at Raider Stadium to celebrate.

The Raiders were able to see out a nervy final 19 minutes and solidify the win and the region title.

“It’s awesome. First one in five years,” HCHS Head Coach Ric Wallace said. “The best thing, these kids have grown up being Rapids and wanting to be Raiders forever. We’ve got pictures of some of these guys on the shoulders of former players and they trained with the Raiders years ago.

Habersham Central High School senior Tucker Bohannon (7) runs toward the home stands with a Raider Soccer flag as a North Forsyth High School player lays on the ground following HCHS’s win Tuesday, April 9 in Mt. Airy. (Zack Myers/NowHabersham.com)

“They’ve wanted it forever.”

Wallace took his squad to Greenville, SC last week while they were on Spring Break. While other students were off on trips to the beach or, at the very least, sitting at home relaxing, the Raiders were putting in work.

The players had to abandon their cell phones and train as opposed to having a lethargic week off the field. And it paid off.

“We went to Spring Break, where it’s real easy for them to say, ‘Hey, that’s my time. I’m not going to do that.’ We went as a team to Greenville and we trained and we stuck to a schedule,” Wallace said. “They’ve bought into everything we’ve asked them to do. It says everything about how they’ve grown as young men.”

Wallace said that Lara has grown a lot this season and, despite being naturally quiet, has found his voice and confidence as a leader on the team.

“There were times a couple of years ago where he shied away from the big moment,” Wallace said. “He said, ‘I want it, Coach. I’ve got this.’ We knew going in that he was the man. If we got (a penalty), that’s where it would go. Even if we got something a little further out, he wanted it.”

Owen Wallace, who will celebrate his senior night alongside eight other seniors Friday night, is the head coach’s son, making this being the first region championship for the program in five years all the more special.

Habersham Central High School senior Owen Wallace (2) yells in excitement while holding the Region 8-AAAAAA championship trophy in front of the home crowd along with teammates Camden Meades (15), Gaspar Ramirez (19), Israel Pascual (14), and Payton Adams (5). (Zack Myers/NowHabersham.com)

“You know, he was born on the day we got our first (region championship) in 2006. I just reminded him today, ‘Man, you were born for this. You’ve had a ball at your feet your whole life. Go out there and lead us today,’” Ric Wallace said. “He came up big and played hard today and was able to create a little something that got us the penalty, the ultimate game winner.”

With the proverbial monkey of winning the region title off the team’s back, they now get a night on Friday to celebrate those who’ve helped build the way back to being on top and play somewhat stress-free soccer. Still, Wallace said he doesn’t think the team will take the night off.

“I really believe they understand these moments aren’t going to last because they have alumni guys coming back and talking to them and telling them things. They’re buying into that stuff,” Wallace said. “It’s ingrained in them, the actions that we want and the way we work. You can see that out there. I think they’ll continue to do that and just enjoy the moment they get here again in Raider Stadium.”

The Raiders will kick off against East Hall at 8 p.m. Friday.

SEE ALSO

Lady Raiders soccer seals region schedule with victory in PKs

Lady Raiders soccer seals region schedule with victory in PKs

Habersham Central High School's Lady Raider varsity soccer team poses with the Region 8-AAAAAA championship trophy after defeating North Forsyth High School Tuesday, April 9 in Mt. Airy. (Zack Myers/NowHabersham.com)

Habersham Central High School’s varsity girls soccer team closed out its regular season region schedule with a thrilling win, taking down North Forsyth High School in penalty kicks Tuesday in Mt. Airy.

Having already secured the first region championship in the program’s history, HCHS (11-2-2, 11-1 Region 8-AAAAAA) checked another thing off the list: a win in a penalty kick situation.

With regulation ending in a 1-1 tie and the two 10-minute overtime periods resulting in a 2-2 tie, the game headed to penalty kicks.

North Forsyth (6-8-4, 5-7) stepped up first and hit their first shot off the left post. Sophomore Meg LaBarbera buried her opportunity, putting HCHS on top in the best-of-five scenario.

The next two attempts were true for the Lady Raiders from Cumming, while the hosts missed theirs.

On the fourth shot, North Forsyth bounced their shot off the football uprights over the top of the soccer frame. Junior Paisley Cathey stepped to the spot and buried hers, tying the shootout at 2-2.

What would happen next was both a dream and nightmare scene for HCHS.

North Forsyth lined up their fifth attempt, but senior goalkeeper Riley Wilson was up to the task and knocked it away.

The next kick for the home team could seal the win, but it, too, was wide of the target.

With the series tied 2-2 after five attempts each, it went to a 1-and-1 scenario.

Wilson stood her ground yet again as the visitors tried to get the upper hand, knocking away a second straight attempt with the game on the line.

Habersham Central High School senior Piper Turner (5) runs to celebrate with her team after netting the match-winning penalty kick against North Forsyth High School Tuesday, April 9 in Mt. Airy. (Zack Myers/NowHabersham.com)

Senior Piper Turner stepped to the spot, stared down the North Forsyth keeper and buried the game winner over a diving, outstretched, gloved right hand. And the celebration was on.

“Super special. Being able to do it at home and just the emotions of winning in that fashion just made it extra sweet,” HCHS Head Coach Jeff LaBarbera said. “You can’t replicate those scenarios in practice, so it was nice to help prepare us for the playoffs in case we have to face something like that in the future. It was good for us.”

LaBarbera credited his senior goalkeeper as the reason the Lady Raiders were able to pull out the victory in such dramatic fashion.

“She’s so good in PK situations,” he said. “I know she’s going to make at least one save and she made two big ones on the fifth and sixth kicker. She gave us the opportunity to win that game. That was unbelievable.”

The head man said he gets to see Wilson train for those tough situations, so he wasn’t surprised she was up for the moment.

“She stayed focused and determined. Like I said, she’s just so good at those. She’s just special,” LaBarbera said.

Habersham Central High School senior goalkeeper Riley Wilson (1) saves a penalty kick against North Forsyth High School Tuesday, April 9 in Mt. Airy. (Zack Myers/NowHabersham.com)

On top of needing the resolve to block penalty kicks and make their own, many of the Lady Raiders returned from a 10-day trip to Italy, where they trained and played games, on Sunday with school returning from Spring Break on Monday.

To say they were exhausted is an understatement.

“They definitely persevered tonight. It was tough,” LaBarbera said. “A lot of them are sick, not feeling well. We’re all tired. We dug deep tonight. We were in a dogfight the whole game. We never let down and never gave up. We pushed through it and I’m super proud of the girls for that.”

Now, before next week’s state playoffs kick off, the attention turns to senior night Friday after hoisting the Region 8-6A championship trophy for the first time Tuesday in front of the home crowd exactly two weeks after winning the title.

“We’re definitely going into senior night in a celebratory mood. That’s where our focus is,” LaBarbera said. “We just take it one game at a time, so we’re not even thinking about next week right now. We’re just going to get this week behind us and get the jet lag sorted out. Then, we’ll focus on next week, next week.”

It took over 60 minutes of game time for either squad to score, as they emerged from halftime tied nil-nil.

Cathey put the Lady Raiders on top with 19:57 left to play in the contest.

Just over nine minutes later, North Forsyth was given a gift as they lined up for a corner kick. The delivery into the box was perfect and sophomore HCHS defender Eden Turner sought to knock the ball away from goal. Instead, the ball careened off her leg, past senior keeper Riley Wilson and into the back of the net, tying the game at 1-apiece.

North Forsyth had a lot riding on the outcome of the match. If the Lady Raiders from Cumming won, they’d be in the final spot as a Region 8 representative in the state playoffs. Lose, and their season comes to an end on Friday against Creekview at home.

The two headed to the two 10-minute overtime periods and, once again, it looked like HCHS would seal it before getting to penalty kicks as Cathey assisted junior Abigail Hotard to go up 2-1 on the scoreboard less than halfway into the first period.

The lead would last just over seven minutes as North Forsyth scored with 8:24 left on the clock in the second overtime to tie it up and send the game into PKs.

HCHS, which was ranked No. 7 in all of Class 6A in the state by MaxPreps ahead of the win, will kick off against East Hall at 6 p.m. Friday at Raider Stadium.

SEE ALSO

King Me: HCHS soccer hands North Forsyth 1st loss, takes region crown

Vehicles stolen from Rabun County and Walhalla, SC recovered

The Kia Sorento on the left was stolen in Rabun County and found in Walhalla, South Carolina. The Ford F-150 pickup was stolen in Walhalla and later recovered in Stephens County, Georgia, Rabun County investigators say. (Rabun County Sheriff's Office/Facebook)

The Rabun County Sheriff’s Office says the two vehicles stolen over the weekend have been recovered.

The stolen Kia Sorento and Ford Escape were found wrecked and recovered in Walhalla, South Carolina. Immediately following those wrecks, a Ford F-150 was stolen in South Carolina and later located in Stephens County.

String of auto thefts

The recent thefts are among a string of auto thefts reported by law agencies across the region.

Rabun County sheriff’s investigators will host an intel meeting on Wednesday for all six agencies involved and the Mountain Judicial Circuit Juvenile prosecutor.

“We have persons of interest and are working together in a collaborative effort to share case files and evidence,” says Rabun County Sheriff’s Investigator Kevin Angell.

A map of where the auto thefts and burglaries occurred. (Rabun County Sheriff’s Office/Facebook)

Authorities released a map showing where the auto thefts and break-ins in Rabun County occurred. They also released security camera footage taken during the crimes in the pre-dawn hours of April 7.

“I am proud of the quick work by our investigators, the collaboration of six agencies in two states, and the partnership with our DA’s office,” says Rabun County Sheriff Chad Nichols.

Sheriff Nichols reminds automobile owners to secure all belongings. Do not leave personal belongings in vehicles and do not leave vehicles unlocked or with the keys left inside.

If you have any information on recent auto thefts and burglaries, please call 706-782-3612 or email [email protected]. You can click here to submit an anonymous tip.

Georgia child welfare agency defensive after Ossoff Senate panel report

Sen. Jon Ossoff holds a press conference in Atlanta about children missing from Georgia DFCS care Oct. 27, 2023. Ossoff’s Senate subcommittee released its full findings into deficiencies at DFCS Tuesday. (Ross Williams/Georgia) Recorder

(Georgia Recorder) — The Georgia Division of Family and Children Services consistently fails to protect children from abuse, and mismanagement at the division is “a key contributor” to child deaths and serious injuries, according to a U.S. Senate report released Tuesday. DFCS called the allegations “unfounded and irresponsible.”

“The most vulnerable children in our state and in our nation must be protected from physical abuse, from sexual abuse, and from human trafficking,” said Georgia Sen. Jon Ossoff, a Democrat and chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee Subcommittee on Human Rights and the Law, who led the investigation along with Republican Sen. Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee. “We cannot and must not look away from these findings, though they are deeply distressing. We cannot accept the abuse, the trafficking, and the preventable death of children. I thank my Subcommittee staff and the more than 100 witnesses whose hard work and courage has brought these facts to the public.”

The investigation, launched in February 2023, also found evidence that more than 400 children in state custody were likely sex trafficked over a five-year span, while nearly 2,000 were reported missing during the same time; Georgia’s Department of Human Services leadership, which oversees DFCS, recommended prolonging foster childrens’ stays in juvenile detention because they didn’t have enough placements; DFCS “consistently fails to meet children’s mental and physical health needs,” including by overprescribing psychotropic drugs to children. The report says the DHS has not adequately responded to reports of previous failures and is seeking to weaken oversight by taking over the federally mandated panels that review the division.

The report says the division experiences high turnover rates as employees struggle to keep up with high caseloads, but that many employees are afraid they will be retaliated against if they speak out.

The child welfare agency responded to the 64-page report Tuesday with an 11-page report of its own, characterizing the findings as a partisan hatchet job that mischaracterizes statistics and ignores the division’s improvements.

“After taking months to produce a report – written and supported solely by staff of the majority party – the subcommittee on Human Rights and the Law provided DFCS and the state only two days to respond to a heavily redacted version of the final report. Highlighting Sen. Ossoff’s staff’s obvious lack of subject matter expertise regarding complex child welfare issues, the subcommittee’s report omits key context, ignores relevant data that undermine the report’s primary assertions, and takes great lengths to misrepresent DFCS actions, facts about various cases, and outcomes for many children in the state’s care,” said DHS spokeswoman Kylie
Winton in a statement.

The DFCS response includes data in which the Georgia agency outperforms the national average, including the rate at which children are the subject of a second credible report of maltreatment in a year, the rate of reported maltreatment for children under court jurisdiction and the rate at which children in foster care experience moves in their placement.

“Not included in the subcommittee’s report are DFCS’s improvements in addressing the issue of hoteling, strengthening rigorous safeguards for the children in our care, and streamlining service delivery,” the statement continues. “Our staff and leadership take our responsibility to Georgia’s at-risk youth with the utmost seriousness and will continue to identify and implement solutions that better serve those in our care. We encourage Sen. Ossoff to focus his efforts on putting the welfare of children above political gamesmanship.”

Kids in need

Ossoff’s report cites a spring 2023 audit that found DFCS failed to properly assess and address safety concerns in 84% of cases reviewed, the worst rate in the past seven years.

Emma Hetherington, a University of Georgia clinical associate professor and the director of the UGA Wilbanks Child Endangerment and Sexual Exploitation legal clinic, or CEASE, which represents victims of child sexual abuse, said for the children she represents, failing to address safety concerns often means kids, especially teens, are not being believed when they speak up.

“The child’s voice and the child’s own words and reports and experiences are dismissed,” said Hetherington, who also testified to the subcommittee.

“It’s sort of a, ‘eh, we got that report, but, you know, they’re just saying that because they were mad about something,’” she said. “They’re fine. And this attitude, this, ‘Oh, well, they’re older, so they’re less vulnerable,’ which in some respects is true, but if you completely fail to respond at all, then you’re actually increasing their vulnerability.”

The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children testified that nearly 2,000 children in DFCS care were reported missing between 2018 and 2022, with at least 410 of those children likely trafficked.

For most victims, child sex trafficking doesn’t look like a stranger looking to kidnap children, Hetherington said. Most children who end up being trafficked were sexually abused when they were younger or were already vulnerable in other ways.

“They don’t have a safe place to sleep at night. They have inadequate clothing, food, shelter, their basic needs, they are not getting appropriate medical care or their education has been neglected,” she said. “They’re a very, very high vulnerability at this point to be preyed upon due to the need for basic things. So you could have a child that runs away from home and someone says, ‘Hey, I’ll give you a ride if you perform this sex act,’ and that is trafficking. It’s not kids being snatched in the night and being trafficked; that’s not typically what we see.”

Hetherington said children dealing with abuse often display problem behaviors and can be written off as simply unruly, promiscuous or angry, which can exacerbate the problem of kids going unheard when they advocate for themselves.

Failure to address safety concerns

The Senate committee document outlines several gruesome stories in which a lack of action preceded the death of a child in state custody.

In one 2023 case, DFCS noted that a background check on foster parents did not reveal their child protective service or criminal histories. The family had “a documented history of using inappropriate corporal punishment against children in their care, and a previous DFCS directive prohibited the placement of non-verbal children in the home because they could not report potential abuse or neglect.”

But the division did place a nonverbal toddler with the foster family, which ultimately killed her.

In another case, investigators said a grandmother reported to DFCS that her grandchild’s mother was suffering from mental illness and referred to one of her children as the devil. Rather than performing a safety assessment in accordance with policy, DFCS requested law enforcement perform a wellness check.

“Based upon the wellness check, allegations of abuse were deemed unsubstantiated, and the case was closed,” the report reads. “The child was killed approximately five months later, when the mother set fire to the home.”

According to the report, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services placed DFCS on an improvement plan in 2017 “to address failures to meet federal safety standards, among other deficiencies,” and HHS fined the division in 2020 for failing to meet some of the plan’s requirements. But even after being fined by HHS, DFCS’ performance on federal safety metrics continued to decline, according to the report.

The state agency says Ossoff’s office cherry picked and incorrectly interpreted statistics to produce the 84% figure, noting that DFCS has appealed the fine and that none of the states that have participated in the federal program that lead to the improvement plan have met federal standards.

Failure to meet medical needs

Ossoff’s report also cites a spring 2023 DFCS audit into federal health care standards that the document says that children in the agency’s care received adequate services for their physical health in only 40% of cases and received adequate care in mental and behavioral health in only 13% of cases reviewed.

The state human services department says its Medicaid provider, Amerigroup, often denies coverage for medically necessary services for foster children and that the department often covers the cost of medical services and appeals denials of coverage.

Both statements ring true for Hetherington, who said many of her clients struggle for a long time to obtain basic services like a visit to the dentist for a toothache.

“Then all of a sudden, once they finally do go to the dentist, the dentist says, ‘Well, we have to pull it because Amerigroup isn’t gonna pay for a root canal,’” she said. “So now I’m dealing with a teenager who’s having to get teeth pulled. I mean, I think any adult would be upset by not being able to get a cap or something like that to replace it, and it’s really devastating for them. There’s already so much low self-esteem going on when you’re in foster care, and then you add these things to it that could have been prevented.”

“The state takes a child away from their parents, typically for reasons of neglect, sometimes abuse, but often neglect, and then the State neglects them,” she added.

In particular, the report alleges DFCS does not adequately monitor the administration of psychotropic drugs to children, and as a result, some children are being overmedicated.

Hetherington said the children she works with are often prescribed powerful medications for conditions like bipolar disorder or schizophrenia when their real issues are with trauma and post-traumatic stress disorder.

“I’ve had clients on lithium before, children on lithium,” she said. “You see what the side effects of those medications are, whether they become zombie-like, whether some of these psychotropic medications for teenagers are very dangerous and increase suicidal ideation and and can increase anxiety and things like that.”

Recommendations

Ossoff’s report ends with seven recommendations for DFCS, Georgia the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and Congress that the subcommittee hopes will help prevent future tragedies.

Hetherington said she hopes the report will bring about new policies at the division

“I just really hope that they take this as an opportunity to be reflective, to really look internally and externally,” she said. “I hope that what comes out of this is not just immediately going on defense, not pointing fingers at everyone else, but actually saying, ‘Well, what can we do?’ I think it’s really important here to recognize these are kids. We’re talking about children and our children’s lives and health and safety, and what matters so much more is those kids rather than our egos or us feeling upset if someone says we did a bad job.”

TFS tennis advances to Region Championship matches

Jaeda-Lee Daniel-Joseph (Austin Poffenberger)

Tallulah Falls got both the girls and boys teams into the Region 8-A DI Championship matches with semifinals wins on Tuesday at Elbert County. Despite a lengthy rain delay, the Lady Indians took a 3-0 win over Commerce, and the Indians won 3-0 over Athens Christian.

“Great performance overall to advance to the championship,” says coach Anthony Cox. “We look forward to, and don’t take for granted, the opportunity to bring home another pair of region championships. Our boys and girls will be focused and ready to play as the season has prepared us for this moment.”

The Lady Indians improve to 15-0, while the Indians continue their hot streak to get to 9-6. Tanner Davis’ win at 1-singles tied him with Javier De Claire (’13) for the known all-time singles wins record of 36, with the caveat being that all-time great and pro tennis player Chuck Nunn (’78) likely has the school record but his win total is not confirmed. Meanwhile, Ava Carnes and Charlotte Stafford set a single-season school record with their 14th win as a doubles combo.

Lady Indians W 3-0 vs Commerce

#1 Singles: Ariel Kelsick (14-0) DNF 6-0, 5-1
#2 Singles: Jaeda-Lee Daniel-Joseph (12-3) W 6-0, 6-1
#3 Singles: Azaria Junaid (12-1) W 6-1, 6-1
#1 Doubles: Ava Carnes & Charlotte Stafford (14-0) W 6-0, 6-0
#2 Doubles: Keira Webb & Landry Carnes (5-0) DNF 6-0, 5-2

Indians W 3-0 vs Athens Christian

#1 Singles: Tanner Davis (12-3) W 6-1, 6-1
#2 Singles: TJ Cox (10-5) W 6-0, 6-2
#3 Singles: David Vasic (0-2) DNF
#1 Doubles: Zach Carringer & Jake Owensby (8-2) W 6-1, 6-1
#2 Doubles: Fabian Deppe & David Plaisted (1-1) DNF

Indians post clean sheet over Providence Christian in non-region tilt

Kelton Reynolds (Austin Poffenberger)

The #2-ranked Indians traveled to Providence Christian on Tuesday in a non-region matchup, coming away with a slim 1-0 win. TFS got its goal in the first half from Austin Ball. The defense and keeper Kelton Reynolds would make sure it held up.

“Providence is a good team and a great challenge coming back after break,” says coach Jeremy Stille. “We were able to get some fitness back in our legs after a week ball. We were rusty, especially in the first half but the boys stayed compact and moved as a unit to limit the danger in front of our goal. Kelton was forced to make a couple of really good saves, but overall it is a great step in continuing our positive momentum heading into senior night and state playoffs.”

The Indians advance to 13-1 on the season.

GOALS
Austin Ball (31)

Cleveland to look closer at Talon property

Vacant lot where the old Talon building stood.(Dean Dyer/WRWH.com)

The city of Cleveland recently received five bids for a ten-acre piece of property owned by the city located at 19 Campbell Street. The site also known as the Old Talon Property has been on the market for a while.

Monday following an executive session the council voted unanimously to explore further one of those bids for possible acceptance. Cleveland City Manager Kevin Harris said the council voted unanimously, following a motion made by Councilman Jeremy McClure to release four of the lower bidders and return their 3 percent deposit made at bidding. Harris said, “that also allows me to continue with the highest bid to further discussion and allow me to discuss that bid with them see what direction we could go.”

According to Harris, they want to examine what would be required by both parties to complete a deal to make sure it’s a winning partnership.

The highest bidder was from Larry Adams with Mountain Craft Builders, LLC for $805,000. Harris said if the council eventually votes to accept the bid they want to make sure it’s in the best interest of the city, as well as the buyer.

Mountain Craft Builders is a local family-owned home and light commercial construction builder.

Deas Chapel organ dedication remembers community members

Members from the Standard Telephone Company unveil the restored Shipman Organ Sunday at Deas Chapel. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Deas Chapel, the century-old historic African-American church in Clarkesville, was nearly filled to capacity Sunday afternoon with members of the community during the dedication ceremony of the restored Shipman organ that is nearly 100 years old. Approximately 40 people crowded into the small renovated chapel not only to hear about the organ but about the history of the community that attended the chapel and the music they shared.

Members of the community attend the dedication ceremony at Deas Chapel. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The organ restoration efforts were led by the former owners and employees of Standard Telephone Company, the city of Clarkesville, and Audrey Davenport. Stewart Swanson, the grandson of Standard Telephone Company former owner H.M. Stewart, led the dedication ceremony.

The Shipman pump organ was obtained by the Deas Chapel congregation sometime after 1905. History doesn’t tell us how the one-room chapel obtained the pump organ. What history does tell us is that the organ was played by Mrs. Clara Davis. She played the organ for nearly 5 decades to the African Methodist Episcopalian congregation that met at Deas Chapel.

The organ restoration

According to Clarkesville Mayor Barrie Aycock, the organ was restored by Michael Morris of Stone Mountain. His restoration efforts took approximately six months to complete.

Bruce Brownlow plays hymns on the restored pump organ in Deas Chapel. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Musician Bruce Brownlow communicated with Morris about the organ. According to Brownlow, Morris was amazed at the condition of the organ. There was no water damage, insect damage, or rot to the organ. Morris stated to Brownlow, “If any of those things were present, we could not do anything.” Brownlow explained that the church did a really good job protecting the organ over the years.

Swanson stated that in 2024, you don’t just go to somebody and ask can they restore an organ or do they happen to have a reed laying around. He explained to the audience that Morris took the organ apart and was able to rebuild the whole thing to at least 95% complete, with only just a few reeds that could not be found today.

Swanson recognized Morris’ work on the organ. “To Michael Morris, who did the heavy lifting, he did the hard work, we really appreciate it.”

Reminiscent of a congregation from years gone by, after the unveiling of the organ, those in attendance sang a handful of hymns that were some of the favorites of the Davis family. Brownlow played the restored organ last played by Clara Davis nearly 40 years ago.

Dedication to the Davis family

The dedication plaque for Henry and Clara Davis on the alter in Deas Chapel. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The organ was dedicated by the men and women of Standard Telephone Company in the memory of Henry and Clara Davis and their three daughters. Mercedes, their oldest daughter passed away a few years ago. However, their two other daughters and a niece were in attendance at the ceremony.

Henry and Clara were not only active in the African-American community but in the larger Habersham and surrounding community.

Clara Davis

Henry’s wife Clara was remembered during the dedication ceremony as not only as the organ player for her church but as an exceptional cook, wonderful hostess, and working actively in organizing the youth in her church. She worked more behind the scenes according to Swanson.

Swanson shared that Clara, on her own free will, worked with medical personnel in the community to come to Deas Chapel and administer immunizations to the children in the congregation to ensure they were protected.

Her other efforts included periodic hearing and eye examinations for the children.

She hosted bake sales to raise money for the children and made sure each family had a first aid kit.

Henry Davis

Henry began working in Clarkesville for a general store owner and founder of what would become Standard Telephone, In 1917, M.C. York. York hired Henry at the age of 14 to make and haul telephone poles for the fledgling company. At that time, he was the company’s only employee.

He learned the technical side of the telephone business, installing phones, stringing wire as a lineman, and fixing outages as they occurred. Henry worked for Standard Telephone Company for 50 years, retiring in 1967, having been promoted throughout his career to the highest operational level in the company. To this day, the Windstream Communications Operations Building in Baldwin, GA bears his name “The Henry Davis Building.”

Henry made such an impression on the community, in 1977 he was selected to be the Grand Marshall of the Mountain Laurel parade in Clarkesville. President Jimmy Carter wrote to Henry Davis shortly afterward with accolades and praise.

Swanson shared what his grandfather stated in a letter about Henry to the local newspaper when a reporter inquired about what he would share about Henry being selected the Grand Marshall. “It is my conviction that the highest compliment a man can aspire to be is to be recognized as a gentleman. I have long regarded Henry Davis as the epitome of the term,” H.M. Stewart Sr. stated. Stewart’s letter also stated, “At the time of his retirement, in 1967, Henry Davis may well have been the best known and most highly respected man in Habersham County.”

Henry and Clara were married for 56 years. Henry passed away at the age of 79 in 1982. Clara passed away in 1983 at the age of 83.

Daughters gratitude

Henry and Clara Davis’ daughters Jeannene and Lucy were grateful for the dedication Sunday. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Lucy Davis Bland who is 90 years old and flew in from Chandler, Arizona to be a part of the event. She is the youngest daughter of the Davis’ and spoke about the dedication. After the ceremony, she stated, “This means so much. I want to thank everyone for coming out and celebrating them. We are just so well blessed.” She adds, “I think it was just a beautiful, beautiful day. I know my Mom and Dad, they were looking down. They were here in spirit.”

Jeannene Davis Gosey who is the middle daughter at 91 years old and lives in Lawrenceville, Georgia. The ceremony was an emotional one for her. “I sat there in aw. When I heard that organ first play, tears came down my eyes because I could actually hear my Mom playing the organ. I’m sure of it.” She adds, “We are so thankful of Lucy and I were able to participate.”

Republicans return to D.C. amid dwindling majority

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — U.S. House Republicans are returning from a two-week recess Tuesday with an even slimmer majority and the potential looming chaos of a second speaker fight in less than a year.

Hours before recess began on March 22, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Rome, Georgia, filed a motion to vacate the U.S. House speaker’s office, threatening to boot Mike Johnson of Louisiana from the role he’s held for just over five months.

The potential leadership crisis looms over a serious to-do list that includes renewing the Foreign Surveillance Intelligence Act and pressure to finally approve a long-stalled foreign aid request for conflicts in Ukraine, Israel, and the Indo-Pacific.

Adding to the risk of chaos for the GOP: Two House Republicans abruptly announced resignations days before lawmakers headed home for the Easter holiday break, narrowing the House GOP’s majority to 217-213 once both are finished and prior to a series of special elections later this spring.

Colorado’s Ken Buck resigned on March 22, quickly followed by the abrupt resignation of Mike Gallagher of Wisconsin, whose last day is slated for April 19.

And as the 2024 election cycle accelerates, political observers will be watching for whether House GOP lawmakers will balance day-to-day business while appeasing the political base for presumed Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump.

House Republicans have struggled to unify during the 118th Congress, which started with the party slogging through more than a dozen ballots to seat Kevin McCarthy at the helm, said Matt Dallek, a political historian at George Washington University.

McCarthy, of California, was ousted in the fall, and the former leader left Congress in December, chipping away at the majority’s margin.

“This is a continuation of the tumult that really began when the Republicans took power,” Dallek said.

Ukraine aid

With a two-week work period ahead, House GOP lawmakers face another chance to prove whether they can coalesce around billions in aid to U.S. allies. House Republicans also face big questions about federal funds to help rebuild the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore and the renewal of a surveillance law that expires April 19, a self-imposed deadline after lawmakers extended it in December.

Johnson has vowed to prioritize Ukraine aid when House lawmakers return Tuesday, despite the prospect of continued opposition from the party’s far-right faction.

The U.S. Senate passed a $95.3 billion foreign aid package in February that would cover assistance to Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan, but the House has yet to advance it.

The standalone foreign aid package received support after Senate Republicans, heeding to Trump’s opposition, blocked a deal to alter U.S. immigration laws in exchange for Ukraine aid after months of bipartisan negotiations.

Johnson has said the House will be considering Ukraine aid again. “We’ve been talking to all the members especially now over the district work period. When we return after this period, we’ll be moving a product but it’s going to, I think, have some important innovations,” the Louisiana Republican said March 31 on Fox News’ “Sunday Night in America,” hosted by former GOP South Carolina Congressman Trey Gowdy.

Johnson said he wants to see the REPO Act as part of the deal. The legislation, introduced last year, would build a fund for Ukraine using the profits from the sale of seized Russian assets, which Johnson said would be “pure poetry.”

Johnson also said he expects conference members to rally in support if the bill restructured Ukraine aid in the form of loans and if it included a measure that would “unleash” American natural gas exports as a way to “help unfund Vladimir Putin’s war effort.”

The speaker faces an uphill battle in unifying House Republicans on the issue.

Georgia’s Rep. Andrew Clyde of Athens, a member of the far-right House Freedom Caucus, wrote on X April 3 that “(b)orrowing billions of dollars to protect Ukraine’s borders while OUR southern border is being invaded is a slap in the face to the American people.”

Some of Johnson’s conservative colleagues think amending the foreign aid bill could be a winning strategy.

Rep. French Hill of Arkansas said adding the REPO Act “would go a long way to filling the Ukrainian budget gap and be a good down payment for reconstruction, to make Putin pay the ultimate cost of his illegal invasion of Ukraine.”

“It would be, in my judgment, a way to get more support for the total package for Ukraine, seizing these Russian assets,” Hill told CBS “Face the Nation” host Margaret Brennan on Sunday.

When Brennan pressed him on the skepticism from his colleagues on the far right, including Greene, Hill responded: “I think overwhelmingly Americans and Republican primary voters believe that Putin should be defeated in Ukraine. As I’ve said before, we should draw the line on authoritarian dictators, particularly permanent members of the (United Nations) Security Council invading neighboring countries.”

Working with the Democrats?

If Johnson can’t unify the House GOP conference, votes from across the aisle may be the only path to passing an aid package, particularly if Johnson bypasses the House Committee on Rules. That fast-track to the floor requires a two-thirds majority for passage, which will inevitably mean Democrats’ support will matter.

However, striking a government funding deal with President Joe Biden last year was a flash point that led to the far-right House Republicans’ ouster of McCarthy.

Business in the lower chamber ground to a halt for weeks in October after seven House Republicans joined Florida’s Matt Gaetz in taking the gavel from McCarthy. All Democrats joined in voting for his removal.

Greene’s motion in late March to sack Johnson followed a fast-tracked bipartisan House vote  that resulted in the passage of the last round of overdue spending bills.

Greene did not force a vote on removing Johnson, but rather said it was a “warning” to him that the conference would begin looking for a new speaker who “will stand with Republicans and our Republican majority instead of standing with Democrats,” she told reporters after filing the motion.

Dallek said that Johnson putting a Ukraine deal on the floor “may be the final straw for the Marjorie Taylor Greenes of the world, and they might move to get rid of him.”

“There’s talk that Democrats would save (Johnson) in agreement for putting Ukraine funding on the floor. You know, retaining your speakership because you’re saved by the opposition party is not exactly a great place to be, right?” Dallek said.

Johnson said he believes his Republican colleagues view Greene’s effort as “a distraction from our mission.”

“Again, the mission is to save the republic,” he told Fox News’s Gowdy on Easter. “And the only way we can do that is if we grow the House majority, win the Senate and win the White House.

“So we don’t need any dissension right now. Look, Marjorie Taylor Greene filed the motion, it’s not a privileged motion so it doesn’t move automatically. It’s just hanging there. And she’s frustrated. She and I exchanged text messages. Even today. We’re going to talk early next week,” Johnson said.

GOP Rep. Don Bacon of Nebraska said he’s “optimistic” the House can pass the Ukraine aid bill during this work period.

“But it is very likely that after this Ukraine bill, we may have a standoff with the speaker. I hope the speaker prevails. He’s doing the right thing. It’s in our national security interest that Ukraine remain independent,” Bacon told NBC’s “Meet the Press” on March 31.

On Monday, Greene wrote on X that she remains opposed to Johnson bypassing the Rules Committee and calling a floor vote.

“Our Republican Speaker of the House is upsetting many of our members by relying on Democrats to pass major bills and working with Dems by giving them everything they want,” Greene wrote.

“That makes him the Democrat Speaker of the House not our Republican Speaker of the House.”

Clarkesville council approves short term rental ordinance

Clarkesville City Council approved the short term rental ordinance during Monday's meeting. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The Clarkesville City Council approved the city’s short-term rental ordinance during Monday’s council meeting. The ordinance has been in the works for some time. The council had already approved the regulations that govern short-term rentals in the city.

Clarkesville City Manager Keith Dickerson spoke to the matter candidly.

“That state is really pushing for local government to not be able to regulate short term rental.” He added, “They’re going to grandfather in anybody that has it.”

Dickerson explained to the council that if they didn’t approve it this time, by the next council meeting, they may not be discussing the matter.

He told the council that the ordinance, as currently drafted, could easily be changed in the future.

The council unanimously approved the short term rental ordinance.