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Fly-in & pancake breakfast at Habersham County Airport this Saturday, April 26

Eventgoers will witness landings and take-offs at the Habersham County Airport Saturday, April 26. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The skies over Habersham County and Baldwin will be a little busier this Saturday, April 26. Local pilots, aviation enthusiasts, and families will gather at the Habersham County Airport for a unique fly-in and pancake breakfast hosted by the Habersham County Aviation Explorers Post 0623.

From 8:00 to 10:30 a.m. or until the pancakes run out, visitors are invited to enjoy a hot breakfast, explore aircraft up close, and even take to the skies in free discovery flights offered to young attendees. Admission is by donation, with all proceeds supporting the Aviation Explorers, a local youth aviation group affiliated with Scouting America.

“This is our first attempt at an event like this,” said Bill Dillashaw, one of the group’s organizers. “We’ve been to other fly-ins and were invited to observe one at Jackson County Airport recently. Now it’s our turn to bring the aviation community together here in Habersham.”

The cost of the breakfast is a $10 donation. However, Dillashaw said any donation would be accepted and no one will be turned away. According to him, it’s not about the money but about aviation and community.

Aviation explorers

Aviation Explorers is an educational group for young people aged 14 to 20, focused on exposing members to all facets of aviation—from piloting and aircraft maintenance to airport design and air traffic control. Although they’re affiliated with Scouting America (formerly known as the Boy Scouts), they operate independently and are co-ed.

“We don’t wear uniforms. We’ve got both young men and young ladies attending, and we meet once a month at the airport,” Dillashaw said. “We do field trips, bring in guest speakers from all over the aviation industry, and really try to give our members a complete view of the aviation world.”

Habersham County Aviation Explorers will host a fly-in and pancake breakfast fundraiser at the Habersham County Airport in Baldwin on Saturday, April 26. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Saturday’s event will feature a pancake and sausage breakfast along with coffee and juice, thanks to several local sponsors including, David and Katie’s Amish Store in Homer, Springer Mountain Farms, Ingles of Cornelia, Lead Edge Design Group, and Warbird Coffee—a company that donates proceeds to help restore historic aircraft like the P-51 Mustang.

Pilots from around the region will fly in to participate, and some will offer free flights for youth. A signed waiver by a parent or guardian is required for those wishing to fly. Attendees can also tour aircraft, talk with pilots, and learn more about the operations and opportunities at the Habersham County Airport.

Community awareness

“This airport is a little goldmine, and a lot of people don’t even know it’s here,” Dillashaw said. “We want to expose the public to what goes on here and the economic impact it brings. Whether you’re young or just young at heart, aviation has something for everyone.”

Aviation Explorers Post 0623 meets the second Monday of each month from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the airport. Membership is open to anyone ages 14–20, but younger children can attend meetings and events with restrictions.

For more information about the fly-in breakfast (click here), Aviation Explorers (click here), or how to get involved, just head to the Habersham County Airport this Saturday, April 26—and don’t forget your appetite.

The Habersham County Airport is located at 1112 Airport Road in Baldwin.

Delta plane catches fire at Orlando airport, forcing passenger evacuations

Flames rise from a Delta Air Lines airplane Monday, April 21, 2025, at the Orlando International Airport, in Orlando, Fla. (video screen grab)

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — A Delta Air Lines airplane caught fire on Monday before it was supposed to take off at a central Florida airport, forcing the evacuation of passengers, airport officials said.

There were no reports of any injuries during the fire on the plane at Orlando International Airport, Delta said in a statement.

A recent spate of aviation disasters and close calls in the U.S. has stoked fears about air travel, though flying remains a safe way to travel. On-the-ground accidents included a plane that crashed and flipped over upon landing in Toronto and a Japan Airlines plane that clipped a parked Delta plane while it was taxiing at the Seattle airport. An American Airlines plane caught fire in Denver last month.

The engine fire broke out late Monday morning on Delta Air Lines Flight 1213 while the plane was at the ramp before a scheduled departure from Orlando to Atlanta, airport officials said on social media.

 

The passengers were evacuated, and the airport’s rescue and firefighting team responded, the airport’s statement said.

The Airbus A330 aircraft had 282 customers, 10 flight attendants and two pilots, according to Delta.

“Delta flight crews followed procedures to evacuate the passenger cabin when flames in the tailpipe of one of the aircraft’s two engines were observed,” Delta said in a statement.

Maintenance teams will examine the aircraft in an effort to determine the cause of the fire, Delta said.

Suspect at-large after domestic incident in Batesville

File photo (Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

A suspect remains on the lam following an unsuccessful weekend search in the Batesville area prompted by an alleged domestic violence incident, according to the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office. Authorities so far have declined to disclose further information.

Deputies from the Sheriff’s Patrol Division, along with a K-9 unit, responded to the area near GA 356 around 3:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 19, to search for the individual. Despite the efforts, the suspect was not located.

Habersham County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson Rob Moore declined to release the name or a description of the suspect at this time, though he said there is “no danger to the public.”

Now Habersham will update this article as more information is released.

Driver charged after crashing into trees off Camp Creek Road

Multiple agencies respond to wreck on Camp Creek Friday, April 18 (Brian Wellmeier/nowhabersham.com)

The Georgia State Patrol charged a 28-year-old Demorest man with DUI in connection with a weekend accident in Mt. Airy.

Troopers say Miguel Manuel was driving a Toyota Tacoma pickup truck south on Camp Creek Road when he ran off the road in a curve near Fair Dew Drive. The pickup reentered the roadway, crossed the centerline, and ran off the opposite side of the road where it struck a tree. As the vehicle overturned, the truck’s back end struck a second tree.

Habersham EMS transported Manuel to the hospital with possible minor injuries. The crash report shows that in addition to DUI, troopers cited him for open container, failure to maintain lane and a seatbelt violation.

The wreck happened just before 9 p.m. on Friday, April 18. Multiple law enforcement agencies responded to the scene.

Camp Creek Road was temporarily blocked between Fairview Drive and Owen Circle as crews cleared one of the trees that fell across the roadway.

Cornelia to hold second town hall over housing needs

GICH team members, residents and community stakeholders fill out surveys on housing in Cornelia Monday, March 31 (Brian Wellmeier/Now Habersham)

Cornelia is set to hold the second of three town hall meetings over housing at 6 p.m. Monday, April 21, at Shady Grove Baptist Church.

Members of the public are invited to attend the town hall, which will involve stakeholders including residents, business owners and city leaders who’ll provide feedback on the issue. In partnership with the University of Georgia and the state’s Department of Community Affairs, input gathered will later be analyzed and used to draft a long-term plan for Cornelia’s Commission to decide the future of development proposed throughout the city.

With a lack of affordable housing gripping Cornelia as well as much of the U.S., the dialogue comes at a pivotal juncture for the future of the city, which, like other municipalities, must navigate such challenges in the years ahead.

At the first town hall in March, led by Cornelia’s Community and Economic Development Director Jessie Owensby, about two-dozen local stakeholders and residents delved into dynamics of development and housing needs within the city, which has a median income of around $58,000 and a diverse blend of populace.

To accommodate a growing workforce, as discussed, Owensby introduced the concepts of infill (new construction on existing dilapidated properties) and redevelopment (remodeling existing homes in despair) as housing opportunities.

Stakeholders and attendees also discussed the need for diverse housing options that serve all age and income groups, with a combination of ideas offered during an open forum.

Spire Motorsports among the surprises of NASCAR season so far with Talladega up next

Carson Hocevar (77) goes down the back stretch during a NASCAR Cup Series auto race, Sunday, April 13, 2025, in Bristol, Tenn. (AP Photo/Wade Payne)

Despite five finishes of 30th or worst in the first eight races of the season, Carson Hocevar has avoided getting caught up in the dismal results.

It’s the encouraging performance of his No. 77 Chevrolet that has the 22-year-old from Portage, Michigan, believing his team is emerging as a force in NASCAR’s premier Cup Series.

“Our group is so strong,” said Hocevar, who is in his second full Cup season. “We’re so good on pit road. We’re good on the racetrack. We just got to be able to take advantage of the adversity. As my dad would remind me when I was a kid racing, they are character-building moments.”

Despite the disappointments, Hocevar still is part of the best start in the six-year history of Spire Motorsports, one of the season’s major surprises.

At Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Michael McDowell (a two-time Cup winner hired for 2025 by Spire) delivered the first pole in team history. Hocevar finished a career-best second at Atlanta Motor Speedway

Spire, which has yet to finish a season in the top 20 of the championship standings, has its three cars ranked between 19th and 25th in points after overhauling its roster with a host of championship veterans.

Rodney Childers, who guided Kevin Harvick to the 2014 championship and earned 40 wins as a crew chief, joined the No. 7 of Justin Haley. Dax Gerringer, formerly a lead engineer for Childers at Stewart-Haas Racing, was hired as Spire’s technical director. Matt McCall, a four-time winner as a Cup crew chief, was added as director of vehicle performance.

“A lot of the impact on our program is the unsung heroes,” Hocevar said before finishing 11th and leading two laps (despite a pit stop miscue) in the April 13 race at Bristol Motor Speedway. “It’s Matt McCall, Dax and a handful of others in the competition space.”

Their mettle will be tested as Bristol marked the quarter-pole of a 36-race season that gets only more grueling.

Emerging from the Easter off-weekend, the Cup Series will return Sunday at Talladega Superspeedway for a stretch of racing on 28 consecutive weeks through the Nov. 2 season finale at Phoenix Raceway.

Denny Hamlin, who has been another 2025 surprise in ending a long winless drought with new crew chief Chris Gayle, said he understands the reason for the marathon but fears the stress.

“There is always a breaking point,” he said. “It is harder and harder to keep people over the years. It is just generally a hard sport to be a part of because of the schedule. It is certainly not ideal.”

Here are some other surprises, good and bad, from the season so far:

Penske pain

In three championships from 2022-24, Team Penske developed a title blueprint of playing possum in the regular season before reeling off hot playoff runs by Joey Logano and Ryan Blaney.

The lack of early results from Penske’s trio of drivers is befuddling this season.

Logano needed seven races before his first top 10 finish, the longest stretch for a defending Cup series champion. Blaney has led five races in his No. 12 Ford but averaged a finish of 16.7 because of mechanical failures, mediocre pit stops and crash misfortune. Austin Cindric could have won the first two races at Daytona and Atlanta but twice got wrecked.

“Last year, we didn’t run very good and then we were able to fabricate a finish somehow,” Logano said. “This year has kind of been the opposite. You name it, and it has happened. The fact that we have speed gives me a lot of confidence that a win will be around the corner at some point.”

23XI Racing’s rise

After his debut in the championship field, Tyler Reddick keeps gathering steam with top-three rankings in NASCAR’s passing, defense and speed categories. Teammate Bubba Wallace, who missed the playoffs last year, has shown major gains on restarts (ranking third in the series with his No. 23 Toyota).

In its fifth year, the team co-owned by Hamlin and NBA legend Michael Jordan is on target for qualifying two title contenders despite the distractions of facing off with NASCAR in federal court for an antitrust battle that could drag through the year.

Keselowski’s swoon

The preseason optimism was high for Brad Keselowski. He ended a 110-race winless streak last year and was reunited for 2025 with crew chief Jeremy Bullins, who took Keselowski to his most recent championship round appearance in 2020.

But it’s been a wipeout for the No. 6 Ford driver, whose best finish is 11th. The 2012 Cup champion is ranked 31st in the standings and is off to the worst start of his 16-season career. At 41, the driver-owner of Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing could face career decisions if the trajectory continues.

Hawks fire GM Fields, promote Saleh to that role, will search for president of basketball ops

Atlanta Hawks guard Dyson Daniels (5) reacts to a loss on the bench in overtime of an NBA play-in tournament basketball game against the Miami Heat, Friday, April 18, 2025, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

Landry Fields was fired as general manager of the Atlanta Hawks on Monday after three seasons, with the team missing the playoffs in the last two of those.

The Hawks promoted Onsi Saleh to the GM role, while also announcing that they have opened a search for a president of basketball operations. Atlanta went 40-42 this season, then missed the playoffs after going 0-2 in the play-in tournament.

“Every offseason we evaluate how we operate and ways we can improve our organization,” Hawks principal owner Tony Ressler said. “As we enter this pivotal offseason, we have several complex decisions ahead of us, and we are committed to providing the human and financial resources needed to ensure that we navigate these decisions with a high level of precision and foresight.”

Ressler added that “adding an accomplished, senior-level leader to provide strategic direction and structure” alongside Saleh “is a top priority.”

Fields led the decision-making a year ago when Atlanta had the No. 1 pick and selected Zaccharie Risacher, who is a finalist for rookie of the year this season. The Hawks have an All-Star guard in Trae Young and another budding star in Dyson Daniels, a finalist for both defensive player of the year and most improved player this season.

Saleh joined the Hawks a year after three seasons with the Golden State Warriors, his time there ending with him holding the roles of vice president of basketball strategy and team counsel. He spent five years before joining the Warriors with the San Antonio Spurs and was the team’s director of strategy and process.

The Hawks haven’t won a playoff series since making it to the Eastern Conference finals in 2021.

Georgia Democrat Jason Esteves says he’s running for governor in 2026

Sen. Jason Esteves. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia Democrat Jason Esteves announced on Monday that he’s running for governor in 2026, entering a field that remains murky for his party after two top potential candidates backed away from a run.

The 41-year-old state senator, also a lawyer and business owner, remains largely unknown outside his state Senate district, which includes parts of Fulton and Cobb counties. An early announcement could help him to raise money and increase his visibility.

He’s likely to emphasize his biography, including his young children and his past service as a public school teacher. Esteves has also served as treasurer of the state Democratic Party, giving him a network among Democratic activists.

In a video announcing his candidacy, Esteves sounded a note of opposition to Republican President Donald Trump while saying he would emphasize lowering the cost of living, including housing costs, as well as expanding health care, restoring abortion rights and increasing funding for schools.

“I’m running for Governor to make Georgia the number one place to work, start a business, and raise a family,” Esteves said in a statement. “As extreme politicians in Georgia push Trump’s reckless agenda and rig the system for special interests, Georgians pay the price.”

Incumbent Republican Gov. Brian Kemp is term-limited after two terms and can’t seek reelection in 2026.

Former Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms has said she plans to run for governor as a Democrat, but has not yet filed papers to create a campaign. Former DeKalb County CEO Michael Thurmond has also expressed interest, and two-time nominee Stacey Abrams could yet choose to run again.

On the Republican side, Attorney General Chris Carr announced his run for governor last year and Lt. Gov. Burt Jones is expected to announce his candidacy soon.

Esteves enters the race as two potential Democratic candidates step back to focus on family health concerns.

Former state Sen. Jason Carter, Democrats’ 2014 nominee and grandson of the late former President Jimmy Carter, said he has no plans to seek the 2026 nomination because of his wife’s cancer diagnosis. Kate Carter has glioblastoma, an aggressive form of brain cancer. The couple has two teenage sons.

“For all intents and purposes, I can’t imagine making a decision to run because it’s the wrong time for my family,” Carter, 49, told The Associated Press on Monday.

U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath announced on March 31 that she was suspending her exploratory bid for governor in 2026, saying she needed to focus on her husband Curtis’ health after complications from cancer surgery. The four-term member of Congress, best known as a gun control advocate, had filed papers on March 5 to raise money for governor.

Carter has been mentioned as a centrist candidate with high name identification who could run as a bridge between the Democrats’ base and voters who might be up for grabs if President Donald Trump’s popularity and the Republican brand take a dip heading into 2026.

An Atlanta attorney who has been out of politics since losing the 2014 governor’s race, Carter has drawn renewed attention in recent years as Carter Center board chairman and family spokesperson as his grandparents’ health declined. He eulogized his grandfather in January at the 39th president’s state funeral in Washington and did the same for his grandmother, Rosalynn Carter, at her Atlanta funeral in December 2023.

The younger Carter said he’s “not going to endorse anybody,” but added, “I’m very excited about Jason (Esteves)” and what he can offer voters and the party.

Esteves first won election to the state Senate in 2022 after nine years on the Atlanta school board. He was chair of the board for four years, including part of the time that the distict was heavily impacted by COVID-19. He touts increased graduation rates and higher pay for staff during that time, but some parents were displeased with how long it took the district to resume in-person classes.

While Esteves was leading the board, it also decided not to renew Superintendent Meria Carstarphen’s contract, which causes a stir among those who supported Carstarphen’s leadership following the school district’s cheating scandal.

Esteves and his wife, Ariel, own Flying Biscuit restaurants in Macon and Columbus, Esteves’ hometown. He and his wife also own an urgent and primary care clinic. They have two children.

___

Associated Press writer Bill Barrow contributed to this report

Work begins on two of Habersham’s oldest elementary schools

Hazel Grove Elementary School (Brian Wellmeier/nowhabersham.com)

Modifications on two of Habersham County’s oldest elementary schools are now underway.

At a work session Thursday, April 17, Assistant Superintendent David Leenman told members of Habersham’s Board of Education that renovations on Woodville Elementary in Clarkesville (built in 1950) and Hazel Grove Elementary in Mt. Airy (built in 1954) are expected to be complete by summer’s end.

“They have already done a great job and made significant progress in just a couple of days,” Leenman said.

To minimize potential distractions, Superintendent Patrick Franklin told board members none of the louder work is being done during school hours, with crews often beginning around 3:30 p.m. or 4 p.m.

Gainesville’s Carroll Daniel Construction is leading the $7.3 million project. Funding is expected to come from bond funds and Education Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax revenue.

With expansion, Woodville will see an additional three classrooms, reconfigured administrative space, roof replacement, a secured entrance and expanded student and adult restrooms. The building also will be repainted.

Hazel Grove, the second oldest school building in Habersham (1954), will now receive new restrooms and new windows.

When the modifications were approved in November, Franklin described the projects as part of much-needed upgrades that will also provide room for future expansion.

“In 1950, you didn’t have the same needs as student do now,” he said. “It will be more of a complete renovation…the cost is with a contingency. Everything will be that (cost) or lower.”

Long-term, the upgrades will provide crucial capacity for schools to grow with Habersham County, according to Franklin. “It gives us room to grow and also modernizes two of our older buildings,” he said. “Those are community schools. The community loves them, so we need to bring them up to date.”

Following approval in November, Habersham County Board of Education Member Doug Westmoreland agreed and stated, “We need the newer facilities and the space. It’s still a beautiful building. Both of them are. But it’s come time after 60 years that we need to do some updates and expansions and get that building up to code.”

Habersham schools to purchase new MacBooks for teachers

Habersham Board of Education (Brian Wellmeier/nowhabersham.com)

The Habersham County School System plans to purchase 675 up-to-date MacBook Pros for teachers.

During a work session Thursday, April 17, Assistant Superintendent David Leenman told board members the purchase is necessary since current MacBooks used by staff have become obsolete.

The total cost, paid through E-SPLOST (Education Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax) funds, will come out to be about $998,000 (including around $21,000 for protective covers).

“Over the last several months, we have noticed that teacher laptops are really wearing down,” Leenman said. “After five years, Apple will label anything older than five years as vintage, and after seven years, Apple will label anything over (that) as obsolete. The laptops we are working on are going on eight-years-old. Replacement parts are becoming a real issue, specifically the batteries…the other issue is – because they are outdated – they have become security risks.”

The Habersham County Board of Education is expected to approve the purchase at 6 p.m. Monday, April 21, during its regular meeting.

South Carolina Senate seeks at hearing to remove state treasurer over $1.8B accounting error

Republican South Carolina Treasurer Curtis Loftis prepares for a hearing in the Senate that could start the process of removing him from office on Monday, April 21, 2025, in Columbia, S.C. (AP Photo/Jeffrey Collins)

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — South Carolina’s Republican-dominated Senate and its elected Republican treasurer faced off Monday in an extraordinary hearing as senators try to kick the treasurer out of office over a $1.8 billion accounting error.

The hearing is the culmination of over two years of investigation by the Senate that started when state accountants unintentionally exaggerated money given to colleges and universities by $3.5 billion.

That led to the discovery of an account error that started a decade ago when the state was changing from one accounting system to another. If accountants couldn’t balance the entries in the two sets of books as they moved thousand of accounts with different definitions, they kept adding it to a special account year after year until it grew to $1.8 billion.

It took forensic accountants, who were paid millions of dollars in fees, to finally unravel that nearly all of the $1.8 billion was not real money but just an accumulation of errors.

The two Republican senators calling for Loftis to be kicked out of office said he can no longer be trusted to handle South Carolina’s bank accounts. They charged that he is incompetent and never reported the mistakes to lawmakers as required by law while refusing to take accountability.

“He’s a liar that was so concerned with his public appearance that he would do and say anything to cover up his mistake,” Sen. Stephen Goldfinch said.

Loftis has called the Senate investigation a witch hunt. He repeatedly said no money went missing and the errors were not made in his office, although others have testified differently. The treasurer said continuing to focus on the mistakes threatens the state’s strong credit rating.

His lawyer Deborah Barbier opened the treasurer’s three-hour case with a photo of Loftis and Republican President Donald Trump on a screen. She pointed out that he has won election four times and will face voters again in a primary in 14 months. Loftis has previously said he would not run for reelection.

“The people don’t want to be told that you are better than them,” Barbier said from a temporary lectern at the back of the state Senate chamber. “Let issues like this be decided at the ballot box.”

Senators can ask questions at the end of the hearing. The Senate would need a two-thirds vote to decide Loftis committed “willful neglect of duty” and send the matter to the House, which must also hold its own two-thirds vote to remove the treasurer.

Thirty-one of the 40 senators present on Monday will have to vote against Loftis to keep the process going.

No office holder has been removed in this way since South Carolina became a state 225 years ago.

Republican leaders in the House have given no indication whether they will take up the matter.

The books still haven’t been fully straightened out, and accountants continue to struggle with Loftis’ office and how they handle the state’s bank accounts, Grooms said.

The treasurer is trying anything to protect his 14 years in office and reputation as a competent conservative steward who is always looking out for taxpayers, Grooms said.

“Because of his failures, the self-proclaimed best friend of the taxpayer is costing the taxpayers tens of millions in legal, auditing and oversight fees,” Grooms said. “With friends like this, who needs tax-and-spend liberals.”

A Senate subcommittee held hearings to question Loftis under oath. They have been contentious. Loftis has slammed papers, accused senators of a witch hunt and threatened to get up and leave.

He did not show any outward signs of frustration or anger as the hearing started Monday.

Planned closure of federal center in Georgia triggers worries about ability to monitor water quality

Chattahoochee Riverkeeper Jason Ulseth leads a team in monitoring water quality and groundwater levels along the river that provides drinking water to millions of Georgians. Photo submitted by Chattahoochee Riverkeeper. (Photo submitted by Chattahoochee Riverkeeper)

(Georgia Recorder) — Routine water sampling conducted by the Chattahoochee Riverkeeper as part of a federal partnership revealed alarming levels of bacteria discharged into the river by Fulton County’s largest wastewater treatment plant in 2023.

The Georgia Environmental Protection Division issued several violations and a $300,000 fine against the city of Atlanta for maintenance problems causing numerous illegal discharges of pollution at the RM Clayton Water Reclamation Facility in northwest Atlanta.

Chattahoochee Riverkeeper’s Chris Manganiello considers the Fulton County pollution drama as a reason to sound the alarm over the now-uncertain future of the U.S. Geological Survey’s South Atlantic Water Science Center in Norcross.

The center’s lease recently appeared on the Elon Musk-led U.S. Department of Government Efficiency’s list for possible terminations by the end of 2025, but it’s still unclear what that means for the staff and the program’s mission.

The U.S. General Services Administration, which manages federal property, did not respond to the Recorder’s emailed questions about the terms of the lease and the fate of the staff.

Since the early 2000s, the Chattahoochee Riverkeeper and the federal agency have collaborated on the BacteriALERT program that provides live updates to the public of the amount of E. coli contamination in a river that is a source of drinking water for millions of Georgians.

“Eventually after working with Fulton County, they came to an agreement with us that their plant was not functioning,” Manganiello said. “This is a situation where we’re pretty sure that we wouldn’t have identified this problem without the help of collection from USGS sources.”

Environmentalists and Democratic congressional members are expressing concerns about the planned lease termination, which the DOGE website says will save the federal government more than $1.3 million.

The center is one of more than a dozen government offices in Georgia that could have its leases ended under the Trump administration’s cuts.

Riverkeeper members said that water gauges are essential for maintaining compliance with state and federal permits. The data collected by these gauges tracks flood levels and the National Weather Service contracts with the center to collect rainfall data.

Manganiello, the Riverkeeper water policy director, said that the closure of the Norcross office and potential layoffs could at a minimum disrupt water monitoring for several months, which could lead to a significant decline in water quality and compliance.

“It’s one thing if we all knew they’re going to close this office because they moved into another location, that would be okay,” he said. “But because we don’t know what’s going to happen if the lease is terminated and these people don’t have a place to physically work, that means there’s going to be a disruption in the maintenance of the physical equipment and to data collection and data processing.”

Chattahoochee Riverkeeper Jason Ulseth said the center operates water flow gauges essential for monitoring everything from bacteria to water flooding levels impacting water management in Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina.

“This science center is critical for many reasons, including the fact that they run all of the flow gauges for Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina,” Ulseth said. “These flow gauges tell us how much water is in any part of the river throughout the system and is essential to municipal water to decision makers, dam operators, (utility) power operators and fishermen.”

The government water monitoring benefits the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area, which draws 3.5 million annual visitors.

The scientific water surveying covers a 48-mile stretch between the Buford Dam and Atlanta. The employees also track water levels, flooding and dam releases at the Buford Dam.

“They’re fishing, they’re tubing, they’re kayaking,” Ulseth said. “So the health of the river and the amount of pathogens that are in the river are very important to the people that are going there. With the bacteria alert program, we are able to actually predict the current levels of E. coli and give public health advisories in real time, which is a one-of-a-kind program in the entire country.”

Atlanta Democratic U.S. Sens. Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock expressed their concerns about potential layoffs in a letter to U.S. Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum.

The relocation plans remain unclear despite the office lease set to terminate in a few months, the senators wrote Tuesday.

“Staff at the (center) perform water quality testing to ensure the safety of drinking water and maintain water gauges across Georgia, including Lake Sidney Lanier and on the Chattahoochee River, which supplies most of metro Atlanta’s drinking water,” Ossoff and Warnock wrote. “Local officials in metro Atlanta rely on gauges at Lake Lanier to ensure enough water is drawn from the lake to provide water to millions of Georgians every day. These gauges also inform water flows for Georgia’s agriculture industry, nuclear reactors across the state, and Department of Defense installations, among others.”

The potential ramifications of staff layoffs at the Norcross science center is also being watched closely by Suwannee Riverkeeper John Quarterman in south Georgia.

He said his organization relies on the data to predict the risk of flooding in areas like the Skipper Bridge on the Withlacoochee River north of Valdosta.

“It will be a problem for flood preparedness if (flood mapping) goes away, or if either of those gauges does,” Quarterman said.