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HCHS varsity basketball splits region openers with Shiloh

Habersham Central High School senior Kyia Barrett (23) drives past a defender in a 53-43 win over Shiloh High School on Jan. 3, 2024 in Mt. Airy. (Zack Myers/NowHabersham.com)

Habersham Central High School’s varsity basketball teams split results with Shiloh High School in the first region games for both schools Wednesday night in Mt. Airy.

The girls walked away with a 53-43 victory, while the boys had their 11-game winning streak busted by the visiting Generals.

Girls: Habersham Central 53, Shiloh 43

“After the game, I went in there and wrote ‘1-0’ on the board,” HCHS Head Coach Bill Bradley said. “As long as you’re writing numbers on the left side, you’re happy, regardless of what it looks like or what it feels like.”

The Lady Raiders (4-8, 1-0 Region 8-AAAAAA) took a 14-9 lead in the first quarter and never relinquished it.

The Lady Generals (3-10, 0-1 8-AAAAAA) couldn’t get footing as the game carried on, but kept the game within reach as the two teams matched scoring in the second quarter.

Another five-point swing for HCHS in the third pushed the deficit to 10, which it would hold through the final quarter.

As has been the story since she returned from injury, Kyia Barrett led the Lady Raiders with 23 points on the night. She knocked down an impressive 8-of-10 free throw attempts en route to her big night.

Karah Dean hit three 3-pointers on her way to 11 points.

Dean, one of the many freshmen on the team getting important minutes, has come out of her shell as the season has gone on.

“Karah hitting that three right off the bat, just having the confidence to take that shot rather than thinking, ‘OK, I’ve got to get it back to Kyia,’” Bradley said. “Nothing bothers her. That’s the reason I like Karah so much.”

Bradley said he likens Dean to former player Kelsey Banks and he’s pushing his current freshman like he pushed Banks a few years back.

“When Kelsey was a ninth and 10th grader, I recognized something in her, but I needed her to find toughness. By the time she was a junior, she was getting that toughness. By the time she was a senior, she was mixinging it up just as well as anybody else even though she was the smallest person on the team,” Bradley said. “With Karah, I liken her to Kelsey because I’m asking her to go be tougher and not just be a shooter. Go find something you can help your team with.”

With the kind of game Dean had, Bradley thinks other teams in the region will have to take notice of her.

“After a game like this, everybody in the league will be talking about ‘You’ve got to go guard 21 over in that corner because she’s going to hit that shot,’” Bradley said.

The head man said he’s seeing progress in his youngsters from the beginning of the season, including limiting turnovers trying to just get the ball back to Barrett.

“I’m starting to see others that are willing to do things. I saw one turnover where we got the ball and were just ‘Where’s Kyia,’ and just throw it and turn it over,” Bradley said. “Just like Oaklee (Jackson) coming off the bench and putting that thing hard on the floor and shooting that runner and scoring. That’s a big, huge bucket. It’s the only bucket she got tonight because she didn’t get a lot of minutes, but that’s a big bucket. Just a young kid saying ‘I’ll go make a play.’

“The more of that that happens, the easier it’s going to get for Kyia because people have to guard other people,” he continued.

Now, the ladies deal with a quick turnaround as Gainesville High comes to town on Saturday evening for a second region matchup before almost a full week off.

“Another big ballgame,” Bradley said. “It sure would be nice to be 2-0 (in region play) going into that week (off).”

According to Bradley, the Lady Raiders can expect a similar opponent in Gainesville as they had Wednesday with Shiloh.

“Gainesville is athletic. I don’t think they have the same guard play they’ve had in the past,” he said. “They’re going to be a lot like Shiloh in the post – just big and strong and try to bully you.”

The way the schedule sets up for HCHS, it needs to win these home games in region play because they have five of six games at home before flipping to five of six on the road to close out the regular season.

“Those home games are really important because the end of the season you go five out of six on the road and that makes it tough,” Bradley said. “Hopefully by that time we’ll have our kids seasoned and they’ll be old veterans and we won’t talk about them being freshmen anymore.”

The Lady Raiders will tip off with Gainesville at 4 p.m. Saturday at HCHS in Mt. Airy.

Boys: Shiloh 77, Habersham Central 59

The Raiders (11-3, 0-1 8-AAAAAA) also held a five-point lead after the first quarter, but that lead flipped to a one-point deficit by the half at 33-32 in favor of the Generals (10-3, 1-0 8-AAAAAA).

The Generals led by 11 after the third quarter in which they scored 25 with Jullien Cole netting 16 of his team-high 25 points in the period.

The visitors outscored the Raiders 19-12 in the final quarter, pushing the deficit to the final 18-point spread.

Shiloh unleashed the sharp shooters as they knocked down 14 3-pointers throughout the contest.

Cole alone sank five shots from beyond the arc. Four of those were in that third-quarter run.

Tylis Jordan had 16 and Hady Diane had 11 for the Generals. Diane knocked down three from deep.

As a team, the Raiders hit eight 3-point shots.

HCHS was led by Josiah McCurry with 15 and Brannon Gaines with 10 on the night.

The Raiders and Red Elephants will tip following the completion of the girls contest on Saturday in Mt. Airy.

Postgame

Following their game, the Lady Raiders gathered to celebrate Barrett scoring her 1,000th point for the program against Athens Christian on Dec. 29.

“What an honor for her,” Bradley said. “I just think about the hours and hours and hours of work that goes into it. Not just the number of shots that it took in-game, I’m talking about the number of hours that I’ve personally spent with her in a gym that nobody knows about. At 6:30 in the morning and she, I and her mom or she, I and her stepdad are the only ones around. Knowing those hours, I know there are hours I wasn’t a part of.

“Just thinking about those hours and what that means and how it takes that to make that accomplishment. It takes a lot of teammates. It takes good teammates that are willing to let you shoot it some and to go get your own,” Bradley continued.

Barrett has 11 games left in the regular season to keep adding to her total as a Lady Raider before moving on to Anderson University next season.

Fire damages mobile home west of Clarkesville

Smoke billows from the roof of a mobile home on Chuckwagon Road in the Fairview Community on the morning of Thursday, Jan. 4, 2024. (Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

An early morning mobile home fire in Habersham County forced two people from their home Thursday.

The fire was reported just before 1 a.m. on Jan. 4 on Chuckwagon Road in the Fairview community.

Initial reports indicate it began as a small interior fire. A man inside the home tried to put it out before firefighters arrived.

When Habersham County Emergency Services got to the scene, the fire was showing through the roof.

Firefighters quickly extinguished the fire. No one was injured.

A firefighter attacks the interior flames from the roof. (Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

 

The residents walk away from the home after surveying the damage inside. (Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)
Habersham County firefighters clean up after extinguishing the fire. They were on scene for several hours. (Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

 

Turner to seek re-election

White County Commission Chairman Travis Turner (WRWH.com)

CLEVELAND, Ga. — White County Commission Chairman Travis Turner has decided to seek another term. Turner said Tuesday that after much discussion with his family, trusted friends, and prayer, he will ask the citizens to allow him to continue to serve.

Turner, who has served as commission chairman since 2009, says he will run on his past service record.

“I feel like I have – I’ve had a steady hand in being able to fill the role as commission chairman to bring sound, steady guidance to our county, to our community, to our commission board,” he says.

Turner says he realizes that it is early, but he wants to make his intentions known as he implements a personal one-on-one campaign, talking with the voters.

“I can share my heart, I can share my thoughts of why, perhaps why, I govern the way I do.”

The party primary election is May 21 with the general election set for November 5.

White County agencies conduct school safety training exercise

White County Sheriff's deputies Dylan Loggins, Victor Cirilo, Ken Daniels, and Wesley Vandiver take part in a school safety training exercise at Mount Yonah Elementary on Jan. 3, 2024. (Bryce Barrett/White County)

White County Public Safety partnered with the county board of education on Wednesday for a school safety training exercise. The morning event took place at Mount Yonah Elementary School. Local public safety agencies, educators, and state emergency responders participated in the training exercise.

While public safety has held these types of exercises before, the Jan. 3 event marked the first time they’ve trained using a unified command. Leaders from within law enforcement, fire and medical services, and the school system gathered at a centralized command post to direct training operations and coordinate their efforts.

Fire officials operating inside the command post are, from left, Josh Taylor and White County Fire Services Chief Michael LeFevre. (Bryce Barrett/White County)

The training was aimed at enhancing coordination and communication among agencies to better prepare them for a possible emergency. School administrators, members of the media, and others were allowed to observe the training from a viewing room at the school board office. They had the opportunity to observe live camera feeds from within the school, listen to first responders’ radio communications, and receive real-time narration from public safety officials.

The experience offered them a better understanding of what’s involved in dealing with crisis scenarios.

“This collaborative effort underscores the commitment of White County Public Safety agencies to continuously improve preparedness, ensuring the safety and well-being of the community in times of need,” said a release from the White County Sheriff’s Office.

Operating from the command post are, from left, Gus Sesum, EMT Brian Brown, Josh Taylor, Fire Chief Michael LeFevre, and Scott Justus. (Bryce Barrett/White County)
From left, David Shanks, Jonathan Jones, and Don Strength (Bryce Barrett/White County)
White County EMA Chief Don Strength (Bryce Barrett/White County)
Georgia Emergency Management Agency (GEMA) Mobile Command Unit (Bryce Barrett/White County)

Participating White County agencies included the Board of Education, Emergency Management, Fire Services, E911, the White County Sheriff’s Office, EMS, and the Georgia Emergency Management Agency and Homeland Security.

9 pounds of meth seized in Athens hotel bust

Drugs, a gun, and digital scale drug agents say they seized in a raid Dec. 29, 2023, in a drug raid at an Athens hotel. (ACCPD photo)

Two alleged drug traffickers are in jail following their arrests last week at an Athens hotel.

On Dec. 29, agents from the Northeast Georgia Regional Drug Task Force and Athens-Clarke County Police Department (ACCPD) raided a hotel in the 100 block of Old Epps Bridge Road. The raid resulted from a meth trafficking investigation, according to police.

Authorities arrested 40-year-old Tyler Stalker of Ellijay and 43-year-old Angela Mosley of Gainesville. The pair possessed nearly nine pounds of methamphetamine. Stalker also had a .38 caliber revolver, police say.

Authorities charged Stalker and Mosley with drug trafficking. They also charged Stalker with possession of a firearm during the commission of certain crimes and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.

Police are asking anyone with information about drug activity in the Athens area to contact the police department’s drug tip line at 706-613-3297.

This article was written with assistive AI technology

Piedmont promotes Garwood to Director of Athletic Communications

(Joy Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

DEMOREST, Ga. – Piedmont University has promoted Joseph Garwood as its new Director of Athletic Communications. Garwood has been on staff at the University since the fall of 2018, when he joined as an Assistant Director within athletic communications.

“Joseph is an essential member of our staff and the elevation he has brought to our department in the way we represent our student-athletes is unmatched,” Percival said. “He has been a tireless worker for over five years and his role has continued to grow throughout his career at Piedmont. He has mentored many students, interns and other employees within the athletic communications office and his impact is priceless.”

Over his first five seasons at Piedmont, Garwood has served as the primary point of contact for many sports, including women’s soccer, women’s basketball, men’s golf, softball, and both men’s and women’s tennis and men’s and women’s lacrosse.

In 2019, he assisted with Piedmont’s efforts to successfully host the 2019 NCAA Demorest Softball Regional, the first time ever the school had hosted an NCAA Regional in which it also competed.

“I am excited to grow within my role here in the Athletic Communications Office at Piedmont,” Garwood said. “I look forward to continuing to promote the achievements and success of the outstanding student-athletes and coaches within this department.”

During his time at Wake Forest, Garwood served as a primary contact for volleyball, women’s tennis, and field hockey while serving as the secondary contact for women’s basketball. He managed the social media accounts for his primary sports year-round and contributed on game day posts for football and men’s tennis.

Garwood brought championship experience with him to Piedmont as he served as Assistant to the Media Coordinator at the 2018 NCAA Tennis Championships hosted by Wake Forest.

Following his first stint at Wake Forest, Garwood spent the 2016-17 academic year as a Media Relations Intern at Wofford College. He was the primary contact for men’s and women’s soccer, women’s basketball and men’s and women’s tennis while with the Terriers. Garwood also spent time compiling media guides, game notes and recording statistics for his teams.

Garwood graduated from Appalachian State University in 2015 with a bachelor of science in history and a minor in political science.

Hall County Animal Services to host ‘Dinner and Learn,’ Q&A session

Hall County Animal Shelter (Source: Google Maps)

In its commitment to transparency, Hall County Animal Services will host a “Dinner and Learn” event for interested citizens to hear updates on Hall County Animal Shelter operations.

The event is scheduled for Tuesday, Jan. 16, from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at the North Hall Community Center. There will be a brief presentation from shelter staff, and the event will end with a question-and-answer session.

“We know it’s important in our industry to be a voice for the voiceless, and having open and productive dialogue is a great way to ensure that everyone is pulling in the same direction when it comes to improving the lives of animals in our community,” Hall County Animal Services Director Trey Garcia says.

Shelter staff will discuss the shelter’s intake statistics, success stories, community cat program, Animal Control operations, facility updates regarding the installation of a new HVAC system, and the long-term goals of the shelter.

The event is free to attend, though reservations are required. Those interested should RSVP via email to [email protected] no later than 3 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 12. Dinner will be provided for those in attendance.

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Congress was full of postponements in 2023 and 2024 could be worse

(Jennifer Shutt/States Newsroom)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — Congress got next to nothing done during the past year and could accomplish even less in 2024 as attention shifts to the November elections.

House Republican and Senate Democratic leaders reached agreement on bills and resolutions they sent to the president’s desk just 34 times during the first year of the 118th Congress — making that session the least productive in decades.

Even when the two chambers brokered deals, several of the laws passed were just short-term extensions, allowing members of Congress to delay the tough job of compromise on big-picture legislation. They’ll need to tackle the farm bill, reauthorize the Federal Aviation Administration and approve more than $1.5 trillion in federal spending this year, just to name a few of the unaddressed items.

Rank-and-file lawmakers aren’t entirely pleased with the lackluster results and have no insight on what leaders might bring up this year outside of the pressing issues they’ve avoided dealing with and now must confront again in 2024.

Texas Republican Rep. Chip Roy rebuked GOP leaders, saying during a floor speech in mid-November that for years he’s heard nothing but “excuses” and “empty promises.”

“I want my Republican colleagues to give me one thing, one thing, that I can go campaign on and say we did,” Roy said. “Anybody sitting in the complex, if you want to come down to the floor and come explain to me one material, meaningful, significant thing the Republican majority has done besides saying, ‘Oh, it is not as bad as the Democrats.’”

Oklahoma Republican Rep. Tom Cole, chair of the House Rules Committee, said in late December he hadn’t heard what legislation would move through his committee this year but doesn’t expect much.

“Look, it’s divided government in a presidential year,” Cole said. “I don’t see us moving a lot of big legislation. I think the appropriations bills, and whatever the two sides agree should be attached to them, is probably the best you’re going to get.”

Cole said Democrats, who control the Senate, are just as much to blame for the low number of laws as Republicans, who control the House. But, he noted that it’s not necessarily a bad thing for Congress to be less productive than normal.

“If you’re Republican, you believe in less government, and not doing something is sometimes a good thing,” Cole said. “Just because we passed a law, doesn’t mean it was a good law and doesn’t mean it has a positive effect. But again, I think it’s more a function of what the distribution of power is, how polarized the country is right now.”

For the last three decades, Congress has been significantly more productive during its first session, typically passing at least 90 public laws in that first year.

On just two occasions have lawmakers not reached that benchmark; during the 117th Congress when there were 81 public laws during the first year, and during the 113th, there were just over 70 public laws.

Michigan Democratic Sen. Debbie Stabenow, chair of the Agriculture Committee, said there won’t be much time left in 2024 after factoring in work on the farm bill, government funding legislation, and the elections.

“I’m continuing to work hard to get a bipartisan farm bill and work through issues related to that,” Stabenow said. “And then there certainly will be other things that need to be addressed as well. But way too much time is going to be taken up by appropriations.”

The elections, she said, “will take a lot of the attention” away from legislative work in Congress.

“They always do,” Stabenow said.

Shutdown headaches

Congress isn’t set to return to Capitol Hill until Jan. 8, less than two weeks before a Jan. 19 deadline to complete work on four of the government funding bills. The deadline for the remaining eight bills comes two weeks after that, on Feb. 2.

Lawmakers were supposed to approve the full dozen bills before the start of the current fiscal year on Oct. 1, but they’ve used two stopgap bills to push off making any final decisions.

Senators will need to continue negotiations on border security and immigration policy in order to move forward with a $110 billion emergency funding package for Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan, and U.S. border security.

Republicans have insisted they won’t approve the emergency funding until there’s a bipartisan agreement to change when and how immigrants, including asylum seekers, are allowed to enter the United States.

Lawmakers will need to address a long-term reauthorization of the Federal Aviation Administration after passing a short-term, temporary extension in December.

Republicans and Democrats will need to broker a deal on how to reauthorize the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA, especially the section of the law that allows for warrantless searches of the electronic communications of non-citizens living outside the United States.

The program has been criticized by members of both political parties for several reasons, including that the process inevitably gains access to Americans’ phone calls, emails, and other forms of communication without a court order.

Lawmakers will need to reach a bipartisan deal on the five-year reauthorization of the farm bill, another must-pass piece of legislation that Congress did not actually finish work on last year.

In the Senate, Democrats are expected to keep confirming President Joe Biden’s judicial and executive nominations. That task would likely fall along the wayside if Republicans gain control of that chamber in November and Biden remains president.

Impeachment could move ahead

In the House, lawmakers could become increasingly occupied with the GOP’s attempts to impeach Biden, though Speaker Mike Johnson insists he’s not going to bring that to the floor before there’s sufficient evidence.

Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, said during his last press conference of 2023 that he viewed impeaching Biden as a legal decision and not a political one.

But he declined to set a timeline for an impeachment vote, despite calls from some conservative members to move quickly, possibly before the 2024 presidential election.

“If you follow the Constitution and you do the right thing, you cannot rush it,” Johnson said.

The House began an unofficial impeachment inquiry into Biden last year when Kevin McCarthy was still speaker. After Johnson became speaker, the chamber voted along party lines in December to open an official impeachment inquiry.

Oversight and Accountability Chair James Comer of Kentucky, Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan of Ohio and Ways and Means Chair Jason Smith of Missouri are the three GOP lawmakers leading up the impeachment inquiry.

Election overwhelms everything else

Republican lawmakers in the House and Democratic senators aren’t entirely sure what else may make its way onto the floor next year, though they all expect the November elections will overshadow Congress.

The entire House and one-third of the Senate will be up for reelection. Voters will also decide whether Democrats maintain control of the White House or if they want a Republican to sit in the Oval Office once again.

Virginia Democratic Sen. Tim Kaine said during the first half of next year he plans to focus on the National Defense Authorization Act, the annual policy bill that lawmakers just approved in December but will need to debate and pass all over again this year.

Congress could take up a Supreme Court ethics bill, following a string of stories from ProPublica exposing lavish gifts and trips that Justice Clarence Thomas took without disclosing, Kaine said.

The Senate Judiciary Committee approved a new code of ethics for the nation’s highest court in July, but that bill hasn’t made its way onto the floor. The justices released their own ethics code in November, but many critics of their transparency said it didn’t do enough.

“I think Supreme Court ethics would be a good thing to vote on,” Kaine said.

Virginia Republican Rep. Bob Good, incoming chair of the House Freedom Caucus, said in mid-December that he expects the group of far-right lawmakers will have input into that chamber’s legislative agenda.

Good didn’t list any bills he wants leadership to put on the floor this year but said “we’re having discussions about that very thing.”

Republicans, Good said, need to be “united as a party in cutting our spending, securing our border, and defending our constitutional freedoms.”

Michigan Sen. Gary Peters, chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, declined to say if there are any bills he wants party leadership to bring to the floor this year to highlight the differences between the two parties.

But he did say there will be “no shortage of ways to show … the clear differences between Democrats and Republicans.”

“We’ll highlight that in the campaigns and we’ll continue to do that next year,” Peters said.

Florida Republican Rep. Kat Cammack said she’d like to see the House take up an overhaul of the spending process and border security legislation, but she noted that many of the GOP bills won’t move through the Democratic Senate.

“We can’t control the Senate,” Cammack said. “And the Senate has been exceptional in the sense they have not picked up hardly anything that the House has passed.”

U.S. House speaker leads GOP lawmakers to the border to slam Biden on immigration

House Speaker Mike Johnson visited the southern U.S. border Wednesday with a group of House Republicans. (Photo courtesy of Johnson's office)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson led a delegation of House Republicans on a Wednesday trip to the U.S.-Mexico border to demand hard-line immigration proposals in exchange for passage of President Joe Biden’s emergency global security supplemental request.

“If President Biden wants a supplemental spending bill focused on national security, it better begin by defending America’s national security,” Johnson, of Louisiana, said. “It begins right here on our Southern border.”

The press conference in Eagle Pass, Texas, came as the Senate is trying to strike a bipartisan deal on immigration policy that has been tied to passage of the supplemental package. The White House in 2023 sent Congress an emergency supplemental request of roughly $106 billion for global security for Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan, and U.S. border security.

Separately, quickly approaching funding deadlines of Jan 19 and Feb. 2 could throw Congress into a partial government shutdown in two stages.

Johnson said that negotiations for government funding are ongoing and that two top priorities for House Republicans are border security and to “reduce nondefense discretionary spending.”

There is still no agreement on a total spending level for the current fiscal year, known as the topline.

Increase in migrants

The number of migrants coming to the U.S. border to claim asylum has continued to rise, with the most recent data from U.S. Customs and Border Protection recording more than 483,000 encounters in total for fiscal year 2024 that began on Oct. 1.

White House spokesperson Andrew Bates criticized Johnson and the Republicans for visiting the border instead of passing the Biden administration’s emergency supplemental request that included about $14 billion for U.S. border security before leaving for a three-week recess in December.

“Speaker Johnson is continuing to block President Biden’s proposed funding to hire thousands of new Border Patrol agents, hire more asylum officers and immigration judges, provide local communities hosting migrants additional grant funding, and invest in cutting edge technology that is critical to stopping deadly fentanyl from entering our country,” Bates said.

In the House, Republicans are insisting on immigration policies from legislation passed in that chamber, H.R. 2. Biden has promised to veto it.

It’s also unclear if Johnson would accept a bipartisan agreement from the Senate. He argued that the House “has done its job” in passing H.R. 2.

“H.R. 2 is the necessary ingredient,” Johnson said.

However, Senate Democrats have already stated that H.R. 2 is a non-starter.

GOP immigration policies

That legislation the House passed in May mirrors Trump-era immigration policies, such as resuming hundreds of miles of construction of a border wall, stripping funding from nonprofits that aid migrants, beefing up staffing of Border Patrol agents, and restricting the use of parole programs.

Republicans are seeking to curb the Biden administration’s use of parole to allow nationals from Haiti, Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela to work temporarily in the U.S.

The delegation on Wednesday was also led by Rep. Tony Gonzales of Texas, whose congressional district is on the border. His office, and Johnson’s office, did not respond to States Newsroom’s request for a list of all the GOP lawmakers in attendance. Johnson said there were 64 members on the trip.

GOP lawmakers who said they traveled to the border with Johnson, according to social media posts, included Georgia Rep. Rick Allen of Augusta.

Johnson said that Republicans met with local residents and sheriffs and toured a CBP processing facility.

He criticized the Biden administration for rolling back immigration policies from the Trump administration, such as stopping the construction of the border wall and ending the “remain in Mexico” policy.

The protocols require migrants from Mexico who are seeking asylum to remain in Mexico while their paperwork is processed, but many advocates have documented harm, separation, and deaths to those who must comply with the program.

In October, the Biden administration decided to allow for the construction of additional border wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, angering Democrats and immigration advocates.

Mayorkas impeachment to be launched

The House Homeland Security Committee on Jan. 10 will also hold a hearing to begin an impeachment case against U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas over his handling of immigration at the border.

Rep. Mark Green of Tennessee, who chairs the committee, said at the border press conference that his committee has finished its investigations into Mayorkas and that “you’re going to see a lot more coming here very soon.”

“The greatest domestic threat to the national security and the safety of the American people is Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas,” Green said. “He, through his policies, has defied and subverted the laws passed by the United States Congress.”

In a statement to States Newsroom, DHS spokesperson Mia Ehrenberg said that House Republicans were “wasting valuable time and taxpayer dollars pursuing a baseless political exercise that has been rejected by members of both parties and already failed on a bipartisan vote.

“There is no valid basis to impeach Secretary Mayorkas, as senior members of the House majority have attested, and this extreme impeachment push is a harmful distraction from our critical national security priorities,” Ehrenberg said. “Secretary Mayorkas and the Department of Homeland Security will continue working every day to keep Americans safe.”

Courthouse demolition will cost taxpayers

(Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

The old Habersham County courthouse is slated to be demolished this year. After years of sitting idle, the county is now pushing through with a plan to tear down the eyesore of a building – at taxpayers’ expense.

The question of what to do with the old courthouse has been lingering in the public consciousness for years. In 2016, county officials and community members began talking about the future fate of the building once the county moved its offices into the new administration building across town.

As Now Habersham reported last week, the county is gathering bids from contractors to tear down the structure. The plan is to tear it down at taxpayers’ expense.

The lone bid

A year ago, the City of Clarkesville made a bid to purchase the courthouse property, but the county did not accept it. Habersham County Finance Director Tim Sims said that since there was only one bidder, the process had to start over and be rebid according to state law.

In February 2023, seemingly in response to that decision, Clarkesville placed a six-month moratorium on multi-family developments in the city. The move stalled talk of developing the courthouse into condominiums.

The Clarkesville City Council placed a moratorium on apartment complexes in Feb. 2023. (Jerry Neace/Now Habersham)

The moratorium also gave the city some control over the property’s development and spurred discussions between the city and the county as to what would be the best use for the downtown square property.

Grant funding

In March 2023, the Habersham County Development Authority discussed the challenges facing potential developers. The Authority said the city’s infrastructure would have a difficult time supporting an apartment building where the old courthouse is located. The Authority also discussed the county and city jointly applying for a grant to develop the property and address the infrastructure issues.

The next month, county officials and the Development Authority determined the property would sell faster without the building. They looked at possibly securing a Community Development Block Grant from the Department of Community Affairs (DCA) to cover demolition costs.

Then- county grant coordinator, Lauren Long, explained to the Authority at a meeting in May 2023 that securing a grant would be a long and tedious process. According to DCA, the county would most likely meet the requirements for the grant. However, there would be a few steps required before the county could move forward with a grant application. According to Sims, one of those steps was an environmental study that may have cost as much as $150,000. However, since the grant wasn’t applied for, the actual cost for the study was never determined.

IGA

The Habersham County Board of Commissioners (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The county did not apply for a grant, and three months later, Habersham County commissioners voted to have the taxpayers pay for the courthouse demolition.

In a 3-2 vote, commissioners agreed to an Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA) for the Development Authority and Clarkesville to split the cost 50/50. The county will pay interest on the loan until the property is sold after demolition.

Proceeds from the sale of the property will be used to repay the loan amount, which under the terms of the IGA, is not to exceed $500,000.

If the county had applied for a grant, it could have potentially saved taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars since DCA would only require a 5% match (or $25,000) on a half-million dollar grant.

Chances are good such a grant would have been approved. According to Long, DCA looks favorably upon partnership grants.

Why the sudden rush?

(Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

The sudden urgency of demolishing the courthouse after years of letting it sit idle has put taxpayers on the hook for a $500,000 loan plus interest.

Proceeds from the sale are expected to cover that, but that’s money the county could have, otherwise, added to its coffers.

With the time that has elapsed since last February, the county, Development Authority, and the city could have developed a partnership sooner and applied for a grant that may have only cost the taxpayers $25,000.

Commissioner Bruce Palmer was the only commissioner who advocated for the county to seek grant funding for the courthouse demolition. He and Commissioner Jimmy Tench were the dissenting votes at the commission’s August 2023 meeting. Tench advocated for saving the courthouse for future office space and storage.

To this day, Palmer says it would have been the wise thing to do.

“Just my opinion, but I think it would have been wise to at least go through the grant process. The worst thing they could say is no.” Palmer added, “Even if it delayed the project, I think the county, the city, and the development authority would all be better off to pursue a grant.”

This article has been updated with new information that was requested but not provided until after its original publication

Cynthia “Cindy” Bell Stephens

Cynthia “Cindy” Bell Stephens, age 66, of Sautee, Georgia (Skylake Community), passed away on Tuesday, January 2, 2024, following a three-year battle with cancer.

Mrs. Stephens was born September 30, 1957, in Houston, Texas, to the late Thomas and Marietta Bell. Cindy was a proud alumna of the University of Houston School of Business, where she honed the skills that would propel her to a successful career in the banking industry. Her journey in finance spanned many years, culminating in her elevation to the executive level. Notably, she made significant contributions during her time at Enron, where her exceptional work ethic earned her the reputation as the most respected in her field.

Beyond her professional achievements, Cindy was a woman of profound warmth and kindness. She cherished her husband Danny, sister Cheryl, nephews, extended family, and a wide circle of friends. The Skylake Community held a special place in her heart, and she found joy in the simple pleasures of life – from her beloved dogs to the horses in the meadow, the cows at the Indian mound, the little blue door church, and the fields of corn in the summer, and a miniature horse she called, “Buddy.”

Cindy’s inner and outer beauty were a reflection of her compassionate spirit. Her genuine nature ensured that she never had an enemy, and many considered her the best friend they ever had. Her love extended beyond people, as she was an avid animal lover, appreciating the beauty of wild creatures outdoors and the companionship of her cherished pets at home. Gardening was another of her passions, and she found solace and joy among the plants she nurtured.

In the face of a courageous battle with cancer, Cindy displayed unwavering strength and grace, never allowing her circumstances to dampen her spirit. She will be remembered as a mentor and inspiration to many. Her most cherished roles were that of a loving wife, devoted sister, and sister-in-law, aunt, and friend.

Survivors include her loving husband of 39 years, Danny Stephens, of Sautee; sister and brother-in-law, Cheryl and David Rowell, of Sautee; brother, Thomas Bell, Jr., of Houston, TX; brother-in-law and his wife, Bobby and Gail Stephens, of Houston, TX; step-daughter, Sandra Lynn Stephens, of Alto Boquete, Panama; nephews, John Thomas Walker, James Cody Walker, Ross Alan Walker, Trent Austin Rowell; nieces, Kara Dawn Guthrie, Kori Leigh Griggers; and numerous great-nephews, great-nieces; and beloved best-friend, Sugar.

A Memorial Service will be held at 11:00 a.m., January 13, 2024, at the Skylake Clubhouse, 77 Skylake Road, Sautee, Georgia 30571.

The family will provide lunch and receive friends following the service.

In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the Charles Smithgall Humane Society, P.O. Box 2090, Cleveland, Georgia 30528. Telephone: 706-865-4135 (https://www.charlessmithgallhumanesociety.org)

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, North Chapel, at 245 Central Avenue, Demorest, Georgia 30535. Telephone: 706-778-1700.

Bank robbery suspect arrested after multi-agency collaboration

Gainesville bank robbery suspect Abel Aguilar (Hall County Sheriff's Office)

A suspected bank robber is in jail, and law enforcement collaboration is being credited with helping to track him down and arrest him.

The suspect, 26-year-old Abel Aguilar of Gainesville, is being held in the Hall County Jail. Police charged him with robbery, theft, and theft by taking a motor vehicle.

According to Gainesville police, Aguilar is believed to have stolen a van before the robbery. He allegedly used that vehicle to flee after holding up a teller at a Wells Fargo bank on January 2.

This Wells Fargo Bank on Thompson Bridge Road in Gainesville, Georgia, was robbed on Jan. 2, 2024. (Gainesville PD/Facebook)

Authorities say Aguilar entered the bank at 1368 Browns Bridge Road and handed the teller a note demanding cash.

He fled the scene with an undisclosed amount of cash.

Multi-agency collaboration

Police released surveillance photos of the suspect within hours of the incident.

Investigators say they were able to determine that Aguilar had stolen a van in Gainesville and used that vehicle to flee after the bank robbery. Police say North Georgia law enforcement agencies started working together to track and find Aguilar. He was arrested in Gwinnett County after trying to flee from Suwanee authorities.

“The collaboration by multiple agencies from across the region to bring this suspect to custody was a driving force in this investigation. This shows the dedication and partnerships our law enforcement have across North Georgia to protect our communities,” says Chief Jay Parrish.

Aguilar is being held in the Hall County Jail.

The Hall County Sheriff’s Office and police departments in Jefferson and Commerce also assisted with the investigation.

This article was written with assistive AI technology