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Dr. John Hendrix attends final Demorest City Council meeting

Demorest Mayor Jerry Harkness embraces Council member Dr. John Hendrix after presenting him with a plague denoting his time on the Demorest city council. Tuesday night was Hendrix's last council meeting. (City of Demorest Facebook livestream)

In a significant moment for the Demorest City Council, Dr. John Hendrix participated in his last council meeting as a voting member on Tuesday night. Concluding a single term, Hendrix chose not to seek reelection this year, marking the end of an era for the city council.

At the end of the meeting, Mayor Jerry Harkness presented Hendrix with a plaque and expressed his appreciation, “ I appreciate you. I appreciate you as a council member. I appreciate the service that you have done for our community.”

After accepting the plaque, Hendrix replied, “ It’s been an honor to serve this city and the town I grew up in. I will always relish this.”

Hendrix made his final motion with the council to adjourn the meeting.

Controversial Term

Hendrix’s four-year term was marked by political tumult and controversies within Demorest, creating challenges that tested the resilience of local governance. The initial two years saw citizens requesting the resignations of Hendrix, Council member Nathan Davis, and then City Manager Kim Simonds due to political upheaval. Despite two failed recall attempts, Hendrix weathered the storm and continued to serve.

Throughout his term, Demorest faced legal challenges, including lawsuits filed by Piedmont University accusing city officials of improper water and sewer rate increases and other alleged illegal activities. While many officials were named in the lawsuit, Hendrix was notably excluded.

The council witnessed the dismissal and subsequent reinstatement of Police Chief Robin Krockum, as well as the departure of city attorney Joey Homans and city treasurer Joely Mixon.

Demorest council member Dr. John Hendrix served on the Demorest city council for one term. Tuesday night was his last meeting as a council member. (Hadley Cottingham/NowHabersham.com)

Overcoming negativity

In the last two years, Demorest worked towards overcoming past events. Key changes included the resignation of City Manager Kim Simonds and the appointment of Mark Musselwhite to the position. The city, through its Downtown Development Authority, made significant strides, acquiring the old Demorest Elementary School property and implementing renovations that transformed the space into a new City Hall and council meeting venue.

The gymnasium was opened to the public and the ballfield saw upgrades that resulted in the recognition of former Eagle Scout Travis Roseman and the rededication of the ballfield to former Cub Scout Brent Lee Moore.

The city council saw the retirement of Piedmont University President James Mellichamp, who spearheaded the lawsuit against the city. They saw the lawsuit with the university settled out of court and the appointment of Marshall Criser as university president, a positive move that has garnered a renewed partnership between the city and the university.

The city has built a new pavilion in Demorest City Park to include bathrooms. All part of accommodating patrons of city events and the Glorious Fourth celebration held by the city each 4th of July.

Hendrix spearheaded the efforts for an ethics ordinance that was passed in November of 2022 resulting in the city becoming recognized by the Georgia Municipal Association (GMA) as a City of Ethics.

Hendrix also saw the city become certified through GMA as a City of Civility, an initiative brought forward by Council member Shawn Allen. The city council adopted the Civility Resolution in February of this year. The civility initiative is for elected officials and staff to recognize that they can agree to disagree with stakeholders without shouting and disrespecting one another. It reinforces finding common ground in disagreements and working forward from that point in a positive manner.

Another GMA initiative, Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging (DEIB), gained traction under Hendrix’s guidance. The city council, in its pursuit of DEIB certification, will undergo training, pass resolutions, and identify areas of interest aligned with the initiative.

Hendrix did not seek reelection. Council-member elect Jimmy Davis won his election bid and will be sworn in in January and fill Hendrix’s seat on the Demorest City Council.

Selina Ann McClary

Nina McClary, age 59, of Demorest, Georgia entered rest on Thursday, November 30, 2023.

Ms. McClary was born on May 10, 1964, in Rockdale County, Georgia to the late Lewis and Vivian King Hayes. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her brother, Jason King; and maternal grandmother, Rudean Lovell.

Nina will be remembered for her artistic abilities, having enjoyed painting as well as music. Nina had a big heart and loved all those she knew.

Survivors include her sister, Tina Hayes, of Clarkesville; brother and sister-in-law, Roger and Linda Hayes, of Sharpsburg, GA; sister, Tammy King, of Jonesboro, GA.

A Private Family Memorial Service will be held at a later date.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, South Chapel, at 1370 Industrial Boulevard, Baldwin, Georgia 30511. Telephone: 706-778-7123.

White County employees recognized at Christmas luncheon

White County Economic Develop Director John Sell, Harry Barton and County Clerk/Human Resource Director Shanda Murphy

CLEVELAND, Ga. – The annual White County Government Employee Christmas Luncheon was held Tuesday at Truett McConnell University. During the luncheon, the county celebrated the dedication and hard work of its employees. The board of commissioners used the occasion to recognize employees by presenting service awards to them.

Commission Chairman Travis Turner said the awards highlight the outstanding contributions of individuals who symbolized over 380 collective years of service to the county.

40-year service award recipient Garrison Baker

Recently retired Probate Judge Garrison Baker, who still assists the county, was awarded a 40-year service award.

20-year service award, from left: Linda Holman, Linda Chambers, Corey Hyde, and Craig Bryant. Not Pictured, Sheriff Richard Kelley and Mark Taylor.

15-year Service Award, from left: Beverly O’Kelley, Anthony Sims, Marcia Thomas

10-year service award, from left: Lon Gilbert, LaDonna Smith, Bo Medlock, Michelle Brookshire, Robbie Burke, Bonnie Abernathy, Cody Allison, Rondal Warwick. Not Pictured – Clayton Hammond, Anthony Kirk

5-year service award, from left: Paul Abele, Carson Finley, Sherry Arrington, Amber Donaldson, Melissa Ayers, James Lindeland, Deborah Leggitt, Katrina Trott. Not Pictured, John Carter, Kaylee Cantrell, Jody Holland, Dylan Loggins, Eric Schoor

White County Economic Develop Director John Sell, Harry Barton, and County Clerk/Human Resource Director Shanda Murphy

White County Board of Commissioners also recognized two individuals who will soon be retiring. Michelle Brookshire has served as an Administrative Assistant for the Board of Commissioners Office for the last 10 years, and Harry Barton has served White County for the past 42 years, including the last several years as the County’s Planning Director.

At the conclusion of the event, door prizes were awarded to lucky ticket holders.

US Supreme Court to decide fate of medication abortion access nationwide

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) —  The U.S. Supreme Court announced Wednesday it will hear oral arguments and decide whether broad access to the abortion pill can remain legal across the United States.

The justices’ decision to hear the case this term will put abortion access and the politics that comes with it back in front of the nation’s highest court just before voters head to the polls for the 2024 presidential election.

The drug at the center of the case, mifepristone, is used in more than half of pregnancy terminations within the United States as part of a two-pharmaceutical regimen that includes misoprostol as the second medication. Both are also used in miscarriage treatment.

Patients’ ability to access mifepristone cannot change until the Supreme Court issues its ruling, under an order the court put out earlier this year.

The nine members of the court will be answering three questions in their ruling, including whether changes the U.S. Food and Drug Administration made to prescribing and dosage in 2016 and 2021 were “arbitrary and capricious.” Those changes that expanded access included shipping the abortion pill to patients through the mail.

The Supreme Court will also decide if the federal district court judge who ruled earlier this year to overturn the FDA’s original 2000 approval of the pharmaceutical “properly granted preliminary relief.”

Nancy Northup, president and CEO of the Center for Reproductive Rights, said in a written statement the Supreme Court “has never invalidated a long-standing FDA approval like they are being asked to do here.”

“The stakes are enormous in post-Roe America,” Northup said. “Even those living in states with strong protections for abortion rights could have their ability to access mifepristone severely restricted if the Court rules against the FDA.”

Northup said the ability for health care providers to prescribe the medication through telehealth and for patients to get it delivered to their homes became “critical” after the court ended the constitutional right to an abortion last year.

“Abortion pills have been used safely in the U.S. for more than 20 years, and they are more important than ever in this post-Roe landscape,” Northup said. “That is precisely why the anti-abortion movement is attacking them.”

Alliance Defending Freedom Senior Counsel Erin Hawley said in a written statement the anti-abortion organization urged the Supreme Court to determine “that the FDA acted unlawfully in removing common-sense safeguards for women and authorizing dangerous mail-order abortions.”

“Like any federal agency, the FDA must rationally explain its decisions,” Hawley said. “Yet its removal of common-sense safeguards — like a doctor’s visit before women are prescribed chemical abortion drugs — does not reflect scientific judgment but rather a politically driven decision to push a dangerous drug regimen.”

Constitutional right to abortion overturned

From left: Associate Justices Amy Coney Barrett, Neil M. Gorsuch, Sonia Sotomayor, and Clarence Thomas, Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr., and Associate Justices Ketanji Brown Jackson, Samuel A. Alito, Jr., Elena Kagan, and Brett M. Kavanaugh. (Collection of the U.S. Supreme Court)

The nine Supreme Court justices who will hear the case and ultimately render a ruling are the same justices who overturned the constitutional right to abortion in a June 2022 ruling.

In the majority opinion in that case, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the conservative justices wrote that “the authority to regulate abortion is returned to the people and their elected representatives.”

Following that decision, states throughout the country began to implement laws of their choosing, with some setting significant restrictions on when abortion is legal and other states moving to expand access.

Several states have prohibited legal access to the abortion pill mifepristone, despite it being an FDA-approved pharmaceutical.

In mid-November 2022, Alliance Defending Freedom filed a lawsuit challenging the original approval of the abortion pill in 2000 as well as the changes to when and how the drug could be used that were made in 2016 and during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of the Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, the American Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the American College of Pediatricians and the Christian Medical & Dental Associations as well as four doctors from California, Indiana, Michigan and Texas.

U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas Judge Matthew Joseph Kacsmaryk ruled in April 2023 that mifepristone should be removed from the market entirely, though he wrote that he did “not second-guess FDA’s decision-making lightly.”

“But here, FDA acquiesced on its legitimate safety concerns — in violation of its statutory duty — based on plainly unsound reasoning and studies that did not support its conclusions,” Kacsmaryk wrote.

The Biden administration requested the ruling be placed on hold until it could appeal the case, which was ultimately granted by the Supreme Court. That stay from the justices ensured mifepristone remains legal until they issue a ruling.

5th Circuit ruling

The case went before the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans, Louisiana, which heard arguments in May 2023.

The three-judge panel ruled in August 2023 that it believed the abortion pill should stay available nationwide, but that dosage and use should revert to what was in place before the FDA began implementing changes in 2016.

The abortion drug Mifepristone, also known as RU486. (Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images)

That ruling was immediately placed on hold pending an appeal to the Supreme Court. Had the justices decided not to hear the appeal, that ruling would have taken effect.

Going back to what was in place before 2016 would prevent mifepristone from being prescribed during a telehealth appointment or sent through the mail.

Only doctors would be able to prescribe mifepristone, removing the option for other healthcare providers with the ability to prescribe medication from being able to do so with that particular drug.

Prescriptions could only be written for up to seven weeks gestation, less than the 10-week threshold currently used by prescribers.

Patients would need to attend three in-person doctor’s office appointments in order to receive a medication abortion. The dosage and timing of mifepristone as well as the second drug, misoprostol, would both revert to what was used more than seven years ago.

DOJ appeal

Following the 5th Circuit’s ruling, the U.S. Justice Department appealed its ruling to the Supreme Court, arguing the two lower courts made “serious legal errors.”

“The loss of access to mifepristone would be damaging for women and healthcare providers around the Nation,” the DOJ wrote in the 42-page document. “For many patients, mifepristone is the best method to lawfully terminate their early pregnancies. They may choose mifepristone over surgical abortion because of medical necessity, a desire for privacy, or past trauma.”

“Surgical abortion is an invasive medical procedure that can have greater health risks for some patients, such as those who are allergic to anesthesia,” DOJ added.

Numerous medical organizations have filed briefs to either the district court or the appeals court or both, arguing that science supports the use of mifepristone for medication abortion up to 10 weeks.

More than a dozen medical groups — including American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, American Medical Association and Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine — wrote in a 48-page brief filed in the appeals case that the “overwhelming weight of the scientific evidence supports the FDA’s finding that mifepristone is safe and effective.”

“Mifepristone is one of the most studied medications prescribed in the U.S. and has a safety profile comparable to ibuprofen,” they wrote.

The medical organizations wrote that “denying or limiting access to mifepristone will not make patients safer — it will actively jeopardize their health.”

“Pregnancy can be dangerous,” they wrote. “The risks of maternal mortality in the U.S. are alarmingly high and drastically higher for Black women, poor women, and all those whose access to reproductive care has been historically and geographically limited.”

White House, congressional reaction

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in a written statement released Wednesday after the Supreme Court announced it would take up the case that the Biden administration “will continue to stand by FDA’s independent approval and regulation of mifepristone as safe and effective.”

“Across the country, we’ve seen unprecedented attacks on women’s freedom to make their own health decisions,” Jean Pierre said. “States have imposed extreme and dangerous abortion bans that put the health of women in jeopardy and that threaten to criminalize doctors for providing the health care that their patients need and that they are trained to provide.”

Washington state Democratic Sen. Patty Murray said in a written statement Wednesday the “case has nothing to do with the safety or efficacy of FDA-approved mifepristone — which is not up for debate — but about Republicans’ anti-women, anti-science, and anti-abortion agenda which they continue to force on the American people despite repeated and overwhelming rejection at the ballot box and in the court of public opinion.”

“Beyond the truly devastating harm this case would do to women’s access to essential health care — at a time where medication abortion accounts for more than half of abortions in the U.S. — the implications for other FDA-approved medications that Americans rely on are enormous,” Murray said. “It is essential that the Supreme Court overturn the Fifth Circuit’s ruling and definitively reject the plaintiffs’ outrageous, politically motivated efforts to drastically restrict access to necessary and lifesaving abortion care throughout the entire country.”

The US avoided a recession in 2023. What’s the outlook for 2024?

Next year is packed with potential shifts in the economy, but many economists and investment analysts expect that the country will likely avoid a recession in 2024 even as growth slows in the first half of the year.

Here’s what economists shared about their expectations for some key metrics as well as their concerns about what could change their outlook.

The job market will remain strong but not as hot as 2023

The unemployment rate has remained below 4% for nearly two years, with the unemployment rate falling to 3.7% in November. But hiring has cooled off from the start of the year and retail employment dropped by nearly 40,000 jobs in the most recent jobs report, which leaves the question: How stable will the labor market be in 2024?

Mike Konczal, director of macroeconomic analysis at the Roosevelt Institute, a New York-based think tank, said that although there has been a slowdown in the hiring rate, there have not been many layoffs, which bodes well for next year if the Federal Reserve does not “overshoot” in its efforts to slow the economy. The Fed has paused its campaign of raising interest rates, which it began in March 2022, and economists expect the central bank will hold rates steady when it meets Dec. 12-13.

“Imagine the unemployed as a pool of water. Instead of more unemployed people going in, it’s just draining a little less. That’s a different kind of dynamic,” he said. “We normally are used to, in a slow labor market, hires essentially just stop and layoffs increase. Some people pointed out that a lot of the change in employment has happened among younger people. It’s not been a broad-based slowdown in 25 to 54-year-olds.”

Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, said he thinks the labor market for 2024 will remain stable and that job growth will be resilient but slow.

“I think 2024 should be an OK year for workers — still plenty of jobs and low unemployment, and while wage growth will moderate, it should remain strong enough to outpace inflation,” he said.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in November, wages rose 4% over the past year, compared to inflation which has been easing, with November’s report showing overall prices rising 3.1% over 12 months and down from 3.2% in October.

Jesse Rothstein, professor of public policy and economics at the University of California Berkeley, said the strength of the labor market partly depends on how successful the Fed’s interest rate policies are.

“If inflation is coming down and unemployment isn’t going up, and they can continue this tight roadblock, I think we’ll see the economy cooling off a bit and wages continuing to increase, to catch up to the inflation that we saw over the last couple of years, but not dramatically outpace that,” Rothstein said. “ … If they’re not successful, the risk is that they overtighten and tip us over into a recession, but thus far, there’s no sign that that’s what’s going on.”

Workers will have the power to keep organizing

Workers in retail, auto-manufacturing, media, and shipping have made news through their labor organizing this year, particularly during what was dubbed the “hot labor summer,” when thousands of workers went on strike or heated up contract negotiations with threats to strike. The tight labor market and greater profits in some industries gave workers the power to demand better working conditionshigher wages, and contracts that were more inclusive of lower-paid workers, and that’s not expected to change in the coming year.

For workers to lose significant leverage in their fights for safer workplaces and higher wages the unemployment rate would have to rise significantly, Konczal said. Organizers will also still enjoy the advantage of a very pro-union National Labor Relations Board, he said.

“When I think more about the background conditions for which workers can exercise some power, I think the issue is less like 3.9% versus 3.6% unemployment, but whether or not the unemployment rate is in the threes or in the fives or sixes or sevens,” he said. “The labor market as a whole is still going to be a strong input to the resurgent labor campaigns.”

He does have some concerns about whether the service sector is going to face headwinds in its workers’ efforts to organize unions as employment starts to slow for these jobs.

“Then again, if demand remains robust and workers do have an edge, I think they will still have the opportunity to push further,” he added.

The housing market will continue to be a challenge

Federal Reserve policy changes and pent-up demand for homes will result in an even more competitive housing market in many states and continuing challenges for people seeking affordable homes and rentals. However, some U.S. housing markets, particularly in the Sun Belt, will see housing prices stabilize. Prices will increase, but less quickly than in the past, as they come down from the unsustainable growth they experienced earlier in the pandemic.

Selma Hepp, chief economist for CoreLogic, said, “This year, when mortgage rates were slightly below 6%, we had quite a bit of surge in demand, so that’s telling me there’s quite a bit of pent-up demand out there but people are sitting on the sidelines and waiting out for mortgage rates to fall.”

She said baby boomers and first-time homebuyers are the biggest competitors in the housing market right now. With mortgage rates coming down slightly, first-time homebuyers have a higher share of the recent mortgage application growth, she said. Those buyers leaving the rental market will, in turn, affect rental prices.

Hepp said that while rents will continue to rise in 2024, they won’t shoot up as they have in the past few years and will begin to moderate in price.

“Historically, rents are up on a 3% year over year basis, and I think what’s what we’re going to revert back to, the reason being because folks who are priced out of the market for purchase are going to bring in renters or remaining renters because they’re not ready to buy or there isn’t inventory out there,” she said.

Zandi said that he doesn’t think the housing market will become affordable for many of the Americans currently priced out in the next year.

“I think we need to see some modest price declines, but that’s going to take some time because all those people who have 3.5% mortgages are going to be very reluctant to move. They’re only going to move when they have to divorce, death, children, or a job change and that could take some time,” he said. “It’s not that I think the worst is at hand in terms of home sales and affordability, but I don’t see the market becoming affordable to most Americans any time soon, certainly not in 2024.”

The Midwest will also continue to see some increased housing demand because of the federal government’s investment in semiconductor manufacturing, Hepp said.

Consumer spending will ‘push the economy forward’

Konczal and Zandi said they aren’t concerned that there will be enough of a significant change in consumer spending to hurt the economy in 2024 and that, so far, they are encouraged by what they see. Core prices, which excludes food prices and energy, rose 0.3% in November, up slightly from 0.2% in October, keeping the increase for the year at 4%. But neither Konczal nor Zandi see this as cause for alarm.

“In aggregate, there’s still a lot of strong savings and strong spending,” Konczal said. “Obviously, for many people, too many people, [savings] and other things are a real concern. But when we’re looking at the economy as a whole, it does seem like the spending is remaining quite strong, and financial conditions haven’t deteriorated either. … I think there’s every reason to assume that it will continue, especially if the Fed is willing to take yes for an answer with the fact that they brought down inflation.”

Despite higher housing prices, the financial health of many Americans has improved, Zandi said.

“People are still a lot wealthier than they were before the pandemic hit, and in the high-income households, low-income households, folks in the top two-thirds of the distribution of income, still have a lot of extra savings they built up during the pandemic that they appear willing to use when they need to maintain their purchasing power,” he said. “I think that the consumers are not going to spend with abandon, and that’s good because that would be the fodder for inflation and more rate hikes. But I think (they’ll) just do their part and continue to push the economy forward.”

What could go wrong?

Economists said that there is potential for economic gloom, depending on the political outcomes next year. Although the general election is about a year away and the numbers could change significantly between then and now, some polls have shown President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump running neck-and-neck. The political and social upheaval that close results could bring could also spell economic turmoil in 2024.

“It feels like it’s going to be very close, and therefore the potential for it being contested is very high, and there’s no upside to that,” Zandi said. “It’s just a matter of how much downside there will be, how much social unrest and violence there will be. Hopefully, we have none … But that’s certainly something to watch for sure. It is a risk to my optimism about the economy in 2024.”

He said that some of these worst-case scenarios could impact the stock and bond markets.

“A close and contested election could result in social unrest that would manifest most quickly and significantly in the stock and bond markets. Given how fragile consumer and business confidence already is, this could upend it, causing consumer spending and business investment to falter, and a recession ensue,” he said.

Rothstein, the Berkeley professor, said a repeat of a candidate refusing to accept their loss, as Trump and his supporters did in 2020, could be a major issue for the country, and although the economy isn’t his first concern when assessing the potential damage, it could pose a “big problem” for financial markets.

In addition to worries about the economic impact of the presidential election, economists are keeping their eye on the risk of a government shutdown. Although it was averted this year with the approval of a stopgap spending bill, Congress is staring down deadlines in January and February to work together on spending bills to avoid a shutdown.

“I think a government shutdown is always a threat to the economy,” Rothstein said. “If it’s shut down for more than a couple of days, you end up with huge impacts that ripple through the economy and it may cause a recession. Even if it doesn’t cause a recession, it definitely makes our economy more fragile and poorer. So I think we have to hope that the signs that we’ve avoided a shutdown so far will continue.”

This article comes to Now Habersham from States Newsroom

Geminid Meteor Shower peaks this week!

There are numerous meteor showers throughout the year, but one stands above all the rest: the Geminids. They are expected to peak across the Northern Hemisphere on Wednesday and Thursday nights, December 13 and 14.

The Geminids are a fairly new shower, first observed by R.P. Greg in Manchester, England, in 1862. During the first few years of its existence, the shower only produced a handful of meteors, but by the turn of the century, 20-30 meteors per hour were observed. Since then, the shower has continued to strengthen, with over 100 meteors per hour recorded regularly since the early 2000s.

I observed over 300 meteors in just three hours outside Dahlonega at the North Georgia Astronomical Observatory in the great shower year of 2014. That year, there was an extended period without moonlight which enhanced the celestial show.

A peculiar origin

The Geminid Shower is quite peculiar in its origin, which was not fully understood until 1983. That’s when astronomers found an asteroid that followed the same orbit as the observed meteors. This asteroid was eventually given the name 3200 Pantheon and is the only asteroid known to cause a meteor shower. The fact that this shower comes from an asteroid creates the numerous “fireball” (very bright) meteors that are observed.

The good news for 2023 is that it is an exceptional year to view this meteor shower. The moon is still new and won’t impact viewing. On top of that, clear skies are expected on Wednesday and Thursday nights during the peak, so we won’t be contending with clouds!

This year you should easily be able to see 40-60 meteors per hour from a dark sky site. The farther away from city lights, the better the show will be. In perfect conditions, over 100 meteors per hour may be seen, although most of these won’t be particularly bright.

Best viewing times

You should be able to see the meteors anytime after dark, but viewing will be good after 10 p.m. and even better after midnight.

The radiant in the constellation Gemini will reach its highest point in the sky around 2 a.m., which is when rates will peak. But don’t worry if you have to be up early for work and can’t stay out that late; you can still see plenty of meteors even as early as 8-9 p.m. thanks to the early sunsets.

If you do head outdoors to watch the meteor shower, bundle up – it’s going to be chilly. I highly recommend a sleeping bag and a beach chair that folds straight back to lie down on. It makes for a warmer, more comfortable viewing experience.

(Source: Greg Smye-Rumsby/ Astronomy Now/ Royal Astronomical Society)

You don’t have to have a view of the radiant to see plenty of meteors, but the eastern parts of the sky will see the highest meteor count.

So, grab a coat or a sleeping bag and get outside to enjoy this spectacular event!

HCHS boasts 15 on All-Region squad

Habersham Central High School junior running back Antonio Cantrell (8) celebrates with senior offensive lineman Wesley Sisk after scoring a touchdown against Shiloh High School. (Zack Myers/NowHabersham.com)

The All-Region football teams for Region 8 of Class AAAAAA were released on Friday and Habersham Central High School was well represented with 15 Raiders honored.

“I think it shows our kids are respected by our opponents we play,” said HCHS Head Coach Benji Harrison. “I make no bones about it: we play in a very tough region. When we get there and we start nominating players, our players are respected that they’re good football players.”

BEST OF THE BEST

Topping the list is the Region 8-AAAAAA (8-6A) Athlete of the Year, which went to junior wide receiver Zeke Whittington.

Whittington finished the season with 63 catches for 862 yards and nine touchdowns. He had four games with over 100 yards receiving, including the playoff game against Douglas County High School.

“When you mention Number 5 (Whittington) in the region meeting, they all know who he is. They know he’s a competitor,” Harrison said. “They joked and couldn’t believe he has another year. There wasn’t much debate in the room when we nominated him. They knew what kind of player he is and not only does he do it on the offensive side, he goes over and does it on the defensive side when we need him to.

“He’s very deserving. When you look at who we play in our region, I think it even stands out as more of an honor [to be Athlete of the Year],” he continued.

Whittington’s 63 catches this season pushed his career total to 219, setting the new school record at that mark. He has another season in 2024 to push that number to near unreachable.

The Raiders also had the region’s Defensive Player of the Year in senior Carter Barrett. 

Barrett is listed as a free safety on HCHS’s roster. He finished his 2023 campaign with 110 total tackles (55 solo, 55 assists) and 10.5 tackles for loss.

Barrett also tacked on four passes defended, three fumble recoveries and one forced fumble to his stat totals.

“Coaches are different than players. They all know their names, we all know their numbers. When you talk about Carter, number 23, [the coaches in the region] knows who number 23 is,” Harrison said of the senior. “What he does defensively causes offensive coaches to have a plan for him. A lot of times, that’s not the case. You don’t really have a plan for a safety. For him to force you to do that…he deserves it.”

FIRST TEAM

Fellow seniors Braden Henslee and Somdee Satiphone were First Team Defense honorees.

Henslee had 84 total tackles (22 solo, 64 assists), nine tackles for loss, two sacks, two quarterback hurries and a pass defended from his linebacker spot. 

Satiphone finished with 22 total tackles (16 solo, 6 assists), one tackle for loss, three interceptions and nine passes defended. He also returned kicks for the Raiders, which saw him amass 339 return yards on nine returns with kickoff return touchdowns against Stephens County and Jackson County high schools.

Senior guard Brad Chosewood was the lone Raider on the First Team Offense.

Senior Hayden Gailey was named First Team Punter.

Gailey punted the ball 22 times in the final seven games of the year, covering 814 yards and pinning four inside the 20-yard line.

SECOND TEAM

The Raiders had three representatives on the Second Team Offense.

Junior running back Antonio Cantrell finished his next-to-last season with 158 carries for 695 yards and 11 touchdowns.

Wide receiver Landyn Savage had 15 catches for 155 yards for HCHS.

Senior offensive lineman Jacob Adams was also named to the Second Team Offense.

Senior linebacker Jarred White and senior defensive lineman Alex Ethridge made their way to the Second Team Defense.

White’s 2023 campaign saw him total 85 total tackles (27 solo, 58 assists), 5.5 tackles for loss, one sack, one interception, one pass defended, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery.

Ethridge notched 34 total tackles (9 solo, 25 assists), 3.5 tackles for loss, a sack and a fumble recovery.

Sophomore Michael Hill was named the Second Team Kicker.

Hill covered 1,476 yards on 33 kickoffs for the Raiders this season. Hill hit 27-of-29 point after touchdown (PATs) tries and 3-of-5 field goal tries for a total of 36 points scored.

HONORABLE MENTIONS

Seniors Jonah Wilson, Aidan Cianci and Davey Sanders were all honorable mentions.

Wilson, listed as a safety, finished the year with 53 total tackles (23 solo, 30 assists), 1.5 tackles for loss, two passes defended, 1 forced fumble and a fumble recovery.

As a defensive lineman, Cianci totaled 35 total tackles (9 solo, 26 assists), one tackle for loss, three quarterback hurries, and one forced fumble.

Gainesville High baseball player injured in batting accident dies

Jeremy Medina was a member of the Gainesville High baseball team. He previously played at Tallulah Falls School. (Gainesville High School/Facebook)

Jeremy Medina, the Gainesville High School baseball player who was declared brain-dead last week after being hit in the head by a baseball bat during practice, has died, according to Northeast Georgia Health System.

The 17-year-old had been in a coma since November 20 when he was struck by the bat during afternoon practice as he leaned against a net.

Medina wanted to donate his organs. The hospital kept him on life support as the family waited for his grandmother to arrive.

“Following last week’s press conference and decision to support Jeremy’s wish for organ donation, we began the process of seeking a visa for his grandmother so she could travel to be with us for the honor walk,” the family said on December 12. “Sadly, his heart stopped last night about an hour before grandma arrived.”

The family says they are grateful for all of the prayers and support they’ve received over the last three weeks and appreciate everyone’s understanding as they take time to heal as a family.

Shop with a Hero delivers Christmas cheer to 12 Baldwin families

Baldwin Shop with a Hero families, volunteers, and students pose with Santa Claus after they have received their gifts. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The Baldwin Fire and Police Departments sponsor “Shop with a Hero” each year to bring Christmas to families. Monday morning, 12 students from Baldwin Elementary School, accompanied by their families and volunteers, were able to buy Christmas gifts that they would not have been able to this year because of financial challenges.

Big smiles and excitement

The students and their families arrived at Walmart Monday at 9:00 a.m. wearing big smiles and a lot of excitement. A budget was assigned for each family. Volunteers could not exceed the amount, distributing half of the money to be spent on clothing and the other half spent on toys or electronics.

The big man himself, Santa Claus, was on hand for the occasion, assisting families in selecting gifts from the various departments in the store.

Santa assists Adam Norton with sizing a bicycle helmet. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Tiffany White expressed her gratitude for the “Shop with a Hero” program. Her son Adam Norton is a student at Baldwin Elementary School.

“It means so much because we are, unfortunately, unable to provide toys for my child.” She adds, “It’s a sweet gesture for the kids that are here.”

The program is a blessing

Baldwin Elementary School Counselor Seresa Garrett believes this program is a blessing for the school. “For me, it is just a tremendous blessing and outpouring of love to our school that we can certainly feel. Not only at Christmas but all year long.”

The Christmas spirit flowed through the aisles as many of the students selected gifts, not only for themselves but for family members.

Zayden Tomas-Wade looks at toys during the Baldwin Shop with a Hero event at Walmart on Monday. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

A way to give back

Baldwin Fire Chief Joe Roy explained this is something the fire department and police department wanted to do to give back to the community and to help families in Baldwin who are having a hard time financially. He coordinates the “Shop with a Hero” program with Baldwin Elementary School administrators who assist in selecting the families each year.

Alegria Ramirez shops with her hero Baldwin Police Officer Aaron Spivey during the Baldwin Shop with a Hero event Monday. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Roy has been the organizer of the event each year since 2011, “We always go to the schools for Public Safety Week. We would hear stories from the teachers about children not having good Christmases. We wanted to help, and that’s one way we could.”

Nancy Meaders, the Walmart coordinator for the “Shop with a Hero” program, was the Walmart associate who rang up every student’s gifts after they completed their shopping. She stated this gesture means so much. “It means that the community is helping people that need the help.”

One family’s buggy of gifts after the Baldwin Shop with a Hero. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Santa Claus even weighed in on the event. He explained that for those that don’t believe in Santa that is fine. Christmas isn’t about Santa. “We have such an amazing community that gives back to the community with no expectation of receiving and that’s what Christmas is about.” He added, “It warms my heart.”

Zayden Tomas- Wade finds a quiet place to read one of the gifts that he received with the Baldwin Shop with a Hero. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Chief Roy wanted to thank everyone for the donations over the past year which have helped to make this a success for the students and their families. “I want to thank all of the people who donated to the fundraisers that we do throughout the year to raise money for ‘Shop with a Hero’. Without them, we couldn’t do it.”

Cleveland City Council approves purchase of $1.8 million ladder truck

(File Photo)

CLEVELAND, Ga. — The Cleveland City Council has approved a contract with an Atlanta company to purchase a new ladder truck.

During the council meeting on Monday, December 11, Cleveland Fire Chief Ricky Pruitt said Peach State Spartin was one of only two companies to submit bids. The cost of the new truck is $1.8 million. The city will use a Federal Emergency Management Agency grant of $952,000 to help with the purchase. The remainder of the cost will come from SPLOST funds.

Chief Pruitt said the current ladder truck can’t be certified to place personnel on. That truck is a 1989 model, and the city has been seeking funds and working toward purchasing a new ladder truck since 1999.

Chief Pruitt said the delivery won’t be soon.

“We’ll have to go in for a pre-construction meeting to go over everything to make sure we’re getting what was quoted on, and it will be delivered by or on June 1, 2025,” Pruitt said.

The new ladder truck is not designed primarily to fight fires but for the use of its extendable ladder, which could reach an eight-story building.

Precision Digital clears hurdle, Baldwin Council approves special use permit

The Baldwin City Council approved Precision Digital's special use permit request, paving the way for the high performance computing company to move forward with their project in the Airport Industrial Park. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

With the approval of The Baldwin City Council, Precision Digital can move forward with construction. After a short delay, the special use permit was approved at the December 11 Council meeting.

The special use permit allows Precision Digital to move forward with a high-performance data center and crypto-mining venture in the Airport Industrial Park.

Failed, tabled, approved

The measure failed and then was tabled at the council’s November 27 meeting when only the mayor and three council members were present. Council members Alice Venter and Erik Keith voted for the measure but Councilmember Theron Ayers dissented. A city charter technicality that requires three affirmative votes to pass a zoning ordinance forced Mayor Stephanie Almagno to table the zoning ordinance.

Monday night’s meeting changed everything for Precision Digital. The Mayor and Councilmembers Maarten Venter and Theron Ayers were the only members present for an in-person vote. However, Councilmembers Alice Venter and Erik Keith attended the meeting by telephone.

Council member Maarten Venter made the motion to approve the special use permit for Precision Digital. In a turn of events, Councilmember Theron Ayers seconded the motion. The measure passed unanimously.

Other business

Baldwin Attorney Jack Samuels calls for a public hearing for Jacob Bellamy’s variance request to expand his automotive business. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Jacob Bellamy, owner of Bellamy Automotive in Baldwin, had requested a variance to add additional space to his growing automotive business. The council first held a required public hearing. No citizens spoke in support or opposition to the variance.

The council moved forward by approving the variance request with Councilmember Alice Venter making the motion and seconded by Ayers. The variance request was approved by the council unanimously.

The city council also approved an update to its wrecker service ordinance. The wrecker ordinance was updated so the city could use their own list wrecker service and not rely on the county.

Cemetery Plot Revocation

Baldwin City Attorney Jack Samuels addressed the city council about the Cemetery Plot Revocation policy. He explained that some revisions were made since the work session but not changed substantially. All that was changed was wording to add clarity to the policy. The council approved the policy unanimously.

Mayor Almagno briefly spoke about the Mayor’s Reading Club Proclamation, an initiative introduced by the Georgia Municipal Association to promote literacy to children in grade school. The council approved the proclamation. The Mayor’s Reading Club Day will be June 7, 2024.

Raider football closes season with awards banquet

Habersham Central High School Head Football Coach Benji Harrison (center) addresses a crowd of parents and players with his coaching staff behind him at the annual Raider Football Banquet Sunday at Level Grove Baptist Church in Cornelia. (Zack Myers/NowHabersham.com)

Habersham Central High School honored members of its football program at its annual Raider Football Banquet Sunday at Level Grove Baptist Church in Cornelia.

Head coach Benji Harrison guided the event along throughout the afternoon as members of the eighth grade, junior varsity and varsity teams were lauded for their performances on the gridiron during the 2023 season.

Harrison said his main purpose in doing the banquet after the season is to send off the seniors in a shower of appreciation.

“That’s the big thing for me is to really let all those seniors know how much we appreciate them. The underclassmen as well. It’s to celebrate the fact they put in a lot of work,” Harrison said. “At the end of the year, you want to celebrate their accomplishments individually and as a team.

“To me, it’s just a celebration and a way of saying ‘Thank you,’ ‘We really see all the sacrifices you make,’ and ‘We appreciate you,’ he continued.

VARSITY

Overall, 17 different athletes garnered hardware for their hard work across the varsity season.

More than 30 athletes were recognized for their academic achievements of maintaining a 93, or better, average during football season. 

Around 12 of those were acknowledged by Region 8-AAAAAA for maintaining higher than a 95 average.

Scholar Athletes Academic Award

Senior Brad Chosewood was honored as the Raiders’ highest grade earner.

The offensive lineman, who was also named to the All-Region First Team Offense, is also on pace to be the HCHS Class of 2024 Salutatorian.

Breakout Player of the Year

The Raiders’ coaching staff split this award for this season, honoring an offensive and defensive player that showed up big for the team this season.

On the offensive side of the ball, Donovan Warren was the recipient of the award.

Warren, a sophomore running back, stepped into a backup role after an early season transfer pushed junior Antonio Cantrell into the starting role.

The sophomore finished his breakout season with 45 carries for 279 yards and four touchdowns. He crossed the 100-yard mark in a loss to Gainesville and was two yards shy of the century mark against Shiloh in the final regular season game.

On the defensive side, lineman Alex Ethridge took home the honors.

The senior totaled 34 tackles (9 solo, 25 assists) with 3.5 tackles for loss, one sack and a fumble recovery in his final season for the Raiders.

Ethridge’s efforts earned him a Second Team Defense All-Region nod.

Special Teams Player of the Year

Senior Somdee Satiphone was the pick for Special Teams Player of the Year.

The wide receiver/defensive back two-way player returned kickoffs for the Raiders this season.

In his nine returns, he covered 339 yards, averaging 37.7 yards per return. Satiphone took two kicks back to the house, the first in the Stephens County game and then again a little over a month later against Jackson County.

Offensive Player of the Year

Once again, the coaching staff honored a pair with this award.

Cantrell led the team in rushing this season with 695 yards on 158 carries for 11 touchdowns.

He averaged 4.4 yards per carry and finished the season with three 100-yard games.

Junior Landyn Savage played wide receiver this season for HCHS.

Savage pulled down 15 catches for 155 yards and a touchdown.

Both Cantrell and Savage landed themselves on the Second Team Offense in All-Region voting.

Elevation Award

This is a first-time-given award for the HCHS staff and they were looking for it to go to someone who elevated their game from the previous season.

In 2022, then-junior Jarred White finished the season with 21 total tackles (7 solo, 14 assists).

In his elevated and final season, White bumped those numbers up considerably.

White had four games where he had 10-plus total tackles. He finished the season with 85 total tackles (27 solo, 58 assists) and 5.5 tackles for loss. 

White added in a sack, an interception, a pass defended, a forced fumble and a fumble recovery.

His efforts in his senior year earned him a Second Team Defense All-Region nod.

Defensive Player of the Year

Senior linebacker Hayden Gailey was named the Defensive Player of the Year.

Gailey finished the season with 67 total tackles (41 solo, 26 assists), 2.5 tackles for loss, three interceptions, four passes defended and one forced fumble.

Gailey also punted for the Raiders and earned First Team Punter All-Region acknowledgement.

Joseph York Perseverance Award

Senior defensive lineman Nate Hurley was named the Joseph York Perseverance Award winner in the 20th year the honor was given.

The award is “presented to the Habersham Central High School football team member who exemplified the attributes of perseverance, valor and bravery in his actions during the season.”

Harrison said Hurley earned the award for sticking out the football program until his senior year, which was the first time he was able to start for the Raiders. 

Hurley finished the season with seven total tackles (2 solo, 5 assists), one tackle for loss, one sack, two interceptions and four forced fumbles.

Shane Dover “All-in” Award

The Shane Dover “All-in” Award is in just its second year of being given out.

Dover passed away January 4, 2022 after an apparent heart attack. Harrison mentioned in his remarks about the award’s importance that Dover had worked with and coached with him from his arrival in 2015 until Dover’s passing.

“We wanted to find a way to keep his legacy going,” Harrison said. “There’s one thing I know about Shane and it’s this program meant a whole lot to him. He was truly all in.

“We wanted a way to continue to honor him and keep his memory strong each year and try to pick guys that he would be proud of,” Harrison continued. “That’s who we try to get for that award. Guys that, if he were sitting in that room voting with us, he’d be right in line with who we picked for that award.”

The 2023 recipients of the Shane Dover “All-in” Award were seniors Aidan Cianci and Jacob Adams.

Cianci finished his season with 35 total tackles (9 solo, 26 assists), a tackle for loss, three quarterback hurries, and one forced fumble. He earned an honorable mention spot in the All-Region voting.

Adams made the Second Team Offense in All-Region voting.

Captains

Harrison named six captains for the 2023 football team, all of which are seniors.

Carter Barrett, Davey Sanders, Jonah Wilson and Wesley Sisk joined Chosewood and Gailey for the honor.

“You’ve got to have great leadership throughout your program, but you better have great leadership at the top of your program,” Harrison said. “Your seniors better be leaders. Those guys were. There’s different ways to be a captain, there’s different ways to lead and I thought all those guys did it in a unique way.”

Sanders and Wilson both earned honorable mention All-Region nods as well.

WCON Player of the Year

Senior Braden Henslee was honored as the WCON Player of the Year.

The First Team Defense All-Region defensive lineman finished the season with 84 total tackles (22 solo, 62 assists), nine tackles for loss, two sacks, two quarterback hurries, and one pass defended.

Bob Turpin MVP

The coaching staff split their MVPs with an honoree on each side of the ball.

For the defensive side, Barrett took home the hardware.

Barrett, who was named Defensive Player of the Year in All-Region voting, finished the year with 110 total tackles (55 solo, 55 assists), 10.5 tackles for loss, four passes defended, three fumble recoveries and one forced fumble.

The offensive MVP was junior receiver Zeke Whittington.

Whittington had 63 catches for 862 yards and nine touchdowns. He finished the season just one yard shy of 1,200 all-purpose yards.

Jimmy Williams Courage Award Nominees

The Jimmy Williams Courage Award is given out a little differently than the others listed above as the nominees are announced at the end of year banquet and the winner is chosen by vote of the Ring of Honor committee and then announced prior to the Ring of Honor golf tournament in 2024.

“Courage can go a lot of different ways,” Harrison said. “It can be courage when you’re coming back from an injury, it can be courage when you’re dealing with something in your personal life and you found a way to persevere through it and didn’t let it hold you back.”

The nominees for this year’s Jimmy Williams Courage Award are seniors Christian Boss, Wesley Sisk and Somdee Satiphone.

Boss started the season as Christian Remillard and was adopted this year. Despite that going on, Boss never lost focus throughout the season and was a big piece of the Raiders’ offensive line.

Wesley Sisk has been through a myriad of injuries and, according to Harrison, “never let them hold him back and keep him out of a game.”

Satiphone has been through personal issues, including recently losing a parent.

“I think all three of those guys, their stories are a little different,” Harrison said. “Each one of them is a little unique, but I think they all exemplified courage in how they’ve carried themselves and to make it to their senior years and have the years they did. It definitely involved some different forms of adversity that all of them overcame.”

FCA All-Star Game

The Raiders had seven senior players selected to play in the Fellowship of Christian Athletes All-Star Game, which will be played at Lakeview Academy on Thursday.

Wilson, Adams, Ethridge, Satiphone, Sanders, Cianci and Hurley will all get to play in the contest.

JUNIOR VARSITY

Outstanding Defense

For the JV squad, Sawyer Burgess and Aaron Hitchcock walked away with awards for their contributions to the defense this season.

Outstanding Offense

On the offensive side of the ball, Paris Wilbanks and Jay Feltus were the standouts celebrated for their accomplishments.

EIGHTH GRADE

For those upcoming to the high school ranks, four awards were given for the successes of their season.

Aron Guerrero was honored with the Outstanding Offense Award and Preston Tatum picked up the Outstanding Defense Award.

The Raider Award was split between Owen Gailey and Eli Akridge for their performances on the field.

As for the MVP Award, that was garnered by Brayson Gates.