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Alleged mail thief faces 18 new criminal counts in Gainesville

Arturo Albarran-Aguirre (Hall County Sheriff's Office)

A Gainesville man is back in jail this week, charged with 18 criminal counts in a Hall County Sheriff’s Office investigation into stolen mail.

Investigation launched in June

The investigation began on June 23, when deputies responded to a report of stolen mail in the 2600 block of Webb Girth Road. According to the initial investigation, a resident spotted a man attempting to take mail out of his residential mailbox. When confronted, the suspect sped off in the SUV he was driving.

The resident told investigators he drove up the road and found several pieces of his neighbors’ mail on the side of the road.

On Thursday, July 6, investigators with the HCSO Special Investigations Unit located the suspect and his vehicle, a Chevrolet Equinox, at a residence in the 1000 block of Black Drive. They arrested Arturo Albarran-Aguirre, 29, who lives at the home, for the theft of approximately 10 pieces of mail from at least four addresses on Webb Girth Road.

Investigators charged Albarran-Aguirre with possession of stolen mail and four counts of theft by receiving stolen mail.

“During a search of Albarran-Aguirre’s person during arrest, deputies found numerous checks and bank cards, all with different names,” a press release from the Hall County Sheriff’s Office states.

Albarran-Aguirre was booked into the Hall County Jail on the initial charges and released on  $6,500 bond on July 8.

More charges filed

While investigating the items found during Albarran-Aguirre’s arrest, investigators determined they had been stolen from the mailboxes of at least 15 victims throughout East Hall County. The mail included checks, bank cards, a driver’s license, a DNR card, and a check stub.

Investigators obtained additional arrest warrants for Albarran-Aguirre on July 10. They charged him with eleven felonies, including two counts of identity theft fraud, four counts of third-degree forgery, and five counts of financial transaction card theft. In addition, they charged him with five counts of fourth-degree forgery and two counts of theft by receiving.

According to the sheriff’s office, Albarran-Aguirre remained at large on the latest warrants until Gainesville Police officers arrested him on Monday afternoon, September 25. Before he was apprehended, the sheriff’s office featured Albarran-Aguirre on its Wanted Wednesday social media post.

Albarran-Aguirre is being held without bond in the Hall County Jail on the latest charges.

Zoo Atlanta welcomes handsome 17-year-old zebra, ‘Wembe’

Zoo Atlanta welcomed 17-year-old zebra Wembe on Sept. 26, 2023. (Credit: Zoo Atlanta)

This week, Zoo Atlanta welcomed Wembe, a 17-year-old male plains zebra, in a transaction with the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA).

According to a press release, Wembe comes to Zoo Atlanta after recommendations from the AZA Species Survival Plan® (SSP), a collaborative program that works to ensure the genetic diversity and long-term sustainability of animal populations in human care in AZA organizations while also making recommendations for individual animal needs.

Zoo Atlanta plans to add a companion for Wembe later this fall. The animals will live in the zoo’s African Savanna habitat, which also houses giraffes Calvin and Lennard, a bontebok named Casper, and two ostriches, Purple and Orange.

“When we think of the wildlife of the grasslands of sub-Saharan Africa, it’s hard to think of an animal more recognizable or iconic than the zebra,” Vice President of Collections and Conservation Jennifer Mickelberg said in the release. “The plains zebra is one of many species that are not yet classified as endangered, but tell us an important story now of the steps we can take to halt further population declines. These are magnificent animals we want to see forever in abundance in their native savannas.”

Plains zebras are classified as ‘Near Threatened’ by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). In the wild, they live about 25 years but can reach age 40 in captivity.

Wembe will need some time to get acclimated to his surroundings, and visitors can check in at zooatlanta.org to find out how to view him in his new habitat.

This article appears on Now Habersham through a news partnership with GPB News

Georgia students again beat national SAT average

For the sixth year in a row, Georgia’s public school students have outperformed their peers in the nation’s public schools on the SAT. Georgia students recorded an average score of 1045, which is 42 points higher than the national average for public school students, set at 1003.

Breaking it down further, Georgia’s Class of 2023 earned an average score of 534 on the Evidence-Based Reading and Writing (ERW) section and 511 on the math section. This compares favorably to the national averages of 510 and 493, respectively.

State School Superintendent Richard Woods expressed pride in Georgia’s students, attributing their success to the dedication of students, teachers, and supportive families. He also highlighted the state’s commitment to academic recovery and addressing any learning gaps.

While Georgia’s mean score did show a slight drop from 1052 in 2022 to 1045 in 2023, the national mean score saw a more significant decline, going from 1028 in 2022 to 1003 in 2023.

There hasn’t been a significant change in participation rates, with 50% of Georgia’s Class of 2023 taking the SAT at some point during high school, compared to 51% for the Class of 2022.

U.S. Senate moves on short-term spending bill in struggle to avoid shutdown days away

U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., center, speaks to reporters on Sept. 26, 2023, at the U.S. Capitol. (Jennifer Shutt/States Newsroom)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — The U.S. Senate is on track to clear a short-term government funding bill in the days ahead, but it wasn’t clear Tuesday if that would happen before the Saturday midnight deadline to avert a shutdown, or if House GOP leaders would put the bill up for a vote in that chamber.

U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy declined to comment on the bipartisan Senate spending bill during a press conference Tuesday evening, or say what he would do if the House cannot pass a short-term spending bill and the Senate can ahead of the Oct. 1 deadline.

“Ask me when they pass that,” McCarthy said.

That means there is no certain path ahead as the days until a shutdown dwindle.

Congress must approve and President Joe Biden must sign some sort of government spending measure before the start of the new fiscal year on Sunday, otherwise a partial government shutdown with wide-reaching impacts would begin.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said Tuesday the stopgap spending bill from the Senate is “a good, sensible and bipartisan bill.”

RELATED

November end date

The Senate’s continuing resolution would extend current government funding and policy through Friday, Nov. 17, just before both chambers are set to go on their week-long Thanksgiving break.

“Over the weekend, Senate Democrats and Republicans together worked in good faith to reach agreement on a continuing resolution that will keep the government open beyond Sept. 30,” Schumer said, referring to one name for a short-term funding bill.

“This bipartisan CR is a temporary solution — a bridge towards cooperation and away from extremism,” Schumer said. “And it will allow us to keep working to fully fund the federal government and spare American families the pain of a government shutdown.”

Schumer urged lawmakers to approve the stopgap spending bill later this week, saying the continuing resolution “is a bridge, not a final destination.”

The CR, Schumer said, is intended to give the House and Senate more time to reconcile the differences between the 12 annual, full-year government funding bills.

The stopgap bill also includes funding security and humanitarian assistance to Ukraine and money for natural disaster recovery, Schumer said.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell urged his fellow Republicans to support the short-term funding bill and not press for a partial government shutdown.

“In order for work on appropriations to continue uninterrupted, Congress needs to extend government funding by the end of this week,” the Kentucky Republican said. “The sooner Congress keeps the lights on, the sooner these important conversations can resume.”

“The clearest path forward is a standard short term continuing resolution,” McConnell said.

Kentucky’s other senator, Rand Paul, has said more than once that he will not give the consent needed for the Senate to quickly pass the short-term spending bill. Paul is opposed to additional aid to Ukraine.

DOD, Ukraine

The Senate legislation would provide $4.5 billion for the U.S. Defense Department as well as $1.65 billion for the U.S. State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development to send assistance to Ukraine.

Ongoing disaster recovery would be bolstered with $6 billion in additional spending for the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s disaster relief fund.

The funding is significantly less than the $24 billion for Ukraine and $12 billion for FEMA the Biden administration asked Congress to provide in a supplemental spending request it released in August.

The short-term spending bill would prevent wildland firefighters from receiving a pay cut that would otherwise begin on Oct. 1.

The bill would extend several expiring authorizations, including for the Federal Aviation Administration, which would go until the end of the year, and the National Flood Insurance Program, which would be extended through Nov. 17.

Senators voted 77-19 on Tuesday evening to advance the 79-page bill toward final passage.

House GOP starts debate

U.S. House Republicans also made some progress Tuesday over funding the government, though not toward reaching agreement on the continuing resolution that they need to pass this week.

The House voted to begin debate on the Agriculture-FDA, Defense, Homeland Security and State-Foreign Operations government spending bills. The vote was 216-212. Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene was the sole GOP lawmaker to vote against the procedural step.

McCarthy said during the Tuesday evening press conference that he planned to put a GOP continuing resolution on the floor later this week that also includes border security provisions. That spending proposal was released earlier this month and hasn’t yet garnered the support needed to go to the floor.

Any House CR wouldn’t be able to pass the Senate unless it could attract the support of at least 60 senators, making it unlikely the proposal would become law.

McCarthy also chastised senators who back aid to Ukraine, saying if they want to “focus on Ukraine and not focus on the Southern border, I think your priorities are backwards.”

Biden on Monday criticized McCarthy for not adhering to the spending caps agreement the two reached when they brokered a debt limit deal in May.

“We made a deal. We shook hands. We said, ‘This is what we’re going to do,’ and now they’re reneging on the deal, which is not much of a surprise these days,” Biden said.

Americans, he said, shouldn’t allow the GOP to stay in power if they can’t avoid a partial government shutdown.

“Funding the government is one of the most basic fundamental responsibilities of the Congress,” Biden said. “And if Republicans in the House don’t start doing their job, we should stop electing them.”

Active-duty military would work without pay in shutdown, White House warns

Air Commandos assigned to the 21st Special Tactics Squadron participate in an airfield establishment exercise at Hurlburt Field, Florida, Sept. 21, 2023. Members of the 21st STS jumped from an MC-130J to conduct the airfield establishment exercise during the 94th Joint Civilian Orientation Conference at Hurlburt Field. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Hussein Enaya)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — The White House is warning that a partial government shutdown would mean 1.3 million active-duty armed services members must keep working without receiving paychecks, and hundreds of thousands of Pentagon employees would face furloughs.

The Biden administration on Tuesday blasted what it’s now calling an “Extreme Republican Shutdown,” saying it would undermine national security.

According to September 2022 figures, numerous states are home to large numbers of troops who would work without pay until after the shutdown, including Virginia with 129,400; North Carolina with 95,900; Florida with 66,900; Georgia with 63,800; and Washington with 62,100.

On Thursday, the GOP-led U.S. House failed for a third time to begin debate on the $826 billion defense spending bill. Another procedural vote on a multi-bill package was expected on Tuesday night as members return from the weekend.

“Nobody joins the military to get rich. You join because you love your country. You want to serve, and you’re willing to do it at some risk to yourself. But you have every expectation that the government is going to be able to pay a decent wage and take care of your family,” John Kirby, spokesperson for the administration’s National Security Council, said on a call with reporters Tuesday.

“When (service members) don’t get their paychecks, electrical bills, water bills, rent, mortgage, grocery bills, all that stacks up to the great detriment of these young men and women,” he continued. “So in total, more than 1.3 million could actually face real financial hardship as they continue to show up to defend the rest of us.”

Service members would be paid retroactively upon the end of a shutdown, which could last hours, days or weeks.

Five GOP members voted against the rule Thursday that would have allowed the House to begin debating the defense spending bill and considering nearly 200 amendments.

Among the no votes were Andy Biggs of Arizona, Dan Bishop of North Carolina and Matt Rosendale of Montana. Arizona Rep. Eli Crane and Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, who both supported moving forward earlier in the week, flipped to vote no.

Government shutdown Saturday

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy has been unable to unify his party members on full-year government spending bills or even a short-term stopgap measure that would avoid a shutdown, which would occur Saturday night without action by Congress.

Far-right members of the conference want to further cut nondefense spending beyond an agreement that McCarthy reached with President Joe Biden, who signed it into law. Some also want to sever any Ukraine funding from a government funding deal.

The fiscal year ends Saturday, and McCarthy has only a slim margin of votes he can afford to lose.

And, any spending bills or short-term deals to avoid a funding lapse would need to be bipartisan enough to appeal to the Democrat-led Senate.

If no deal is reached before the year’s fiscal deadline, other parts under the Defense Department’s massive scope will be affected, the administration also warned.

Kirby said the Pentagon’s military recruitment programs, as well as procurement and management of existing defense contracts will be disrupted if the department’s civilian employees are furloughed.

“All of this would prove disruptive to our national security and our efforts to address the critical needs of the American people. And again, the reason is these extreme House Republicans are basically turning their backs on a bipartisan budget deal that they worked out with the president, that two-thirds of them voted for just a few months ago.”

The department’s civilian workforce totals 804,422, and roughly 430,000 could face furloughs, according to the Pentagon on Tuesday.

McCarthy’s office did not respond to a request for comment on the possibility of troops working without pay or Pentagon furloughs.

The offices of Biggs, Bishop, Crane, Greene, and Rosendale also did not respond.

No paychecks for service members during shutdown
About 1.3 million active-duty service members in the U.S. military would be required to keep working without pay during a government shutdown. Troops would receive back pay once a funding lapse ends.

DUTY LOCATION

TOTAL ACTIVE DUTY

Alabama

8,200

Alaska

20,200

Arizona

17,400

Arkansas

3,700
California

163,300

Colorado

37,900
Connecticut

6,200

Delaware

3,400
District of Columbia

11,000

Florida

66,900
Georgia

63,800

Hawaii

40,400
Idaho

3,500

Illinois

22,600
Indiana

1,000

Iowa

200
Kansas

20,500

Kentucky

34,600
Louisiana

14,900

Maine

700
Maryland

29,500

Massachusetts

3,300
Michigan

1,900

Minnesota

500
Mississippi

11,000

Missouri

14,400
Montana

3,200

Nebraska

6,400
Nevada

12,200

New Hampshire

1,100
New Jersey

7,900

New Mexico

13,400
New York

19,300

North Carolina

95,900
North Dakota

7,200

Ohio

6,800
Oklahoma

21,100

Oregon

1,500
Pennsylvania

2,400

Rhode Island

3,700
South Carolina

38,300

South Dakota

3,300
Tennessee

2,300

Texas

114,200
Utah

4,500

Vermont

100
Virginia

129,400

Washington

62,100
West Virginia

100

Wisconsin

900
Wyoming

3,100

Abroad

171,700

How a looming government shutdown could hit national parks

Yellowstone is one of 63 national parks among 423 national sites that would be impacted by a government shutdown. There are 11 National Park Service sites in Georgia. (Photo by U.S. Park Service/Facebook)

(GA Recorder) — National parks and nearby communities could forego millions of dollars per day during a partial government shutdown that could start this weekend.

Would-be visitors will likely see restrictions on park access, though the extent of those restrictions was still unclear just days before a potential lapse in federal appropriations set to begin Sunday. Parks would lack the regular funds used for daily operations, but some could be covered temporarily by states or other funding sources.

The National Park Service furloughed about seven out of every eight workers during shutdowns in October 2013 and December 2018-January 2019, according to a report last week from the Congressional Research Service.

However, the Interior Department took different approaches to visitor access in each shutdown under presidents of different parties.

In 2013, under Democratic President Barack Obama, parks were closed to the extent possible, and visitors were asked to leave. Concessionaires inside parks closed, and park roads, where possible, were blocked.

In 2018 and 2019, under Republican Donald Trump, most parks remained at least partially open with services reduced. In part, that approach relied on visitor fees, which was legally dubious. It also left visitors without access to even basic services like restrooms and trash removal.

That move also left parks severely understaffed and irresponsibly put visitor health and safety — and the wellbeing of the parks themselves — at risk, said John Garder, senior director for budget and appropriations at the advocacy group National Parks Conservation Association.

“The decision of the last administration to keep parks open using fees was reckless,” Garder said.

The parks had limited resources to educate visitors, he said. Some used sensitive areas of Joshua Tree National Park for camping, damaging the park’s delicate namesake flora, he said.

No shutdown plan online

The Interior Department has not updated its plan of action in the event of a shutdown as a funding lapse approaches.

The 2019 plan has been removed from a White House Office of Management and Budget web page listing all current agency and department shutdown plans but had not been replaced by Tuesday afternoon.

“When the Department has final lapse plans, they will be published,” Interior spokesperson Melissa Schwartz wrote in a Monday email. Department spokespeople declined further comment.

NPS parkways, such as the Blue Ridge Parkway in North Carolina and Virginia, would likely stay open because of the difficulty in closing them.

Government funding is set to lapse on Oct. 1. The U.S. House Republican Conference, which controls that chamber, has shown little progress in resolving internal disputes about whether and how to reduce federal spending, leaving negotiations over regular spending bills as well as a short-term stop-gap measure to keep the government open at a standstill.

Lost revenue and research

If park access is severely restricted, every day of a shutdown next month could result in 1 million fewer visitors to national parks, Garder said.

Visitors seeking to enter many parks — including those on long-planned trips or celebrating weddings and other special events — would likely be turned away, Garder said.

It would also mean a roughly $70 million per day loss for so-called gateway communities outside park boundaries whose economies largely depend on tourism, according to the NPCA.

“It’s deeply disappointing for visitors, but it’s alarming and disheartening for those who worry about their bottom lines and for park employees, whose morale is deeply affected,” Garder said.

The 16-day 2013 shutdown saw a loss of nearly 8 million visitors and $414 million in economic activity, according to a 2014 NPS report cited by the Congressional Research Service.

A government funding lapse could also threaten long-term scientific research and park assets.

For example, a 60-year study of wolves and moose on Isle Royale, an island park 15 miles from Minnesota in Lake Superior, was interrupted by the 2018-2019 shutdown.

And the damage to the desert-dwelling Joshua trees from campers also showed the potential long-term harm to parks, said Lisa Frank, the executive director of the federal legislative office for the advocacy group Environment America.

“These trees grow very, very slowly,” she said. “They’re in a really harsh environment, that it’s totally a miracle that they grow at all in that part of the world. And so damage to some of those trees, when they’re already suffering from climate change and everything else, is a pretty severe problem.”

Senate Republican calls for parks to stay open

U.S. Sen. John Barrasso, a Wyoming Republican and ranking member of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee that has jurisdiction over the Park Service, wrote to Interior Secretary Deb Haaland last week asking to use visitor fees to cover operational costs during a shutdown.

The NPS used fees collected under the Federal Lands Recreation Enhancement Act to keep parks open to visitors during the last shutdown and could do so again, he said.

“Your judicious use of FLREA fees will protect the millions of people who plan and save for trips to these special places, ensure that gateway communities that rely on park visitation for jobs and economic stabilities do not needlessly suffer, and sustain the dedicated National Park Service employees who rely on a regular paycheck,” Barrasso wrote.

But the Trump administration’s use of those funds was illegal, the Government Accountability Office found, as those fees were supposed to be used for other purposes.

State funding?

In previous shutdowns, states have signed memoranda of understanding with the federal government to allow state funds to cover park costs and keep them open, Garder said.

In Arizona, Gov. Katie Hobbs, a Democrat, said last week she would sign an executive order to use state lottery revenue to keep Grand Canyon National Park open during a shutdown, according to The Associated Press. Republican Gov. Doug Ducey spent about $200,000 to keep that park open in 2019.

While on sounder legal footing than using entrance fees, Garder said state partnerships do not excuse federal lawmakers from passing a spending law.

“It’s certainly not a long-term solution,” he said.

Shields could face death penalty for Mountain City woman’s murder

Murder suspect Christopher Shields exits a Franklin, North Carolina, courtroom on September 25, 2023, after learning he could face the death penalty. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Christopher Shields appeared in Macon County Superior Court Monday in waist chains and under a heavy police presence. He left the same way, but with the knowledge that he now could face the death penalty for the 2022 murder of Tina Walkingstick Frizsell.

Macon County, North Carolina, Superior Court Judge William Coward granted District Attorney Ashley Welch’s request to transfer Shield’s felony murder charge to a capital murder charge. That move will allow prosecutors to seek the death penalty when the case goes to trial.

Judge Coward also denied Shields bond. His attorney had been pushing for a reduction in the $1.2 million bond set last summer following his arrest for Frizsell’s murder.

Prosecutors allege Shields shot Frizsell to death in a shed on his property in Otto, North Carolina, in May of 2022. Investigators say the Mountain City, Georgia, woman’s body was then moved to another location and burned.

Frizsell, a mother of two, was killed the day before her 43rd birthday. Her family was in the courtroom for Monday’s hearing.

RELATED: Ledford killed ahead of murder trial in which she was a witness

Flight risk

Defense attorney Tony Dalton argued the state is treating Shields prejudiciously by holding him at Central Prison in Raleigh, North Carolina, four and a half hours away.

He explained to the judge that his client moved back to Macon County several years ago to help take care of his grandparents. His grandmother passed away last week, and his grandfather is currently in hospice care.

Murder suspect Christopher Shields (in yellow) and his defense attorney Tony Dalton listen to Macon County District Attorney Ashley Welch during a court hearing in Franklin, North Carolina, on Monday, September 25, 2023. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Dalton said since his arrest, Shields has been housed in several detention centers in western North Carolina, making it difficult to represent him.

He told the judge he looked at his client’s criminal history and had not seen at any time where Shields failed to appear in court. Dalton said Shields has family and his children in the area and would not be a flight risk.

District Attorney Ashley Welch countered that argument, telling the judge that Shields has connections in Colorado and Texas and is a flight risk because of the severity of the charges against him. She also said Shields is an escape risk. He picked the locks on his cells in various detention centers where he’s been housed since last May.

DA claims Shields has ‘hit list’

Welch also argued that Shields made a “hit list” and allegedly threatened the lives of witnesses and potential witnesses. She said he has called upon his “larger family” to assist in those threats based on information coming from inmates and potential witnesses in the community.

District Attorney Ashley Welch addresses Judge William Coward during Christopher Shields’ bond and Rule 24 hearing. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

According to Welch, Angela Ledford was one such witness. Investigators found the 22-year-old Clayton woman’s decapitated body last month in the Chattahoochee National Forest.

Welch said she is currently working with Georgia authorities since Ledford was a witness in the Frizsell shooting.

She explained to the judge that not only is Shields a flight risk but also a risk to the community.

‘Egregious’ acts

Monday’s proceeding was a continuation of an administrative hearing held on September 11, during which defense attorney Tony Dalton asked for a bond reduction. That was also when Macon County Assistant District Attorney Jim Moore introduced the Rule 24 transfer, seeking to make the case eligible for the death penalty.

Dalton argued the district attorney’s office did not properly inform him of the Rule 24 transfer. At Monday’s hearing, Dalton admitted that his paralegal had received the notice on August 18, but he had not received it himself.

Macon County Assistant District Attorney Jim Moore gives details of the shooting death of Tina Walkingstick Frizsell during the Rule 24 hearing. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Moore detailed for the judge the nature of the case and the “egregious actions” that took place in Frizsell’s murder. As he shared details of the shooting, Frizsell’s mother began to sob and quickly left the courtroom.

Judge Coward issued his ruling after the attorneys presented their arguments.

Since it is now a capital murder case, Shields most likely will not go to trial until 2025, giving prosecutors time to collect potential evidence from Ledford’s Georgia murder case.

Driver charged with DUI in Saturday night wreck near Hollywood

A Habersham County ambulance is shown on the scene of Saturday night’s wreck on GA 15 / US 441. The southbound car crossed the median and northbound lanes as it overturned and landed on a guardrail. (Rob Moore/Habersham County)

A weekend wreck in northern Habersham landed an Elberton driver in jail for DUI. The wreck was reported just before 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 23, on GA 15/US 441 north of Grandis Heights Circle in Hollywood.

According to emergency officials, a southbound Toyota Camry overturned and crossed the median and northbound lanes before coming to rest on top of a guardrail on the highway’s north shoulder.

Habersham County Emergency Services responded to the crash, along with several units from the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office.

An ambulance transported two patients from the wreck to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville.

The wreck impacted northbound traffic while the vehicle was removed from the guardrail.

Deputies charged Augusta Lynn Naggie, 20, of Elberton, with driving under the influence, reckless driving, speeding, failure to maintain lane, underage consumption, and possession of an open alcohol container.

Naggie was released from jail on a $4,787.50 bond.

Northeast Georgia Health System and Anthem announce new two-year extension

Northeast Georgia Health System and Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield in Georgia have extended a new two-year agreement.

The agreement covers the health system’s facilities, including all Northeast Georgia Medical Center hospitals, Northeast Georgia Physicians Group practices, Urgent Care locations, Georgia Heart Institute locations, Laurelwood, long-term care facilities, and other outpatient facilities.

The extension guarantees continued access for Anthem members with employer-based health plans.

“We are pleased at the collaborative nature of the discussions and at the willingness of both parties to work together to ensure our patients have certainty about their access to services at NGHS,” said Steve McNeilly, chief operating officer of population health and vice president of managed care operations for NGHS.

Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield in Georgia President Robert Bunch said the agreement will continue to make quality health care accessible for its insurance holders in Northeast Georgia.

“We value our collaborative relationship with NGHS as we work together to tackle healthcare affordability and improve lives and communities for the Georgians we mutually serve,” said Bunch.

The announcement comes ahead of open enrollment, which is important given that UnitedHealthcare insurance holders were left in the lurch when NGHS and United failed to reach an agreement when their contract expired earlier this year.

United remains out of network.

“Because of this new agreement, our community can confidently choose Anthem when they enter open enrollment this fall,” said McNeilly.

Click here for a list of current NGHS in-network insurance providers.

White County Commission places moratorium on short term rentals

White County Commission Chairman Travis Turner displays a stack of letters from Kellum Valley Residents opposed to any short-term rentals in their community. (Dean Dyer/WRHW.com)

The White County Board of Commissioners has been struggling with a flood of zoning applications from homeowners seeking to put their property up for short-term rental use. The process has become so burdensome that during Monday night’s commission meeting, Commissioner Edwin Nix proposed placing a moratorium on the process.

Nix told the board that letters have been mailed out to people who are not sanctioned for that type of business but continue to operate, and he felt something needs to be done.

“I don’t think we will ever get rid of them. I think we will have to deal with them, somehow or another. I think this board needs to put a 120-day moratorium on all short-term rentals until the planning commission gets an opportunity to clear the ones that are clogging the system up and we get an idea of how many we really have,” said Nix.

The moratorium will go into effect on October 2.

“Any application that has been filed up to October 2 will be honored and will be allowed to go through the zoning process,” said Commission Chairman Travis Turner.

Commissioner Terry Goodger seconded the motion and the board approved it unanimously.

The county has installed new computer software that is helping them determine just how many short-term rentals are operating in the county legally or illegally.

The commission board addressed four short-term rental issues during their meeting on Monday. That process took more than an hour because of special situations surrounding some of the requests. One such request was denied by the board following an outcry of opposition from residents in the Kellum Valley area north of Cleveland.

Baldwin City Council member Larry Lewallen resigns

Baldwin City Council Member Larry Lewallen resigned after ten years of service. (Hadley Cottingham/NowHabersham.com)

Longtime Baldwin City Council member Larry Lewallen has resigned three months ahead of his expected departure from office.

Lewallen served on the city council for ten years. He was not seeking reelection.

Although his term expires at the end of December, Lewallen announced at the September 25 council meeting he was stepping down immediately.

“I’m sorry, but under certain circumstances and over the past, I’ve got to resign my post on the city council as of tonight,” he announced. “I was supposed to go to the end of the year, but I’ve been here 10 years. I think that’s a good long time. For the people that elected me, I hate to do this, but this is something I have to do. I always tried to do what I thought was best for the city and the citizens.”

Councilmember Maarten Venter said he will miss having Lewallen on the council.

“I appreciate you, Larry. You have always been a solid guy,” Venter said.

Baldwin’s Acting Mayor Alice Venter also expressed gratitude.

“Well, thank you very much for all your years of service. You have been a classic example,” she told Lewallen.

Lewallen is the second member to resign from the Baldwin City Council this year. In February, Mayor Joe Elam resigned. The council is now down to just four members.

“We have a quorum as we stand, but if something happened to one of the council members, we would be in trouble,” the acting mayor tells Now Habersham.

Eric Keith was the only person to qualify for Lewallen’s seat in the upcoming election. He will be sworn in in January.

Alice Venter says the city is checking with legal counsel to determine if Keith could be appointed to the seat before officially taking office in January.

Pet of the Week: Girly

Girly is looking for a new home and family to love. (Photo by Habersham County Animal Care and Control)

Hi! I’m Girly, and I’m here to tell you my tale. I’m about 50 pounds and approximately 3 years old, still young at heart and ready for adventures.

Life was tail-waggingly awesome at first. I had a family, belly rubs, and treats galore. Ah, those were the days! But one day, things got a bit ruff. There was a squabble with another dog, not my fault, but suddenly, I was labeled “The Neighborhood Stray.” The love I knew vanished, replaced by me being turned over to Animal Control.

But let’s talk about the good stuff—I’m quite the smarty-paws! Give the word “sit,” and down I go, like a pro. Fetch? Oh boy, that’s my jam! Throw a ball, and I’ll bring it back, ready for another round of fun. And zoomies? Imagine me zipping around, pure joy in motion.

Me and one of my pals. (HCAAC)

Now, about my personality—I’ve got a little bossiness in me, but it’s more like a “momma dog” vibe. I watch over my pack and want the best for everyone. Shelter life is a bit chaotic, with new doggos coming in all the time. I’m just a silly girl at heart!

I’ve got preferences in pals too. I click best with the male dog buddies; we just have that paw-some connection. But hey, I’m cool with low-key ladies and even those tiny, wiggly puppies. They’ve got their charm!

Now, I’m on a quest for a new home, a cozy den where fetch is a daily ritual, zoomies are met with laughter, and belly rubs are the ultimate reward. I’m dreaming of a family to call my own, where we can cuddle, play, and make beautiful memories.

If you’re ready to be the hero in my tale, ready to give me the love and family I’ve been dreaming of, please contact the Habersham County Animal Shelter. Let’s start our adventure together! 🐾❤️

Click on the image to book a time to meet me