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Millions of federal workers’ paychecks would be on hold in a shutdown

U.S. Capitol (Jennifer Shutt/States Newsroom)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — More than 3.5 million federal employees and military personnel — many in the Washington, D.C., area but also scattered across the states and around the globe — are bracing for another partial government shutdown as U.S. House Republicans struggle to produce a short-term plan to fund the government past the end of the month.

Most of the workers will be furloughed and go without paychecks in a shutdown. Some will have to work without pay because of the nature of their jobs, like members of the military, law enforcement officers, air traffic controllers, and TSA officers. Federal employees would get back pay once the shutdown ends under a law enacted in January 2019.

Lawmakers would not be personally affected — members of Congress would continue to get paid, as well as President Joe Biden and federal judges, though the judicial branch could see its funding run low.

In the D.C. area, Virginia is home to an estimated 140,000 civilian federal workers, who for some unknown period would go without pay and would be forced to draw on savings or other assistance, according to a federal employee database. Maryland has an estimated 139,000 civilian employees.

Georgia is home to about 77,000 civilian federal workers.

The economic impact could be broad because the funding lapse this year would hit much harder than the 35-day partial government shutdown that took place during the Trump administration and reduced GDP by billions of dollars. This time, a partial shutdown would affect more than 1.4 million uniformed members of the military and 1 million additional civilian federal employees at the Pentagon, Department of Health and Human Services, and several other agencies, as well as congressional staff.

Speaker Kevin McCarthy, a California Republican, has repeatedly warned his own members against forcing a funding lapse, saying it won’t help the party achieve its goals.

But that hasn’t stopped especially conservative Republicans from halting work on full-year spending measures and opposing the short-term stopgap bill that’s needed to give lawmakers more time to work out a deal.

American Federation of Government Employees National President Everett Kelley said in a written statement that a “government shutdown would be a disaster for the American people and the federal employees who keep our government running.”

“Shutdowns hurt local communities across the country, deny Americans access to government services, and do significant damage to the overall economy,” Kelley said.

Congress, Kelley said, “needs to do its job and pass a continuing resolution to keep the government funded at current levels while continuing to negotiate a final budget. Nothing less is acceptable.”

AFGE represents more than 750,000 federal and D.C. government employees.

Here’s a look at why the federal government might shut down by Oct. 1, what agencies are impacted, and what isn’t affected.

Why would the government have to shut down?

Congress is supposed to pass 12 government funding bills each year before the start of the new fiscal year on Oct. 1, but lawmakers haven’t completed all of their bills on time since 1996.

Instead, every year the House and Senate pass at least one stopgap spending bill, or continuing resolution. This keeps funding levels and policy mostly flat for a few weeks or a couple of months, giving the Appropriations committees more time to work out bipartisan bills and for leaders to hold floor votes.

Congress sometimes has to pass several short-term funding bills lasting for months, or even the entire fiscal year, if agreements on new, full-year spending bills can’t be negotiated.

If Congress doesn’t approve all dozen full-year government funding bills, or pass a short-term stopgap bill, by midnight on Sept. 30, then a funding lapse begins and government departments begin implementing a partial shutdown.

What happens during a shutdown?

Federal civilian employees are broadly categorized as either “excepted” or “non-excepted.” During a partial government shutdown, excepted federal workers continue to work without pay while everyone else is furloughed — which means they are on an enforced vacation and their pay is on hold until the government resumes operations.

Employees that deal with “the safety of human life or the protection of property” often work without pay until Congress approves some sort of spending measure.

What federal departments and agencies are involved?

Any federal department or agency without a full-year appropriations bill would need to implement its shutdown plans if Congress doesn’t approve a spending bill before Oct. 1.

Congress has yet to pass any of its dozen annual funding bills for fiscal 2024, so all of the departments and agencies funded through the annual appropriations process would be impacted.

That includes the departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Defense, Education, Energy, Health and Human Services, Homeland Security, Housing and Urban Development, Interior, Justice, Labor, State, Transportation, Treasury and Veterans Affairs.

Smaller federal agencies would also be affected, including the Environmental Protection Agency, Food and Drug Administration, NASA and the Smithsonian Institution, among dozens of others.

The entire legislative branch, including the U.S. House, U.S. Senate, the Capitol Police, the Congressional Budget Office, Government Accountability Office and the Library of Congress, among others, would be partially shut down.

Each department and agency has its own guidance for implementing a partial government shutdown, which is posted on the Office of Management and Budget’s website.

What federal operations escape?

Spending on mandatory programs like Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security does not go through the annual appropriations process, so those three programs are mostly exempt from the impact.

How many federal employees would be furloughed?

The federal government employed just under 2.2 million civilian employees earlier this year, according to its database. There are another 1.4 million members of the U.S. military, according to numbers from the Office of Management and Budget. The Legislative Branch employs more than 31,000 employees and the judicial branch has about 33,000 employees.

About 745,000 of the civilian employees work for the Department of Defense, with another 449,000 at the Veterans Affairs Department. The Department of Homeland Security — which houses Customs and Border Protection, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency — employs more than 216,000 federal employees.

A state-by-state breakdown of where civilian federal employees work shows that the nation’s capital has the most federal employees, with 161,000 working in the District of Columbia.

California has the second-highest population of civilian federal employees with 142,000. Texas holds nearly 123,000.

More than 636,000 federal employees are veterans.

Federal employees tend to get back pay after the shutdown ends, though that hasn’t extended to federal contractors.

Does anyone get paid during a partial government shutdown?

Yes. The president, members of Congress and judges.

Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution “forbids the salary of the President to be reduced while he or she is in office, thus effectively guaranteeing the President of compensation regardless of any shutdown action,” according to the Congressional Research Service.

Members of Congress would receive pay for several reasons, including that they have a permanent appropriation for their salaries, a section of the Constitution addressing lawmakers’ pay and the 27th Amendment, according to the Congressional Research Service.

Article I, Section 6 of the Constitution says that U.S. lawmakers “shall receive a Compensation for their Services, to be ascertained by Law, and paid out of the Treasury of the United States.”

And the 27th Amendment notes that “No law, varying the compensation for the services of the Senators and Representatives, shall take effect, until an election of Representatives shall have intervened.”

Judges and the judiciary would “likely be able to continue to operate for a limited time using funds derived from court filings and other fees and from no-year appropriations,” according to a report from CRS.

How many funding lapses have there been?

Congress has failed to fund the government three times since 2000.

In 2013, there was a 16-day shutdown amid calls from several hardline Republicans, including Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, to defund the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare.

While none of the 12 full-year government funding bills were law when that shutdown began, it didn’t fully impact the Pentagon.

Just before the funding lapse began, Congress passed a bill to provide pay for troops, Defense Department civilian employees and certain contractors working for either the Defense Department or the Homeland Security Department, according to the Congressional Research Service.

There were two funding lapses during the Trump administration, one of which was relatively short and one that lasted for 35 days.

The 35-day partial government shutdown began after five of the dozen annual spending bills became law, reducing the number of federal employees and operations impacted.

The Departments of Defense, Education, Energy, Health and Human Services, Labor and Veterans Affairs weren’t affected. Congress also wasn’t impacted, having passed its own funding bill.

What is the economic impact of a partial government shutdown?

Federal employees were furloughed for a total of 6.6 million days during the 2013 partial government shutdown, bringing the total “lost productivity” to about $2 billion, according to an analysis from the White House budget office.

The 2019 partial government shutdown reduced real gross domestic product by $3 billion during the fourth quarter of 2018 and by $8 billion during the first quarter of 2019, according to analysis from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.

That shutdown, CBO said in its report, “dampened economic activity mainly because of the loss of furloughed federal workers’ contribution to GDP, the delay in federal spending on goods and services, and the reduction in aggregate demand (which thereby dampened private-sector activity).”

What’s the Biden administration saying?

The White House released a memo Wednesday rebuking House Republicans for approaching the end of the fiscal year without a bipartisan plan to fund the government.

The administration said it’s clear that “if extreme House Republicans fail to ram through their radical agenda, they plan to take their frustration out on the American people by forcing a government shutdown that would undermine our economy and national security, create needless uncertainty for families and businesses, and have damaging consequences across the country.”

The memo says a funding lapse could affect dozens of federal programs, including eliminating some spaces in Head Start, slowing down new loans at the Small Business Administration and forcing the FDA to “delay food safety inspections for a wide variety of products all across the country.”

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration, or OSHA, could have to reduce the number of inspections, “denying workers a key protection against safety risk, and Americans who are owed back pay for their hard work would face delays due to the majority of Department of Labor investigations being suspended.”

Air travel could also be impacted since TSA employees and air traffic controllers would be working without pay, the White House memo says.

“These consequences are real and avoidable — but only if House Republicans stop playing political games with peoples’ lives and catering to the ideological demands of their most extreme, far-right members,” the White House memo says. “It’s time for House Republicans to abide by the bipartisan budget agreement that a majority of them voted for, keep the government open, and address other urgent needs for the American people.”

GSP: Driver pulled in front of tractor-trailer on Ga. 365

Driver Maria Yanes and her passenger were in this Toyota Highlander when they collided with a tractor-trailer on Ga. 365 at Alto-Mud Creek Road on September 19, 2023. (Rob Moore/Habersham County)

An SUV driver and passenger were lucky to get out alive Tuesday after the driver pulled into the path of a tractor-trailer on Ga. 365 at Alto-Mud Creek Road.

State troopers say 35-year-old Maria Yanes of Gainesville was driving a Toyota Highlander west across the highway from the median crossover. She failed to yield the right of way and pulled into the path of a southbound semi, troopers say.

The wreck injured Yanes and passenger Ruth Noemy Hernandez, 20, of Gainesville. The collision snarled traffic on the south end of Habersham County for several hours on September 19.

Both lanes impacted

A 9-1-1 caller who phoned in the crash around 4:47 p.m. reported that the semi-truck was all the way across the highway on the northbound side. They reported the black SUV was off the road on the southbound shoulder.

Habersham County Emergency Services responded, along with units from the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office and police departments in Baldwin and Alto.

Tuesday afternoon’s wreck on Ga. 365 at Alto-Mud Creek covered both directions. The Toyota Highlander rests on the southbound shoulder while the tractor-trailer is on the northbound side. (Rob Moore/Habersham County)
A Dollar General tractor-trailer rests on the northbound side of Ga. 365 just south of Alto-Mud Creek Road following Tuesday’s collision. (Rob Moore/Habersham County)

Habersham County EMS transported Yanes and Hernandez-Perez to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville with possible minor injuries. The truck driver, Rodrecus Lyndell Colton, 33, of Hogansville, also sustained possible minor injuries, according to the state patrol.

Troopers from Georgia State Patrol Post 7 in Toccoa investigated the crash. They cited Yanes with failure to yield right of way and a seatbelt violation.

All lanes of Ga. 365 reopened by 6:55 p.m. Tuesday.

SEE ALSO

GSP investigating injury wreck Tuesday on Ga. 365 at Rock Road

Pittard named sole finalist for White County Manager

White County Interim Manager Billy Pittard (WRWH.com)

The White County Board of Commissioners Tuesday voted to approve Billy Pittard as a sole finalist for the position of White County Manager. Pittard has been serving as interim county manager since May 8.

The commissioners are expected to hire Pittard during their regular meeting on October 2 following the required waiting period.

Pittard began working as Operations Manager in Barrow County in 2021 and served as Barrow’s Interim County Manager before coming to White County. He also served as the President of the Association of County Commissioners of Georgia (ACCCG),) for the 2019-2020 term as well as holding various other leadership positions in the communities he has served.

In addition to his years of professional management experience in local government, Pittard’s educational background is in engineering and business.

Pittard is set to become the fourth full-time county manager White County has had in two years.

Virginia Grace York

Virginia Grace York, 95, of Cornelia, GA, passed away peacefully on September 20, 2023, with her loving family by her side.

Virginia’s Christian faith was an essential part of her life. She loved the Lord, her family, her church, and her community.

Virginia was born on September 29, 1927, in Towns County, Georgia, to the late John and Leone Sims.

In addition to her parents, Virginia was preceded in death by her husband, Hubert York; her daughter, Diane York Thomas and her siblings, Trecie Minish, Ruth Abott, Johnnie Vee Burch, Orene Elrod, Margaret Sims, Ralph Sims, and Philip Sims.

Virginia is survived by her children, Brenda York of Cornelia, Gary York (Bonnie) of Sautee, Knox York (Glenda) of Sautee, and son-in-law Kenneth Thomas of Cleveland; six grandchildren; eight great-grandchildren; six great-great-grandchildren and numerous nieces and nephews.

A private family service will be held at Habersham Mills Cemetery in Demorest, Georgia.

In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to The Bridge Church, 607 Hulsey Rd, Cleveland, GA 30528, to purchase Bibles.

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

Women’s Tennis Battles Weather, Enjoys Successful Weekend at Huntingdon Invitational

The Piedmont women’s tennis team was in tournament action for the second straight weekend this past Friday and Saturday, this time taking to the road for the Huntingdon Invitational in Montgomery, Alabama.

The Lions battled multiple weather delays over the two days but were able to produce a solid showing on both days, picking up 26 singles wins and 10 doubles wins.

Overall, 19 Lions competed in the event, with all 19 picking up at least one singles win.

For the second straight weekend, the newcomers shined as freshman DREA ROBINSON won all three of her singles matches and her lone doubles match, as she was partnered with fellow freshman Kenzie Imsand.

Imsand won both of her matches, as did freshmen Daisha Thompson and Olivia Carpenter.

Making her Piedmont debut, Pauline Reutter won her first collegiate singles match in dominant fashion and was also victorious with Marion Sloyan in her first career doubles match.

The veterans also delivered strong performances as Alyssa McSpadden delivered a perfect 2-0 mark in singles, while Dakota Wilkes Joined her in 2-0 territory in singles action.

Junior Bri Laidman won a battle in a third set breaker after both of the first two sets went to tiebreakers as well.

Up next, the Lions will conclude the fall season as they take on the ITA Regionals, beginning Friday, September 29, in Sewanee, Tennessee.

Gainesville man charged with child molestation

Jason Carter Berry (Hall County Sheriff's Office)

Hall County investigators have arrested and charged an 18-year-old Gainesville man for allegedly molesting a young girl earlier this month.

Investigators took Jason Carter Berry into custody on Tuesday, September 19. He is accused of sexually assaulting a girl under the age of 12.

The crimes reportedly occurred on September 3 at a location on Nopone Road in northern Hall County. One of the victim’s family members reported the incident to law enforcement.

Berry faces four felony charges, including three counts of sexual battery on a child under the age of 16 and child molestation.

As of September 20, he remained in the Hall County Jail without bond.

White County sheriff seeks second term

White County Sheriff Rick Kelley (WRWH.com)

White County Sheriff Rick Kelley made it official Tuesday; he will be seeking a second term in office.

“It’s hard to believe that this term is already winding down,” Kelley said in making the announcement.

He said there were a few challenges during this first term, notably dealing with the effects of COVID and the resulting supply chain issues and labor shortages. Still, Kelley said, “The staff here has done an amazing job. We’ve been able to overcome all those challenges and been able to present citizens with a professional sheriff’s office that they can be proud of.”

Aside from the challenges, the Sheriff said a lot of things have been accomplished. The sheriff’s office has added two K-9 deputies to the Patrol Division and increased the number of school resource officers to six, which puts one in every school in the county.

On the technological side, Sheriff Kelley noted his administration has added body cameras for each officer as well as remote video visitation and educational tablets for inmates in the jail.

Kelley said progress has been made, but there’s more work to be done,

“I told the citizens when I ran for office initially that I would work hard for them and I would present them with a professional sheriff’s office they could be proud of. And I have accomplished that. And I want to continue working hard for the citizens of this county because this is my home county, and it is important to me,” he said.

If re-elected, Sheriff Kelley says he wants to focus on enhancing the programs that are already in place.

“And I want to focus on drug education programs in school, the CHAMPS program, and also want to look at expanding our inmate labor program.”

The mystery bird

An American Kestrel (Photo by Joe Berry)

At the end of last summer, the family and I were headed into town one evening after sunset. As we passed a hayfield that is home to a camera-shy American Kestrel, I noticed a large group of birds over the field. There was only enough light to tell that they were flying about erratically, catching insects. I did make out some white patches on the wings that I had not personally seen before on birds.

They did not return to the hayfield the next evening; they must have been passing through on a migration.

Researching the ‘mystery bird’

I am not a “birder” with a broad knowledge of bird species, but when I see a well-marked unique stranger, I like to learn what it is. My hope was to see them again someday with better light and a camera in hand so I could identify them.

I am a member of the Facebook group “Georgia Wildlife and Landscape Photography.” We post photos of wildlife and landscapes with the county and date to assist others in knowing when the species may be seen in an area. Several days ago, I was looking through the group’s photo postings and spotted my mystery bird. It had swept-back wings with white wing bars.

I knew positively that it was my mystery bird when I saw the video that the member had also posted of the birds feeding over a sunflower field. The flights of the feeding birds had the same erratic patterns.

The member identified the birds as the Common Nighthawk (Chordeiles minor). I hadn’t recalled seeing this bird before, so I looked it up. My research revealed that they are a medium-sized nocturnal bird of the Nightjar family. This explains why I hadn’t seen them; they feed in very low light. They have large eyes and mouths on their flattened heads to better catch insects in the low light.

Nighthawk (Photo by Joe Berry)

Migration

Nighthawks begin their southbound migration in July, headed to Argentina for the winter. During migration, they are commonly seen in the evenings with a “burst of sunset feeding activities.”

This gave me hope that I might see the birds again soon as I knew that it was time again for their migration through North Georgia.

Just a few days later, I had stepped out on the front porch to let the dogs have some time in the front yard after supper and caught a glimpse of what I was sure was a Nighthawk above the house across the road.

They were here! I was sure of it!

Nighthawk (Photo by Joe Berry)

I got the dogs back in and quickly changed into my camo. I grabbed my gear and was off on my bike to the hayfield a quarter mile down the road.

As I parked my bike, I began seeing the Nighthawks passing southward overhead in waves that were too high to get good pictures. I was disappointed but went ahead and snapped a couple of shots to confirm their identity. I could zoom in on the images on the camera display and see the white wing bars and flattened heads, definitely Nighthawks.

Camo, quick prayer, and a hayfield

A few more waves of nighthawks passed over as the sun got closer to the horizon, but they were still too high.

(Photo by Joe Berry)

Then I noticed a group of a dozen or more drop down below the tops of the trees on the other side of the hayfield. They made a wide turn and came back through the hayfield and began feeding, as I had seen in the video.

I said a quick prayer of thanks to the Lord and headed out into the hayfield.

I was hoping that by being camouflaged and keeping a low profile, I wouldn’t disturb their feeding, and I was correct. The Nighthawks were flying all around me on my knees, sometimes coming within ten feet.

In my haste to get into the hayfield, I had left my spare batteries on the bike, but the one battery was enough to get plenty of images. I hope you enjoy them.

 

Former U.S. Capitol Police chief blames intelligence failures, not Trump, for Jan. 6 attack

WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 07: Rep. Barry Loudermilk (R-GA) speaks during a joint committee hearing with the House Committee on Oversight and Accountability and House Committee on House Administration at the U.S. Capitol Building on June 07, 2023 in Washington, DC. The joint hearing was held to discuss reforms in voting laws in the District of Columbia. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

(GA Recorder) — The FBI and U.S. Department of Homeland Security failed to share intelligence with the U.S. Capitol Police ahead of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack, leaving the Capitol Police under-prepared for that day’s violence, the former chief of the Capitol Police told a U.S. House panel chaired by Cassville, Georgia Republican Barry Loudermilk on Tuesday.

But Democrats at the House Administration hearing said the testimony by former USCP Chief Steven Sund didn’t change that former President Donald Trump bore responsibility for boosting baseless allegations that the 2020 presidential election had been stolen.

Trump then summoned supporters to the Capitol, urged them to disrupt then-Vice President Mike Pence’s ceremonial role in certifying the election and then stood by as his supporters attacked the Capitol, Democrats said.

Sund told the panel: “Significant intelligence existed that individuals were plotting to storm the Capitol building, target lawmakers and discussing shooting my officers. And yet, no intel agencies or units sounded the alarm. We were blindsided. Intelligence failed operations. The January 6 attack at the Capitol was preventable.”

Sund told the House Administration Subcommittee on Oversight that besides intelligence failures, the U.S. National Guard had also been instructed not to assist Capitol Police out of concern for political “optics.”

Republicans on the panel, led by Loudermilk, used the hearing Tuesday to rebut the findings of the House Select Committee to Investigate the Jan. 6 Attack on the U.S. Capitol that Trump bore responsibility for the insurrection.

Loudermilk has a personal history with the Jan. 6 committee, and noted Tuesday he had been “a target” of the panel.

The committee asked Loudermilk last year to answer questions about a Capitol tour he gave the day before the attack. Some Democratic House members had said they suspected rioters used tours in the days leading up to the attack to gain a better understanding of the Capitol’s layout.

Democrats said Tuesday that Trump, who faces criminal indictments in connection with Jan. 6, is the main responsible party.

“The person responsible for directing the violence to the Capitol that day in order to undermine — to undermine — a peaceful transfer of power is the favorite to secure the Republican nomination for president,” subcommittee ranking Democrat Norma Torres of California said, referring to Trump’s 2024 bid to reclaim the presidency.

Intelligence breakdown and National Guard slowdown

Sund, who resigned from the Capitol Police two days after the Capitol attack, said that intelligence made public since the attack could have prevented that day’s violence if it was shared ahead of time.

“If the intelligence had been accurately reported and the FBI and DHS had followed their policies and established practices, I wouldn’t be sitting here today,” he told the panel.

“This could have been preventable if we had gotten the intelligence they had,” he later told Virginia Republican Morgan Griffith.

Sund’s department’s own intelligence operations also failed to note the potential danger in the days leading up to the attack, he said.

The USCP Intelligence Division issued a Jan. 3 intelligence assessment, but didn’t highlight an imminent concern, Sund said. The division had intelligence available, but failed to include it, Sund testified.

Sund also told the panel that he was stymied in efforts to have National Guard troops assist U.S. Capitol police.

He’d asked the sergeant at arms of each chamber of Congress on Jan. 3 for permission to call in the National Guard, but was denied in deference to the “optics” of having National Guard troops at the Capitol, he said.

On Jan. 6, he asked House Sergeant at Arms Paul Irving to call the National Guard, but didn’t receive approval for more than an hour, he said. The Guard’s arrival at the Capitol was delayed hours more by Defense Department officials, who also cited “the optics of the National Guard on Capitol Hill,” he said.

Memos on Jan. 4 and Jan. 5 from the Defense Department and Department of Army restricted the D.C. National Guard from being involved in responding to Jan. 6 pro-Trump protests, Sund confirmed in response to House Administration ranking Democratic Joseph Morelle of New York.

Sund was unaware of those restrictions until after the attack, he said.

Jan. 6 committee questioned

Loudermilk and other Republicans on the panel used Sund’s testimony to blame the attack on former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi — not Trump, as the U.S. House committee that investigated the attack, found.

The Jan. 6 committee didn’t ask Sund to appear, the former chief said Tuesday, in response to a question from Loudermilk.

Republicans highlighted Sund’s testimony that Irving delayed National Guard backup and noted that, as the House’s top law enforcement officer, Irving reported to Pelosi.

“None of us in this room are saying what happened on Jan. 6 was correct,” U.S. Rep. Greg Murphy, a North Carolina Republican, said. “But I absolutely believe the conditions for that to occur rest at the former speaker’s lap and the two sergeant at arms, and complicit with other individuals. You know, it’s one thing for something to occur, but it’s another thing to create the conditions for that to occur.”

Trump has also called Pelosi responsible for the attack, a claim Pelosi rejected on “The Sunday Show with Jonathan Capehart” on MSNBC.

“He knows he’s responsible for that, so he projects it onto others,” Pelosi said of Trump. “The assault on the Capitol building, the assault on the Constitution, the assault on our democracy. Shame on him.”

Morelle at the hearing disagreed with the Republicans’ effort to shift blame to Pelosi.

“I’m disturbed by that you don’t blame the rioters or the president,” Morelle said. “It’s like blaming a homeowner when he or she is robbed instead of blaming the intruder.”

Morelle added that Irving had been appointed and reappointed to his post by Republican former Speakers John Boehner and Paul Ryan.

Further, Sund’s account of the National Guard’s delay on Jan. 6 could not solely be attributed to Irving, Morelle noted. The Pentagon, which then was controlled by Trump appointees, also contributed to the delay in sending National Guard troops, he said.

Mt. Airy driver cited for wreck on Ga. 365 at Rock Road

Tuesday afternoon’s wreck on Ga. 365 at Rock Road involved a passenger vehicle and a work truck. Two injured people were transported by ambulance to Northeast Georgia Medical Center Gainesville. (Rob Moore/Habersham County)

The Georgia State Patrol says a Mt. Airy driver failed to yield while crossing over Ga. 365 near the Stephens County line. The pickup truck ran into the path of a northbound car.

Units from Habersham County Emergency Services, the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office, and Georgia State Patrol responded to the wreck around 5:28 p.m. on September 19.

According to the state patrol’s preliminary crash investigation, Timothy Greenless of Mt. Ariy was driving a RAM 3500 pickup east on Rock Road. Greenless failed to yield after stopping at the sign and ran into the path of an Acura MDX that was northbound on Ga. 365.

A heavily damaged passenger vehicle rests on the shoulder of Ga. 365 at Rock Road following Tuesday’s collision. (Rob Moore/Habersham County)
A work truck rests in the turn lane from Rock Road onto Ga. 365 after Tuesday afternoon’s wreck. (Rob Moore/Habersham County)

The Acura T-boned the pickup, injuring both people in the car. The driver, Michael Chumley, and a passenger, Nicola Howard, both of Cherry Hill, New Jersey, were taken to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville for treatment.

The investigating trooper cited Greenless with failure to yield after stopping at a stop sign.

The wreck was reported while Habersham County Emergency Services and sheriff’s deputies were on the scene of another injury wreck on Ga. 365 at Alto-Mud Creek Road on the other end of the county.

SEE ALSO

3 injured in RV rollover wreck on Hwy. 17

Shirley Lois Craven England

Shirley Lois Craven England, age 86, of Alto, Georgia, passed away on Tuesday, September 19, 2023.

Mrs. England was born on May 3, 1937, in Gillsville, Georgia, to the late Mr. and Mrs. Craven. She was also preceded in death by her beloved husband, Guy Willard England, and many siblings.

Mrs. England worked in the sewing industry for many years and was a member of Living Mission United Methodist Church.

Survivors include her sons and daughters-in-law, Phil England, of Cornelia; Eddie and Naja England, of Maysville; Roger and Regina England, of Alto; grandchildren, Tyler England, Chanda Silvers, Elisha Kinsey, David Bennett, Jeremy England, Casey Barron, Madelin Jones, and Amanda Sugent; and fifteen great-grandchildren.

The family will receive friends from 1:00 p.m. to 2:45 p.m. on Saturday, September 23, 2023, at Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel in Baldwin, Georgia.

Funeral Services will be held at 3:00 p.m. in the chapel with Rev. Paul Creason officiating. Interment will follow at Living Mission United Methodist Church Cemetery in Lula, Georgia.

Following the interment, there will be a meal provided by the England family at the home of Roger England at 527 Garland White Road, Alto, Georgia 30510.

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

George Monroe Warren, Jr.

George Monroe Warren, Jr. of Clayton, Georgia, passed peacefully in his sleep on Tuesday, September 19, 2023, and went to his Heavenly home.

Mr. Warren was born on October 26, 1933, in Fort Benning, Georgia, to the late George Monroe Warren, Sr., and Rosa Furr Warren. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife of 61 years, Patricia Jane Warren, his son, George Monroe Warren III, and sister Eleanor Jane St. Clair.

George was a Retired Veteran who enlisted in the army at the age of 16 and was listed in the book “America’s Young Warriors.” He served in the Korean War and did two tours in the Vietnam War. His military career spanned 22 years. He retired in 1972 at the age of 38 as a Command Sergeant Major. Mr. Warren loved the military life and serving his country. He continued to be very active in the local chapter of the VFW. In his later years, George wanted to capture and pass down to his children and others the stories of his military career and life experiences, so he wrote a memoir titled “SMAJ,” which was his nickname while on active duty.

Following his retirement, he had a second career in the restaurant business. He owned the Roundhouse Restaurant on Peachtree Street in Atlanta and the Crab ‘N’ Claw restaurant in Conyers, Georgia. The restaurant business suited him well. He loved people and had an infectious personality, always telling stories and sharing jokes. His laugh could be heard across the room.

Survivors include his loving wife, Sherrie Malcom Warren, of Social Circle; sons Lindsey Warren and wife Stacy; Wesley Warren; Brian Warren and wife Lori; daughter Ramona Warren Phelps and husband Rodger; grandchildren Leigh Anne Warren; Whitney Warren; Dylan Warren; Raleigh Warren and husband Evan; Jordan Warren and wife Desi; Brandi Warren Wilkes and husband Brandon; Meagan Warren and Joshua Warren; and several great-grandchildren and extended family.

Memorial Services will be held Saturday, September 30, 2023, at Clayton United Methodist Church, 71 South Main Street, Clayton, GA. The family will receive friends from 10:00 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. at the church prior to the service. The service will be held at 11:00 a.m., with a reception to follow.

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