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Buford man faces multiple charges for possession of child pornography

Seth Daniel Marx (Hall County Sheriff's Office)

Hall County sheriff’s investigators arrested a Buford man after discovering he possessed multiple images of child pornography, officials say. Investigators say 20-year-old Seth Daniel Marx shared at least one of the images.

Marx was arrested on September 12 and charged with 11 counts of sexual exploitation of a minor. He remains in the Hall County Jail with no bond.

According to the Hall County Sheriff’s Office, the initial investigation began in February following a cyber tip.

During the course of the investigation, authorities determined Marx was in possession of a video depicting young children being sexually assaulted. The sheriff’s office says Marx shared that video on an instant messaging platform. After seizing the suspect’s phone, investigators said they found nine more videos containing lewd images of children on it.

Investigators do not believe any of the victims are from the local area. The GBI assisted with the investigation.

Oakwood man killed in Athens wreck

A single-vehicle wreck in Athens claimed the life of a Hall County man.

Athens-Clarke County police say Brandon Tolbert, 27, of Oakwood, was fatally injured in the wreck Tuesday afternoon, September 12. The crash occurred approximately 3 miles southeast of downtown Athens.

Police say Tolbert was driving a woodchipper truck with an attached trailer west on Lexington Road when it crashed near Oak Drive. The truck veered to the left, struck a curb, and sideswiped landscaping in the center median where it stopped.

Tolbert was removed from the truck and given medical care. He was transported to an Athens area hospital where he was pronounced dead.

The investigation into the crash is ongoing. Investigators are asking anyone with information to contact Senior Police Officer Tilley at [email protected] or 762-400-7355.

This is the 13th fatal vehicle crash in Athens-Clarke County this year.

Tennessee fugitive arrested in Cornelia

George Joshua Harrison (Habersham County Sheriff's Office)

Suspicious activity outside a local elementary school late Tuesday night led police to arrest a fugitive from Tennessee.

Cornelia police took 29-year-old George Joshua Harrison of Elizabethton, Tennessee, into custody outside Cornelia Elementary School on September 12. He was sitting in a parked car with a woman and child while another man worked on the car tire, police said.

When a Cornelia Police Officer approached the vehicle shortly before 10 p.m., he said Harrison told him they were trying to fix a “mechanical issue.” The officer said he smelled marijuana and asked for Harrison’s ID, as well as those of the two other adults, identified as Josh Wells and Haley Miller. Miller had her 1-year-old son with her, police said.

The background check showed Harrison was wanted on a felony probation warrant.

According to the incident report, Harrison admitted to the Cornelia police officer he was smoking marijuana earlier in the day. While searching the vehicle, a second officer on the scene reportedly found marijuana and a Smith and Wesson .380 pistol with a loaded chamber.

Also inside the car, police said they found a tray with marijuana residue, a rubber container with suspected THC wax, a Hookah with methamphetamine inside of it, several bags with the names, “Josh” “Josh” and “Own” on them, two scales, and a grinder.

Escape

As the first officer cuffed Harrison, he said Harrison began “to dig with his hands in the back of his pants,” as if he were hiding something. As the policeman walked Harrison to his patrol car, the handcuffed suspect took off running toward the road.

“I yelled ‘No!’ and began to pursue him on foot,” Cornelia Police Officer Aaron Spivey wrote in his report. “George appeared to be creating distance between me and him and I pulled my taser. I acquired a shot once George was in grass and as I was pulling the trigger, George fell to the ground and rolled.”

The taser caught Harrison below the right eye. He fell, then got back up and continued running.

As Harrison headed for the car where the loaded gun was, Spivey said he fired another taser round, striking Harrison in the “back and the buttocks area.”

“George had a near complete NMI (neuromuscular incapacitation) and fell to the ground landing hard on his shoulder, elbow, and chin,” Spivey reported.

The officers on the scene secured Harrison and provided first aid. They requested an ambulance which later took the injured suspect to the hospital.

Harrison was booked at the Habersham County Detention Center early Wednesday morning. Police charged him with three felonies including escape, possession of meth, and being a fugitive from justice. They also charged him with two misdemeanors for marijuana possession and obstructing law enforcement officers.

According to the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office, Harrison was wanted in Tennessee for a probation violation on an “unknown original charge” and a probation violation on misdemeanor charges.

As of late Wednesday morning, September 13, Harrison remained in jail. Charges have not been filed against Wells or Miller.

COVID-19 cases on the rise in Northeast Georgia

(NowHabersham.com)

Area health officials say COVID-19 cases are on the rise in Northeast Georgia now with kids back in school.

Dr. Zachary Taylor, director of District 2 Public Health, said 67 cases were reported in the district at the end of July, while 195 cases were reported during the last week in August.

“It sort of coincided with the return to schools,” Dr. Taylor said. “People coming into those settings, it probably involves children becoming infected and perhaps taking it home and infecting other family members.”

However, Dr. Taylor said the number of cases is likely underreported, as many people are using at-home test kits, which are not reported to the health department.

Hospitalizations are also up, but the numbers are still considerably low compared to previous upticks, Taylor says. The district reported 406 hospitalizations during one week in 2022, while a little over 60 hospitalizations were reported during the first week of September.

According to Taylor, COVID treatment has changed over the past several years thanks to the use of Paxlovid, an at-home antiviral medication, along with increased immunity from previous vaccination and COVID-19 infections.

On September 12, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued updated guidance on who should get vaccinated against COVID-19. The CDC recommends the shot for people 6 months and older.

The CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices voted to approve updated booster shots. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday approved an updated booster from Moderna and one from Pfizer.

SEE ALSO

New round of COVID-19 booster shots on the way after CDC recommendation

U.S. House conservatives balk at short-term funding patch to avert shutdown

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — The most conservative Republicans in the U.S. House announced Tuesday they won’t support the short-term spending bill that’s needed to stop a partial government shutdown from beginning on Oct. 1.

Freedom Caucus Chair Scott Perry, a Pennsylvania Republican, said the group is not interested in a stopgap spending bill that “continues the policies and the spending of the Biden-Schumer-Pelosi era and we’re not going to vote for it.”

“The power of the purse is in the legislature. The way you stop all this craziness of the Biden administration — the tyranny of the Biden administration — is to stop giving them money,” Perry said during a press conference just outside the Capitol building.

The caucus does not disclose its membership numbers, but nine House members spoke at a press conference outside the Capitol. GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert of Colorado was also in attendance.

The GOP-controlled House passed one of its dozen annual government funding bills before going on a six-week break throughout August. The Senate began debate on a three-bill package Tuesday.

That means the process of appropriating funds won’t be completed in time and a short-term stopgap spending bill is necessary if Congress is going to avoid a partial government shutdown.  

The House is scheduled to take up a second spending bill, the Defense funding measure, later this week, though Perry indicated the group may not support its passage.

“The Republican Party always wants to defend the nation and always wants to support our military,” Perry said. “But what we’re not going to do is say that we’re going to pass things without knowing what the plan is; and knowing that it leads to the increased spending that is crippling our citizens.”

“We’re not going to do that. So we’re going to have to see the whole plan, is the point,” Perry added.

The short-term spending bill could pass the House without Freedom Caucus support, if the legislation has the backing of Democrats.

House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries said during a press conference later Tuesday that Democrats have not had any discussions about filing a petition, known as a motion to discharge, which would force a vote on spending bills.

Jeffries, of New York, said that far-right Republicans “are determined to shut the government down, crash the economy or alternatively, jam their right-wing ideology down the throats of the American people.”

“We will not be paying any right-wing ransom notes,” he said. “It’s not happening.”

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, said Tuesday that “one of the top Senate priorities” this month is avoiding a government shutdown.

“Both parties in both chambers are going to have to work together in a bipartisan way to avoid a shutdown,” Schumer said. “It may not be obvious to 30 crazy people on the far right of the Republican House, but it’s obvious to everyone else. They can’t just have it their way.”

Schumer “implored” Republicans to “recognize that time is short” and that “the only way to avoid a shutdown is through bipartisanship.”

Spending mess

Congress is supposed to pass 12 government funding bills annually before the start of the new fiscal year on Oct. 1. But lawmakers haven’t completed all of their work on time since the last century.

So every September, congressional leaders draft a stopgap spending bill that’s often referred to as a continuing resolution, or CR. That short-term government funding bill extends current funding levels and policy, usually until mid-December.

That is intended to give the House and Senate a couple more months to work out a final agreement on the dozen annual spending bills that fund much of the federal government.

If Congress cannot agree to either a short-term spending bill, or pass all dozen of its full-year spending bills, then a partial government shutdown would begin.

During a funding lapse, federal employees in the so-called “exempt” category continue working without pay, while “non-exempt” federal workers are sent home, also without a paycheck.

When the funding lapse ends, Congress typically approves back pay for all federal employees, though not contractors.

Freedom Caucus members at Tuesday’s press conference said there are several steps they want GOP leaders to take on government funding, including adding a border security bill that couldn’t get through the Democratically controlled Senate on its own.

North Carolina Rep. Dan Bishop expressed frustration that House leaders are likely to call on members to pass a “clean” stopgap spending bill. That term generally refers to short-term spending bills that don’t include many additional, or unrelated, provisions.

“The opportunity to negotiate on behalf of the American people arrives again right now. And leadership means seizing that opportunity and doing something for the American people,” Bishop said.

Debt limit deal

The debt limit agreement brokered between Speaker Kevin McCarthy and President Joe Biden included total spending levels for the fiscal year slated to begin on Oct. 1.

Spending on defense was set at $886 billion with spending on non defense accounts at $704 billion, though House Republicans have written their funding bills significantly below that level for domestic programs.

Georgia Rep. Andrew Clyde of Athens said during the press conference Tuesday the spending agreement within the debt limit deal was “disastrous.”

“The country gave House Republicans the majority to change the course of Congress,” Clyde said. “Greenlighting a so-called clean, or unqualified, or blind CR, is completely out of the question. It would endanger the Republican majority and endanger Speaker McCarthy’s leadership.”

An official in the White House’s budget office, who declined to speak on the record, said Tuesday the Biden administration is opposed to House Republicans’ decision to cut federal funding by more than $100 billion below the debt limit agreement.

The official said the House GOP full-year spending bills break GOP lawmakers’ “public promises” and “gut key investments in our communities.”

The White House released fact sheets for each state Tuesday detailing what they say will happen if Congress approves the House Republican spending bills as they were written.

Ariana Figueroa contributed to this report.

A special day of fun at the Chattahoochee Mountain Fair

Those that attended the Special Needs Day at the fairgrounds wrapped up their day with a group photo. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Habersham Central High School and Ninth Grade Academy special education students got a treat Tuesday morning, September 12. Chattahoochee Mountain Fair General Manager Shelley Tullis and the carnival ride operator opened up the fairgrounds especially for them so they could enjoy the fair away from the large crowds and chaos. And they did it all for free!

The students got to enjoy the same shows as everyone else, but just for them. They got to experience the entertainment from the WOW Factor Science Show as well as the HOG Diggity DOG Show. The students also visited the petting zoo.

“The Special Needs Day is the most rewarding part of this whole fair experience. To see those kids’ faces is unbelievable,” said Tullis. “They’re happy, it’s here [at the fairgrounds], and they don’t always get to experience this. That is my most rewarding event, and that will always be part of what I do.”

Juan Diego with Chattahoochee Mountain Fair Manager Shelley Tullis. She calls him her “inspiration.” (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)
Students ride bumper cars at the Chattahoochee Mountain Fair. The fairgrounds opened up to give special needs students a fun day at the fair without all the crowds and noise. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)
A student tackles the mechanical bull at the Habersham County Fairgrounds. (Photo by Ashlee Harrelson)
Petting zoo (Photo by Ashlee Harrelson)
(Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)
(Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The principals of both schools accompanied the students and teachers.

“It’s the highlight of my year to get to come out here with these students and their teachers and just have fun and celebrate school with them,” said Habersham Central High School Principal Jonathan Stribling.

HCHS Principal Dr. Jonathan Stribling rides the ferris wheel with student Sissy Pritchett. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

“I appreciate the ability of our students to get out and enjoy this, and their smiles today tell me everything — that they’re having fun and they are loving life!” said Ninth Grade Academy Principal David Leenman.

A quick trip down the big slide (Photo by Ashlee Harrelson)

Leenman added, “It’s a great opportunity for them to get out and have this event all to themselves and ride as many rides as they have. I just appreciate our system supporting this day. I appreciate our teachers doing a good job of this and all that goes into this day.”

Ninth Grade Academy teacher Ginger Bridges praised the vendors.

She told Now Habersham they worked until late last night preparing for the students’ visit.

“I want to thank all of the [ride] vendors and the shows. They came out early, and they did that for these kids and made it an exceptional day!”

Lions capture first win of 2023 in 3-0 shutout at Toccoa Falls

(Photo by Dale Zanine)

The Piedmont women’s soccer team picked up its first win of the 2023 season, defeating Toccoa Falls 3-0 on Tuesday night in Toccoa.

The Lions struck for a pair of goals in quick succession midway through the first half and never looked back in the win.

After the Screaming Eagles had a great look on a shot that just sailed high over the bar, Piedmont answered with a strong surge.

Senior Elissa Lotter was right on target with a blast from outside the box that was too high for the TFC keeper to reach.

Then, just over a minute later it was a pair of freshmen connecting to make it 2-0.

After a Piedmont cross into the box was unable to be cleared by Toccoa Falls, Gretchen Dedolph was able to find Jocelyn Lopez, who beat the goalkeeper from just in front of the goal for her first in a Lions uniform.

The second half saw the Lions take control even more, as they owned possession and held a 16-2 edge in shots over the second 45 minutes.

Piedmont senior Aria Solano Found the back of the net in the 61st minute, as she collected a rebound off her own shot that deflected off the crossbar.

Up next, the Lions will return home for their CCS opener, welcoming Wesleyan to the Walker Athletic Complex next Tuesday, September 19 at 6:30 p.m.

TURNING POINT:
Piedmont struck for two goals in just over a minute as ELISSA LOTTER sent home the game winner while freshman JOCELYN LOPEZ added on to make it 2-0 midway through the first half.

STANDOUT PERFORMANCES:
– Lotter provided the spark the Lions needed, scoring her first of the 2023 season.
– Lopez found her first collegiate goal off fellow freshman Dedolph’s first career assist.
– Solano scored for the second time in her career.

INSIDE THE BOX SCORE:
– Piedmont held a 25-8 shot advantage for the game.
– Overall, 25 different Lions saw the field on Tuesday night.

Linda Fortenberry Erwin

Linda Fortenberry Erwin, age 67, of Baldwin, Georgia, took her heavenly flight home to be with the Lord on Tuesday, September 12, 2023.

Born in Demorest, Georgia, on July 22, 1956, she was a daughter of the late Bobby Lee & Mary Beatrice Kinsey Fortenberry. Linda was a hardworking lady who had a heart of gold and never met a stranger. Her kids were her world, but her grandkids were her universe. She did without often so her family could have what they needed. Linda supported her family through their many endeavors and tried to be at every event possible. She was a member of the Clarkesville Church of God.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her grandson, Peyton Erwin, and by her brother Jerry Lee Fortenberry.

Survivors include her children & their spouses, Greggory & Brittanie Erwin of Chatsworth, GA; Richard & Shannon Erwin; Elisa Beth Erwin all of Clarkesville, GA; Joseph Erwin of Cumming, GA; grandchildren, Christian Erwin, Danyelle Erwin, Madison Erwin, Jeremy Erwin, Emma Gail Erwin, Andrew Erwin, Preston Erwin, Brycen Erwin, Taylor King, Kayleigh Moore, Lucas Erwin, Brayden Erwin, & Paisley Erwin; great-grandson, Zedekiah Erwin; sister & brother-in-law, Patricia & Jim Skeen of Clarkesville, GA; sister-in-law, Jeanette Fortenberry of Mount Airy, GA; nephews & spouses, Lee & Nicole Fortenberry; Jesse & Brittnee Fortenberry; niece & spouse, Mary Jo & Tyler McCullough; other relatives & friends.

Funeral services are scheduled for 1:00 p.m. Friday, September 15, 2023, at Hillside Memorial Chapel in Clarkesville, with Rev. Tim Tanner & Rev. Kenneth McEntire officiating. Interment will follow the service in the Yonah Memorial Gardens.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 2:00 p.m. until 4:00 p.m. & from 6:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. on Thursday, September 14, 2023, and again from 12:00 noon until the service hour on Friday.

An online guest registry is available for the Erwin family at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

Arrangements are in the care & professional direction of Hillside Memorial Chapel & Gardens of Clarkesville, Georgia. (706) 754-6256

Kemp suspends state gas tax, declares state of emergency over inflation

(Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

Georgia motorists could soon be paying less at the pump thanks to a healthy state budget surplus, and analysts say they may get another surprise assist from the earth’s axial tilt.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp announced Tuesday he plans to suspend the state’s fuel tax, declaring a state of emergency due to high levels of inflation. The suspension is set to go into effect Wednesday and last through Oct. 12. Kemp’s office said the cut will save Georgians 31.2 cents per gallon of gasoline and 35 cents per gallon of diesel.

Kemp placed the blame for high gas prices squarely on the shoulders of President Joe Biden.

“From runaway federal spending to policies that hamstring domestic energy production, all Bidenomics has done is take more money out of the pockets of the middle class,” Kemp said in a statement. “While high prices continue to hit family budgets, hardworking Georgians deserve real relief and that’s why I signed an executive order today to deliver it directly to them at the pump. Working with partners in the General Assembly, we’ll continue to help Georgians weather the economic headwinds caused by this president, his administration, and their allies in Congress.”

Inflation dropped to a 3.2% rate in July, a drop from 8.5% for the same month the year before, according to the Consumer Price Index.

Some economists charge federal domestic policy with exacerbating inflation, but other factors have likely contributed to this summer’s high gas prices, including a production cut from Saudi Arabia and Russia as well as extreme heat forcing refineries to decrease production.

Whoever is to blame, the average Georgian is currently shelling out $3.57 for a gallon of regular gasoline, according to AAA, which means filling up a 15-gallon tank will cost $53.55. Subtracting the excise tax would bring the damage to about $48.87.

Georgia is already faring better than most states, with the U.S. average price at the pump Tuesday at $3.86. States out west are paying the most, with Californians paying $5.46 a gallon.

Georgians are paying more at the pump than they were a year ago – a gallon of regular cost just $3.24 in the halcyon days of Sept. 12, 2022, a 33-cent difference – but prices are relaxing in the short term.

A gallon of Peach State regular would have cost $3.59 a week ago or $3.63 a month ago.

A downward trajectory is typical for this time of year, petrol professionals say, and it’s got nothing to do with election season.

Mid-September is when gas stations begin selling winter blend fuel. Winter gasoline is cheaper to produce and helps engines start more easily in cold weather, though it creates more emissions.

According to GasBuddy, gas prices typically fall between 10 and 30 cents per gallon between mid-to-late September and November as gas stations switch to the cheaper winter blend and demand for motor fuel falls with the mercury.

Head of GasBuddy petroleum analysis Patrick De Haan said drivers in states like Iowa and Minnesota facing steep fuel costs have reason to hope for relief, even without Kemp’s help.

“There is some good news for those in the hardest hit states in the Midwest, however, as gasoline prices should start to level off and even decline by mid-week,” De Haan reported Monday. “And with most of the nation switching back to cheaper winter gasoline on Saturday, we should see more price decreases for most of the nation in the weeks ahead, barring further refinery disruptions and hurricane season. Fall tends to bring falling gas prices, and I’m hoping this year won’t be any different.”

Kemp suspended the state’s gas tax for most of last year amid high general inflation and pressure on gas prices from the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Between March and December, about $1.7 billion ended up in fuel tanks instead of state coffers, about $170 million per month, but with years of multi-billion budget surpluses, the state can likely endure the loss without making cuts to services.

U.S. House Speaker McCarthy tells committees to launch Biden impeachment probe

U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy at a press conference on Tuesday, Sept. 12, 2023, in the U.S. Capitol. (Ariana Figueroa/States Newsroom)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy on Tuesday announced that he has directed several House committees to open a formal impeachment inquiry into unproven GOP allegations that President Joe Biden profited from his son’s business dealings when he was vice president in the Obama administration.

“These allegations paint a picture, a picture of corruption,” McCarthy, a California Republican, told reporters at a Capitol press conference. “This logical next step will give our committees the full power to gather all the facts and answers for the American public.”

The inquiry for now will allow McCarthy to skirt a floor vote, as it’s unclear if he has 218 votes for the House to launch a probe. But the announcement comes as a far-right group of Republicans have pushed for an impeachment investigation and have threatened McCarthy’s position as speaker.

Congress is scrambling to broker a short-term spending deal with the White House to avoid a partial government shutdown before a Sept. 30 deadline, and the House GOP is pushing for spending cuts in its appropriations bills at odds with Senate legislation.

Ian Sams, the White House spokesperson for oversight and investigations, said in a statement that House Republicans have spent the entire year investigating Biden and have yet to find  “evidence of wrongdoing.” He added that McCarthy initially planned to hold an impeachment vote but has “flip-flopped because he doesn’t have support.”

“This is extreme politics at its worst,” Sams said.

Democrats said the announcement by McCarthy showed him caving in to his right wing. “We have 11 legislative days to pass 11 appropriations bills and avoid a shutdown. Yet Mr. McCarthy — on his first day back — is calling for an impeachment inquiry,” Rep. Madeleine Dean of Pennsylvania, a member of the House Judiciary Committee, said on X. “This is not leadership. This is a mockery. Mr. McCarthy needs to lead his caucus — not the other way around.”

The chair of the House Progressive Caucus, Pramila Jayapal, Democrat of Washington, said on X that the impeachment inquiry is a distraction “from the fact that the GOP can’t even pass bills to fund the government.”

“So, here we go — headed to an extreme MAGA Republican shutdown while they play political games with a non-starter impeachment,” she said on X.

McCarthy said the impeachment inquiry will be led by House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer of Kentucky, with assistance from House Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan of Ohio and House Ways and Means Committee Chair Jason Smith of Missouri.

Jordan and Comer have spent the year holding various hearings, but those investigations haven’t revealed any direct link that Biden profited from his son Hunter’s business dealings.

“We’ll follow the facts, the Constitution, and the law,” Jordan wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

McCarthy said the allegations “warrant further investigation by the House of Representatives” and said on X that they are “serious and credible.”

Rep. Matt Gaetz, Republican of Florida, has openly threatened to strip McCarthy of his position as speaker if he did not launch an impeachment probe.

“When [McCarthy] makes his announcement in moments, remember that as I pushed him for weeks,” Gaetz wrote earlier Tuesday on X.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, Republican of Rome, criticized Gaetz for taking credit, arguing that on Biden’s first day in office, she introduced articles of impeachment.

“You wouldn’t cosponsor those, and I had to drag you kicking and screaming to get you to cosponsor my articles on the border,” she wrote on X. “Who’s really been making the push?”

Shortly after McCarthy’s announcement, Gaetz took to the House floor, arguing that McCarthy had not held up his end of the deals he made in January with the right wing of his conference – when he was elected on the 15th ballot for speaker.

“Mr. Speaker, you are out of compliance with the agreement that allowed you to assume this role,” Gaetz said on the House floor.

He said the path forward for the House is to “either bring you into immediate total compliance or remove you.”

Matthew Alexander Cahill

Matthew Alexander Cahill, age 61, of Gillsville, Georgia, passed away peacefully into the Arms of the Lord on Tuesday, September 12, 2023, following a short, courageous battle with cancer.

Born in The Grand Turks & Caicos Islands on May 17, 1962, he was a son of the late Francis Alexander & Betty Whitmire Cahill. Matt served his country proudly in the United States Marine Corps as well as the United States Army National Guard during Operation Desert Storm. He was employed with Global Tech Industries for many years. Matt was a loving husband, brother, Dad, Gampa, and friend. He will be missed tremendously.

In addition to his parents, Matt was preceded in death by his brother, Lonnie Smith.

Survivors include his loving wife of 20 years, Lena Whitfield Cahill of Gillsville, GA; children, Frank & Katie Cahill of Fayetteville, NC; Melanie Cahill of Jacksonville, FL; Angel & Max Lipchinsky; Phillip Blackburn, all of Gillsville, GA; sisters & brother-in-law, Desiree Cahill Wolfe & John Wolfe of Fort Lauderdale, FL; Jackie Cahill Gillett of Catawba, NC; grandchildren, Travis, Lane, Sean, Belle & Lily; as well as numerous nieces, nephews, other relatives, & friends.

Funeral services are scheduled for 2:00 p.m. Saturday, September 16, 2023, at Hillside Memorial Chapel in Clarkesville, with Dr. Kenneth Franklin officiating.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 12:00 noon until the service hour on Saturday.

An online guest registry is available for the Cahill family at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

Arrangements are in the care & professional direction of Hillside Memorial Chapel & Gardens of Clarkesville, Georgia. (706) 754-6256

Mt. Airy Town Council considers possible millage rate increase

Mt. Airy Town Councnil members listen to a department report during their regular monthly meeting on September 11, 2023. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The Mt. Airy Town Council discussed setting their millage rate at Monday night’s meeting but decided to table the matter until next Monday to ensure they had exact figures to make that decision.

The town is experiencing a downturn in revenue due to competition with other cities, officials said. Over the last year, Baldwin, Cornelia, and Clarkesville have allowed liquor stores to come to their cities, with Cornelia and Clarkesville having stores opening during that period. Mt. Airy used to hold the distinction as the only place in Habersham County where you could buy liquor.

According to Mt. Airy Mayor Ray McAllister, the competition has cost the town somewhere in the neighborhood of $26,000 to $28,000.

Another service that many cities provide is GCIC employment background checks for businesses. Mt. Airy has seen a significant decrease in revenue in that department this year as well. Council members did not discuss a specific dollar amount.

Inflation is also a concern, giving way to discussions of a possible millage rate increase.

“I mean, we beat this to death last year,” said Mt. Airy Councilmember Ken Moore regarding the council’s debate on whether to raise taxes last year. “At some point, we’re going to have to make an increase,” he said.

Fellow councilmember Adam Tullis did not object to an increase but said he wanted to know exact numbers before making a decision.

“I will be honest with you. I’ll tell you like I told you last year, I would like to see a one mill increase, but I don’t get to vote,” Mayor McAllister said.

Councilmember Mike McCoy was not opposed to the idea of a millage rate increase. However, he felt that it should be raised in small increments.

“I think, as much as we have a fiduciary responsibility, you know, responsible for taxpayer’s dollars and not raise taxes, which we can all agree, we have successfully done for decades. There is also the other responsibility that we making sure we have funds to provide services to our constituents,” said Councilmember Patrick Ledford.

Mt. Airy City Clerk Sheri Berrong told the council that when she returned from clerk’s training, she would get the exact numbers to them by the end of the week.

The town council tabled the matter and set a special called meeting for Monday, September 18, at 6:30 p.m.