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Work underway on GA 365 at Mt. Zion Road RCUT

(Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Contractors began installing the Restricted Crossing U-Turn Intersection (RCUT) at GA 365 and Mt. Zion Road in Alto this week. The intersection design will prevent vehicles from crossing over the highway. Side street traffic on Mt. Zion will now have to turn right and make a U-turn at a dedicated downstream median opening.

Contractors worked Tuesday near a bank with five crosses, marking the intersection’s deadly history. Seven people, including three small children, have died at this crossover since 2021.

Crews worked in the shadows of five wooden crosses staked out near the intersection (far right), commemorating the deaths of Avonlea, Colton, and Maddie Holtzclaw, Cynthia Wade, and Lincoln Burgess. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The state transportation department approved the RCUT under pressure from state and local officials after a wreck in July claimed five lives.

The Georgia Department of Transportation contracted with Vertical Earth LLC to install the RCUT. Vertical Earth is the same company that installed the new retaining wall on Highway 441 in Demorest.

Traffic delays are expected to continue as work on the RCUT progresses. The Georgia DOT urges drivers to watch for construction crews and obey the posted speed limit.

Georgia students still struggle to catch up on reading skills three years after pandemic learning loss

(GA Recorder) — Three school years after classrooms shut their doors in March 2020 following the initial outbreak of COVID-19, Georgia students remain behind in phonics compared to kids in other states, said Woody Paik, executive vice president at education company Curriculum Associates, but the data also shows some good news.

“If I look across all grades for the spring of ‘23, Georgia’s a little bit behind every grade relative to national,” he said, pointing to data from children from kindergarten through 8th grade.

Curriculum Associates sells lessons, assessments, and classroom tools, including the popular i-Ready software, which is used by more than 11 million students nationwide. Paik spoke at the Georgia Board of Education’s retreat in Young Harris, Georgia, last week.

Across the country, Curriculum Associates’ data shows academic recovery is sluggish in both reading and math. The data shows that while elementary school students in majority Black schools saw the biggest increases in reading and math scores between 2022 and 2023, majority Black and Latino schools remained significantly below majority white schools.

Similarly, the percentage of students on grade level dropped nationwide among all levels of median income after the pandemic, but the effect was more pronounced in districts with lower median incomes.

“If I look at the schools with median income $50,000 to $75,000 or $75-plus, the historic difference was 8%, meaning the wealthier neighborhoods had about 8% more kids on grade level, roughly,” Paik said. “That historic difference of 8% is now 12%, so the inequities that exist just got wired.”

And seemingly paradoxically, students who were not yet in kindergarten when the pandemic began still display lower reading ability than students in those grades before the pandemic, according to Curriculum Associates’ data.

For example, 68% of first-graders read on grade level in 2019, which fell to 58% by 2022 and rose to 61% in spring 2023.

“These are kids whose lives were disrupted by family situations – maybe day care was closed, maybe pre-K was closed, whatever it may be,” Paik said. “But the point is, these kids are walking into the buildings repeatedly farther behind than they were before, and they were not directly, but rather indirectly impacted by school closure, so it’s a tough situation.”

Still, Paik said there’s reason for optimism in Georgia, where the numbers suggest some students in Georgia are catching up quicker than children in other states.

“In first grade, national went from 59 to 65, or they went up six points. Georgia went up 53 to 62. They went up nine points,” he said. “If you look at third grade, national went up from 69 to 72, so three points, Georgia went up 61 to 67, or six points. So I don’t exactly know what’s in the water here.”

State education leaders have already announced plans aimed at further closing learning gaps, including new tutoring resources through AmeriCorps and Georgia Virtual Learning, as well as the formation of a 30-member Georgia Council on Literacy.

The board is also planning to implement assessment changes in line with this year’s Georgia Early Literacy Act, which would require schools to adopt tests to screen for K-3 students having trouble with reading and plans to get them back on track. The tests would occur three times per year, with the first taking place within 30 days of the start of the school year, and the tests will also be designed to identify characteristics of dyslexia.

In its September meeting, the state Board of Education took up a rules change that included the new screeners but did not vote on the measure after board member Helen Odom Rice said she had questions about the changes. Rice said the proposed rule as written may not have been aligned with the bill’s requirements for disclosure of screener results to parents and the board.

“There’s a lot, and it’s critical that we get this right, especially with the screening and testing, and especially the alignment; it’s in law. And I don’t know if everybody’s had a chance to really read it and go through it.”

The board is scheduled to meet next on Nov. 1 and 2. According to the Early Literacy Act’s timeline, they have until Jan. 1 to establish procedures for education service providers to submit screeners for consideration and until July 1, 2024, to approve a list of screeners. Schools will begin implementing the screeners and intervention plans next August.

Gaming interests ready new legalized gambling push in Georgia in ’24

(GA Recorder) — A powerful sports betting and gambling company is intensifying its efforts to win legalized sports betting, casinos and horse racing in Georgia.

Representatives from the Entain Foundation U.S. met with several state legislators in Atlanta on Tuesday to hatch a plan to pass a gambling bill in 2024. In the last couple of years, Georgia’s legislative sessions have ended with failed attempts to legalize sports betting, horse racing, and casinos in combination or as standalone propositions as legislators were divided on everything from the ills of gambling addiction to how revenue would be distributed, and what forms of gambling to permit.

Entain trustee Bill Pascrell, a partner at PPAG, one of the larger lobbying firms in the country, said several Georgia legislators asked for assistance to push Georgia to join several dozen other states that legalize retail and online sports betting and other types of sanctioned wagering.

Entain is an international gambling corporation and co-owner with Las Vegas-based MGM Resorts of online sportsbook BetMGM.

”Georgia, as you can imagine, has politically a lot of issues including the Trump indictment, so there’s a little bit of a distraction at the moment but I feel pretty positive Georgia is going to move (betting) on next year along with a few other states,” Pascrell said.

Martin Lycka, senior vice president for American Regulatory Affairs and Responsible Gambling at Entain, said Georgia would greatly benefit not only from tax revenue made from gambling but also from companies spending money on marketing and other areas that will also trickle down into local communities.

“The other one relates to consumer protection legislation in order to clamp down on any black market,” Lycka said. “Let’s not fool ourselves into believing that Georgians would not be betting at the moment.”

During the 2023 legislative session, a variety of sports betting bills failed to make it out of either chamber, from online wagering to voting on-site at licensed locations and other events via kiosks to a push to open up several horse race tracks.

The odds-on favorite among state lawmakers is for online and retail sport betting, while there are significant disagreements between the public and legislators regarding the legalization of horse racing pari-mutuel betting and casinos.

This year added another wrinkle as some gambling legislation relied on an opinion from former Georgia Supreme Court Chief Justice Harold Melton that a statewide ballot referendum is not necessary if gambling is handled by the Georgia Lottery.

And how to split the purse continues to spark debate over how the sales tax revenue and other gaming fees collected will be allocated. A consensus seemed to form among state lawmakers debating recent proposals that the majority of revenue should be used for the same purpose as the state lottery-funded HOPE Scholarship and Pre-K programs. Some disagreement lingers about whether a portion of that funding should be dedicated specifically to needs-based scholarships.

A major roadblock to legalized sports betting in Georgia is an effort led by the Georgia Baptist Mission Board, which harbors concerns about the harms of gambling addiction. The board’s lobbyist Mike Griffin, agreed on Tuesday that there is a good chance that sports gambling will be brought up during the next legislative session.

Griffin also pushed back on the economic benefits of gambling, citing studies that say the additional revenue doesn’t offset the extra government resources legal wagering costs taxpayers

“Sports gambling is one of the most dangerous forms of gambling because of its easy accessibility and its ability to create addiction,” Griffin said in an email. “While I know it is being said that many are already doing this kind of gambling anyway, we must understand that just because somebody is doing something illegal does not mean that it should be made legal.”

“Something as detrimental as sports gambling made legal will be like putting gasoline on a fire. It will make something that is already bad, just worse,” Griffin said.

Entain is also promoting gaming in Georgia as a way to make it easier to identify if someone has a gambling addiction than if they’re placing wagers through unregulated channels like offshore sporting books and casinos, said Pascrell.

“If you don’t regulate it, you can’t track it, you can’t monitor it,” Pascrell said. “And unlike alcohol and drug use, it’s really not readily apparent whether somebody’s having a gambling addiction problem. The only way to penetrate and have an impact on problem gambling in a particular jurisdiction is to regulate it.”

Gambling options in Georgia’s neighboring states vary greatly.

Alabama is only one border state that does not sell lottery tickets and its only state-regulated gaming option is bingo halls in some of the most impoverished areas. Alabama is home to a few casinos operated by federally recognized tribes. After two years of legalized sports betting in Florida, the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday put a temporary hold on it. But Florida also holds a state lottery, as tribe-operated casinos and pari-mutuel betting options are available across the state.

Neighboring Tennessee already reaps economic benefits from sports gaming, which it legalized soon after the U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way for online wagering in a 2018 ruling.

The Tennessee Education Lottery reports that $73.7 million in tax revenue has been generated since online-only sports betting was legalized in November 2020.

The soulless ones

Today, many are living through terrifying and horrific hours.  Children are brutally murdered at the hands of human animals. Whether the beast is dressed in a pristine suit watching a parade of his Russian troops or the dirty rascals dressed in fatigues in the Middle East, they are still the same: pure evil.

For most decent people, it is hard to imagine how one becomes soulless, but power, ego, and warped beliefs can destroy anyone’s heart. Unfortunately, these creatures live among all people everywhere. How they’re able to influence so many with their deranged, narcissistic minds has always been a mystery to me. I fear it is because when many lose hope, they also lose the ability to care.

When we think, “Well, it doesn’t matter how I vote or what I say because we are doomed anyway,” we open the door to brutality. Doing so proves that our lives are more important than our children’s. So, we must never give up or give in for their sake, and we must stand firm against the rabid scoundrels of the world.

The tentacles of these inhumane humans travel far and sneak into safe havens to kill. If we don’t show that our ‘caring power’ is strong, they will turn off the lights in America.

As I watched the news this morning, it seemed an odd juxtaposition between the frenzy of bombs falling in Gaza and Israel and the fever Taylor Swift causes as her Eras Tour movie debuts. It all appeared remarkably strange yet very American.

Don’t get me wrong, Taylor brings delight to many with her generosity and warmth, but she also reminded me to be thankful. Thankful that joy still abides here. No bombs are falling on this corner of the world… yet. Happy celebration creates dancing in the aisles when Taylor performs.. for now.

At the premiere, the mega star’s elegant blue gown is pristine, her makeup flawless, and her shoes are tinted the same shade of sky blue.

A world away, a child is barefoot, his face covered in soot, and his clothes are torn and stained with blood. American youngsters rush to catch a school bus this morning, while in other countries, children run to a bomb shelter. Yes, American life is normal…today.

Many say, “We just can’t keep giving US money to aid foreign wars!” Yet, how can we not?  Do we believe we are impervious to barbarians who fear nothing? Clearly, September 11, 2001, proved we are not.

If we are concerned about the future world for our children, we and our allies need to keep writing checks.  We must encourage all peace-loving nations and citizens to care enough not to fall prey to those who wish for our fall. We cannot save the world, but we cannot lose ours because we failed to try.

Remember, God is not an American, and he is not an isolationist. He is the father of all humankind. His message is clear… “Don’t withhold good from someone who deserves it when it is in your power to do so.”  Proverbs 3:27

Apathy is deadly. The lion will die if the mighty beast does not roar and lazes in the sun, unaware of the hyena slinking behind him. The hyenas hide in the bushes, waiting for the lion to become impassive and sluggish.

We must remember to roar.

Our gratitude for living where we are free to roam without constant fear of death is immeasurable. More importantly, it should never be taken for granted.  Human animals can thrive with very little to steal life from their victims.

We cannot become victims.

This is the day to stand as one nation. This is the hour to put our political blame games aside and move our spirits forward. We must value others, denounce selfishness, and let our goodness shine. Now is the moment to defeat terrorists lurking on every corner. It is time to punish the antisemites, the racists, and the haters everywhere.

Americans should lead the chorus of roars, keep the hyenas away, and destroy the evil lurking in the darkness before they find us sleeping in the sun.

For the love of all nations under God, join hands and pray for terror to end and for those who suffer from the brutal wounds of soulless, barbaric human animals…now.

Exonerated man killed by deputy

Leonard Cure was killed during a traffic stop in Camden County, Ga., on Monday, Oct. 16, 2023. (The Innocence Project of Florida/Facebook)

A sheriff’s deputy in Southeast Georgia’s Camden County shot and killed a Black man from metro Atlanta who was released after being wrongfully sentenced in Florida to 16 years in prison.

The fatal shooting occurred during a traffic stop on October 16.

Authorities say 53-year-old Leonard Cure died after being tased, hit with a baton and shot by a Camden County sheriff’s deputy on Interstate 95 near Kingsland. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation is looking into the shooting and says Cure became noncompliant with the deputy after being placed under arrest.

The GBI didn’t say why Cure was arrested and did not give the deputy’s name.

Cure was convicted in 2003 of armed robbery outside Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and spent 16 years in prison before being exonerated with the help of the Innocence Project of Florida. The group’s director Seth Miller says Cure, who received a cash settlement in August from the state of Florida, had recently closed on a house in Palmetto, southwest of Atlanta.

This article comes to Now Habersham through a news partnership with GPB News

College athletes’ name, image and likeness rights debated by U.S. Senate committee

The U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday discussed national regulations for policies on name, image and likeness use for college athletes. (Georgia Football/Facebook)

(GA Recorder) — The U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee held a hearing to discuss policies governing name, image, and likeness, known as NIL, in college sports. The witnesses in attendance — such as National Collegiate Athletic Association President Charlie Baker and Big Ten Conference Commissioner Tony Petitti — called for a unified NIL law to swiftly address inconsistencies in state laws, as well as protect the health and wellbeing of student-athletes.

NIL rules in some states generally allow high school or college athletes to make money based on their own name, image, and likeness, or personal branding. Through NIL, student-athletes can profit from autographs, merchandise, affiliations, and other means.

The witnesses also said they do not want student-athletes to be considered employees, as they said this could create a myriad of problems for athletic programs and the athletes themselves.

“We want to partner with Congress to further curtail inducements and prevent collectives and other third parties from tampering with students,” Baker said.

Baker said the NCAA “is moving bylaws forward to improve outcomes for student-athletes because they deserve to profit from NIL.”

“We are concerned that management of college athletics is shifting away from universities to collectives,” Petitti said.

The five other witnesses included decorated University of Florida gymnast Trinity Thomas, University of Notre Dame Athletic Director Jack Swarbrick, National College Players Association executive director Ramogi Huma, Saint Joseph’s University Athletic Director Jill Bodensteiner and Grove Collective Executive Director Walker Jones. The Grove Collective is exclusively a University of Mississippi NIL program.

NCAA policy

The NCAA adopted its interim NIL policy in 2021. This policy provides the following guidelines:

  • “Individuals can engage in NIL activities that are consistent with the law of the state where the school is located.”
  • “College athletes who attend a school in a state without an NIL law can engage in this type of activity without violating NCAA rules related to their name, image, and likeness.”
  • “Individuals can use a professional services provider for NIL activities.”
  • “Student-athletes should report NIL activities consistent with state law or school and conference requirements to their school.”

“Between the (transfer) portal and NIL, college football is in absolute chaos,” said ranking member Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican.

The NCAA transfer portal is a database where student-athletes can declare their intentions to transfer to another school.

Graham referenced how University of Utah football players recently received Dodge Ram pickup trucks through an NIL deal.

“We’re heading down the road here of a bidding war,” Graham said.

Disadvantages and confusion for students

NIL laws currently exist in 32 states, which results in inconsistent rules for student-athletes to juggle.

Thomas, who profits from NIL, said this lack of uniformity often leaves students confused.

These laws also place some students at a disadvantage, depending on where they go to school, she said. The best path forward, Thomas said, would be a national policy “that applies to all athletes from every sport at every school.”

“This will create equal opportunity for all student-athletes to benefit from NIL,” Thomas said. “It will create a uniform standard to ensure we’re all playing by the same rules and eliminate confusion and unfair advantages.”

Proposed federal NIL legislation

Many members of Congress have already proposed legislation that would create a national NIL standard, including Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Connecticut Democrat, who chaired the committee in Illinois Democrat Dick Durbin’s absence.

Blumenthal, alongside New Jersey Democrat Cory Booker and Kansas Republican Jerry Moran, introduced a discussion draft of a bill in July that would set national NIL standards. The draft also aimed to create a Medical Trust Fund for student-athletes.

Blumenthal said it is important to set a “strong national standard” and to “make sure it is enforceable.”

Blumenthal referenced that in his legislation, he proposed a separate corporation that would serve as a “central oversight entity that would set, administer, and enforce rules and standards to protect athletes who enter into endorsement contracts,” according to a Booker press release.

Sen. Joe Manchin III, a West Virginia Democrat, appeared at the end of the hearing to talk about legislation that he introduced with Sen. Tommy Tuberville, an Alabama Republican, in July. The bill, called the “Protecting Athletes, Schools and Sports (PASS) Act of 2023,” would establish a consistent national NIL standard, as well as further protect the rights of athletes and schools.

“Our legislation with Senator Manchin will set basic rules nationwide, protect our student-athletes, and keep NIL activities from ending college sports as we know it,” Tuberville, a former football coach at Auburn University, said in a Manchin press release.

In the press release, Baker endorsed the PASS Act on behalf of the NCAA.

Sen. Ted Cruz, a Texas Republican, also discussed his own draft of a bill that he introduced in August. His bill would codify NIL rights for student-athletes with a national standard.

Cruz, who said he was “very worried about the state of college athletics,” warned that if Congress “doesn’t act and act quickly,” there could be “enormous damage.”

Sen. John Kennedy, a Louisiana Republican, told Baker that he “may regret asking Congress to intervene here.”

“All of a sudden, you’re going to be micromanaged,” Kennedy said.

Employee status

Many of the witnesses said they were concerned about how employee status could affect college athletic programs or students.

Bodensteiner said international students would also be unable to compete if there was a transition to employee status.

Graham asked Baker what would happen to Division II schools if student-athletes were labeled as employees. The NCAA Division II includes schools with smaller, lesser-funded athletic programs than those in Division I.

“I think it’s pretty clear that Division II and Division III schools would get out of the interscholastic collegiate sports business,” Baker said.

Swarbrick said preventing student-athletes from being considered employees protects their ability to be admitted and to learn under the same standards as other students.

“If this committee and Commerce Committee doesn’t act in about a year, this thing is going to be an absolute mess, and you’re going to destroy college athletics as we know it,” Graham said.

Sports fall under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation.

Transparency in college sports

Baker repeatedly called for greater transparency in college athletics. For example, Baker said there are no publicly available numbers regarding NIL participation.

“Nobody knows what’s going on,” Baker said.

“So the first thing we really need to have more than anything, is some form of transparency around what people are actually getting,” Baker said.

Six seniors honored as TFS hosts Harrier Harvest

Tallulah Falls hosted the annual Harrier Harvest on Tuesday evening, with eight different schools competing in the event. TFS saw its girls finish 3rd and the boys finished 5th.

Avery Keim came in 6th for the Lady Indians, as Josie Chesser (13th), Olivia Henderson (18th), and Delaney Johnson (20th) all finished inside the top 20. The Indians were paced by Timothy Beck (13th) and Teagan Penland (16th).

TFS honored six seniors prior to the meet: Jenna Chesser, Eli Damron, Ana Harris, Carter Miller, Dani Prince, and Jackson Shadburn.

(TFS Athletics)

FULL RESULTS

Eight residents displaced by Hall County mobile home fire

A residential fire in Hall County forced eight people, including four children, from their home Tuesday afternoon.

At approximately 4:25 p.m., Hall County Fire Rescue responded to the fire at 2400 block of Floyd Road. Crews found smoke showing and a small working fire confined to one room of a single-wide mobile home.

After extinguishing the bulk of the fire, personnel entered the home to conduct a primary search. It was all clear and the flames were knocked down quickly, says Hall County Fire Rescue Public Information Officer Kimberlie Ledisnger.

The American Red Cross was notified to assist the displaced residents. The cause of the fire is unknown and under investigation by the Hall County Fire Marshal’s Office at this time.

Wassmer Navarro leads men’s tennis in 3-1 weekend at belmont Abbey Hidden Duals

(Photo by Dale Zanine)

BELMONT, N.C. – The Piedmont men’s tennis team concluded its fall slate this past weekend, competing in the Belmont Abbey Hidden Duals in Belmont, North Carolina.

The Lions took on Belmont Abbey, Pfeiffer, Queens, and Johnson & Wales (NC) in mini-dual matches, prevailing in three and dropping just one.

Sophomore Yannick Wassmer Navarro closed out his fall season in style, going 2-0 in singles action while also picking up a pair of doubles victories.

Overall, the Lions went 6-6 in singles competition with five different players picking up victories.

Piedmont had more success in doubles, going 5-3 over the two days. Senior Bryce VanOrder led the team, winning all three of his doubles matches, taking one each with Kody Dills, Wassmer Navarro, and freshman Brent Sherman.

The Lions delivered strong performances in the clutch, winning all three of their singles matches that went to third-set match tiebreakers. Wassmer Navarro, VanOrder and Silas Sandles each outlasted their opponents late.

The event concludes Piedmont’s fall season. The Lions are scheduled to begin the spring campaign on Saturday, Feb. 10 at the Transylvania Invitational.

Commissioners reject request to lease house to county recreation director

Habersham County Commission did not approve a proposed housing lease agreement for Parks and Recreation Director Brooke Whitmire at Monday night's commission meeting. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham).

In a 3-2 vote, the Habersham County Commission failed to approve leasing a house to the Parks and Recreation Director Brooke Whitmire. Commissioner Bruce Palmer made the motion to approve the lease agreement, with Commission Chairman Ty Akins seconding the motion. However, Commissioners Dustin Mealor, Jimmy Tench, and Bruce Harkness were the dissenting votes.

The denial came during the commission’s regular meeting on Monday night. The house is located at 4336 Toccoa Highway and is adjacent to the Ruby Fulbright Aquatic Center.

The lease agreement was on the agenda but not for discussion. It was within the consent agenda portion of the agenda that commissioners typically approve without any discussion. Tench had an issue with the contract being on the consent agenda and stated that he needed more information. Mealor made the motion to strike the executive session from the agenda and to move the lease agreement as an item for discussion under new business. The motion carried 5-0.

Commissioner Dustin Mealor (left) and Commissioner Jimmy Tench voted with Commissioner Bruce Harkness against approving the lease agreement. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Akins explained to the commission that they had decided to lease the property until they decided what they were going to do with it. He stated that they thought they had it leased a few months back to the Soque River Watershed Association (SRWA), but that deal fell through.

County Manager Alicia Vaughn explained that the county had a business interested in leasing the property but “It was not in the shape that they wanted to move forward; it definitely had some challenges.”

Harkness asked Vaughn, “Did we advertise it for rent?” Vaughn responded, “No, we did not advertise it for rent.” She explained that the county would not have had to advertise it had the SRWA rented the property since they are a non-profit agency that provides services to county citizens but if a commercial business had wanted to rent it, the county would have had to advertise the property for rent.

After those deals fell through, Akins explained that Whitmire expressed interest in renting the property and agreed to make repairs and improvements while she lived at the house.

Vaughn stated, “Us providing housing for an employee, it’s completely appropriate for us to do that and we also have really expanded services at Parks and Rec. We have a lot of after-hour events, so I think it is absolutely beneficial for us to have Brooke right there next to the aquatic center.”

Vaughn explained that it is difficult to find affordable housing in the area and this is something that would be reasonable for the county to do. She advised the commission that Whitmire still lived in Banks County.

Harkness made a light-hearted statement, “You know what they say about renting to employees and family members.” Vaughn asked, ”What?” He replied, “It’s dangerous.” Those who attended the meeting laughed at the comment.

Parks and Recreation Director Brooke Whitmire’s housing lease agreement was denied at Monday night’s commission meeting. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The terms of the lease state that Whitmire would have leased the property for $600 a month. However, over the course of the two-year lease agreement, Whitmire “shall contribute $3,000.00 during the term of the lease for renovations to the space and provide documentation of same” to the county. The contract also allowed for a one year extension to the lease agreement should the county not need the space. The lease agreement would have begun at the beginning of November.

The county would have been responsible for any maintenance issues with cost estimates under $500.00, such as a malfunctioning toilet, leaking drain or faucet, etc. during its normal operating hours: 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM Monday through Friday. All after-hours maintenance would have been the responsibility of Whitmire. The county would have also provided ground maintenance and tree services for the property.

Whitmire would have been responsible for all utility services at her own expense. She would have also been responsible for providing property insurance in an amount that exceeded the appraised value of the premises.

The county purchased the property this past spring for the cash price of $140,000. The closing date was March 13, 2023. The county commission discussed purchasing the property during their February 20, 2023 meeting.

Ohio’s Jim Jordan fails in bid for U.S. House speaker, leaving chamber paralyzed

The U.S. House of Representatives is expected to vote again on whether to elect Jim Jordan as House speaker after the Ohio congressman failed to win the post on the first ballot. (U.S. House of Representatives livestream image)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — The U.S. House rejected Ohio’s Jim Jordan as a candidate for speaker on Tuesday in the first round of voting. Jordan has pushed a second vote to Wednesday.

Jordan, co-founder of the far-right Freedom Caucus and one of the lawmakers who bolstered former President Donald Trump’s false claims about the 2020 election, was unable to clinch the votes needed to hold the gavel amid concerns about his agenda and frustrations with his history inside and outside of Congress. The House has now gone two weeks without a speaker.

Republican Reps. Don Bacon of Nebraska, Ken Buck of Colorado, Lori Chavez-DeRemer of Oregon, Anthony D’Esposito of New York, Mario Díaz-Balart of Florida, Jake Ellzey of Texas, Andrew Garbarino of New York, Carlos Giménez of Florida, Tony Gonzales of Texas, Kay Granger of Texas, John James of Michigan, Mike Kelly of Pennsylvania, Jen Kiggans of Virginia, Nick LaLota of New York, Doug LaMalfa of California, Mike Lawler of New York, John Rutherford of Florida, Mike Simpson of Idaho, Victoria Spartz of Indiana and Steve Womack of Arkansas, as well as all Democrats voted against Jordan on the first ballot.

​​Florida Rep. Gus Bilirakis was the only Republican that didn’t vote.

House Republican Conference Chair Elise Stefanik of New York said in her nomination speech that Jordan is a “patriot” who would “go after corruption and deliver accountability.”

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, standing, casts a vote for himself as House speaker on Tuesday, October 17, 2023. (U.S. House of Representatives livestream image)

“Jim is the voice of the American people who have felt voiceless for far too long,” Stefanik said. “Whether as Judiciary chair, conservative leader, or representative for his constituents in west central Ohio, whether on the wrestling mat or in the committee room, Jim Jordan is strategic, scrappy, tough and principled.”

House Democratic Caucus Chair Pete Aguilar of California nominated New York Rep. Hakeem Jeffries for speaker, saying he was the clear candidate for anyone who wanted a bipartisan path ahead.

“The choice before us is simple, come together on a bipartisan path forward, or take us over the cliff,” Aguilar said. “Abandon the extremism that is preventing us from getting things done, or triple down on division and dysfunction.”

“A vote today to make the architect of a nationwide abortion ban, a vocal election denier and an insurrection inside to the speaker of this house would be a terrible message to the country and our allies,” Aguilar said.

There was no majority of the vote needed to elect a speaker, with Jefferies receiving 212 votes and Jordan receiving 200, while other lawmakers got some of the Republican votes.

McCarthy ousted two weeks ago

The stalemate comes two weeks after eight House Republicans and Democrats voted to remove Kevin McCarthy as speaker about nine months into his tenure.

McCarthy had to hold 15 separate votes in January before he was able to become speaker and only after making several agreements behind closed doors with far-right members of the party.

After McCarthy announced he wouldn’t try again to become speaker, Louisiana’s Steve Scalise and Jordan announced their bids for the role.

Scalise, currently the majority leader, won the first secret ballot nomination vote within the House Republican Conference. But he never scheduled a floor vote and withdrew from the race after just one day.

Ohio Republican Congressman Jim Jordan, center, speaks with fellow Republicans on the House floor after losing the first ballot in his bid to become House speaker. (livestream image U.S. House or Representatives)

Jordan had said after losing the first nomination vote that he would back Scalise on the floor, but several of his followers refused to back their party’s speaker nominee.

House Republicans huddled again Friday to take a second nomination vote for speaker, choosing between Jordan and Georgia’s Austin Scott.

Jordan won that nomination vote, but another secret ballot taken afterward showed that more than 50 House Republicans said they wouldn’t support him during a floor vote.

That gap dwindled over the weekend and throughout Monday as several Republicans, who said they would never back Jordan during a floor vote, announced public support.

Several holdouts remained heading into Tuesday’s floor vote, leaving Jordan short of the roughly 217 votes he would need to become speaker.

Those holdouts maintained their opposition throughout the first ballot on Tuesday afternoon.

“I’m voting for a good, solid, conservative Republican. That’s the only kind of person I’ll vote for,” Giménez said immediately following the vote.

Rep. Dusty Johnson of South Dakota said he anticipated that Jordan might not have all the votes on the first ballot, but he said he remained hopeful that those GOP holdouts would flip.

“A lot of the people who are holding out are very reasonable people,” Johnson said. “It’s my assessment that when people stay at the table that a deal is possible.”

Chavez-DeRemer, who voted for McCarthy on the first ballot, said she did so because he was the closest Republican to secure the necessary 217 votes but that she would “continue to reassess where things stand as this process plays out.”

Attempt to expand McHenry powers

Pennsylvania GOP Rep. Mike Kelly introduced a resolution Monday night to elect Rep. Patrick McHenry as speaker pro tempore for up to 30 days. Approving that resolution would expand McHenry’s powers beyond what they are as the speaker pro tempore by designation, Kelly said.

Under the resolution, McHenry, a North Carolina Republican, would stay in the role until Nov. 17 — the same day government funding is set to expire — or until a new speaker is elected, whichever is first.

McHenry has been serving as the speaker pro tempore by McCarthy’s designation under a process put in place to ensure continuity of government following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

Chavez-DeRemer said she feared the chaos the last few weeks would only continue under a Jordan speakership. With the Republican conference still bitterly divided, she said the chamber should empower McHenry.

“Until we can find clear consensus among the Republican Conference, it’s time to give expanded authority to Speaker Pro Tempore McHenry so the House can resume governing,” she wrote on X, formerly Twitter.

Kelly of Pennsylvania voted for Rep. Steve Scalise on the first ballot.

“We have elections for a reason,” Kelly said shortly before the vote.

He said he would reassess his support on additional ballots.

Rep. Victoria Spartz of Indiana told reporters on her way into the chamber that she would vote present if the vote count was not in Jordan’s favor.

On Monday night, she said she believed “intimidation techniques” were used to “push people on the floor before we find consensus.”

Orville Wayne Popham

Orville Wayne Popham, age 87, of Clarkesville, Georgia, passed away on Tuesday, October 17, 2023, at his residence following an extended illness.

Wayne was born in Habersham County on December 02, 1935, to the late Arvil William & Mary Vinnlee Popham. He was also preceded in death by his wife of 65 years, Carol Lovell Popham; granddaughter, Kennedy Ruthann Wright; sisters, Bobbie Popham Wright and Joyce Popham White.

Wayne was a member of Bethlehem Baptist Church. He worked in the grocery store business for several years, owning a store of his own, Wayne’s Grocery, in the 1960s. He then followed in his father’s footsteps as a painter, retiring from Habersham Mills in 1997 and from Piedmont College in 2010. One of his most prized possessions was his 1940 Ford Deluxe, given to him by his father when he was 16 years old. He kept this car for over 50 years and sold it to his nephew to be restored. Another highlight for Wayne was trying out for the Atlanta Crackers with his best friend, Maxie Skinner when they were teenagers. They made it to the final cut, and both chose their sweethearts at home over baseball.

Survivors include his children & their spouses, Lynn & Tommy Anderson of Gainesville; Leesa & Jeff Anderson of Clarkesville; Greg & Sue Popham of Commerce; Leslie Popham of Clarkesville; Leah & Garrett Misencik of Clarkesville. He was blessed with numerous grandchildren, numerous great-grandchildren, as well as lots of nieces and nephews.

A homegoing service will be held at 2:00 p.m. on Thursday, October 19, 2023, at Hillside Memorial Chapel in Clarkesville, with Rev. Jody Anderson, Rev. Kenneth McEntire, & Rev. Tony Goss officiating. Interment will follow in the Bethlehem Baptist Church Cemetery, with Rev. Chip Cranford officiating at the graveside.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 11:00 a.m. until the service hour on Thursday, October 19, 2023.

Flowers are accepted, or memorials may be made to Habersham Senior Center, 217 Scoggins Drive, Demorest, GA. 30535.

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

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