Jason William Grindle (Hall County Sheriff's Office)
The suspect deputies shot and wounded while trying to arrest him Monday in Gainesville has been released from the hospital. Jason William Grindle, 34, is now being held in the Hall County Detention Center without bond.
Deputies shot Grindle multiple times in an exchange of gunfire in the backyard of a residence on Brand Drive, officials say. No officers were injured in the incident.
The Georgia Bureau of Investigation is conducting an independent investigation into the officer-involved shooting, which is standard protocol.
Grindle was wanted for aggravated assault, home invasion, armed robbery, and exploitation of an elderly person in Stephens County. He was also wanted on a warrant from Hall County Superior Court, but the sheriff’s office did not say what the charge was. Deputies from the Hall County Sheriff’s Office, Gainesville police and a GBI agent were attempting to serve those warrants on Grindle when the shooting occurred.
“When officers encountered Grindle outside of the home, he was armed with a handgun. HCSO deputies exchanged gunfire with Grindle, and he was shot,” says GBI spokesperson Natalie Ammons.
EMS transported Grindle to an area hospital where he was treated, released, and then taken to jail.
Grindle has a long criminal history. He served four stints in state prisons, according to the Georgia Department of Corrections. His most recent release was in December 2020. Grindle was previously convicted in Stephens, Franklin, and Habersham counties for various felonies, including theft by taking, fleeing police, and drug possession.
Ammons says more charges are expected to be filed against Grindle in relation to the shooting.
Once the GBI completes its investigation into the shooting, it will turn over its findings to the Northeastern Judicial Circuit District Attorney’s Office for review.
This is the 29th officer-involved shooting the GBI has investigated this year and the first in 2023 in Hall County.
Habersham County Judicial Center (Daniel Purcell/Now Habersham)
A local attorney has been appointed to serve as the new Solicitor General of the State Court of Habersham County. Governor Brian Kemp announced Tuesday he has appointed Jessica Martin to the job. Martin will fill the vacancy created when former solicitor Bill Oliver was appointed to serve as a superior court judge in the Mountain Judicial Circuit.
Martin will succeed Ann Pickett, who served as the county’s interim solicitor following Oliver’s departure. The Solicitor General prosecutes all misdemeanor criminal and traffic offenses committed within Habersham County.
Martin currently serves as a staff attorney for the Mountain Judicial Circuit, drafting orders and jury charges for civil and criminal cases for the circuit’s three justices. She also handles essential duties contributing to the overall operation of the court.
Previously, Martin worked as an associate attorney for McClure, Ramsay, Dickerson & Escoe LLP and as a law clerk for the Piedmont Judicial Circuit. She earned her J.D. from the University of Georgia School of Law and a B.A. in Political Science and Business from Piedmont College.
Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School fourth graders with their first prize award from New York University’s Rock that Movie Chinese Video Competition. Pictured, from left, are Hudson Garner, Cece Weisser, Crosby Kennett, Bridgit Kolousek, Eli Casebolt, Beth Vignolini, and Isaac Mejía-Ponce; back row, Wylie Dilbeck, Alice Hayne, Harrison Green, Wyatt Orwig, and Kinley Shirley; back row, Lower School Mandarin Teacher Jiahui Tian, Annie Wu, Phoenix Nowack, Van Hounsell, and Director of Digital Arts and Media Lab Selassie Alleyne.
Fourth and fifth graders at Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School recently won a national Mandarin video competition hosted by New York University.
Rabun Gap students earned first place overall for elementary schools (fourth-grade class) and first place for linguistic accuracy (fifth-grade class) in NYU’s “Rock That Movie” Chinese video competition. Thirty-nine videos were submitted to the competition from 25 schools in seven states, according to the university’s website. The entries were judged by
graduate students in NYU’s foreign language department who selected the winners based on content, fluency, accuracy, and filming.
The theme for this school year’s competition was “Connected!”
Led by Rabun Gap Lower School Mandarin Teacher Jiahui Tian, the students produced their contest videos in Mandarin as a part of an applied learning project. The students worked with the school’s director of digital arts Selassie Alleyne to film and edit their original videos.
Winners included fourth graders Eli Casebolt of Otto, NC; Wylie Dilbeck of Franklin, NC; Hudson Garner of Franklin, NC; Harrison Green of Rabun Gap, GA; Alice Haynie of Martin, GA; Van Hounsell of Lakemont, GA; Crosby Kennett of Rabun Gap, GA; Bridgit Kolousek of Franklin, NC; Isaac Mejía-Ponce of Rabun Gap, GA; Lizzy Moavero of Toccoa, GA; Phoenix Nowack of Rabun Gap, GA; Wyatt Orwig of Demorest, GA; Kinley Shirley of Clarkesville, GA; Beth Vignolini of Rabun Gap, GA; Cece Weisser of Clayton, GA; and Anni Wu of Franklin, NC.
Fifth-graders awarded were Aaron Chang of Franklin, NC; Aniston Elmer of Toccoa, GA; Finn Healy of Clarkesville, GA; Beatrice Long of Scaly Mountain, NC; Sawyer McCall of Franklin, NC; Sam Phillips of Rabun Gap, GA; Nicky Pobudina of Clayton, GA; Talon Sanders of Clayton, GA; Peyton Sawyer of Clayton, GA; Elliott Scott of Clayton, GA; Charlotte Swift of Highlands, NC; Sylvia Thurmond of Rabun Gap, GA and Aria Wright of Franklin, NC.
Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School fifth graders with their first prize award from New York University’s Rock that Movie Chinese Video Competition. Pictured, from left, are Beatrice Long, Aaron Chang, Nicky Pobudina, Elliott Scott, Talon Sanders, Peyton Sawyer, and Aria Wright; back row, Lower School Mandarin Teacher Jiahui Tian, Charlotte Swift, Sawyer McCall, Aniston Elmer, Sam Phillips, Sylvia Thurmond, and Director of Digital Arts and Media Lab Selassie Alleyne.
The forestry service is conducting a controlled burn today in the Warwoman Wildlife Management Area in Rabun County. The 776-acre Roach Mile burn is approximately four miles northwest of Clayton.
(Source: U.S. Forest Service)
Forestry fire managers are burning dried vegetation and debris to reduce the danger of wildfires and improve wildlife habitat.
To sign up for prescribed burn alerts for the Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest, click here.
House Speaker Pro Tem Jan Jones, a Johns Creek Republican, argues that eliminating the tax would have negligible effect on individuals in addition to costing the state treasury around $13 million a year. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)
(GA Recorder) — When Laura Strausfeld was a law student, she went to the drugstore to pick up a box of tampons, throwing a chapstick in on the way. Glancing at the receipt, she noticed that the tampons had a sales tax. The chapstick, however, did not.
What Strausfeld had noticed was the so-called tampon tax, a sales tax levied on menstrual products that has since been eliminated in many states around the country. Outraged by the inequity of the tax, Strausfeld went on to found the nonprofit Period Law, which works to repeal taxation on menstrual products across the country. Period Law, along with other national and local advocacy groups, stood in support of eliminating the tax this past legislative session in Georgia. But women in Georgia continue to pay the tax on menstrual products and will continue to do so – at least until next year.
Senate Bill 51, which would end the sales tax on menstrual products in the state, did not advance out of the committee this year but is still alive for 2024 when the Legislature reconvenes next January.
If Georgia eliminated its 4% sales tax on menstrual products, it would become the 29th state to dispose of the so-called tampon tax. But the GOP-controlled Legislature has balked at efforts to tax period products at the same rate as food and medicine. Though the bill did not make it out of committee, it did at least rate a hearing in the Senate Finance Committee, leaving the door open for lawmakers to support lifting the tax in the future.
“These products are not luxury items, but states like Georgia are taxing them as luxury items,” said Lacey Gero, manager of state policy at the Alliance for Period Supplies, a national network of nonprofits dedicated to ending what is known as period poverty, which is when someone lacks adequate access to essential period products.
“Period supplies are not luxury items, and they should not be taxed as such. In states like Georgia, we’re seeing that the products are being taxed at the same rate or similar rate to decor and electronics or makeup and toys,” Gero said.
The issue is not new. Rep. Debbie Buckner introduced an exemption bill in 2018, 2019, and 2021. All have proved unsuccessful.
“The information and the proof about why it is an unfair tax has been presented time and time again,” Buckner said. “That sales tax on top of the cost of the products – that is meaningful because women do not make the same level of salaries that men do. It is a medical necessity for them to buy the product, and there’s nothing comparable that men are taxed for or that they have to buy.”
In this year’s Senate finance hearing for SB 51, Sen. Nabilah Islam, a Lawrenceville Democrat who sponsored the bill, pointed out that groceries, prescription goods and personal medical devices, candy, soda, and Viagra are all exempt from Georgia’s sales tax. If passed, the bill would exempt menstrual products from the sales tax under non-prescription medical devices. Of the non-prescription medical devices listed by the FDA, Islam said, menstrual products are the most used.
Some progress has been made to help with the costs. Georgia was one of the first states to set aside money in the state budget for public health and public education to distribute period products to low-income women and girls. Last year, the Legislature increased spending for education to include elementary schools in addition to middle and high schools. This year, lawmakers are increasing the amount for public health departments so that they can distribute products to homeless shelters and other community support resources. Yet, the state still levies a state-wide tax on menstrual products.
Twenty-three states have passed legislation eliminating the tax on feminine hygiene products. Five states do not have a sales tax at all, for a total of 28 states without period product taxes. Of the Southern states, Florida eliminated its tax in 2017, and Louisiana followed suit in 2021. In Texas this year, GOP Gov. Greg Abbott has signaled his support for removing the tax. Missouri lifted the tampon tax earlier this month. National drugstore chain CVS Health has paid the applicable sales tax on menstrual products since 2022 in states that still levy it, including Georgia.
“It really is a bipartisan issue and that’s why we keep pushing it in Georgia. We realize that Georgia has had trouble passing this bill, but we have faith that they will,” said Michela Bedard, executive director at PERIOD, a global nonprofit. “Georgia should be credited with already taking steps to put money in the budget to pay for period poverty, so this is something that’s already on their mind. We just want to finish the project.”
This year’s attempt to lift the tax failed in part due to a parliamentary question of whether bills affecting revenue can originate in the Senate. Some legislators argued that bills proposing to raise revenue need to be started in the House but that sequencing doesn’t apply to taking money away from tax collections.
“We’ve got significant support, bipartisan support, but we continue to be blocked from having hearings in the House and getting it moving,” said Claire Cox, co-founder of Georgia STOMP (Stop Tax On Menstrual Products) and chair of the Georgia STOMP board. “There’s a lack of understanding of what’s not moving in the House. There’s interest in the Senate.”
Though it received support in the Senate, repealing the tax does face strong opposition from one powerful state legislator.
State Sen. Elena Parent, an Atlanta Democrat, laments that the GOP-controlled Legislature once again stalled repeal of the so-called tampon tax in 2023. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)
“Like many issues of importance to Georgians who are under considerable financial stress, the Republican majority did not allow a vote on this bill,” said Sen. Elena Parent, an Atlanta Democrat who co-sponsored SB 51. “As I understand it, there has been opposition to the bill from a high-ranking Republican female legislator in the House. That’s where the compromise of the money in the budget came from … she appears to be a main reason the bill has not gotten farther.”
House Speaker Pro Tem Jan Jones, a Johns Creek Republican, favors a budgetary approach, allocating money directly to distribute period products to low-income women. Jones argues that eliminating the tax would have negligible effect on individuals in addition to costing the state treasury around $13 million a year. Georgia does not make a distinction in its tax code between what people need and what people want except for exempting food and drugs, Jones said, citing necessary products the state continues to tax, like diapers.
“If you only tax the things that people want when you have an economic downturn, it’s state government, personnel money coming in to pay for the other things that people need, like Medicaid or all the public education,” she said.
The question, Jones said, is not if people need menstrual products but would exempting them from the state sales tax would actually make a difference.
“I don’t think it would make a serious difference. What makes a difference is giving someone the products that they need free of charge,” she added. “If I’m poor, saving three or four dollars a year makes no difference. What I need is the products in my hand.”
Proponents of this year’s legislation say that period products should have been made exempt from taxation back when the state exempted groceries and medical necessities.
“I talked to the people who were in the room when they took the tax off of groceries, and there were no women in the room,” Buckner said. “The men in the room just didn’t think about it. They don’t use the products.”
“These products are a medical necessity. They are required monthly. They amount to a decent amount of money on a monthly basis for people on fixed incomes,” she added.
Advocates also cite the fact that Georgia has a record high revenue at the moment with a $6.6 billion surplus. The so-called tampon tax would amount to less than 0.01% of the state budget and would save women and girls an estimated $6.1 million dollars.
Though setting money aside in the budget is important and an admirable step in the right direction, proponents say, it does not address the issue of equity.
“[The Legislature] it’s male-dominated. Our strongest supporter for the elimination of period poverty is also very strongly against giving tax breaks, and those two things in Georgia have gotten very conflated and made the conversation difficult about the inequity, the discriminatory nature of the sales tax as a separate issue from addressing period poverty,” Cox said. “Conflating the poverty issue with the discriminatory issue misses the point completely.”
Suzanne Herman, attorney and legal director at Period Law, says that allocating money in the budget for menstrual products and lifting the sales tax on them are not mutually exclusive. She points out that continuing the so-called tampon tax is a matter of fairness, especially in Georgia, given the fact that Coca-Cola, which is headquartered in the state, is exempt from the sales tax.
“It’s not a coincidence that soda is untaxed under Georgia’s exemption for groceries, whereas, in a lot of other states, you don’t see soda having a sales tax exemption,” she added.
Georgia’s menstrual product tax isn’t just inequitable, Herman said, it’s unconstitutional.
“It is an unconstitutional tax and it’s a principled argument of discriminatory practices. There’s money that Georgia and women have been paying for years and years that is unconstitutional federally, probably under the state Georgia Constitution as well,” she said. “It really signals to women that their health and dignity in this sense is not prioritized.”
East Hall High School has selected Brad Cochran as its new head girls basketball coach.
Cochran has 16 years of experience coaching both girls and boys basketball. He spent seven years as the assistant women’s coach at Piedmont College in Demorest. Most recently, Coach Cochran served as the Union County head girls basketball coach, where he led them to the playoffs in his first year there with a winning regular season record of 14 – 11.
“Coach Cochran is a family man first and has proven to do an excellent job building relationships with his players of all levels,” says East Hall High School Athletic Director Adam Rich. “He has worked on all levels refining his players’ basketball skills. His ability to help players of all abilities and utilize film to create game plans are assets that he will carry over with our girls. We are excited to have him in our community and can’t wait for him to join us in Valhalla.”
Pending board approval, Cochran will begin at the start of the next school year.
Louisville Metro Police Department Interim Chief Jacquelyn Gwinn-Villaroel addresses reporters after Monday’s mass shooting. (Kentucky Lantern photo by McKenna Horsley)
LOUISVILLE (Kentucky Lantern) — The AR-15 rifle used to kill five people in Louisville was purchased legally, police said Tuesday.
In a morning news conference, Louisville Metro Police Department officials said the gunman bought an AR-15 rifle on April 4 from a Louisville gun dealer — six days before he walked into his place of employment and killed his coworkers.
Five victims died from the shooting at Old National Bank, LMPD has said. According to their LinkedIn profiles, they were all employees of the bank. They are:
40-year-old Joshua Barrick, senior vice president of Commercial Real Estate Banking
Nine people were injured and taken to the University of Louisville Hospital for treatment. Eckert was among those being treated for injuries but died Monday night at the hospital.
Four patients were still in the hospital Tuesday morning. One was in critical condition, and three were stable at that time. Officer Nikolas Wilt was in critical condition Monday night after receiving a gunshot wound to the head. On Tuesday morning, his condition remains the same.
The gunman, identified as 25-year-old Connor Sturgeon, was an employee of Old National Bank and died from police gunfire. Officer Cory Galloway shot Sturgeon.
Wilt was sworn into the police force in late March. Galloway is his field training officer.
A motive for the shooting is unclear, but Louisville Interim Police Chief Jacquelyn Gwinn-Villaroel said it was “targeted.”
“He knew those individuals, of course, because he worked there,” she said.
Police investigations are continuing.
“We have executed a search warrant on his residence, and we have recovered items we cannot get into specific details on what we recovered at this time because, again, the investigation is ongoing, and we want to make sure that we’re providing accurate information,” Interim Chief Jacquelyn Gwinn-Villaroel. “The family deserves that, and the community deserves that.”
Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg said Kentucky’s current law paves the way for the murder weapon to be sold again in an auction, as all weapons seized by police must be sold in auction if not retained for official use. In February, his administration directed LMPD to remove firing pins from seized weapons bound for auction.
“That’s not enough. It’s time to change this law. And let us destroy illegal guns and destroy the guns that have been used to kill our friends and kill our neighbors,” Greenberg said.
On Monday, a mass shooting occurred in downtown Louisville. Louisville Metro Police received initial reports around 8:30 a.m. and responded within three minutes.
According to the Gun Violence Archive, a non-profit organization that collects data on American mass shootings, the Louisville shooting was the nation’s 146th mass shooting of 2023 and its 14th mass murder.
This tractor-trailer ran off the highway in Tiger on Monday, shutting down the southbound lanes of GA 15/US 441 for several hours. (Rabun County Sheriff's Office)
A truck driver hauling goods for Amazon got hauled off to jail after authorities say he wrecked while allegedly driving under the influence of drugs.
The early Monday morning accident temporarily shut down the southbound lanes of GA 15/US 441 in Rabun County near Camp Creek Road in Tiger.
Troopers from Georgia State Patrol Post 7 in Toccoa responded to the wreck at 7:43 a.m. on April 10. Their preliminary report states the driver, 52-year-old Stacey Darnell Dewberry of Griffin, was southbound when he lost control of the Kenworth in a curve and struck the guardrail.
“The vehicle reentered the roadway and exited the roadway again to the right going through the guardrail, and became stuck on the edge of a dropoff,” the report says.
Dewberry was transported to Mountain Lakes Medical Center in Clayton and evaluated for non-life-threatening injuries. He was released and then transported to the Rabun County Detention Center.
Troopers charged Dewberry with DUI, failure to exercise due regard, driving too fast for conditions, failure to maintain lane, and failure to update his address.
Forsyth County Schools, banned 13 books, most of them pertaining to LGBTQ+ topics or centered on marginalized characters. (Terry Vine/Getty Images)
A year after it was enacted, Georgia’s so-called book banning law is leading to confusion and censorship in our schools.
The law, passed in April 2022 as Senate Bill 226, allows parents and guardians to submit complaints about the content of “material” in their children’s textbooks and in school and classroom libraries.
Georgia public schools now must have a complaint resolution policy that allows challenges to material believed to be “harmful to minors,” defined by the law as sexual content appealing to the “prurient, shameful, or morbid interest of minors,” which lacks “serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value for minors.” This definition mirrors the U.S. Supreme Court’s definition of obscenity.
When a parent or guardian submits a written complaint about school material, the school principal has seven days to investigate whether the material is harmful to minors. The decision of whether to remove or restrict student access to the challenged material is left exclusively to the principal, although the school board may conduct a review.
The Georgia Department of Education does not give principals any guidance for determining whether material meets the definition of “harmful to minors,” and it offers no concrete steps for handling complaints. The department’s model complaint resolution policy simply restates the law’s requirements.
The law undermines students’ constitutional right to receive information. In the 1982 case of Island Trees School District v. Pico, the Supreme Court noted that school libraries afford students “an opportunity at self-education and individual enrichment” and that public school boards are not free to restrict student access to library books “simply because they dislike the ideas contained in those books.” In the words of the court, “the First Amendment rights of students may be directly and sharply implicated by the removal of books from the shelves of a school library.” Yet Georgia now empowers any parent to initiate a process that does exactly that.
Another year-old Georgia law only makes matters worse. SB 377, also referred to as Georgia’s “divisive concepts” bill, regulates whether and how teachers can discuss topics like race and ethnicity in the classroom. Both laws deprive students of their First Amendment right to receive information, and the combination has created uncertainty and normalized censorship.
Nan Brown, coordinator of the Georgia Library Media Association’s advocacy team, reports that Georgia teachers have begun censoring both what they say to students and what materials they keep in their classrooms. Some teachers have limited or altogether avoided discussing topics like the Civil War or figures like Martin Luther King Jr. for fear of putting their jobs at risk, Brown said.
In the just-ended Georgia General Assembly session, lawmakers considered encouraging even more censorship in our schools. Senate Bill 154 would have made school librarians criminally liable for distributing “harmful materials” to minors. Fortunately, the bill did not pass this year. But it could reappear in 2024.
What would such a law mean for Georgia schools? To see the damage it could do, we need only look one state over.
In 2017, Florida’s Legislature passed a law (House Bill 989) that was a precursor to Georgia’s SB 226. Florida’s law lacks detailed guidance for resolving complaints, leading to significant uncertainty among educators about what books they can have in their classrooms, paving the way for self-censorship by teachers that deprives students of their First Amendment right to receive information.
Last year, the Florida lawmakers — in addition to passing their own “divisive concepts” law — passed HB 1467, which requires all books in public school media centers, as well as any books assigned or recommended by teachers, be pre-approved as content-appropriate by the school’s media specialist. A public educator who allows students access to unapproved materials may be subject to felony prosecution.
Schools are unequipped to shoulder the administrative burden of this year-old law. For example, in Duval County, Florida, a mere 54 media specialists are responsible for vetting 1.6 million titles in the county’s 200 schools. Fear of criminal consequences and a backlog of classroom materials waiting to be reviewed has led Florida teachers to box up and donate entire classroom libraries.
SB 154 would have similar consequences in Georgia. The proposal — which remains in play for the 2024 General Assembly session — would expose educators to potential arrest and prosecution for simply having books and resources in their classrooms without any real, practicable guidance on which materials are allowed and which are not.
Georgia must learn from the mistakes we’ve already made by following in Florida’s unconstitutional footsteps. Criminalizing teachers’ well-intentioned conduct and impeding students’ access to educational information would put us on a path to even more censorship in our schools.
________
Madi Blair is a second-year law student at the University of Georgia. She is currently working with the School of Law’s First Amendment Clinic, which provides legal representation and client advocacy on a variety of media law and First Amendment issues.
A Gainesville man wanted on multiple felony arrest warrants suffered injuries in a confrontation with law enforcement in northwest Hall County on Monday.
Just before 2:15 p.m. on April 10, warrant service deputies with the Hall County Sheriff’s Office (HCSO), along with officers from the Gainesville Police Department and an agent with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI), went to a location in the 2400 block of Brand Drive to serve warrants on Jason William Grindle, 34.
“As law enforcement approached Grindle in the backyard of the residence, the suspect presented a handgun. At that point, HCSO deputies fired on Grindle,” states a news release from the Hall County Sheriff’s Office.
Initial reports indicate the suspect was struck more than once. Grindle was talking and alert when an ambulance arrived to take him from the scene of the incident. No officers were injured, according to the sheriff’s office.
Grindle was being sought on a number of felony arrest warrants, including aggravated assault, home invasion, armed robbery, and exploitation of an elderly person out of Stephens County.
He also was wanted on a Hall County Superior Court arrest warrant.
The GBI is leading the investigation into the shooting.
Funeral Services will be held for O’Dell Coker, age 78, of Clarkesville, Georgia, at 2:30 p.m., Sunday, April 16, 2023, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, North Chapel, with Rev. Connie Berry and Rev. Mike Franklin officiating.
Interment will follow in Yonah Memorial Gardens.
Visitation will be Saturday, April 15, from 5-8 p.m. at Whitfield Funeral Homes, North Chapel in Demorest.
Mr. Coker went to be with his Lord and Savior on Monday, April 10, 2023.
Born on March 1, 1945, at The Charm House in Clarkesville, Georgia, he was the son of the late Ira and Grace Fortenberry Coker. He was preceded in death by his wife of 34 years, Doris Ivester Coker, who passed away in December 2019.
He was formerly employed with Piedmont Automotive Products for a combined total of 54 years. He was a member of Stonepile Baptist Church in Clarkesville, Georgia, where he enjoyed singing in the choir and with the special singing group. O’Dell loved working outside, cutting grass, planting and growing flowers, good conversations, church activities, and family get-togethers.
Survivors include son and daughter-in-law, Randy and Regina Coker, of Clarkesville; son Larry Coker, of Clarkesville; daughter and son-in-law Karen and Doug Banks, of Flowery Branch; and daughter and son-in-law Cindy and Allen Holcomb, of Demorest; grandchildren, Adam Holcomb, Daniel Holcomb, Thomas Holcomb, Jordan Banks, and Jacob Banks; brother and sister-in-law, Omer Ray and Opal Coker of Alto; brother and sister-in-law Otis and Nancy Coker of Cornelia; and sister and brother-in-law Exie and Lanier Burnett of Loganville.
The family will accept flowers or donations be made in his honor to the following locations, Stonepile Baptist Church, 2394 Stonepile Road, Clarkesville, GA 30523, or Shriners Children’s Hospital, Attn: Office of Development, 2900 Rocky Point Drive, Tampa, FL 33607 or St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, 501 St. Jude Place, Memphis, TN 38105
Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, North Chapel, at 245 Central Avenue, Demorest, Georgia 30535. Telephone: 706-778-1700.
A Lula man faces a felony obstruction charge after struggling with a Habersham County deputy sheriff outside a church Sunday afternoon.
The deputy attempted to pull over a truck driven by 45-year-old Michael Lee Walker at 1 p.m. Sunday for alleged reckless driving on Highway 365, when the driver turned onto Duncan Bridge Road toward White County and failed to stop for the patrol car’s activated lights and siren.
Speeds remained around 60 mph as the Ford truck continued, eventually turning into the parking lot of Bethesda Fellowship on Charlie Davis Road, where a crowd was in attendance for Easter activities.
When the deputy attempted to detain Walker, he attempted to escape into the church and a struggle ensued. The deputy deployed a taser in an attempt to gain compliance from Walker.
Bystanders at the church helped the deputy until a Baldwin police officer and other deputies arrived. No injuries were reported.
Walker also is charged by the sheriff’s office with driving under the influence, two counts of failure to signal a lane change, improper passing, driving on the wrong side of the road, reckless driving, and fleeing and attempting to elude a law enforcement officer.
He remained jailed at the Habersham County Detention Center on Monday.
A year later, Georgia’s ‘book banning’ law normalizes censorship in schools
A year after it was enacted, Georgia’s so-called book banning law is leading to confusion and censorship in our schools.
The law, passed in April 2022 as Senate Bill 226, allows parents and guardians to submit complaints about the content of “material” in their children’s textbooks and in school and classroom libraries.
Georgia public schools now must have a complaint resolution policy that allows challenges to material believed to be “harmful to minors,” defined by the law as sexual content appealing to the “prurient, shameful, or morbid interest of minors,” which lacks “serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value for minors.” This definition mirrors the U.S. Supreme Court’s definition of obscenity.
When a parent or guardian submits a written complaint about school material, the school principal has seven days to investigate whether the material is harmful to minors. The decision of whether to remove or restrict student access to the challenged material is left exclusively to the principal, although the school board may conduct a review.
The Georgia Department of Education does not give principals any guidance for determining whether material meets the definition of “harmful to minors,” and it offers no concrete steps for handling complaints. The department’s model complaint resolution policy simply restates the law’s requirements.
The law undermines students’ constitutional right to receive information. In the 1982 case of Island Trees School District v. Pico, the Supreme Court noted that school libraries afford students “an opportunity at self-education and individual enrichment” and that public school boards are not free to restrict student access to library books “simply because they dislike the ideas contained in those books.” In the words of the court, “the First Amendment rights of students may be directly and sharply implicated by the removal of books from the shelves of a school library.” Yet Georgia now empowers any parent to initiate a process that does exactly that.
Another year-old Georgia law only makes matters worse. SB 377, also referred to as Georgia’s “divisive concepts” bill, regulates whether and how teachers can discuss topics like race and ethnicity in the classroom. Both laws deprive students of their First Amendment right to receive information, and the combination has created uncertainty and normalized censorship.
Nan Brown, coordinator of the Georgia Library Media Association’s advocacy team, reports that Georgia teachers have begun censoring both what they say to students and what materials they keep in their classrooms. Some teachers have limited or altogether avoided discussing topics like the Civil War or figures like Martin Luther King Jr. for fear of putting their jobs at risk, Brown said.
In the just-ended Georgia General Assembly session, lawmakers considered encouraging even more censorship in our schools. Senate Bill 154 would have made school librarians criminally liable for distributing “harmful materials” to minors. Fortunately, the bill did not pass this year. But it could reappear in 2024.
What would such a law mean for Georgia schools? To see the damage it could do, we need only look one state over.
In 2017, Florida’s Legislature passed a law (House Bill 989) that was a precursor to Georgia’s SB 226. Florida’s law lacks detailed guidance for resolving complaints, leading to significant uncertainty among educators about what books they can have in their classrooms, paving the way for self-censorship by teachers that deprives students of their First Amendment right to receive information.
Last year, the Florida lawmakers — in addition to passing their own “divisive concepts” law — passed HB 1467, which requires all books in public school media centers, as well as any books assigned or recommended by teachers, be pre-approved as content-appropriate by the school’s media specialist. A public educator who allows students access to unapproved materials may be subject to felony prosecution.
Schools are unequipped to shoulder the administrative burden of this year-old law. For example, in Duval County, Florida, a mere 54 media specialists are responsible for vetting 1.6 million titles in the county’s 200 schools. Fear of criminal consequences and a backlog of classroom materials waiting to be reviewed has led Florida teachers to box up and donate entire classroom libraries.
SB 154 would have similar consequences in Georgia. The proposal — which remains in play for the 2024 General Assembly session — would expose educators to potential arrest and prosecution for simply having books and resources in their classrooms without any real, practicable guidance on which materials are allowed and which are not.
Georgia must learn from the mistakes we’ve already made by following in Florida’s unconstitutional footsteps. Criminalizing teachers’ well-intentioned conduct and impeding students’ access to educational information would put us on a path to even more censorship in our schools.
________