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Demorest resident expresses ‘enough is enough, is enough’ over 441 retaining wall repair

Demorest resident Deborah Showalter addresses the city council on Tuesday, April 4, 2023. (Jerry Neace/Now Habersham)

It’s been a long time coming, and frankly, Debra Showalter says she’s tired of waiting. The Demorest resident says she’s fed up with the lack of progress on repairs to the cracked retaining wall on Historic Highway 441 in Demorest.

Showalter expressed her displeasure to city council members Tuesday during their regular monthly meeting.

“I would like to know if you have any updates on the wall, and if you do not, could we all start raising cane to get it done because it’s enough, is enough, is enough,” Showalter said.

Heavy rain from the remnants of Hurricane Delta damaged the wall the weekend of October 10-11, 2020.  Pressure from the moisture-heavy soil caused the wall to crack and separate, allowing mud to seep through. A portion of the sidewalk above the wall then collapsed.

Showalter’s property sits above where the wall and sidewalk are damaged. She asked the council to find a better way to close off the sidewalk next to her property until it’s repaired. She says people keep tearing down the police tape the city put up and are using the sidewalk, ignoring the inherent hazards.

Showalter says she’s contacted the Atlanta television news stations about the situation.

“I had one of the young ladies that contacted me that wanted to know if they [GA DOT] had done anything yet. She said, ‘Keep us updated.'”

Demorest Public Works crews wash away mud that seeped from the broken retainer wall following days of heavy rain in Oct. 2020. (photo by Rick Austin)
Barriers were placed in front of the broken wall as a precaution. (NowHabersham.com)

Raising ‘holy cane’

Demorest Interim City Manager Mark Musselwhite said he spoke with the DOT project manager on Tuesday.

“I was asked about the Windstream lines that are very low, and he has asked them to raise them,” Musselwhite said. He went on to explain that DOT is looking at a different way to shore up the wall by stacking sandbags and using a silt fence to prevent the existing rock from washing down the main road until the contractors start work next month.

Crews are expected to begin the repair work the first week in May.

“If they do not come back in May and get going on this, I’m going to start raising holy cane,” said Showalter. “I hope I have the support of a lot of the citizens who have seen the monstrosity of a broken wall for three years like we have.”

In mid-March, the city seemed to get ahead of itself when it posted that repairs were underway. On March 16, the Demorest Facebook page read: “Work has begun to repair the damaged retaining wall on Business 441 (Central Avenue) in Demorest. Motorists should expect delays in both directions in Demorest as Georgia DOT crews work.”

(Source: Demorest Facebook page)

Part of the delay in getting to this point stems from early disagreements between the city and DOT over who was responsible for making the repairs. Once DOT took on the project, the agency then had to bid out the work. Earlier this year, the state transportation department awarded the $732,928 contract to Vertical Earth Inc. out of Cumming. The company will repair .189 miles of wall.

State transportation officials estimate the project will be completed by the end of this year.

Mitchell breaks 21-year-old record in 800 to highlight TFS action at Mt. Pisgah

Molly Mitchell (Crump Photo)

The track & field teams competed in an impromptu meet at Mt. Pisgah on Wednesday. Even shorthanded, the Lady Indians finished third and the Indians fourth with only six individuals each.

An original meet slated for Friday was scratched with a bad weather forecast. TFS secured a spot late to join in the Mt. Pisgah meet. Molly Mitchell highlighted the success with a PR in the 800 that broke a 21-year-old school record.

The following finished in the top-5 of their respective events:

BOYS – 4th Place

  • Tyler Brown (1st in 400; 2nd in 300 MH; 5th in Long Jump)
  • Sam Ketch (1st in Discus; 3rd in Shot Put)
  • Zakhar Valasiuk (3rd in Pole Vault)

GIRLS – 3rd Place

  • Molly Mitchell (1st in 800 – PR & School Record 2:30.14)
  • Julianne Shirley (1st in High Jump; 2nd in 400)
  • Dani Prince (1st in 300 MH; 3rd in 100 MH)
  • 4×400 Relay (1st)
  • Sofia Rueda (2nd in 300 MH; 4th in 100 MH)
  • Jace Ibemere (2nd in Triple Jump; 3rd in 200)
  • 4×100 Relay (2nd)
  • Meredith Orr (3rd in 3200)

FULL RESULTS

ATL tops list of world’s busiest airports, widening gap with competitors

ATL is the world's busiest airport, according to 2022 data.

Atlanta’s Hartsfield Jackson International Airport has retained its title as the world’s busiest.

Data released this morning by industry group Airports Council International World shows more than 93 million passengers passed through ATL in 2022.

That’s a 24% increase over 2021, though those numbers still lag behind 2019’s.

Dallas Fort Worth Airport took the No. 2 spot with more than 73 million passengers.

The difference in volume between ATL and DFW widened from 13.2 million passengers in 2021 (75.7 million passengers in Atlanta versus 62.5 million in Dallas Forth Worth) to 20 million passengers in 2022.

From the top 10 airports globally, five are in the U.S.:

  1. Hartsfield-Jackson International, Georgia (ATL): 93.7 million passengers
  2. Dallas Fort Worth Airport (DFW), Texas (DFW): 73.4 million passengers
  3. Denver, Colorado (DEN): 69.3 million passengers
  4. Chicago O’Hare, Illinois (ORD): 68.3 million passengers
  5. Dubai, United Arab Emirates (DXB): 66.1 million passengers
  6. Los Angeles, California (LAX): 65.9 million passengers
  7. Istanbul, Turkey (IST): 64.3 million passengers
  8. London Heathrow, United Kingdom (LHR): 61.6 million passengers
  9. Delhi, India (DEL): 59.5 million passengers
  10. Paris Charles de Gaulle, France (CDG): 57.5 million passengers

The ACI reported that the top 10 airports for total passenger traffic represented 10% of global traffic in 2022 and experienced an 85.9% overall recovery of their pre-pandemic 2019 levels.

“The new top 10 busiest airports for passenger traffic reflects the resilience of the airport and aviation industr and the eagerness of passengers to travel by air,” ACI World Director General Luis Felipe de Oliveira said in a press release.  “While U.S. airport hubs were able to recover quicker due to their strong domestic market, we are now witnessing global hubs joining upper ranks — including Dubai, Istanbul, and London Heathrow airport.”

ATL also beat out other international airports for takeoffs and landings, with 724,000 movements, but still below its 904,000 movements in 2019.

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

Gainesville developers ‘bow out’ of proposed Mt. Airy subdivision

Many audience members applauded during a public hearing in January when Cook's Construction withdrew its rezoning requests for 101 acres of land off Demorest-Mt. Airy Highway. (Neace/Now Habersham)

A Gainesville-based development firm that withdrew its plans to build a large subdivision in Mt. Airy says it has no intention of refiling. In January, Cook Construction pulled its rezoning requests for a 101.4-acre tract off Demorest-Mt. Airy Highway after encountering strong opposition from city residents.

Geoff Cook, president of construction services for his family’s firm, says they would like to submit another proposal but adds, “the area didn’t seem like they wanted any new growth.”

“We didn’t feel like we were welcome, so we just kinda decided to bow out and not move forward with it,” he tells Now Habersham.

Before the town’s planning commission even had a chance to vote on the matter, it was clear public opposition had overwhelmed the project. Cook’s attorney withdrew the company’s rezoning requests before a standing-room-only crowd at City Hall during a public hearing on January 18, 2023.

‘Not financially advantageous’

The developers had planned to build 66 townhouses and 227 single-family houses on land adjacent to the Towerview subdivision. Towerview residents were among those who expressed concerns about traffic and the impact such a large-scale development would have on Mt. Airy’s infrastructure and local schools.

Had it been developed as proposed, The Village at Mount Airy stood to potentially increase the town’s population by more than half, adding around 771 new residents to the area.

Mt. Airy Mayor Ray McAllister says the developers told him that the city’s requirement for one-acre lots “was not financially advantageous to them.”

After withdrawing the plan, Cook had to wait at least 60 days before refiling another application to develop the property.

Mayor McAllister referenced the property during the city council meeting on April 4. The council approved a “one-time gift” of $500 to the Habersham Economic Development Council (EDC).

“We don’t have industry and things like that, but they [EDC] asked the other day what could they do for Mt. Airy?” McAllister said. He told the EDC, “They need a developer that will work with us on that property that we got over there and will build houses on a one-acre lot.”

McAllister says he’d still like to see the land developed in a way that complements the town’s character.

“We are a small town bedroom community, and to be honest with you, I believe our citizens like being a small town bedroom community just like it is.”

SEE ALSO

Demorest council imposes building moratorium

No new leads in case of missing Lawrenceville man

A specialty canine tracking team led a search for Joel Rosenbaum in Habersham County on Tuesday, April 4, 2023. (Rob Moore/Habersham County)

The search for 65-year-old Joel Rosenbaum of Lawrenceville continues, with Habersham County Sheriff’s Office officials saying no new leads have been uncovered.

Rosenbaum was last seen about 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 26, passing by the Chevron at the Square on Monroe Street in Clarkesville. That store is a brief walk from the sheriff’s office, where he walked out the front gate of the Habersham County Detention Center property just before 6:30 that night.

On Tuesday, sheriff’s office personnel were joined by specialty tracking dogs to cover again the last area Rosenbaum was seen and to examine other locations where he might be.

Joel Rosenbaum as seen in his mug shot from the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office taken several days before he disappeared. Rosenbaum was jailed for suspected DUI and released two days later. His family has not seen him since.

“After a thorough search of the area from the sheriff’s office to the Clarkesville square, down into Pitts Park, and along the river, we are confident he is not in the area that was searched today – and that’s the area surrounding the last place we can confirm he was,” said Sheriff Joey Terrell. “The tracking dogs did not alert and there were no visual clues that he had been in that area.”

Investigators also utilized the specialty tracking team in the Cornelia area and to search around some unoccupied buildings and campsites to ensure Rosenbaum was not there.

Rosenbaum previously served as a well-known bartender at a country club in Johns Creek.

Anyone with information about Joel Rosenbaum’s whereabouts or who has seen him is asked to contact Investigator George Cason at (706) 839-0560 or submit an online tip at https://www.habershamsheriff.com/tips.

 

SEE ALSO

Rosenbaum missing: Official timeline

Demorest council imposes building moratorium

The Demorest City Council voted to impose a six-month moratorium on new construction in the city, effective immediately. (livestream image)

Demorest is putting the brakes on new developments. The city council Tuesday night voted unanimously to impose a six-month building moratorium. The moratorium will give city leaders time to review and possibly modify Demorest’s comprehensive plan, land use maps and ordinances and other development regulations.

During the next six months, the council will take into consideration policies, regulations, and development standards to encourage quality growth in Demorest, the council says.

The moratorium went into effect on April 4th and will expire on October 12, 2023. The council can lift the moratorium sooner if it chooses.

What does the moratorium mean for the city of Demorest?

While the moratorium is in effect, Demorest will not accept any new applications for annexations, conditional use permits, changes to conditional use permits previously approved, variances, waivers, or amendments to the Land Use Plan.

The moratorium also states that Demorest will not accept permit applications for any type of building or land use activity “for any development or construction on any land that is authorized for residential use and is larger than one acre or for any non-residential use.”

What is exempt from the moratorium?

The moratorium will not affect applications that were submitted and filed with the city before April 4, 2023.

Demorest will continue accepting building permit applications for fences, pools, renovations to existing structures and previously platted subdivisions, construction on government and quasi-government property, and property owned by private educational institutions.

Flexibility

According to Demorest City Attorney Thomas Mitchell, the council can modify the moratorium if it chooses.

“If something special comes up, we can modify this moratorium, correct?” asked Mayor Jerry Harkness during the meeting.

“You can,” Mitchell responded.

That flexibility helped convince at least one councilmember to vote for the measure.

“As long as we can come back to it – if there is something unforeseen [that] goes on – I think that’s key to the whole process,” said Councilmember Donnie Bennett.

“If I wanted to build a ten story building on my lot so I can see the mountains better above the trees, I might have a problem?” one member of the audience asked half-jokingly.

Bennett responded, “You might,” then continued, “but if a tree lands on your house and you need to build another one, you won’t have a problem.”

After Mayor Harkness confirmed that development of “existing platted lots” is allowed under the moratorium, Councilmember Shawn Allen made the motion to approve the resolution. Councilmember Andrew Ferguson seconded the motion and the rest of the council voted for it.

Second city to impose moratorium

The moratorium comes at a time of accelerated development the county. Demorest is the second municipality in Habersham to impose a moratorium in response to that growth.

On February 6, the Clarkesville City Council imposed a six-month moratorium on construction of multi-family housing units. The move followed the opening of a 72-unit apartment complex west of the city on Highway 115.

Another new large apartment complex is set to open in Demorest this month. The 150-unit Villas at Four Four One complex is located just north of Habersham Medical Center on Historic Highway 441.

Several other apartment complexes and large-scale subdivisions have been built in Habersham County in recent years.

SEE ALSO

Gainesville developers ‘bow out’ of proposed Mt. Airy subdivision

Clarkesville to close House Street

The Clarkesville City Council unanimously voted to close House Street after the city manager raised concerns about illegal dumping and traffic hazards. (Jerry Neace/Now Habersham)

The Clarkesville City Council voted Monday night to close a rarely used, somewhat hazardous side street on the south side of town.

House Street is a short stretch of road located off of Spring Street. It runs behind Dunkin’ Donuts and ends in a steep drop off at the Wilbanks Lumber Yard, which recently expanded.

House street is located off of Spring Street and runs behind Dunkin’ Donuts in Clarkesville. (Jerry Neace/Now Habersham)

City Manager Keith Dickerson explained to council members that House is an old city street that may have possibly serviced the lumber yard years ago. He said he had hoped Dunkin’ Donuts would use it for a another exit. As it stands now, all visitors must enter and exit the shop from the same point on Washington Street. Dickerson said the city discussed giving Dunkin’ Donuts access to House Street, but the owners declined the offer.

“It’s slowly deteriorating and slowly going away. Two things are happening. People have figured out that they can drive down there and dump stuff,” he said, “and the other thing is that the GIS brings some of the trucks into Wilbanks [Lumber Yard] on House Street. They have a hard time getting out of there.”

Dickerson said the city keeps having to pick up trash dumped along the road and he sees no reason to keep it open.

House Street is being used for illegal dumping, the city manager says. Once the road closes, the city will no longer be responsible for its upkeep. (Jerry Neace/Now Habersham)

“Nobody is using this road and nobody should be on this road,” he said.

Dunkin’ Donuts and the Wilbanks family own the property lining House Street. Councilmember Franklin Brown asked if Wilbanks was ok with the road being closed. Dickerson stated that they were fine with it. Brown then made the motion to close off House Street. Councilmember Terry Gladden seconded the motion and it carried unanimously.

No date has yet been set for when the road will officially close.

Meissner Corporation to create 1,700 jobs in Athens-Clarke County

The Meissner Corporation plans to open a second manufacturing and research facilty in Athens-Clarke County. The new campus will double the company's U.S. footprint and create around 1,700 jobs. (Faceook)

Meissner Corporation, an industry leader in advanced microfiltration and therapeutic manufacturing systems, today announced plans to open a plant in Northeast Georgia. The company will invest nearly $250 million in a new facility in Athens-Clarke County. The project will create more than 1,700 jobs over the next eight years, state economic development officials say.

Meissner, headquartered in Camarillo, California, is one of the world’s largest privately held companies in the bioprocessing sector. It develops, manufactures, supplies, and services products and systems for the pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical industries.

The company recently played a leading role in the industry’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Meissner provided critical products which enabled the development, manufacture, and distribution of numerous lifesaving therapeutics and vaccines.

‘Ideal location’ to expand

Company president, Christopher Meissner, calls Athens-Clarke County an “ideal location” from which to serve clients on the East Coast and worldwide.

“We are thrilled to embark on this important expansion and are excited to build our second U.S. manufacturing campus in Athens-Clarke County,” says Meissner. “We sincerely appreciate the partnership with state and county officials, and are eager to break ground to join the community in Athens-Clarke County.”

Meissner’s new facility will be located at the Christian Industrial Tract, located at 1310 Spring Valley Road, in Winterville. When complete, the new campus will more than double the company’s manufacturing footprint in the United States. The campus is expected to consist of multiple structures, including state-of-the-art cleanroom facilities, laboratories, research and development, and office space.

The company plans to work with the University System of Georgia and Technical College System of Georgia to explore potential internship and collaborative opportunities with schools such as the University of Georgia, Georgia Tech, and Athens Technical College.

Operations are expected to begin in early 2026. The company will be hiring for a broad range of jobs, including technicians, scientists and engineers as well as information technology and administrative positions.

For information on employment opportunities, visit www.meissner.com.

Marjorie Taylor Greene, other Georgia Republicans rush to Trump’s defense

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - APRIL 04: U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) pushes through the crowd gathered outside the courthouse where former U.S. President Donald Trump will arrive for his arraignment on April 4, 2023 in New York City. With his indictment, Trump will become the first former U.S. president in history to be charged with a criminal offense. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

(GA Recorder) — Georgia Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene and other state Republicans have rushed to former President Donald Trump’s defense, some of them speaking out before the indictments were unsealed Tuesday afternoon.

Greene and her retinue made their way through a New York City street swarming with photographers, protesters and counter-protesters Tuesday morning, pushing their way to a park bench, where she grabbed a megaphone and proclaimed Trump’s innocence.

Trump pleaded not guilty Tuesday afternoon to 34 New York state felony offenses related to alleged hush-money payments.

“This is the former president of the United States of America, and the government has been weaponized against him,” she said in remarks that were live-streamed. “I’m here to protest and use my voice to take a stand. Every American should take a stand. This is what happens in communist countries, not the United States of America. We have to take a stand against the injustice, the corruption and the communist Democrats who are taking our legal code, twisting it, manipulating it, and perverting it into something it was never meant to be.”

Greene received some shouts of support from the audience, but parts of her brief speech, organized by the New York Young Republican Club, were drowned out by shouting, whistle blowing and blunt requests for Greene to vacate the city.

Afterwards, in an interview with Right Side Broadcasting Network back inside her van, Greene said she spoke with Trump Monday and he is “completely committed to fighting this injustice.”

Other Georgia Republicans – including congressional representatives Buddy Carter, Rich McCormick, Austin Scott, Andrew Clyde, Barry Loudermilk and Mike Collins – have publicly criticized what they argue is a politically motivated case designed to sideline Trump in the 2024 presidential election.

In a Tuesday letter to his constituents, Clyde called the charges a “sham.”

“Make no mistake — this is all about 2024,” the Athens Republican wrote. “The establishment is terrified that they can’t legally defeat Trump in the upcoming election, so they’re yet again abusing and misapplying the law in a dangerous and desperate attempt to take him down. This brazen political persecution should righteously anger every American, regardless of their political stripes.”

Scott, who is a Tifton Republican, dismissed the indictment as an attempt to embarrass Trump when interviewed Friday on ABC News.

“In America, the government is not supposed to hunt you no matter who you are, and that is exactly what’s happened here,” Scott told ABC.

Scott said he’s personally open to another GOP presidential candidate courting his support next year but said the indictment has made Trump the “absolute nominee for the Republican Party in 2024.”

In an ABC News/Ipsos poll conducted just after news of the indictment broke, 79% of Republicans and 48% of independents said the charges were politically motivated. Only 16% of Democrats felt the same way, with the majority, 64%, saying the charges were not political. In total, 47% of those polled said they believe the charges are driven by politics, 32% said they are not, and 20% were unsure.

But the ABC News poll also suggested Americans are taking the charges seriously. Half of the respondents said they view the indictment as serious, and 45% said Trump should be charged with a crime. Another 32% said the former president should not be charged, and 23% said they were not sure.

Georgia Democrats have remained mostly mum on the indictment news.

New York prosecutors asked for a January trial date. Trump has other legal challenges in the meantime, including a probe from Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis into whether then-President Trump attempted to illegally interfere with the 2020 election results. She said in January that decisions in the case were “imminent.”

A portion of a Fulton County special grand jury’s report was released in February, stating that a majority of jurors believe at least one of the 75 witnesses perjured themselves while testifying about President Joe Biden’s narrow election win as it met from June to December. The grand jury recommends Willis press charges against those witnesses, but the publicly released version does not say who they are.

Under a blue Colorado sky

Denver, Colorado, skyline

Home for my adult son is the mile-high city of Denver. It is where a cloudless azure sky envelops the snowcapped Rockies, which sparkle in bright sunlight. Every visit, I am never sure if it is the altitude or the beauty which takes my breath away.

During one long Easter weekend, we traveled to Boulder, home to the University of Colorado. We strolled the brick mall streets downtown where tulips and manicured perfection replaced cars. Street performers filled the air with vibrations from guitars, fiddles, and folk songs.

It was a lively scene dominated by young folks sporting a bit of a hippie vibe. Boulder had changed little from the university town it was in the late 1960s, although it had better restaurants and shops. And instead of barefooted, long-haired 60’s hippies, the people I saw on that visit wore sneakers and hair in all colors. Groovy!

The hippies I once knew spread flowers and peace. Some protested, experimented with drugs, and listened to rock music splashed with defiance. Our parents’ generation was labeled the “establishment,” and they often believed the world would eventually be doomed by these errant Baby Boomers.

“Their music is horrific; they are all druggies and are not true Americans!” The establishment shouted as the chants of the hippies rose to drown out adverse reactions to their culture.

Most generations believe the next generation will never be as accomplished as they are, and they declare America is going “down the tubes.” They believe the country is destined to fail because of the bad behavior of irresponsible, crazy kids.

Anybody remember our parents not allowing the boys to wear long hair? Anyone recall the moms and dads condemning the gyrations of Elvis or the mania the Beatles produced?

Well, I wore bell bottoms, owned Elvis albums, and who among Baby Boomer readers didn’t watch the Beatles on Ed Sullivan?

But our parents were wrong. We grew up and became productive citizens. The long-haired hippie boy of the ’60s is now CEO of some company somewhere, and the flower-child girl at Woodstock is now a grandmother, retired from the company she founded in the ’70s.

My son, Corey, in his seersucker suit, Easter 1980.

On Easter Sunday, that weekend we were in Colorado visiting my son, we walked into the Highlands United Methodist Church in Denver, a noble old church, which had seen multiple generations pass through its doors since 1926. The air was crisp, the sky brightly blue, and frankly, it closely resembled a time forty years earlier when my little boy wore a seersucker suit and carried his Easter basket to church.

Since church attendance had been declining and younger folks had not been participating as much in services across our land, and since I was no longer in the Bible Belt, I wondered what I would see that Easter day.

We took our seats in old wooden pews, where I noticed, mixed between the Bibles and Methodist hymnals, were children’s storybooks. I thought it was a bit odd, but after a few moments, I understood.

Many children, escorted by parents, noisily ran toward their seats. Toddlers were dressed in Easter colors of blue, pink, yellow, and purple. Siblings with disheveled hair and infants cradled in their parents’ arms filled every seat in the church.

Finally, the sanctuary was alive with songs, babies crying, children jabbering, and happiness. The 1960s hippie had become the grandparent. He sat beside the 1980s college student who had become the parent who sat beside the child who was reading the book he’d pulled from the back of the pew.

The young minister, wearing a peach-colored Easter blazer, enthusiastically stood to welcome all. After old Easter hymns were sung, he delivered a rip-roaring, happy sermon filled with God’s word and celebration for the risen Lord.

The world isn’t doomed because young folks listen to rap music instead of the Beatles or Guns N’ Roses. America isn’t lost because a newbie hippie is dressed in ragged khakis with purple hair and rings in his nose.

I found hope and solace in witnessing the return of young families to worship the Lord. One generation will pass on the word of God to the next. As I studied the congregation, I was pretty sure the grandmother in front of me once wore a flower in her hair, and the toddler’s father once followed the Grateful Dead.

No, the world isn’t doomed if we continue to pass our faith forward so the five-year-old boy in the seersucker suit may one day return to find hope in a church under a blue Colorado sky.

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Lynn Gendusa

Lynn Walker Gendusa is an author and columnist whose work appears regularly on NowHabersham.com and in USA Today newspapers. Her latest book is “Southern Comfort: Stories of Family, Friendship, Fiery Trials, and Faith.” She can be reached at www.lynngendusa.com. To enjoy more of Lynn’s inspirational work about faith, home, family, life, and love, click here.

Rosenbaum missing: Official timeline

The Habersham County Sheriff’s Office on Tuesday released a timeline of events in the ongoing search for Joel Rosenbaum. The 65-year-old Lawrenceville man disappeared on January 26 after being released from the Habersham County Detention Center.

He was last seen around 7 p.m. on January 26 walking past the Chevron gas station on Monroe Street, less than a half mile east of the county jail.

Habersham County Public Information Officer Rob Moore issued the following statement on April 4 after the latest search for Rosenbaum failed to turn up any new leads:

“As with every missing person, the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office takes this case very seriously and hopes for successful location of Mr. Rosenbaum. Our hearts go out to his family and friends, who have described him as a friend to all. We are not sure Mr. Rosenbaum is still in the area at this time, as there have been possible sightings in the Rabun County area. Unfortunately, without new information, a sighting, or a tip that provides a possible starting point, we have to rely on the public to report any contact or possible sightings of Mr. Rosenbaum so that we can deploy resources to that area. Today (Tuesday), we brought in a world-renowned canine tracking team with a very successful track record, but found no indication that Mr. Rosenbaum is or has been in the area around where he was last seen.” – Rob Moore, Public Information Officer, Habersham County Sheriff’s Office

Timeline as of April 4, 2023

  • Jan. 26 – Joel Rosenbaum, 65, of Lawrenceville was released from the Habersham County Detention Center in Clarkesville following his arrest on traffic charges and left on foot with the clothes on his back (grey and red Atlanta Falcons shirt, black pants, and white tennis shoes) and his driver’s license.
  • Feb. 2 – A search party, made up of Rosenbaum’s friends, volunteers, state, and local law enforcement personnel canvassed the Clarkesville area, but turned up no new information and no new leads in the case.
  • Feb. 10 – Habersham County Sheriff’s Office again asked for the public’s help, publicizing a $10,000 reward offered by Rosenbaum’s family for information leading to his whereabouts.
  • Feb. 20 – Friends and family of Rosenbaum concentrated their search efforts in the Clayton, Georgia area after a Rabun County woman reported she thought she had seen him in that area. Habersham County Sheriff’s Office investigators also followed up that lead during that search effort.
  • April 4 – Specialty tracking dogs were brought in to assist Habersham County Sheriff’s Office investigators with the ongoing search effort, but uncovered no evidence that he is still in the area.

What we know:

  • The last known sighting of Mr. Rosenbaum in Habersham County was at a convenience store a couple of minutes’ walk from the Habersham County Detention Center in Clarkesville, where the clerk saw him walking toward the downtown square.
  • Searches in Clarkesville and Tallulah Falls uncovered no new leads.
  • The Atlanta native is 5-foot-6, 140-150 pounds.
  • Rosenbaum’s family is offering a reward leading to his whereabouts.

How can the public help?

Anyone with information or who has seen Rosenbaum is asked to contact Investigator George Cason at the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office at (706) 839-0560 or submit an online tip at https://www.habershamsheriff.com/tips

Bobby Elwood Griffin

Bobby Elwood Griffin, age 83, of Mount Airy, passed away peacefully Sunday, April 2, 2023, at his residence.

Mr. Griffin was born December 8, 1939, in Bay, Georgia, to the late Walls A. Griffin and the late Hazel Marie McMillan Griffin. Mr. Griffin was preceded in death by his beloved wife of 53 years, Judith Deen Griffin, and two grandsons, Caleb Nation and Michael Griffin. He was a farmer, rancher, and retired as a custodian with Hebron Baptist Church. He was a member of Level Grove Baptist Church in Cornelia.

Survivors include his children, J. Marie (John) Griffin-Taylor of Mount Airy, Ann (Michael) Nation of Pelzer, SC, and Robert (Cathy) Griffin of LaMoille, IL, and six grandchildren also survive.

A graveside service will be held Thursday, April 6, 2023, at 11:00 a.m. at Antioch Congregational Christian Church Cemetery, with Rev. John Williams officiating.

Funeral arrangements are under the direction of Swain Funeral Home in Baxley, Georgia.