The town of Tallulah Falls has lifted its Boil Water Advisory for residents on Hickory Nut Mountain.
The advisory was issued as a precaution after two water line leaks forced repairs on Wednesday.
Residents may resume normal water consumption.
The town of Tallulah Falls has lifted its Boil Water Advisory for residents on Hickory Nut Mountain.
The advisory was issued as a precaution after two water line leaks forced repairs on Wednesday.
Residents may resume normal water consumption.
Clarkesville has lifted the Boil Water Advisory it issued for some city water customers on Thursday.
The advisory was issued as a precaution after a water main broke on White Oak Court.
Impacted areas included Swain Drive, Memorial Drive, Richard Street, View Street, Stapleton Drive, Mockingbird Lane, White Oak Court, and Leland Hills.
Residents and businesses in these areas may resume normal water consumption.
Two more suspects, including a 16-year-old, have been arrested for murder in the March 5 shooting that killed an Athens man.
X’Zydric Faust was taken into custody Wednesday in Pinellas County, Florida. Faust is charged as an adult with murder in the death of 24-year-old Ja’Vanni McDavid.
McDavid was fatally wounded in the early morning shooting on Northview Drive.
Faust is the third suspect to be arrested in the case.
On March 17, the Athens-Clarke County Police Department arrested Jaden Appling, 20, of Athens, and charged him with murder.
Anthony Brown was arrested the morning of the incident and charged with aggravated assault. McDavid initially survived the shooting but later died from his injuries. Police upgraded the charges against Brown to murder.
Brown and Appling are both being held in the Clarke County Jail without bond. As of March 31, Faust remained in Pinellas County awaiting extradition to Georgia.
(GA Recorder) — Only a small portion of Georgia’s bipartisan mental health bill survived the 2023 legislative politicking.
Advocates and proponents of improved access to behavioral health services in Georgia had rallied behind what was seen as the next step in reforming the state’s system, following up on the work championed last year by the late House Speaker David Ralston.
The bipartisan measure cleared the House earlier this month with overwhelming support but slowed in the Senate and failed to clear the deadline for bills to advance out of committee. HB 520 remains alive for next year.
“I would be remiss if I did not voice my disappointment that the Senate chose not to act on a priority for this House,” House Speaker Jon Burns, a Newington Republican, told reporters early Thursday morning.
Burns said the House is focused on those who feel they have nowhere to turn for help.
“I’m sorry that they will be kept waiting another year. But make no mistake, our work will continue,” he said. “This will continue to be our priority, as it has been for the last two years. That won’t change.”
On Wednesday, the final day of the 2023 legislative session, state senators salvaged one piece of the bill meant to streamline aggregated data sharing among state agencies to help guide future policymaking. That provision was added to another bill dealing with inactive state boards.
“I’m going to vote for this for the tiny, little bit of reform they offer but must express real disappointment that we are not moving forward in mental health reform in the way House wished in 2023,” said Rep. Mary Margaret Oliver, a Decatur Democrat and one of the bill’s co-sponsors.
The Republican sponsor, Rep. Todd Jones, struck a more upbeat tone afterward, saying he wasn’t disappointed and that he would continue to work on the bill in the legislative off-season.
“In my mind, good policy is good policy, and it’s going to be good policy in 2023 and good policy in 2024,” the South Forsyth lawmaker said early Thursday morning.
A Senate panel unveiled a trimmed-down version of the proposal last week but never received a vote in committee.
The measure appeared to become ensnared in the end-of-session haggling between the two chambers.
Lt. Gov. Burt Jones leaned into a proposal to make it easier to build hospitals in counties with less than 50,000 people that did not move out of a House committee. Jones’ father owns property in Butts County that is considered a potential site for a new hospital that would have qualified under the bill.
Both chambers have set up study committees to dig into those hospital regulations under the state’s certificate-of-need program and how they might be updated.
Burns acknowledged early Thursday morning that the Senate’s hospital bill was a factor in the House mental health bill stalling this year, calling the certificate-of-need reform a “very complex issue” that is better addressed comprehensively.
Jones told GPB Lawmakers Wednesday that he had concerns about the price tag of the House mental health proposal, which a state analysis put at as much as nearly $72 million annually and one-time expenses of up to $3.7 million for the studies outlined in the legislation.
“I know it was very popular on the House side, but we’ve had a lot of members on the Senate side that were having a hard time swallowing that number,” Jones said, referring to the cost.
Gov. Brian Kemp showed his support for the House’s work in remarks to the chamber late in the evening Wednesday, saying the representatives “delivered on another historic bill that’s still being worked on” and that honors Ralston.
“Working on this issue has been a priority for both the House and my office, and whether it is this session or those to come, I know that we will continue to work for greater progress,” Kemp said.
Much of this year’s original bill centered on studies designed to lay a foundation for future decision-making, such as a review of the state’s crisis bed space capacity and an assessment of the gaps in Georgia’s behavioral health workforce.
But some provisions of the bill would increase local aid directly in the near term. For example, one part would create county-based coordinators who would collaborate with a local criminal justice system and that community’s behavioral health providers to ensure the available resources are being used.
It would have also expanded a loan repayment program meant to grow the behavioral health workforce.
The most expensive recurring item was for health-related social supports – like for housing and employment – for eligible Medicaid recipients under the age of 19. Such a change would require federal review and cost the state treasury $45 million with an additional $90 million federal match. This was dropped from the Senate version that is still pending.
“HB 520 has encountered a delay – not a defeat,” said Jeff Breedlove, chief of communications and policy with the Georgia Council for Recovery and a co-chair of a coalition of advocacy groups. “It’s the responsibility of advocates to earn the vote. We have work remaining to do.”
(GA Recorder) — The agricultural and forestry trucking industry scored a major victory this week in the waning minutes of the 2023 Georgia Legislative session with the passage of a law that increases their freight load capacity.
The bickering between some House and Senate lawmakers over raising the size of truckloads permitted on Georgia’s state and local roads through House Bill 189 was eventually resolved by a joint committee of lawmakers. The compromise came just in time for the bill to meet the Day 40 deadline for bills to clear both chambers. The attention will eventually turn toward finding a long-term solution to the extensive funding needed to maintain the same state roadways and bridges that deteriorate more rapidly as massive tractor-trailers bump along them.
Under the new regulations, trucks carrying food, timber, and other agricultural and forestry commodities can weigh as much as 88,000 pounds. It’s a 4,000 pound increase from the state maximum that recently reverted back after the expiration of a three-year moratorium that let truckers carrying some of the state’s top agricultural products to be as large as 95,000 pounds without risk of incurring a fine.
The final version includes a July 1, 2025, sunset date. It also gives local police the authority to enforce the law and cite trucks that exceed the legal limit. But local officials won’t be able to use the money from the fines to purchase truck scales or for road maintenance. Instead, the legislation requires the money to be sent to the state.
The Senate passed the truck weight bill by a 37-16 vote shortly after midnight Thursday, minutes after a tighter 95-75 passage in the House chamber.
Rep. Teri Anuelwicz, a Smyrna Democrat, said while the bill lets local police issue citations to rulebreakers, it also unfairly requires the fines to be sent to the state.
“This is simply a toothless bill that serves to encourage a culture of forgiveness versus permission when it comes to enforcing these truck weights,” she said as legislators cast their votes.
Senate Transportation Committee Chairman Greg Dolezal said that his committee insisted on having an expiration date in order to ensure that the vested parties work together to bridge the gap of billions of dollars needed to repair, repave and rebuild Georgia’s roadways.
The compromise truck weight plan was recommended by a conference committee of six House and Senate lawmakers who met Wednesday to hash out disagreements between the chambers. The measure also limits the distance that the heavier-laden trucks can travel to a 150-mile radius from the site where the trailers are loaded.
Since the onset of the pandemic in March 2020, Georgia loggers and farmers welcomed Gov. Brian Kemp’s executive orders for larger loads that they said became a lifeline for the businesses by shaving off significant transportation expenses.
The push to allow heftier trucking loads drew strong opposition because the vehicles are more likely to tip over and are harder to slow down, thereby putting passenger vehicles at risk.
Georgia Department of Transportation officials said the initial bill that included commercial vehicles of any type was a reckless plan. The agency estimated that it would double the number of bridges that trucks carrying excessive loads would not be allowed to cross.
A cleverly-scheduled match against non-region foes Mt. Vernon proved a great measuring stick to see just where the Indians are at this time of the year. The undefeated and top-ranked Indians came away with a solid 4-1 win at home on Thursday.
“Great game against a ranked opponent,” says coach Jeremy Stille. “Very tough and well-played game by both teams. Very proud of the guys and how hard they worked to get a win in a challenging contest to prep for state.”
Austin Ball secured yet another hat trick with 3 goals, and Luis Varano Pastor added the other. Landon Hall and Koen Eller had assists. Keeper Kelton Reynolds played excellent between the posts, making several stops including a PK in which he read the shooter and made a great save.
The Indians are now 14-0 on the season and will await their first round state playoff matchup. The win marked the second this season against a ranked opponent. The team’s 14th win is now a new program record, and the goal differential sits at 102-3 for the entirety of the season. Ball’s hat trick was his 9th this season, and he now has a school-record 50 career goals.
GOALS
3 – Austin Ball (37)
Luis Varano Pastor (9)
ASSISTS
Landon Hall (11)
Koen Eller (2)
The TFS tennis teams honored its seniors on Thursday evening and promptly beat visiting Prince Avenue Christian to continue their unbeaten streak. The Lady Indians won 5-0 and the Indians 4-1 in a dominating effort.
“It was a beautiful day to celebrate our seniors and their contributions and accomplishments,” says coach Anthony Cox. “We are also really proud of this season’s entire boys and girls squads on a tremendous regular season. We look forward to getting some practice in over spring break to get prepared for the region tournament.”
The tennis teams are both now 12-0 overall, heading into the region tournament as the first seeds from 8-A DI. In the win for Ariel Kelsick, the junior set a new single-season wins record with her 12th. Cassidy Hayes earned her 25th career win, tying her for second all-time in school history of combined doubles/singles wins.
Seniors honored include Lucia Fano, Cassidy Hayes, Vy Vo, Sarah Zhang, and Milicia Durovic.
GIRLS
#1 Singles: Ariel Kelsick (12-0) W 6-2, 6-2
#2 Singles: Jaeda-Lee Daniel-Joseph (11-0) W 6-0, 6-0
#3 Singles: Ava Carnes (6-1) W 7-6, 2-6 (10-4)
#1 Doubles: Katarina Foskey & Azaria Junaid (6-0) W 6-0, 6-0
#2 Doubles: Cassidy Hayes & Landry Carnes (5-2) W 6-1, 6-1
BOYS
#1 Singles: Tanner Davis (12-0) W 6-1, 6-0
#2 Singles: TJ Cox (12-0) W 6-0, 6-0
#3 Singles: William Xu DNP (Forfeit win)
#1 Doubles: Zach Carringer & Jake Owensby (7-0) W 6-1, 6-1
#2 Doubles: Justin Graham & Aiden VanOrman (4-2) L 3-6, 6-7 (4-7)
WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — Health insurance companies may no longer need to cover a wide swath of preventive health care services that were required by the 2010 Affordable Care Act, under a federal judge’s ruling issued Thursday in Texas.
The decision could affect millions of Americans’ access to no-cost preventive health care — including pregnancy-related care, cancer screenings, HIV prevention pharmaceuticals, and more — that a federal agency given new powers under Obamacare required health insurance companies to cover.
It was not immediately clear when or how the decision could take effect in consumer insurance plans. The Biden administration is likely to appeal the case.
U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer called for an immediate stay and appeal of the ruling and for insurance providers to “publicly commit they will retain free preventive care.”
“This ruling is not only misguided, it is outright dangerous and could cost lives,” Schumer, a New York Democrat, said in a statement.
New Jersey Democratic Rep. Frank Pallone, ranking member on the U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee, said in a written statement the judge’s decision “imperils access to lifesaving care including mammograms, lung cancer, and skin cancer screenings, screenings for pregnant women and newborns, and PrEP.”
“It has no basis in the law, will unnecessarily cause confusion, and will put lives at risk if people are forced to forgo routine screenings and treatment,” he added. “The Department of Justice should immediately move to appeal this reckless decision and have it stayed so that Americans do not lose access to care.”
The U.S. Justice Department and the Department of Health and Human Services did not respond to requests for comment Thursday morning on the case, Braidwood Management v. Becerra. The White House also did not return a request for comment on the ruling.
Judge Reed O’Connor, from the U.S. District Court in the Northern District of Texas, wrote in his ruling that preventive services required by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force to be covered are unlawful because they violate the Appointments Clause.
That section of the Constitution requires the president to nominate certain positions, sometimes referred to as principal officers, that the U.S. Senate then confirms.
Government officials whose positions are generally considered “inferior” are often left for the president, Cabinet secretaries, or others in the executive branch to hire without Senate involvement.
The conservative Christian business owners who filed the lawsuit argue the preventive care measure mandates are unconstitutional due to a lack of oversight on how recommendations are made by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force.
The business owners argue that because the ACA does not allow the secretary of HHS — or other leaders of the agency — to reject recommendations made by that committee, it has insufficient oversight.
O’Connor, nominated by former president George W. Bush, sided in his ruling with the business owners, who wanted to provide health insurance without coverage for “PrEP drugs, the HPV vaccine, contraceptives, and screenings and behavioral counseling for STDs and drug use.” They argued their employees had no need for such coverage and that it violated their religious beliefs under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
PrEP, also known as pre-exposure prophylaxis, are drugs that have a 99% prevention rate for HIV and are used by all Americans, but primarily by men who have sex with men. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found the drugs “played a part in recent decreases in new HIV infections.” The CDC estimates that 1.2 million Americans are eligible for PrEP.
The business owners argue that requiring health insurance to cover preventive HIV medication, such as PrEP, violates their faith. They also argue it’s unconstitutional for the federal government to recommend covered preventive services.
O’Connor wrote in Thursday’s ruling that Braidwood Management Inc. and Kelley Orthodontics, as well as others, “need not comply with the preventive care coverage recommendations of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force issued on or after March 23, 2010, because the members of the Task Force have not been appointed in a manner consistent with Article II’s Appointments Clause.” The Affordable Care Act was signed into law on that date.
Numerous medical groups — the American Medical Association, The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Medical Women’s Association, the American Academy of Family Physicians, the National Medical Association and the Infectious Diseases Society of America — warned against revoking no-cost preventive care services in a brief filed in November.
“Ultimately, if this Court invalidates the Task Force’s recommendations nationwide, physicians and healthcare professionals will be left in an untenable situation,” they wrote.
“Amici will struggle to encourage their patients to accept services that they know will save lives and to help their patients navigate a new and confusing insurance situation,” they added. “Amici will see many of their patients, including some of their most vulnerable, turn down medically indicated services because of the very financial barriers that Congress sought to remove.”
“The past ten years have shown the benefits of no-cost preventive coverage, and amici ask that the Court hesitate before ordering a remedy that could upset that substantial progress,” they said.
The preventive care services in question receive either an “A” or “B” rating from the Preventive Services Task Force. They include domestic violence counseling, postpartum depression counseling, breastfeeding support, and treatment for heart disease.
Some of the screenings for cancer include breast, colorectal, ovarian, lung and skin for patients as young as 6 months to 24-year-olds with fair skin.
HHS estimated in 2020 that nearly 152 million people had access to preventive care services under the law. That breaks down to about 58 million women, 57 million men, and 37 million children, according to HHS data.
Health policy experts at the Kaiser Family Foundation said during a briefing Thursday afternoon the ruling’s impacts aren’t likely to be immediate since health insurance companies typically set plans for a full year, and the Biden administration is expected to both request a stay of the ruling and appeal it to the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals.
In the event the case is appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court and the justices side with this judge’s ruling, Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy, said health insurance companies will likely keep coverage for prevention activities covered under the ruling but that patients could have to pay some of the cost.
How much someone pays for one of those health care services would depend on the type of insurance they have, their deductible, and several other factors.
Laurie Sobel, associate director of women’s health policy, said it wouldn’t be especially challenging for Congress to fix the issue at the heart of the lawsuit.
“The main argument is that the agency, that Health and Human Services, has no power to approve or reject the recommendations by USPSTF, so a fix could be that you just include that (HHS has) to approve the recommendations,” Sobel said. “So it makes it clear that USPSTF is in an advisory role and not actually determining what has to be covered.”
Levitt, however, noted that the ACA is a “political lightning rod,” making any changes in a divided Congress somewhat unlikely.
“It does not require a lot of words to fix this in legislation, but it potentially requires very difficult politics,” Levitt said.
Alina Salganicoff, senior vice president and director of women’s health policy, said because the judge’s ruling didn’t impact the Health Resources and Services Administration or the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, there are still several preventive services that insurance companies must cover.
“An important message is that mammograms will likely still be covered without cost-sharing, so people shouldn’t fear that they won’t have coverage for their mammogram at this point,” Salganicoff said, noting those are under the Health Resources and Services Administration recommendations.
There are also several other cancer screenings and types of preventive care that will be covered since the judge’s ruling applies to recommendations the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force made on or after March 23, 2010.
One issue with that is health care providers have updated the types of screenings available as well as timing in the 13 years since.
Sexually transmitted infection testing is one of the recommendations, Salganicoff said, that pre-dates March 2010, though public health experts have tweaked and adjusted it over the years.
“These are updated every five years, so those will likely still be covered,” Salganicoff said.
“I think it’s too soon to tell how insurance plans are going to respond to some of the tweaks over time,” Salganicoff added. “My anticipation would be that clinicians and plans do want to have coverage to current standards rather than requirement to standards set based on research that was conducted 13 years ago or before.”
Several cases challenging whether employers should have to comply with the ACA’s birth control mandate have come before the U.S. Supreme Court. Thursday’s ruling does not change that section of the ACA.
In 2020 the court granted a victory to those opposed to offering health plans that cover contraception.
In a 7-2 decision, with an opinion written by Justice Clarence Thomas, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Little Sisters of the Poor, which challenged that the mandate violated its rights under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
The case brought by the nonprofit Catholic religious organization, which operates homes for the elderly, upheld a Trump administration expansion of an exemption under the ACA that allowed private employers to object to the birth control mandate for religious or moral reasons.
The Trump administration widened the exemptions in November 2018.
In 2016, the Supreme Court unanimously returned a case brought by a Pittsburgh-based Catholic priest to the lower court level.
Bishop David Zubik, the main plaintiff, had argued that religious freedoms were violated by the contraceptive mandate. Zubik argued that a special carve-out exemption for religious organizations did not go far enough and therefore burdened the exercise of their religious freedoms. The Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh and Erie, as well as the nonprofit Catholic Charities, joined as plaintiffs.
In 2014, Hobby Lobby, a Christian-owned craft supply retailer, won at the Supreme Court level after it became the first high-profile plaintiff to challenge coverage of birth control under the ACA.
In a 5-4 decision, Justice Samuel Alito wrote in the majority opinion that a requirement for “closely held” for-profit corporations to provide employees with access to no-cost contraception under ACA plans violated the Religious Freedom and Restoration Act.
________
State’s Newsroom’s Ariana Figueroa contributed to this article
Two mothers of special needs children are coordinating an event other special needs families can enjoy this Easter. Rhonda Stamey and Athena Harkins are organizing an Easter egg hunt for developmentally and physically challenged children and adults.
Stamey is someone well-known to the local special needs community. She’s spent years coordinating events – even a baseball league – so that her developmentally delayed son and others may more fully participate in and celebrate life. Together, she and Harkins organize parties at Christmas and trunk-or-treating at Halloween. Now, they’re adding Easter to the list.
“This is a first, so we are just doing the egg hunt to see how participation is,” says Stamey.
The egg hunt at Hillside Baptist Church in Cornelia this weekend is open to all special needs families. As with previous events, there is no age limit.
“It will take place on a fenced-in playground at the church unless it rains. If that happens, we will do it in the fellowship hall,” Stamey says.
Generous donors from throughout the community have donated candy and prizes, enough to fill over 400 eggs and hand out surprise gifts to each participant.
This weekend’s egg hunt is a true family event, organizers say. Siblings may join in the hunt.
“This is a great event because it gives a chance for all the special needs families to hunt eggs without a huge crowd, and we will have volunteers to help assist those who need help hunting,” Stamey says. “There is no age cut off, so special needs adults like my own son, who is 21 with the development level of a 3-year-old, can hunt and face no judgments for being there.”
“They should get the chance to enjoy the holidays just like other kids but around kids like them – kids that understand them, that want to play with them, that want to be around them,” adds Harkins, whose 14-year-old son, Dennis, is autistic.
Harkins says these specially organized events are less stressful on families and provide a meaningful social outlet.
“You can feel isolated and alone sometimes living with a special needs family member; you can’t do what other families can do, sometimes,” she says. “[At these events] we can associate with other parents who live the way we do. It’s freeing. It’s worth it.”
The Easter Egg Hunt for Special Needs Families at Hillside Baptist Church begins at 12 p.m. on Saturday, April 1. The event is open to all special needs families, regardless of where they live. The church is located at 324 level Grove Road, Cornelia, GA.
For more information, call Rhonda at 706-949-9775.
Click here for more Easter egg hunts in Northeast GA.
WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — A New York criminal grand jury has indicted former President Donald Trump, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office confirmed following news reports.
A former president has never been indicted before. Trump is also a Republican candidate in the 2024 race for the presidency.
“This evening we contacted Mr. Trump’s attorney to coordinate his surrender to the Manhattan D.A.’s Office for arraignment on a Supreme Court indictment, which remains under seal,” a spokesperson for Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg wrote in a statement. “Guidance will be provided when the arraignment date is selected.”
Trump released a statement Thursday evening alleging the indictment is “election interference at the highest level in history.”
“Never before in our Nation’s history has this been done,” Trump wrote, blasting the prosecutor and Democrats.
“I believe this Witch-Hunt will backfire massively on Joe Biden,” Trump added. “The American people realize exactly what the Radical Left Democrats are doing here. Everyone can see it.”
The New York Times and Washington Post reported Bragg has been investigating alleged payments Trump paid to adult film actor Stormy Daniels in return for her silence during the 2016 election about an affair.
Trump has denied having an affair with Daniels.
Trump inaccurately predicted his possible arrest on March 21, but it never materialized.
Members of Congress quickly began to react, along partisan lines, as news reached them Thursday.
Republicans said the indictment was politically motivated and accused Bragg of skewing justice to punish the former Republican president.
Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, a potential top rival to Trump for the GOP presidential nomination next year, said he would direct Florida authorities not to cooperate with New York officials to extradite Trump to face charges. Trump, a New York native and longtime resident of the city, listed Florida as his official residence in 2019.
“The weaponization of the legal system to advance a political agenda turns the rule of law on its head,” DeSantis tweeted.
“Florida will not assist in an extradition request given the questionable circumstances at issue with this Soros-backed Manhattan prosecutor and his political agenda.”
House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, a Louisiana Republican, called the indictment “outrageous.”
“The sham New York indictment of President Donald Trump is one of the clearest examples of extremist Democrats weaponizing government to attack their political opponents,” Scalise wrote on Twitter.
Many House Republicans who have allied themselves with the former president took aim at Bragg. Reps. Tim Walberg of Michigan, Andy Biggs of Arizona, and Matt Gaetz of Florida accused Bragg of targeting the former president.
“A majority of Americans know Alvin Bragg’s witch hunt is a politically motivated prosecution,” Gaetz wrote on Twitter.
Ohio Republican Rep. Jim Jordan, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, tweeted, “Outrageous.”
Colorado GOP Rep Lauren Boebert tweeted the indictment “is another political witch hunt targeting the people’s President.”
Fourth-ranking House Republican Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York called the indictment a “dark day” for America but said the criminal indictment has “energized” voters.
“Tens of millions of patriotic Americans have never been so energized to exercise their constitutional rights to peacefully organize and VOTE at the ballot box to save our great republic by electing Donald J. Trump in 2024,” she wrote in a statement posted to Twitter.
California Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff, who led one of the impeachment trials against Trump, wrote on Twitter the “indictment of a former president is unprecedented.”
“But so too is the unlawful conduct in which Trump has been engaged,” Schiff wrote. “A nation of laws must hold the rich and powerful accountable, even when they hold high office. Especially when they do. To do otherwise is not democracy.”
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, said Trump should face “the same laws as every American.”
“He will be able to avail himself of the legal system and a jury, not politics, to determine his fate according to the facts and the law,” Schumer said in a statement. “There should be no outside political influence, intimidation or interference in the case. I encourage both Mr. Trump’s critics and supporters to let the process proceed peacefully and according to the law.”
North Carolina Democratic Rep. Alma Adams released a statement saying that the promise that “no one is above the law” in the United States was kept with Trump’s indictment.
“Mr. Trump, like every other American, is entitled to due process,” Adams wrote. “That is another core promise of our Constitution. The State of New York has spent years meticulously building their case, and they secured an indictment not from political power brokers or the media, but from a grand jury of ordinary citizens.”
Sen. Thom Tillis, a North Carolina Republican, wrote on Twitter that he was skeptical of the indictment.
“This is the same District Attorney who is notorious for letting violent criminals off the hook in Manhattan but has been laser-focused on pursuing a politicized prosecution of a former president,” he wrote. “Politics should never tip the scales of justice, and Congress has every right to investigate the conduct and decision-making of the Manhattan D.A.’s office.”
The New York case is one of several investigations Trump is facing. Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis said during a Jan. 24 court hearing her office’s decision is “imminent” whether to charge people in connection with a probe into interference in the former president’s 2020 election loss. This month Trump’s legal team asked a Fulton judge to block the release of the special grand jury’s report based on its 2022 investigation.
The U.S. House Committee to Investigate the January 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol made a criminal referral to the Justice Department at the tail end of its two-year probe that found Trump culpable for that day’s insurrection.
Federal authorities are also looking into Trump’s storage of classified materials at his Mar-a-Lago estate in South Florida after his presidency.
In his March 21 prediction, Trump called on his supporters to “PROTEST, TAKE OUR NATION BACK!” but did not issue a similar exhortation Thursday.
The indictment follows more than a week of public sniping between Bragg and congressional Republicans.
Three U.S. House committee chairmen, Jordan, Oversight Chairman James Comer of Kentucky, and Administration Chairman Bryan Steil of Wisconsin, all Republicans, sent Bragg a letter last week calling the prospective indictment “an unprecedented abuse of prosecutorial authority.”
Bragg’s office shot back that prosecutors would “not be intimidated by attempts to undermine the justice process, nor will we let baseless accusations deter us from fairly applying the law.”
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Jennifer Shutt, Ariana Figueroa, Ashley Murray and John McCosh contributed to this report.
(GA Recorder) — Lawmakers signed off on a $32.4 billion spending plan for next year as the clock expired on the 2023 legislative session, although Gov. Brian Kemp warned of “significant holes” in the budget.
“I think it’s important for me to say tonight that the recent news from the Federal Reserve and others suggest there may be storm clouds on our nation’s economic horizon,” Kemp told members of the Senate on the final day of the session. “Additionally, there are significant holes in this year’s final budget that my office will need to work closely with you all, the House and the Office of Planning and Budget to address in the coming months.
“As we have done in years past, our job is to make the tough decisions necessary to keep the financial health of this state on sound footing, and I believe that there remains work to be done after the session to conclude and achieve that goal,” Kemp said.
As with all bills that pass through the Legislature, the governor has the power of the pen and can veto lines in the budget he finds problematic. The close of the session kicks off the usual 40-day bill signing period, and Kemp has already signed a few bills, including a controversial measure banning most gender-affirming care for minors. Bill signings can be tracked here.
Kemp also pressed senators to sign off on the renewal of a tax break for big economic development projects, threatening to call lawmakers back for a special session if they didn’t. The current perk is set to end this summer.
The Senate gave the measure final approval with a 43-to-6 vote shortly before midnight, extending the tax break to 2026.
“There’s only been 18 of them in the history of Georgia. These are used very selectively,” said Sen. Chuck Hufstetler, a Rome Republican who chairs the Senate Finance Committee and who is the bill’s sponsor. “About 75% of them are outside the Atlanta metro area that have been done. It’s brought in thousands and thousands of jobs.”
Kemp had less luck this year with a push to expand Georgia’s school voucher program. That measure came up short in the House Wednesday in what proved to be one of the more dramatic votes of the 2023 legislative session.
The governor and the state’s lead budget writers framed the process of developing next year’s spending plan as an exercise in restraint in anticipation of a potential economic downturn. Revenues will also be needed to fund future priorities, such as the gradual income tax rate reduction plan passed last year that is set to start in 2024.
State revenues have been on an upswing in recent years, but economists have predicted a slowdown in tax collections and that has caused budget hawks to approach new spending with caution. But rising revenues have also turned up the pressure to boost funding for state services.
“I’d like to note that this is no easy task to balance the revenue at hand with the needs statewide. With more money, we certainly could have done more things, and I would have liked that,” House Appropriations Chairman Matt Hatchett said.
When asked about the governor’s comment about “significant holes” in the budget, House Speaker Jon Burns told reporters there are always some funding plans that come up short. Lawmakers typically address the gaps when they return in January when they amend the budget.
“I think we have a very comprehensive budget, but I’m sure there’s some issues that maybe we could have addressed in different ways that may need to be backfilled some in the future,” Burns told reporters.
The new budget, which will take effect in July, provides a $6,000 pay raise for some state law enforcement and a $2,000 salary bump for teachers and other state employees, and funds the state’s HOPE scholarship at 100%.
The increase for educators is part of a multiyear effort to drive up those salaries and will put the average teacher salary in Georgia to $61,000, according to Hatchett. The budget also includes a $1,000 supplement for school custodians.
The final spending plan softened some of the cuts made in the Senate, but the reductions remained, including a $1.4 million cut to Georgia Public Broadcasting and $66 million cut to the University System of Georgia.
The top legislative budget writers said the Board of Regents has about $500 million in reserves to help absorb the cut, and Senate Appropriations Chair Blake Tillery told senators GPB’s news competitors have long complained about the state subsidy.
“I think that’s actually a very valid point: Why are we picking winners and losers?” Tillery said this session.
Lawmakers also set aside $9.4 million to pay for 500 people to come off the wait list for services for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. That’s short of the 2,400 a Senate panel recommended last year.
But this year’s budget process also appeared to become tied up with the end-of-session tensions between the House and Senate. Hatchett received a standing ovation when he kicked off his late-night budget presentation with this declaration: “This House does not play politics with the budget.”
Some Democratic priorities – such as $6.3 million for free breakfast and lunch for school children – were also restored after being stripped out in the Senate.
“Kids aren’t able to learn if they’re hungry,” Hatchett said to cheers from some lawmakers. “This funding will provide more than 17 million meals at no cost to low income students in Georgia public schools. Seventeen million meals.”
It’s the kind of lesson every parent hopes their kid will remember. Distracted and drunk driving claims thousands of lives each year. With prom season fast approaching, White County High School sought to remind its students of the dangers.
The high school partnered with local public safety agencies on Wednesday for a mock crash exercise. The scenario involved a head-on collision resulting in critical patients and a fatality. As part of the exercise, fire personnel extricated patients trapped in vehicles, and EMS workers assessed and treated ‘patients’ in the field before transporting them to hospitals.
AirLife paramedics airlifted one ‘patient’ from the scene.
The exercise gave students a chance to see the potentially grim results of bad choices on the road. It also gave them an opportunity to see local first responders in action.
“I believe it is important for the students to see this type of exercise. This makes them aware of the consequences of distracted driving or driving under the influence,” says White County Fire Services Battalion Chief Josh Taylor.
White County Public Information Officer Bryce Barrett says the mock exercise was “as close to real” as possible while keeping everyone safe.
“After all patients were transported to the hospital, members of the White County Fire Service shared stories of similar situations that happened right here in White County,” says Barrett.
The Georgia State Patrol and Air Life Georgia assisted the following agencies with Wednesday’s exercise:
White County Coroner’s Office
White County Fire Service
White County Emergency Medical Services
White County Emergency Management
White County E/911 Communications
White County High School
White County Sheriff’s Office
White County Warrior TV and Payne’s Wrecker Service of Cleveland also helped.
According to the most recently available national statistics, nearly 15,000 people died in the United States in 2020 due to distracted and drunk driving.