Home Blog Page 836

David Clyde Hamilton

David Clyde Hamilton, age 45, of Clarkesville, passed away on March 1, 2023.

Born in Toccoa, Georgia, on August 19, 1977, David was the son of Martha Gragg and the late Cyde Hamilton. David was a Class of 1996 graduate of Habersham Central High School, and he was formerly employed with Regal Manufacturing. He was a lover of animals and a gentle soul. David was always willing to lend a hand or help anyone who needed it. He was an avid race fan, and he also was a racecar driver for many years. He enjoyed riding around with his friends and spending time with his family.

Survivors include his mother, Martha Gragg of Clarkesville, sisters Teresa Hamilton Smith of Clarkesville and Jean Hancock of Clarkesville, nieces Breanna Smith (Ruben Wall), Erica Hamilton, Jessica Chitwood (Benjie) and Jessica Kabbes and nephew Alex Hancock, special cousin Buddy Hamilton, as well as ten great nieces and nephews and many cousins and extended family.

No formal services are planned at this time.

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

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

Sautee Nacoochee Center to host dance weekend this spring

The Sautee Nacoochee Cultural Center will host its first-ever Spring @ Sautee three-day dance weekend March 24-26, 2023.

The Sautee Nacoochee Center welcomes the dance world to its first-ever weekend of live music and dance: Spring @ Sautee. The three-day event is open to the public, beginning Friday evening, March 24, and continuing until Sunday afternoon, March 26.

The weekend will feature fun and interactive dance sessions, workshops, yoga classes, and energetic live music from local and regional bands.

All ages and experience levels are welcome.

“Folks from as far away as Connecticut will attend this three-day event of live music and dancing,” says Jennie Inglis, marketing and development coordinator for the Sautee Nacoochee Community Association (SNCA).

Activities will be held in the Historic Gymnasium and Community Hall at the Center on Highway 255 near Helen, Georgia.

Dream come true

Part of the inspiration for the name Spring @ Sautee came from local author Emory Jones’ book, The Valley Where They Danced.

Dancing of all kinds has gone on at the Center since the early 1980s.

“It has been a dream of the dance organizers to host a weekend event, and Emory’s book title evokes the beauty and magic of dancing in the Sautee and Nacoochee Valleys,” says SNCA Executive Director Mel Whitehead.

Two bands will anchor the dance weekend, Playing With Fyre and Contraforce.

Event organizers describe Playing With Fyre as a “unique, dynamic trio that plays within the unparalleled passion of the moment.”

With their unique blend of jazz, old-time, and blues, Playing with Fyre takes dancers on an “emotionally driven dance journey,” says Inglis. Band members include George Paul on piano, Rob Zisette on fiddle, and Steve Kemble on percussion.

Charleston, South Carolina-based quartet Contraforce is deeply rooted in traditional folk music. The group composes and records its own tunes and does not shy away from musical experimentation. Members include fiddler Andrae Raffield, percussionist/handpan/saxophonist Joey Dorwart, guitarist Jimi “Two Nails” Peirano, and Vocalist Karin Mcquade.

Callers Deanna Palumbo and Terry Doyle will lead dancers through the figures and dances.

DJ Tacoshel will provide the mix for a late-night Techno Contra Dance on Saturday. Epic First Dance will teach a swing workshop prior to the afternoon Swing Dance on Saturday with the Toccoa Jazz Band. Waltz sessions will be offered on both Saturday and Sunday mornings.

Registration

The cost to register for Spring @ Sautee is $125. A full schedule and registration information are available at www.sauteecontra.com.

The Sautee Center is located at 283 Hwy 255 North in Sautee. The Sautee Nacoochee Community Association is a member-based organization serving White and Habersham Counties and all of Northeast Georgia. Its mission is to value and nurture individual creativity, along with the historical, cultural, and environmental resources of the Sautee and Nacoochee Valleys and surrounding areas.

For more information, visit www.snca.org or call 706-878-3300.

Demorest City Hall moving to new digs; new location to open Monday

Starting next week, Demorest City Hall will be operating from a new location.

Interim city manager Mark Musselwhite tells Now Habersham that, barring any unforeseen circumstances, the new City Hall will open in the old Demorest Elementary School on Alabama Street on Monday, March 13.

City officials had hoped to move into the historic school building last month, but encountered a few hiccups and a challenge or two during renovations.

Musslewhite says one challenge that had to be overcome involved issues with the fire sprinkler system. That has since been addressed.

Barring any new challenges, the current Demorest City Hall will close this Thursday, March 9, at 3 p.m. so staff can start packing up the remaining items that need to be moved. IT personnel will begin taking down the computer network as well. Staff will begin moving Friday morning to the new facility, with IT personnel arriving later that day to set up the computer network.

The historic Demorest Elementary School closed in 2011. The Demorest Development Authority bought the property in July 2022. (NowHabersham.com)

Demorest City Hall will reopen Monday at 8 a.m. ready for business at the Alabama Street location.

While the new facility does not have a drive-thru window where residents can pay water bills and conduct other business, Musselwhite says there will be a drop box where they can leave payments.

Musselwhite, now entering his third month as interim Demorest City Manager, expressed his gratitude for all of the hard work that staff, vendors, and the city council have done over the last 90 days to make the move a reality.

Still, there’s more work to be done.

He says the staff has already begun measuring and pricing out renovations to the historic school’s auditorium to become the new city council meeting room in the near future.

Economist warns that ‘heightened dysfunction’ in Congress raises risk of debt default

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — Economists on Tuesday urged Congress to address the debt limit quickly, cautioning that simply because U.S. lawmakers have successfully brokered deals before doesn’t mean they will be able to this year.

“There is a temptation to brush off the developing debt limit drama, thinking it will end the same way as the others over the years with lawmakers coming to terms and signing legislation just in time,” Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, said in prepared remarks. “That seems a mistake given the heightened dysfunction in Congress and the large political differences gripping the nation.”

Congress took three broadly bipartisan votes to suspend the debt limit during the Trump administration, but Republicans have rejected Democrats’ calls for bipartisanship on the debt limit during the Biden administration.

Democrats moved a bill last December to raise the debt limit by $2.5 trillion, but the federal government reached that $31.4 trillion limit in mid-January.

The Treasury Department has since used accounting maneuvers, called extraordinary measures, to continue paying all of the nation’s bills in full and on time, though those steps are expected to expire between late June and September.

Economists told the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs subcommittee on economic policy on Tuesday that Congress must act well before that summer deadline if lawmakers want to avoid negative impacts on federal programs, the global economy, and long-term financial prospects.

Maryland Democratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen asked the panelists if they agreed with speculation from some GOP lawmakers that if the U.S. enters a default, the Treasury Department would be able to prioritize which payments it makes.

Van Hollen read a quote from panelist Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of American Action Forum, a center-right think tank, who told the senator’s office that “it won’t work and we will default, other than that it’s a spiffy idea.”

Zandi, as well as Michael R. Strain, director of economic policy studies, and Arthur F. Burns scholar in political economy at the American Enterprise Institute, a right-leaning policy research organization, both agreed with that assessment.

Amy K. Matsui, senior counsel and director of income security at the National Women’s Law Center, also agreed.

A key issue with the proposal from some that the Treasury Department could prioritize certain payments, Holtz-Eakin said, is that the federal government “can’t do it forever, and it doesn’t solve any underlying problem.”

“It just kicks the problem down the road temporarily. And that’s putting aside I think they don’t have the legal authority… and I don’t think they can execute on it,” he said. “But even if they could, and it was legal, it doesn’t solve the basic problem.”

Zandi told the panel that if Congress doesn’t take action on the debt limit and the United States were to default, it wouldn’t be possible to put the genie back in the bottle, in response to a question from New Jersey Democratic Sen. Bob Menendez.

“It’s not possible,” Zandi said. “Since the founding of the nation, this was a principle that we established. Alexander Hamilton, the first Treasury secretary, bought back the revolutionary war debt on pennies on the dollar to establish the credit of the United States — that we are money good, if you put your money with us, you’re good.”

“If we for one second go over the line and not pay in a timely way, we lose that forever,” Zandi added. “And it’s incalculable, the cost.”

Louisiana Republican Sen. John Kennedy, the ranking member on the panel, pledged at the beginning of the hearing he would not vote for a default on the debt, though he didn’t explicitly say he would vote to raise or suspend the debt limit.

Kennedy voted against the legislation that raised the debt limit in December, as did all other Senate Republicans and all but one House Republican.

“This United States senator will not vote to default on America’s debt,” Kennedy said. “We have a lot of it. But there’s a moral principle involved and a practical principle involved. And if you’re going to have a party, you gotta pay the band, and it’s time for us to pay the band, and we’re going to do it.”

“However, I think you will see some of us — including, but not limited to the House Republicans — use this as an opportunity to talk about our rate of growth and spending and to talk about the rate of growth and our debt accumulation,” Kennedy added. “And that’s not unusual.”

Miss Carter’s green pastures

Five horses gathered at the fence behind the barn waiting for Miss Carter to bring them treats. She patted their noses, told them they were each special, and she would return with more love in the afternoon. Apple, the young colt, tilted his head as Miss Carter whispered to him as only she could do.

Afterward, Miss Carter returned to the barn to prepare tea and cookies for friends joining her for a picnic.

Miss Carter is three years old; the horses are seven inches high; the fence is constructed of popsicle sticks, and the barn is made of plastic. This idyllic scene rests on a child’s table in my living room. However, for Carter and me, our imaginations allow us to travel far. We visit places where there is the freedom to ride, climb trees, and play in a hayloft.

I am called Grandma by this spirited, sweet child. We are not blood-related since she is my stepdaughter’s little girl but never mind all that. Family dynamics are way too complicated for a three-year-old. Love seems to cancel such trivial nonsense anyway.

Carter broke her femur in a freak accident at her preschool several weeks ago. She looks exquisite in her pink and purple Spica cast, which begins just under her breastbone and travels down her right leg to her ankle and the left leg to her knee. A steel bar is attached from the right ankle to the left thigh, which separates her legs by about two feet.

She cannot walk, nor can she sit without assistance. She sleeps only on her back because she cannot turn. And she sleeps like this without complaint. She requires constant supervision, and when she needs to move, we must lift her, including the heavy apparatus she is half-buried in.

I keep Carter three days a week since she cannot return to school until the cast is removed. I have learned to sit with her around her table in little chairs that rise one foot above the floor. As a result of the lifting and sitting, I take a substantial amount of ibuprofen for my back on a weekly basis.

When we are not at the barn, we go to Barbie’s house, visit the girls, or shop at the grocery store where the head cashier, Miss Carter, runs the Minnie Mouse cash register. We unload our groceries in the kids’ kitchen and prepare cookies containing pretend ingredients of vegetable soup with cherries. We solve puzzles, and without cheating, I cannot win a game of Candy Land to save my life.

In her infinite wisdom, Carter has taught me a lot about life during these last few weeks. I realize if I were in her situation, the claustrophobia would have set in, and my wailing would have spooked all the horses, causing them to flee to greener pastures. I would require more than ibuprofen to get through the days, and not even Godzilla could lift me since I would have drowned my sorrow with real cookies made with chocolate chips.

Children are amazing. They accept what befalls them and roll with the punches. They use their imaginations to escape to bliss and enjoy the love showered upon them as they go. They choose not to complain but instead hold their dolls or bears and, if need be, watch Alvin and the Chipmunks to ease their burdens. They do not worry too much about tomorrow because they assume it will eventually arrive, bringing a new horse to the barn or more folks to the tea party.

Adults could learn a tractorful of insight by observing God working through a child’s mind and soul. I understand these terrible things happen to even the smallest of humans since we live on this earth. However, when they do, because the children are innocent, God calms their souls, and I think he must whisper to them, just like Carter does to her little colt, Apple, to assure him all is well.

When tragedy visits us, perhaps we should remember that courage will help us stand again. Miss Carter understands that attitude makes a huge difference in how we heal. We can choose to laugh at Alvin and the Chipmunks or cry and complain over our misfortune. We can decide to pray to God or blame Him for our troubles.

Children trust us to make things okay. They believe our words of comfort, “It’s going to be alright.” Are we not God’s children? If we believe in His words, everything will be okay, even on the day when the horses come with chariots to take us home. Until then, enjoy the green pastures, let your imagination fly, and appreciate the love bestowed upon you as you go.

_________

Lynn Gendusa

Lynn Walker Gendusa is an author and columnist whose work appears regularly on NowHabersham.com and across the U.S. through the USA Today Network. Her work has been featured in Guidepost, senior magazines, and on MSN.com. Lynn’s latest book is “Southern Comfort: Stories of Family, Friendship, Fiery Trials, and Faith.” She can be reached at www.lynngendusa.com.

Lady Indians cruise, Indians grind out win at Rabun

Bailey Crumley (Austin Poffenberger)

GIRLS

The Lady Indians found themselves up 5-0 after the first half and rode that momentum to a 9-3 final Tuesday evening at Rabun County in a big region matchup.

Maddie Mullis got the scoring started with a strike from 25 yards out. Addie Higbie then recorded goals off assists by Stasa Beratovic and then Mullis. She secured another hat trick when she scored off a helper from Lily Desta. She wasn’t done quite yet – Higbie scored an unassisted goal to make it 5-0 going into the break.

In the second half, Maddie LeBlanc connected with Gemma Farris, who scored to push the lead up to 6-0. Bailey Crumley found the back of the net prior to a PK by Higbie, her fifth goal of the match. The final tally came from Crumley on an assist by LeBlanc. Rabun scored its 3 goals in the final 10 minutes of play.

The #8-ranked Lady Indians are now 6-2 overall and 3-1 in region play

GOALS:

5 – Addie Higbie (16)
2 – Bailey Crumley (2)
Maddie Mullis (3)
Gemma Farris (8)

ASSISTS:

2 – Maddie LeBlanc (2)
Stasa Beratovic (1)
Maddie Mullis (4)
Lily Desta (1)

_____

BOYS

The Indians hadn’t given up a goal all season. #2-ranked Tallulah Falls had outscored opponents 59-0 until Rabun County scored on a header off a corner kick in the first half on Tuesday evening for a 1-0 lead.

TFS regrouped at the half, and fought back to a 2-1 win. Austin Ball and Clay Kafsky scored on direct free kicks, and the Indians were able to maintain control the rest of the way to the win. Ball’s goal made him the sole all-time goals leader in TFS history with 34 career goals.

TFS is now 8-0 overall and at 4-0 in region play.

GOALS:

Austin Ball (21)
Clay Kafsky (4)

Indians lose region opener in walk-off at #1-ranked Elbert

Rohajae Pinder (Austin Poffenberger)

The Indians went to Elberton and gave the #1-ranked Blue Devils all they could handle, forcing Elbert County to win on the final at-bat with a walk-off 7-6 win.

TFS put the pressure on early with a pair of runs in the first, but an Elbert 4-run second gave the home team the 5-2 lead. The Indians battled back to score 3 runs in the fourth and tie the game, only to see Elbert County reclaim the lead in the home half. Again Tallulah Falls knotted the contest in the fifth, and the Blue Devils needed a walk-off in the seventh to claim the win.

Rohajae Pinder doubled in two runs in the first inning, plating Danny Grant and Ashton Roache. In the fourth, Chase Pollock brought in Roache with a base hit up the middle. Cole Bonitatibus then doubled in Pollock and Caden Walker to tie the game at the time. Pollock had a sacrifice fly to bring home Grant in the fifth.

Bonitatibus earned the tough-luck loss after relieving Walker. Bonitatibus allowed a couple of unearned runs across 5 innings of work, striking out 5 against just one hit and one walk. The Indians totaled 9 hits in the contest, with Grant and Pollock recording 2-hit games. Roache, Pinder, Walker, Bonitatibus, and Zaiden Cox also had hits. Pinder, Pollock, and Bonitatibus all had 2 RBI apiece, and Grant and Roache both had 2 runs scored.

TFS is now 3-5 overall and 0-1 in region play.

Flonnie Jean Webb

Flonnie Jean Webb, age 54, of Cornelia, Georgia, passed away on Tuesday, March 7, 2023.

Ms. Webb’s wishes were to be cremated, and no services are planned at this time.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, South Chapel, at 1370 Industrial Boulevard, Baldwin, Georgia 30511. Telephone: 706-778-7123.

Cornelia woman sentenced to 15 years in prison for DUI crash that killed Habersham Central High student

A Cornelia woman charged in a DUI crash that killed a Habersham Central High School student in 2019 will spend the next 12 years of her life behind bars.

On Tuesday, Senior Judge David Emerson sentenced Cherrie Pulido to 15 years with 12 to serve in the death of Carlos Morales. The judge handed down the sentence after Pulido entered into a non-negotiated guilty plea.

Pulido’s trial was set to begin on Monday, March 6, but she instead pled guilty on Tuesday to homicide by vehicle in the first degree, DUI, and failure to maintain lane.

Carlos Morales was looking forward to graduation, his sister says. He was killed in the crash six months before the end of the school year.

A Habersham County Grand Jury indicted Pulido on November 10, 2020, nearly one year after the collision on Camp Creek Road that killed the 17-year-old Morales and injured his brother and cousin. The teens were on their way to school when the wreck happened.

The Georgia State Patrol investigated the fatal crash. Troopers said at the time that the then-37-year-old Pulido was traveling south on Camp Creek Road in a Jeep Grand Cherokee when she crossed the centerline into the northbound lane. The Cherokee struck the Ford F-150 pickup truck Carlos Morales was driving head-on.

Morales received extensive medical treatment at the scene and was airlifted to Northeast Georgia Medical Center (NGMC) in Gainesville, where he later died.

Bobby George Goodson

Bobby George Goodson, age 71, of Alto, Georgia, passed away on Monday, March 6, 2023.

Mr. Goodson was born on February 28, 1952, in Habersham County, Georgia. He was preceded in death by his father, Robert Goodson. Bobby enjoyed playing guitar and writing music and loved his dog, George.

Survivors include his mother, Margaret Goodson, of Alto; son and daughter-in-law, Robbie and Brandy Goodson, of Alto; brother, Danny Goodson, of Alto; and numerous aunts, uncles, and cousins.

A Graveside Service will be announced at a later date.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, South Chapel, at 1370 Industrial Boulevard, Baldwin, Georgia 30511.

Clarkesville City Council denies apartment complex variance

The proposed development is located on East Louise Street/Toccoa Hwy. between Ingles grocery store and the Ruby Fulbright Aquatic Center in Clarkesville. (Jerry Neace/Now Habersham)

The Clarkesville City Council denied a variance request for an apartment complex on East Louise Street (Hwy. 17) that had been previously designated several years ago as a subdivision development, but construction never began.

Bowersox Investment Group of Canton, GA, submitted an application to the city in January for the development of the apartment complex named Ellison Park. According to the zoning requirements, the property was zoned as R-2 Multi-Family and had a max density of 10 units per acre.

Bowersox Investment Group requested the variance to increase the density from the required 10 units per acre to 12.36 units per acre. By ordinance, the 6.8-acre parcel would only allow 68 units, and the developer requested 84 units.

City Manager Keith Dickerson explained to the council that city staff had made some requests and recommendations to the developer. They had agreed to install a dog park, a walking trail, and have a brick facade on the buildings, and the developer complied with those requests in the preliminary design.

The reason for the variance request was due to a hardship based on construction costs.

However, the Planning and Zoning commission had denied the variance request to increase the density of the development, and the developer wanted to come before the council to appeal that denial.

Break even

Stephanie Joyce, a representative for the developer, spoke to the council about the variance request. “Variances usually come from a hardship, whether you’re hitting rock, have to redirect sewer lines. In this case, we are in unprecedented times, so I understand not wanting to set a precedent for writing a variance for our hardship, but whoever thought we would be here right now when it comes to building and development and construction.”

She continued, “We are not trying to be greedy in asking for the hardship. We are literally trying to break even for the first five years just so we can make the housing happen.”

FILE PHOTO – Clarkesville City Council members shown left to right are Angela Kiker, Terry Gladden, mayor Barrie Aycock, Franklin Brown, and Brad Coppedge. (Jerry Neace/Now Habersham)

Councilmember Franklin Brown had a couple of concerns related to ingress and egress to the property. He inquired if they had done a traffic study related to the one entrance entering the highway. Joyce replied that they had been in contact with the Georgia Department of Transportation, and they had done the markup on the handout she had given them.

Brown also had a concern with having a second entrance related to ingress and egress for public safety vehicles responding to a fire. She stated that they could accommodate that concern in the next revision of the development plans.

Not ‘prudent’

The Planning and Zoning Commission advertised the variance request in January and only had one individual inquire about it. That individual did not live inside the city limits, officials said. The commission unanimously denied the variance request at its February meeting.

Clarkesville Zoning Administrator Caleb Gaines did not attend Monday night’s city council meeting but provided a brief to the council explaining their denial: “After discussion of the merits of the application with the representatives of Bowersox, the commission decided that a variance based on financial reasons does not meet the zoning ordinance’s requirements.”

“Clarkesville definitely needs more housing, but in the best interest of the guidance of zoning in regard to density, it would not be prudent to exceed the density requirements set forth in the ordinances,” Gaines said.

City councilmember Angelia Kiker upheld the Planning Commission’s recommendation.

“I have a little hard time going against the planning and zoning after they did that work,” she said. “These are unprecedented times, and we all are experiencing hardships with building costs and interest rates and all kinds of things. This is a self-imposed hardship. I have an issue with going against our planning and zoning to give a variance based on a hardship for a self-imposed hardship.”

She assured the developer that she was not against the development of the apartments but was not in favor of the variance.

The council voted 3-1 to deny the variance request, with Brown casting the only vote in favor of the request.

(Jerry Neace/Now Habersham)

A ‘terrible precedent’

After the meeting, councilmember Brad Coppedge said he agreed with Kiker’s reasoning in denying the request. Approving it, he said, would have set a “terrible precedent.”

“It is fully explained that’s not part of the options to come forward asking for a variance based on a created hardship,” Coppedge said. “I felt tonight it was just one of those where it’s unfortunate that they have to hit a certain number to be able to, let’s say, break even in five years, but that’s their model. That’s what they wanted.”

The Planning and Zoning Commission’s recommendation also carried a lot of weight with Coppedge.

“They made a unanimous recommendation. That needs to be pointed out too,” he said.

Cleveland unveils new land use map

Tom O’Bryant talks with the Cleveland City Council about the city's proposed new land use map. (WRWH.com)

Officials Monday night got a chance to see a proposed future land use map for the city of Cleveland. The map reflects updates to the city’s zoning ordinances.

The unveiling came during the first of two public hearings the Cleveland City Council must hold on proposed changes to the city’s comprehensive plan. Economic Development and Planning Director Tom O’Bryant displayed a draft map with designated areas of planned use such as business and industrial, residential, and historic.

The city’s planning and zoning board has been working on the map as it updates zoning regulations.

A second public hearing is set for April 10. Between now and then, O’Bryant said the draft map would be available for the public to review, ask questions about, and make suggestions.

O’Bryant said the map is available at Cleveland City Hall and will be posted on the city’s website.