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Georgia Senate passes bill to strip judges of most cash bail discretion

On Thursday, state senators passed a bill increasing offenses that require cash bail that Republican Sen. Randy Robertson said would ensure people charged with certain crimes have some “skin in the game.” (Stanley Dunlap/Georgia Recorder)

(GA Recorder) — The Georgia Senate passed a bill on Thursday that would ramp up the number of criminal charges that require bail to get out of jail to include misdemeanors such as criminal trespassing.

Senate Bill 63 is the latest legislation championed by Republican lawmakers as a way to further protect crime victims by prohibiting judges from sparing people jail time when they promise to return to court. But opponents of giving judges discretion over bail called the bill another example of Georgia’s past criminal justice reform efforts now severely undermined by new efforts to penalize people who cannot afford to stay out of jail.

The legislation now heads over to a House chamber where lawmakers will decide whether charges such as reckless driving, criminal trespassing, theft by taking, simple battery, and fighting should be included in a long list of crimes with bail requirements.

As part of the bill, judges are given the authority to set bail amounts and to waive the requirement that someone needs to post bail if they are cited for violating a local ordinance instead of a state statute.

Sen. Randy Robertson, a Cataula Republican, said Thursday that his bill is in response to people accused of a crime who skirt spending time in jail by getting out on signature bonds without putting up cash or property.

Whether it’s violent offenses like aggravated assault or murder or property crimes like simple theft and burglary, Robertson said people who are arrested are often those who have run afoul of the criminal justice system.

“These are not new criminals,” he said. “These are not people that woke up that morning and decided to go out and explore the world of breaking laws.

“What this bill does is it puts some rights back into the lives of those individuals who are victims. of crimes so that they know that the perpetrators who broke into their lives and either injured or took something from them, that they have to have a little skin in the game in order to get back out of jail,” said Robertson, a former lawman.

Democratic legislators, however, argued Thursday that the bill will reverse progress to reform efforts for cash bail and diversion programs, like accountability courts, that were the result of a criminal justice council established during Republican Gov. Nathan Deal’s tenure.

According to the council report, people who are held for two or three days pre-trial are nearly 40% more likely to commit another offense than those who are released within one day.

“It might be two days, it might be three days before somebody shows up to get them out of jail,” Sen. Derrick Mallow of Savannah said. “Well, most employers, if you don’t show up in the next 24 hours, you’re a no call, no show, you’re terminated.

“Now this individual that could have gotten a citation for a simple offense has lost their employment,” he said. “Next thing, they’re gonna lose their housing. Next thing, they lose their transportation.”

Lawrenceville Democratic Sen. Nabilah Islam said the bill unfairly targets many of the poorest Georgians who are more likely to interact with the criminal justice system.

Robertson’s bill is an “unnecessary and cruel” punishment that also erodes due process since many people who are locked up before their case is settled plead guilty at a higher rate and are sentenced more harshly.

“The size of your bank account should not determine the penalty you pay for a crime,” she said.

Sen. Josh McLaurin, a Sandy Springs Democrat, said politicians should not exert pressure on judges by using cash bail as a primary means of crime reduction.

The only factors judges should consider when deciding whether to take someone’s liberty before they are convicted of any crime is whether the person is likely to re-offend if they’re not held in jail and are a flight risk, McLaurin said.

The bill gives judges latitude to forgo bail if someone is participating in pre-trial diversion accountability courts for mental health, substance abuse, and in the case of veterans.

The problem, McLaurin said, is that rolling back cash bail reform puts undue pressure on accountability courts that can only take on some people because of court resource constraints. Accountability courts are a legacy of Deal’s Criminal Justice Reform Council.

“We are using it now here as a safety valve for cash bail in the jail system that we’re increasing the tension and the pressure on.

Republican Sen. John Albers said that the crime is so bad in some places that many people are afraid to leave their homes or perform regular tasks like going shopping.

“It mystifies me to be perfectly candid with you that some folks are so concerned about prisoners and criminals and not victims and citizens,” the Roswell lawmaker said.

Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania

The Ant-Man franchise is like many of the MCU phases: The first one was standard but serviceable fare. The sequel expanded on what made the first one great. This third entry has creativity but also takes a step back.

In Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania, Paul Rudd returns as Scott Lang, who’s now a famous author and a recognizable celebrity everywhere he goes. (The “Welcome Back, Kotter” theme plays every time he walks down the street.)

Evangeline Lilly is also back as his girlfriend, Hope, who’s now in charge of her father’s company. Scott’s daughter Cassie (Kathryn Newton) spends her time as an activist getting in and out of jail. She’s a chip off the old block like her ex-con dad.

The story picks up when the three of them visit Hope’s parents, her dad Hank Pym (Michael Douglas), and her mom Janet (Michelle Pfeiffer). During the visit, Cassie reveals she’s been working on a device that can make contact with the Quantum Realm. Janet believes it to be dangerous after she was once trapped inside the Realm for 30 years. When Janet tries to shut off the device, all five of them are pulled into the Quantum Realm. There, they discover a city filled with strange creatures rebelling against their tyrannical leader. (Some would look right at home in either Star Wars or Avatar.)

They try to get some help from Lord Krylar (Bill Murray) but to no avail. Murray’s role is mostly forgettable and amounts to nothing more than an extended cameo.

Jonathan Majors stars as Kang the Conqueror, the leader of the Realm who once befriended Janet and now wants to escape so he can get his powers back. This inevitably leads to a confrontation between him and Ant-Man as Kang holds Cassie for ransom.

There’s a lot here for fans to appreciate, and some of the visuals are made with some degree of imagination, but others are no more impressive than other things the MCU has cooked up.

That’s how I felt about a lot of Quantumania.

There are some nifty surprises, including a character from the first film who reemerges and hints about the future of the Ant-Man universe. Still, this film doesn’t have the emotional weight it wants to have.

Quantumania lacks the coolness of the first film, and there’s no breezy, zippy pace like the sequel. If anything, it plays like some of the more recent entries in the MCU: It’s there to set up even bigger ideas that will hopefully be more engrossing.

Grade: B

(Rated PG-13 for violence/action and language)

Jack Bunyon Lee

Jack Bunyon Lee went home to be with the Lord on Wednesday, February 22, 2023, surrounded by his family.

Born in Atlanta, GA, on December 2, 1951, his childhood home was in Morrow, GA, and he attended Jonesboro High School and later Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College.

Family will receive visitors at Hillside Memorial Chapel Saturday, February 25, from 5:00-8:00 p.m. Funeral services for Jack Bunyon Lee will be held Sunday, February 26, 2023, at Hills Crossing Baptist Church at 2:00 p.m., with the Rev. David Stancil and Rev. Tony Gray officiating. Interment will follow at Hillside Memorial Chapel Gardens.

Jack was preceded in death by his parents, John Bunyon Lee, Jr. and Dorothy Evans Lee, and his beloved nephew Clayton Lee Wallace. He was also preceded in death by his in-laws James H. and Rebecca D. Heidle.

Jack’s first job was working in the family business, Bunyon Enterprises, begun by his father and his uncles. Working alongside his dad and uncles as a young boy and later with his cousins, Jack eventually assumed the position of Executive Vice President. In conjunction with the University of Georgia, Bunyon Enterprises developed a potting soil that was ultimately sold worldwide. Jack served in the Army National Guard for six years. In later years, he continued his love of the outdoors by planting roadside wildflowers for the State of Georgia in the northern half of the state. He finished his work career as the primary owner of Lee’s Lawn Service.

Serving others both inside and outside his church was the work that touched his heart. As Brotherhood Director for many years, one of Jack’s greatest joys was preparing the meals for Round-Up in the fall each year when church members came for Homecoming at Bethlehem Baptist church. He also taught the youth there for many years and served as the Coordinator for the Work Projects undertaken by area youth with World Changers. In his role, Jack prepared and oversaw projects for the youth to repair homes. This service took place primarily in the southeast. In addition, he led many mission trips to areas where specific disaster relief was needed, including Illinois, Mississippi, and Louisiana. Many memories were made taking supplies and leading groups of volunteers during the seven trips to the areas devastated by Hurricane Katrina. The Lord ably used Jack’s love for others and his organizational skills.

Jack has been married to Deborah H. Lee, whom he met in church, for over 51 years. Jack and Debbie made their home in Clarkesville, Georgia, and are members of Hills Crossing Baptist Church. Jack’s family was a source of his greatest joy. In addition to his wife, Jack is survived by son John M. Lee (Debbie) of Gastonia, NC, son Joel K. Lee of Clarkesville, GA, and daughter Jaclyn Lee of Clarkesville, GA. Precious grandchildren include Maggie Lee and Jackson Lee of Gastonia, NC, and Hannah Lee of Clarkesville, GA. Additional family includes sisters Pamela Waddy (George) of McDonough, GA, Patricia Wallace (Damon) of Opelika, AL, Peggy Hall (Don) of Macon, GA, and brother-in-law Michael Heidle (Kathy) of McDonough, GA. He was blessed with twenty-five nieces and nephews and a vast extended family. Jack is also survived by two uncles, Powell Lee (Shirley) of Fayetteville, GA, and Weyman Evans (Theda) of Clarkesville, GA, and many cousins and friends.

Combining his love for his family, especially his grandchildren, gardening, and cooking provided many opportunities to share his vast knowledge and offered sweet times of fellowship with those he loved best.

The family would especially like to thank Dr. Talati and staff, the physicians at Emory University Hospital, and Pruitt Hospice, especially his nurses, Beth Turner and Amy Westbrook.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests that contributions be made to Habersham Baptist Association Disaster Relief Fund, P. O. Box 713, Cornelia, GA 30531.

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

Shirley Ann (Wiley) Smith

Shirley Ann (Wiley) Smith, age 72, of Lula, Georgia, went to her heavenly home on Thursday, February 23, 2023.

Mrs. Smith was born on March 21, 1950, in Hall County, Georgia, to the late Fay B. “Horn” and Bertie Lee Armour Wiley. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by all of her siblings. She was the last of her immediate family.

Shirley retired from the Hall County Board of Education with 35 years of loyal and dedicated service. She was of the Christian Faith. Shirley was a loving and dedicated wife, mother, and grandmother. She was known to her granddaughter as “Gaga.”

Survivors include her loving husband of 47 years, Baxter Smith, of Lula; daughter and son-in-law, Leslie and Stacey McClure; granddaughter, Aubrey McClure; and several sisters-in-law, brothers-in-law, as well as nieces and nephews.

Funeral Services will be held at 2:00 p.m., Saturday, February 25, 2023, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel, with Rev. Phil Ferguson officiating. Interment will follow at the Clemons Chapel United Methodist Church Cemetery, with Rev. Chris Austin officiating.

The family will receive friends from 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., Friday, February 24, 2023, at the funeral home.

In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to the Clemons Chapel Cemetery Fund, 6975 Lula Road, Lula, Georgia 30554

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

Woman injured, man killed in domestic shooting

A woman suffered a minor injury, and a man shot and killed himself during a domestic altercation behind a Buford warehouse Wednesday afternoon, officials say.

The Hall County Sheriff’s Office was called to the 900 block of Sherwin Parkway just after 5:30 p.m. on February 22 to investigate reports of an injured woman running into a warehouse in the industrial park. The initial investigation showed the woman and the suspected shooter, who were involved in a personal relationship and also worked together, left work at the same time and got into his vehicle.

“The two began to argue, and as the woman tried to exit the vehicle, the suspect shot at her. He then returned to his vehicle and shot himself,” says HCSO Public Information Officer  B.J. Williams.

According to Williams, the woman suffered a grazing wound to her abdomen but did not require hospitalization. The shooter, identified as Steven Expose, 32, of Winder, was pronounced dead at the scene.

The investigation into the incident continues.

Kiliya Frances Stiles

Kiliya Frances Stiles, age 66, of Clarkston, entered heaven Sunday, February 12, 2023, at the Northside Hospital, Lawrenceville.

Frances was born in the Democratic Republic of Congo on September 4, 1956. She retired from Ethiopian Airlines as a flight attendant. Frances lived a full and exciting life that most people don’t get the opportunity to live. She traveled the world, having lived in Tokyo, Portugal, Belgium & London before settling in Georgia. She was of the Christian faith and attended Dominion City Church.

Left to cherish precious memories, husband, Carl Stiles; children, Michaud Kiliya Lemba, Isaac Mubiayi, Kiliya Shako, Gladys Kiliya, Miranda Mubiayi & Priscilla Mubiayi; grandchildren, Joshua, Noah, Naomi, Alexis, Tshayima, Faith-Lily & Onoya; brothers, Jean-Pierre Kiliya, Claude Kiliya, Aime Kiliya, Jean-Paul (AKA DoDo) Kiliya & Christian Kiliya; a number of nieces, nephews & other relatives also survive.

Funeral services honoring Frances will be held at 1:00 p.m. Saturday, February 25, 2023, at the Ward’s Funeral Home Chapel. She will be entombed at the Alta Vista Mausoleum.

You may sign the online guestbook or leave a condolence at www.wardsfh.com.

Ward’s Funeral Home of Gainesville is honored to serve the family of Kiliya Frances Stiles.

Robert Howard Jordan

Robert Howard Jordan, age 90, of Lula, passed away on Wednesday, February 22, 2023.

Born on October 13, 1932, in Alto, he was a son of the late Chalmers Howard Jordan and Willie Pearl Segars Jordan. Mr. Jordan was a U.S. Army veteran and a member of Rock Springs Baptist Church. For 37 years, he was in the fur trade industry. Mr. Jordan also owned and operated Katfish Korner for some years and was a poultry grower for 14 years. In his spare time, he enjoyed big game hunting in Canada, Alaska, Africa and the United States. Some of his favorite pastimes was watching wildlife shows, as well as Johnny Carson (which he never missed), and he was an avid reader.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a granddaughter, Alexa Jones Armstrong.

Survivors include wife of 69 years, Oletha Louise Davidson Jordan of Lula; daughters and sons-in-law, Cindy Cochran (Randy) of Baldwin and Teresa Martin (Ronald) of Alto; grandchildren, Jake Robert Stargel and Cody Rex Martin; brother, Swayne Jordan of Alto; sister, Virginia Jordan of Alto; numerous nieces, nephews, other relatives and friends.

Funeral services are 11 am on Friday, February 24, 2023, in the Chapel of McGahee-Griffin & Stewart, with Dr. Kent Barrett officiating and military honors provided by the Grant Reeves Veteran’s Honor Guard. Interment will follow in Rock Springs Baptist Church Cemetery with Rev. David Harbin officiating. In the case of inclement weather, the graveside service will be held in the chapel.

The family will receive friends from 10 am until the service hour on Friday, February 24, 2023, at the funeral home.

An online guest register is available and may be viewed at www.mcgaheegriffinandstewart.com.

McGahee-Griffin & Stewart Funeral Home of Cornelia, Georgia (706/778-8668) is in charge of arrangements.

Minor injuries reported in Wednesday night accident in Cleveland

(photo Cleveland Fire Department)

A two-vehicle accident in downtown Cleveland Wednesday night resulted in minor injuries.

The crash occurred around 7 p.m. in front of Regions Bank on West Kytle Street.

According to Cleveland Fire Chief Ricky Pruitt, a car turned in front of a westbound Jeep. The impact caused the Jeep to travel over the front of the passenger car and overturn.

The occupants were out of both wrecked vehicles before first responders arrived. White County EMS evaluated them, with only minor injuries reported. EMS did not transport anyone to the hospital, Pruitt says.

The road near the accident site was temporarily closed as crews cleared the scene and police investigated the crash.

Tallulah Falls School Senior William ‘Trey’ Greene Named Habersham County STAR Student

Pictured, from left, are Habersham County STAR Student William ‘Trey’ Greene, Tallulah Falls School President and Head of School Larry A. Peevy, and Habersham County STAR Teacher Adam Greiving.

Tallulah Falls School senior William ‘Trey’ Greene of Demorest has been named Habersham County Star Student. The prestigious award was presented at the February 16 Habersham Rotary Club meeting by Habersham Chamber of Commerce President Ellie Van Doornum.

This honor qualifies Greene to compete for STAR Student of the region later in the spring.

Greene, son of Sheila and Richard Greene, earned his class’s highest score on the Scholastic Achievement Test with an impressive score of 1590, the highest recorded score in the school’s history. As part of the STAR program, Greene selected upper school history teacher Adam Greiving of Clarkesville as the STAR teacher.

The Student-Teacher Achievement Recognition (STAR) program honors Georgia’s highest-achieving high school seniors and the teachers who have been most instrumental in their academic development, according to the PAGE (Professional Association of Georgia Educators) Foundation. This achievement is a testament to Greene’s hard work and dedication to his studies, as well as the guidance and support provided by his teacher.

“We are incredibly proud of Trey and his achievements. His hard work and dedication to his studies have paid off in a big way, and we are thrilled to see him recognized as the Habersham County STAR Student,” said TFS President and Head of School Larry Peevy. “We are also grateful to Adam Greiving for his excellent work as a teacher and for inspiring Trey and his classmates to achieve their best.”

Bipartisan group predicts U.S. debt default as soon as summer, depending on tax receipts

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — A bipartisan think tank expects that the United States will default on its debt in the summer or early fall if Congress doesn’t take action to address the debt limit before then.

The timeline is similar to one the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office released last week, saying lawmakers have until sometime between July and September to either raise or suspend the debt limit before the United States would reach the so-called X-date.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has said the country has until at least early June.

“Today’s X Date range reflects, in part, the considerable uncertainty in our nation’s current economic outlook,” said Shai Akabas, the Bipartisan Policy Center’s director of economic policy. “Policymakers have an opportunity now to inject certainty into the U.S. and global economy by beginning, in earnest, bipartisan negotiations around our nation’s fiscal health and taking action to uphold the full faith and credit of the United States well before the X Date.”

President Joe Biden and Speaker Kevin McCarthy, a California Republican, have begun preliminary talks around the debt limit and government spending, but Biden remains adamant that negotiations on if and how to reduce federal spending need to happen on a separate track from debt limit talks.

McCarthy has said the two should be tied together and that it doesn’t make sense to raise the nation’s borrowing capacity, which pays for laws Congress already approved, without addressing future spending.

The BPC projection noted the default date, when the country would no longer have the ability to pay all of its bills in full and on time, “will depend heavily on 2022 tax collections in a fragile post-pandemic economy with low unemployment, persistent inflation, and recession fears.”

“Indeed, if tax season revenues fall far short of expectations, there could even be a ‘too close for comfort’ situation prior to quarterly tax receipts due on June 15,” the projection says.

Congress took three bipartisan votes during the Trump administration to suspend the debt limit and has taken one mostly party-line vote to raise the debt limit during the Biden presidency.

That $2.5 trillion raise ran out in January, after which the Treasury Department began using accounting maneuvers called extraordinary measures to keep the country below the $31.4 trillion borrowing limit.

The United States has never pushed past the default date, or X-date, so there’s uncertainty about what exactly would happen, but the federal government would be barred from deficit spending.

That would mean steep cuts to government programs, though it’s unclear if the Treasury secretary would be able to determine which programs get funding and which don’t.

Even if default spending cuts could be prioritized, it’s likely that there would be broad impacts to the global economy as well as health care programs, defense and the federal workforce.

The Bipartisan Policy Center said in its projection it plans to narrow the default date window as federal revenues and spending become clearer.

Akabas said he was “optimistic that today’s projection provides Congress and President Biden with a window of opportunity to come together and work out a deal.”

“They owe it to every hardworking American and small business owner to avoid the costs and risks associated with dragging this out to the 11th hour.”

Georgia GOP lawmakers advance bill to ban some gender-affirming health care

State senators discuss transgender health care bills SB 140 and SB 141. (Sarah Kallis/GPB News)

(GA Recorder) — A House committee passed a bill Wednesday that would ban doctors from performing some gender affirming procedures on transgender patients under 18.

Sen. Carden Summers’ Senate Bill 140  would restrict surgical treatment for gender dysphoria as well as hormone therapy for minors, but it would allow puberty blockers, which delay the onset of puberty.

“This bill does provide puberty blocking agents, and it does give you a mental pause relating to that,” said Sen. Ben Watson, chair of the Senate Health and Human Services Committee and a Savannah physician. “It forbids the surgery and forbids testosterone and estrogen. So to say that it does not treat (gender dysphoria), I think to say that would be a misrepresentation.”

Another bill, Sen. Clint Dixon’s SB 141, would outlaw puberty blockers in addition to surgical and hormone treatments. Dixon and Summers are both sponsors of the others’ bills, and Summers has also filed a bill aimed at preventing adult authority figures from talking about LGBTQ issues with minors under 16.

Tom Rawlings, a child welfare attorney who presented the bill with Summers, said allowing puberty blockers can give children and families a chance to stop and consider their options before seeking more permanent treatment.

“The majority of individuals who display gender dysphoria resolve it in some way — they may resolve it in becoming accustomed to their own body and their own gender, so to speak, they may become gay or bisexual, they may find a different attraction to different kinds of folks,” said Rawlings, who headed the Georgia Division of Family and Children Services and who was fired after an altercation in which he called an off-duty police officer “boy” and “son.” “But the bottom line is that we’re simply suggesting that, until the person is 18, we should limit irreversible medical procedures on such individuals.”

Formal studies on the rate at which gender dysphoria resolves itself have produced widely different results. Experts say gender identity is different from sexual orientation.

Healthcare providers say surgical intervention in transgender minors is extremely rare. The American Academy of Pediatrics describes puberty blockers as reversible but notes that the effect of sustained puberty suppression on fertility is unknown.

Dr. Quentin Van Meter, an Atlanta-based pediatric endocrinologist who spoke in favor of Dixon’s bill, said he has serious concerns about interfering with puberty because it is important in shaping many of the body’s systems into adulthood.

In 2020, a Texas judge disqualified Van Meter as an expert on transgender health care, according to the Pennsylvania Capital-Star.

“I’m passionate about it because I deeply care for children,” Van Meter said. “I know hormones are necessary, and puberty is not a disease. It’s a process that helps us go from a non-reproductive individual to a healthy, reproductive individual. Our brains are dependent on it, our bones are dependent on it, our gonads are dependent on it.”

A 2020 position statement from the Endocrine Society endorsed by the Pediatric Endocrinology Society finds that “medical intervention for transgender youth and adults (including puberty suppression, hormone therapy, and medically indicated surgery) is effective, relatively safe (when appropriately monitored), and has been established as the standard of care.”

More than a dozen people signed up to speak at Wednesday’s hearing, mostly parents in opposition, but many were denied the chance to speak because lawmakers scheduled another meeting in the same room an hour later. A hearing on Summers’ other bill was similarly rushed.

Parents gathered in the Capitol after the meeting said puberty blockers can be effective for children who come out as transgender before they hit puberty but do not help those who realize they are transgender afterward. The physical changes that come with puberty can be distressing for many who have gender dysphoria.

Stephanie Hinnant, a Decatur mom, said hormone treatment may have saved her child’s life.

“For my child, that would have been essentially six years that they would be stuck in the wrong body, developing through childhood, and I don’t know if they would have made it six years,” she said. “That’s the biggest thing. This is health care that helps them to survive and exist and be on this planet. And without it, the option for most of these kids is not being on this planet anymore.”

Hinnant said her child is now happy, healthy, and working on an engineering degree.

A national push

Elements of the GOP have focused on pushing back against more novel expressions of gender in recent years and have been bringing the fight to state legislatures. The American Civil Liberties Union is tracking 321 anti-LGBTQ bills across the country, including 95 related to health care.

One of the most outspoken politicians on the issue has been Georgia Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, who visited the Georgia Senate Wednesday to urge them to fight against what she called a “multi-billion dollar medical industry that’s growing all over the country.”

“There are children that are not even old enough to vote, not old enough to graduate high school, not old enough and don’t have driver’s license, aren’t old enough to join the military, aren’t old enough to get a tattoo, aren’t old enough to buy nicotine or alcohol that are taking dangerous medication, puberty blockers, they are undergoing dangerous surgeries, permanent, life-altering surgeries,” she said.

As of June, about 300,000 Americans between 13 and 17 identified as transgender, or 1.4% of that age group, according to data from UCLA.

12 Habersham County Road Department employees receive traffic flagger training

Habersham County Road Department employees replace a culvert on Hazel Creek Road just off Ga. 365 near Mt. Airy. (Habersham County photo/Rob Moore)

Areas where Habersham County road crews are working should be safer now that a dozen members of the road department have received additional training in traffic flagging.

Public Works Director Jerry Baggett said the county was able to provide that training through a partnership with the state.

The training, provided through the Georgia Department of Transportation, saved county taxpayers some $3,000 it otherwise would have cost to train the road department employees.

Habersham County Road Department employees replace a culvert on Hazel Creek Road just off Ga. 365 near Mt. Airy. (Habersham County photo/Rob Moore)