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Middle school threat a ‘hoax,’ White County Sheriff’s Office says

White County Middle School (NowHabersham.com)

Investigators looking into an alleged threat aimed at White County Middle School have determined it was a “hoax.”

“There is no evidence to support an imminent threat to the school,” the White County Sheriff’s Office announced on social media late Thursday afternoon, January 12.

Officials say a juvenile suspect has been identified and charges are pending.

Sheriff’s investigators, with assistance from the GBI, began looking into the alleged threat on January 11 after some middle school students reported seeing a TikTok video of someone threatening the school.

“We at White County School System take the safety of our students, staff, and community very seriously. So, we asked our law enforcement partners to investigate the rumor and add extra presence at our schools,” said White County Assistant School Superintendent Scott Justus.

The sheriff’s office alerted the public to its investigation saying “we are taking this situation seriously and it will be investigated to the fullest capacity.” The agency also announced it would increase patrols on White County school campuses until further notice. That expanded law enforcement presence will continue.

The White County Sheriff’s Office says it will “conduct extra patrols with both marked and unmarked vehicles as we are currently doing at all of our schools for the next couple of days.”

The sheriff’s office thanked the public, White County School System, and GBI for their “prompt response and input into this investigation.” The school system sent out a statement Thursday evening thanking the sheriff’s office for its “swift and thorough investigation.”

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Dean Dyer of WRWH Radio contributed to this report

County offices close as severe weather rolls into region

(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

Emergency management agencies are on heightened alert as severe weather makes its way across North and Central Georgia.

A line of strong to severe thunderstorms crossed into Habersham around 3 o’clock Thursday afternoon, bringing with it heavy rain and high winds. Damaging thunderstorm wind gusts up to 60 mph are possible and could cause widespread damage to trees and powerlines, officials warn.

Those in the path of the storm should be prepared for the possibility of brief spin-up tornadoes.

On the heels of this storm, much cooler drier air will move into the region and could result in some flurries and light snow showers in North Georgia Thursday night and Friday. Any snowfall accumulations should remain limited to the higher elevations of the Blue Ridge Mountains, where up to 1 inch is possible. Otherwise, a light dusting will be possible in the lower elevations.

Schools and government offices closed

Ahead of this two-seasons-in-one storm system, area schools and government offices closed.

In Habersham, “All county offices have closed except for essential employees,” says assistant EMA director Melanie Bellinger. She and other public safety officials encourage people to stay home or remain at a safe location inside until the storm passes.

“Monitor weather stations for further information,” Bellinger urges.

Banks, Franklin, Habersham, Rabun, Stephens, and White are among the school systems in Georgia that dismissed students early to get them home before the storm. After-school activities are canceled. The school districts have not yet announced their schedules for Friday.

“We are going to wait and see what impact the storm has before deciding on tomorrow,” Habersham County School Superintendent Matthew Cooper tells Now Habersham.

Now Habersham is closely monitoring the storm. Check our website weather and Facebook page for continuing updates throughout the evening.

The Savvy Picker: Goodwill Cornelia

The Cornelia Goodwill Thrift Store is located at 308 Habersham Hills Circle in the old Walmart shopping center in Cornelia, Georgia.

No one has ever accused a Goodwill of oozing with ambiance, but Goodwill stores are generally loaded with stuff and the one in Cornelia is no exception.

(TheSavvyPicker.com)

Like many Goodwills, the shelves tend to be packed, so be careful. You might knock one thing off while reaching across it to grab another. But how would I know this? And how would I know that the good folks at Goodwill would be understanding and not charge for said broken item? Talk about good will!

Anyway, there are a lot of stories on the internet about people finding unbelievably valuable things at Goodwill, like a priceless marble bust and an original copy of the Declaration of Independence! So, it’s worth a shot to run in and poke around. The best thing I found at the Cornelia location was a Victorian Eastlake Chair in great condition with really nice upholstery. It was only $9.98! These chairs are routinely listed for between a hundred and a thousand dollars.

I thought this one was particularly nice, but I didn’t buy it. Why? Because part of this business is knowing your market, and I just don’t have the market for it. Personally, I love the Eastlake style, but it is not very popular in coastal Carolina. Now, I could buy the chair and sell it online, but shipping furniture takes a lot of time. I can make better money for my time by selling more easily shipped items. This is something I learned the hard way! The bottom line: know what sells in your area and what you are good at selling.

(TheSavvyPicker.com)

Even though I passed on the chair, I wanted to take a picture of it for this article. And while I was snapping away a lady came up to me and said, “I was going to buy that chair, but it only has wheels on the front legs.”

I looked at all four legs. “It’s supposed to be that way,” I said. “See how the front legs are shorter than the back? The wheels make the legs the same length.”

“Yeah, but why?” said the lady. I told her I wasn’t sure, but I knew it was typical of the style, and that the chair was a very good deal. In other words, I tried to convince her to buy it even though I had no skin in the game. (Yeah, but why?)

Anyway, the lady could not wrap her head around the two-wheels-for-four-legs issue, so she and her four-wheeled shopping cart departed.

Still looking at the chair, I Googled the answer to her burning question. In the late 1800s and early 1900s it was common for chairs to have two wheels on the front legs only because it made it easier to roll them on wood floors. Presumably, it also made it easier for men to push ladies’ chairs in at the dining table. So now you know.

(TheSavvyPicker.com)
(TheSavvyPicker.com)

After photographing the chair I headed to the shelves and found this cute little shelf-sitting couple, priced individually… and differently. (Yeah, but why?) I also picked up a Jeanette Glass Iris and Herringbone Carnival Glass Bowl for $3.09. These always sell for me. I will probably price this one at around $20. I also found this a new-in-the-box Imperial Porcelain Collectible tea set, which sells for around $22. Not bad for a quick visit!

(TheSavvyPicker.com)

Most Goodwills have a lot of inventory turnover. There’s always something new to see, so check it out!

The Cornelia Goodwill Thrift Store is located at 308 Habersham Hills Circle in the old Walmart shopping center in Cornelia, Georgia. The store is open from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday and from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Sunday. For more information call (706) 894-9400 or visit them online.

Reasons to shop here: The large quantity of items means you can often find something that fits your brand.

Scores of the day: Carnival glass bowl and tea set

Expected profit on tea set and bowl: $40

Re-seller takeaway: Know what sells in your market and consider passing up nice items that don’t match the style of your shop.

The Savvy Picker publishes bi-monthly on Now Habersham. For more great reads and finds, click here. Also, visit The Savvy Picker website for additional tips on tracking vintage treasure. The website now offers a new feature: Bonus Tips! Check out this week’s tip. We will be adding more features soon.

Gainesville man charged with felony sex crimes involving young victim

Michael Edwin Murphy (Hall County Sheriff's Office)

A Gainesville man is in the Hall County Jail following his arrest on multiple sex offenses related to an assault on a young girl.

Investigators with the Hall County Sheriff’s Office arrested Michael Edwin Murphy, 43, on Wednesday, January 11.

“The investigation revealed Murphy sexually assaulted the child, a girl under the age of 16, and took multiple photos of the victim during the incident,” a news release from the sheriff’s office states.

The alleged incident occurred on Christmas Day last year at Murphy’s residence in the 3900 block of Price Road in northern Hall County. One of the victim’s family members reported the alleged crime to law enforcement two days later. Officials say Murphy was acquainted with the victim.

Investigators charged Murphy with sexual battery on a child under 16 and child molestation. In addition, he faces seven counts of sexual exploitation of children – one for each photo he created, officials say.

As of January 12, Murphy remained in the Hall County Jail with no bond. The sheriff’s office says its investigation is ongoing.

Area schools releasing students early due to severe weather threat

Habersham Central High School (file photo)

Due to an elevated threat of severe weather, Habersham County and at least five other Northeast Georgia school districts are releasing students early today.

There is an increased threat of possible isolated tornadoes and significant wind damage in the region. Although the timing for the arrival of these storms is uncertain, it falls within a window that could affect normal school closing times.

“We cannot risk our buses and student drivers being on the road during storms of this nature,” says Habersham County School Superintendent Matthew Cooper.

Habersham County students will be released two hours early. Other area school systems will release their students as follows:

  • Rabun and Stephens counties 12:30 p.m.
  • Franklin County 1-hour early release
  • Banks County 2 p.m.
  • White County 2:15 p.m.

Severe weather threat

The storm system that prompted a tornado watch across Northwest Georgia is moving east.

The National Weather Storm Prediction Center has placed the northern half of the state under an elevated risk for severe storms. Tornados, hail, wind, and flooding could accompany these storms.

 

Stay weather aware and be ready to act in the event of severe weather. Make sure to keep your mobile devices charged, so you have multiple ways to receive warning information.

Now Habersham is closely monitoring this developing weather situation and will continue to bring you updates throughout the day. Check back here and on our Facebook page.

SEE ALSO

Strong/Severe storms expected this afternoon

Georgia House, Senate adopt new rules that reduce public accountability

With the new session, the Georgia Capitol is bustling with lawmakers and lobbyists. Starting this year, lawmakers’ conversations with lobbyists and others could be exempt from court proceedings. Jan. 9, 2023. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

(GA Recorder) — The Georgia House and Senate gaveled in for a second day of lawmaking Wednesday. Both chambers passed resolutions laying out rules for the rest of the session, but one change has First Amendment advocates concerned.

Both chambers’ rules have new provisions shielding communication between lawmakers and third parties under legislative privilege.

“I expected the way this would play out is a member who may have questions – because we can’t all be experts on every issue that comes up before us – we rely on others who do have expertise, that that communication, in order to help us make those determinations, would be protected,” said Majority Leader Chuck Efstration, a Dacula Republican.

The Legislature has already exempted itself from the Open Records Act, which allows the public to access government records. The new rule would shield members from court proceedings as well, said Richard T. Griffiths, a spokesman and president emeritus for the Georgia First Amendment Foundation.

“It’s shielding anything that is potentially controversial, or where they might violate the law,” he said. “And that’s a big problem. It’s a major disappointment. They’re taking it beyond the Open Records Act exemption to a point where they are no longer accountable for what they say, what they hear on the Senate floor, in hearings. And that’s problematic.”

The rules packages including the change passed both chambers in a mostly party line vote.

Sen. Colton Moore, a Republican from Trenton, said Democrats were only trying to create problems by opposing the change.

“Do we not already have legislative immunity during session?” he asked. “If I’m speeding down Interstate 75 to get here, the executive branch cannot stop me. We should have the ability to speak freely with third parties about the legislative process. Hopefully, we will not become so divided in our society and in our government that I have to one day worry about a governor sending an executive branch or prosecuting me (because) of something I said to a third party.”

Democrats said they feared unintended consequences of the rule, including allowing members of the executive branch to enjoy legislative privilege for communications with legislators.

A separate rule in the House’s resolution adds committee hearings to the list of locations where cameras are not allowed without permission from the speaker. Previous rules banned cameras in the House, galleries, and lobbies.

“I have citizens that have come to testify in committee and giving testimony is a big deal to them, and they would like to have a family member take a video of them getting testimony,” said Rep. Becky Evans, a Democrat from Atlanta. “I’m very concerned about how this will be handled.”

Burns said members of the public will have access to any committee hearings through the state’s live recordings or video archives.

“All of our committee meetings are online videoed, and they are archived so that the member’s family or any other interested citizen would have access to that testimony at the committee meeting,” he said.

Video stream or no, the rule restricts the public’s right to know how the government works, Griffiths said.

“The fact is, a government controlled camera is not the same as cameras controlled by the public,” he said. “Government controlled cameras that record who might be speaking do not record other things that may be monumentally important but not on the camera that is being used at that moment.”

The unsinkable Mollie Sparks

My great-grandmother, Mollie Sparks, shown here with here grown children, was unsinkable, undeterred, and undeniably remarkable. (Lynn Walker Gendusa family photo)

Mollie Sparks was born amid the hardwood trees in Putnam County, Tennessee, on December 5, 1876. Her family came to America in 1669 and would call Monterey, Tennessee, home for generations.

Mollie’s academic education lasted for two years. Like others in that era, all family members worked to put food on the table. The luxury of going to school was merely a dream for many.

She married John Thomas Sparks in 1894. Two weeks before her last child was born, her husband tragically died in a sawmill accident. Mollie was left to care for five small children and would eventually raise two granddaughters.

Our American history reveals several well-known heroines. We recognize these outstanding women for their heroic acts of extreme courage and strength.

Mollie Sparks was not famous, yet she was a giant among our many unheralded, unsung courageous American women. She stood erect at 4 feet 10 inches tall and weighed 88 pounds her entire adult life. However, she could carry the weight of her world on her tiny frame.

After her husband died, she was left impoverished. The family lived in a small clapboard house with a large enough yard to yield a garden. She had no indoor plumbing, car, electricity, or one to assist her with the enormous task of providing for her young family.

Mollie rolled up her sleeves and, from then on, never sat down. She earned her money by washing and ironing clothes for the townsfolk. The water came from her well, the washing machine was her hands on a washboard, and her iron heated on a wood-burning stove.

At the end of her long days, she hand-sewed quilts to keep her children warm. Each stitch by her slender, nimble fingers created beautiful, intricate patterns that would pass to family members she would never meet.

Mollie’s hair grew past her waist, which she rolled into a tight bun at the nape of her neck to keep it out of the way. The dress she wore every Sunday to church was clasped at the collar with a broach that, I am sure, was a gift.

She tithed all she could spare on those Sundays and gave produce from her garden to those needier than she. She obeyed the principles of her devout faith in God her entire life.

Her children grew into beautiful, sweet, caring people. None of them were afraid to work to aid their families. They were all kind, reliable, good people, who asked for little and never complained.

Her oldest son survived his service in World War I and returned to Tennessee to become a fireman until he was burned severely in an explosion. She cared for and nursed him back to health even though her beautiful boy bore scars for the rest of his life.

Another son died at 38, leaving her to raise his two children. They became nurses and gave all the credit for their living to the life of Mollie Sparks.

Mary Mollie Randolph Sparks

By her death at age 94, she endured many of her children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren serving our country in five wars. She was stubborn, willful, and could rule a clan with an iron fist.

Mollie never felt life owed her anything other than what it produced. She worked for all she had and then gave all she had left to the people blessed to know this fine woman of integrity.

Her belief that kindness, discipline, and faith would get one through all life’s travails was a testimony to a well-lived life. Not with an abundance of material items but with a generous heart.

I often wonder what she would think of this world today.

A world where people complain if the waiter isn’t serving them fast enough. A culture where some applaud vitriol, crave entertainment and teach their children by words instead of actions. We can become spoiled by not remembering those who fearlessly gave so much.

Mollie Sparks taught me a lot about endurance. In my darkest hours, when living felt unbearable, I would remember this woman’s daily life, and then my problems became very small. I could survive anything because her spirit and grit were inspiring.

My great-grandmother, Mollie Randolph Sparks, was unsinkable, undeterred, and undeniably remarkable.

Often our God-given heritage helps us find strength from those who walked before us. Sometimes we must look backward to see that confidence, gratitude, and faith are necessary to travel forward.

Tickets to Bulldog’s Championship Celebration ‘sold out’

UGA QB Stetson Bennett kisses the CFP National Football Championship trophy after the Bulldogs' blowout win over TCU, 65-7, on Jan. 9, 2023, in Los Angelese. (Twitter)

Bulldog fans wanting tickets to Saturday’s National Championship Celebration at Sanford Stadium in Athens are out of luck. The complimentary tickets are “sold out,” according to the georgiadogs.com website handling comp ticket requests.

Tickets were made available to the general public at 9 a.m. Thursday and were gone within hours. Season ticket holders and students got early access to the tickets on Wednesday.

(Source. GeorgiaDogs.com)

Non-ticket holders can still join in the celebration outside Sanford Stadium. The Bulldogs will parade down Lumpkin Street beginning at 12:30 p.m. on January 14. That will be followed by a Dawg Walk at 1 p.m., beginning at the Baxter Street extension and proceeding through the Tate Student Center Plaza.

The formal program inside the stadium will being at 2 p.m.

According to University of Georgia Athletics, stadium gates will open at noon.

More info to know

If you are one of the lucky ticket holders for Saturday’s celebration, here’s some additional information you’ll need to know, according to georgiadogs.com:

Entry for this event will be through gates 1,2,3, 4, 4A, and 5 only.

Seating in the stadium will be limited to the West, East, and North stands, in addition to reserved seating on the field.

Parking will be available on a first-come-first-served basis throughout campus with the exception of Tate Center Deck, Reed Hall, Psychology-Journalism, Railroad, East Campus Road, Legion, and Stem Deck parking lots.

All regular gameday procedures will be followed, with the campus opening up to visitors on Saturday at 7 a.m.

Judge Johnson resigns

(Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

Habersham County Chief Magistrate Gerald Johnson has resigned. Johnson submitted his resignation letter to Gov. Brian Kemp on Wednesday. His resignation comes less than one week after a professional ethics panel recommended the Georgia Supreme Court remove him from office.

The supreme court suspended Johnson nearly 15 months ago following a domestic dispute at his home on October 18, 2021. During that incident, the judge got into an argument with his wife and broke her car windshield. He also repeatedly fired an AR-15 into his backyard in a residential neighborhood while drunk and briefly aimed the gun at a Habersham County Sheriff’s deputy.

Deputies did not arrest the judge, but Habersham County Sheriff Joey Terrell did report the incident to the Judicial Qualifications Commission (JQC). A JQC Hearing Panel conducted a hearing last November and, upon review of the case, recommended Johnson’s removal from office.

A remorseful resignation

Gerald Johnson

Johnson, who is undergoing treatment for PTSD and an alcohol substance use disorder, offered his “sincere regrets and deepest sorrow” as he tendered his resignation. He told the governor that serving the citizens of Habersham County as judge has been the “greatest honor and privilege” of his life, second only to his approximately 25 years in law enforcement.

“With deepest remorse, I have accepted full responsibility for my bad choices,” he wrote. “I respectfully disagree with the alleged facts and circumstances as reported by the Judicial Qualifications Hearing Panel’s final report and recommendation. However, my belief does not change the fact that the public’s perception of my ability to be a judge has come into disrepute.”

Johnson said he has been “cooperative, forthright, and honest” while working on his recovery and stated it is “successful and continuing.”

“I feel that to continue with these lengthy judicial processes, such as the continued delays or an appeal, would not be in the interest of justice, fair to my wife and family, or serve the needs of the citizens of Habersham County or the State of Georgia,” Johnson wrote.

He concluded by asking Gov. Kemp to accept his resignation while he works on his continued recovery.

READ Judge Gerald Johnson’s resignation letter

“Preferential treatment”

Judge Johnson served as Habersham’s chief magistrate for seven years. Before that, he worked for the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office.

In its 14-page report, the JQC Hearing Panel zeroed in on Johnson’s past affiliation and relationship with the sheriff’s office. The panel said that, in addition to violating the Judicial Code of Conduct, the judge violated multiple laws. They concluded he received “preferential treatment” by not being arrested.

“The gravity of Johnson’s conduct that entire day (and night), the manner in which he sought to avoid or minimize the repercussions flowing therefrom, and — though not directly attributable to him — the way in which his misconduct has since been seemingly ignored by the criminal justice system all combine to make it untenable to believe that Johnson could return to serve as a judge without harming the civic institution of the judiciary,” the panel wrote.

Habersham County Attorney Donnie Hunt says Johnson’s resignation is effective immediately. By law, the three sitting Mountain Judicial Circuit Court judges will appoint a successor to fill Johnson’s unexpired term.

“We anticipate a public notice of the vacancy, submission of resumes, and interviews of qualified candidates,” Hunt tells Now Habersham. No timeline has been announced for naming a successor.

Since Johnson resigned as opposed to being removed from office, it remains unclear whether he will be eligible to run again for reelection in 2024. Now Habersham reached out to Johnson for comment through his attorney Dennis Cathey but has not heard back from him.

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This article has been updated with additional information on naming Johnson’s successor and comments from county attorney Donnie Hunt.

Kemp to push Georgia lawmakers to OK income and property tax breaks, bar local zoning standards

Gov. Brian Kemp, left, and Georgia Chamber of Commerce CEO Chis Clark attend the 2023 Eggs & Issues event where the Republican governor announced plans for property and income tax relief and proposals to address a workforce housing shortage. (Stanley Dunlap/Georgia Recorder)

(GA Recorder) — Gov. Brian Kemp unveiled plans Wednesday to provide Georgians a $1.6 billion tax refund, relax local housing rules to attract first-time home buyers, and pull money from reserves to restore funding lost during a 2022 suspension of state gas taxes.

The Republican governor outlined his legislative priorities before more than 2,000 corporate leaders and elected officials attending the Georgia Chamber of Commerce’s annual Eggs & Issues breakfast. Kemp spoke about his legislative goals as he sought support from two new leaders in the state House and Senate, who also pledged to work with him as he embarks on his second-term agenda.

After a record fiscal year of $21 billion in corporate investment announcements, Kemp said he aims to maintain the state’s strong reputation with the business community.

The governor said he plans to build up starter home inventory by offering financial assistance for workforce housing and easing local zoning restrictions that homebuilders claim drive up costs.

The governor said he plans to give Georgians who file income taxes another $1.6 billion in refunds, $250 if they file individually and $500 if they file jointly.

Another $1 billion from reserves would be used for a one-time property tax grant that will provide about a $500 tax break to the average homeowner.

“Not all governments are rolling the millage rate back to completely offset the property tax,” Kemp said during the event held at the Georgia World Congress Center in downtown Atlanta. “And 60% of Americans right now are living paycheck to paycheck. So when something like that happens, it really, really puts a burden on working Georgians.”

Kemp said his budget proposal will include taking $1 billion from the state’s record-high rainy day fund to replenish the money lost while the gas tax was suspended over the last year.

“We’ve been open in our state when others didn’t want us to be and our economy’s done incredible,” he said. “We’re going to backfill the infrastructure transportation money that was lost by suspending the gas tax and make that whole so we continue to keep our freight and logistics, congested transportation projects, roads, bridges and other things going.

“Instead of spending it on new government programs and bigger government, we’re gonna put that money back in your pocket,” Kemp said.

Kemp said the state is ready to provide a large source of funding to build more affordable houses for people beginning their professional careers, but it will also require more city and county officials to relax some of the zoning standards that homebuilders claim are making housing too expensive.

A House legislative study committee spent the fall examining ways to address the lack of affordable housing in the state for renters, entry-level homeowners, and middle-class families who struggle finding houses priced under $300,000.

“I think there’s members of the General Assembly and others that are getting frustrated that that collaboration doesn’t happen,” Kemp said. “You’re gonna have a top-down approach to that versus a bottom up. And I just personally think it would be better for us all to work together.”

Georgia Chamber CEO and president Chris Clark said that even though Georgia is at the top of the nation for business development, the biggest challenge is to address a severe shortage of workers that needs to be filled over the next several decades. The state estimates that 50,000 new manufacturing jobs will come online in the next decade.

The business chamber supports efforts by the state and local governments to provide more workforce housing and to provide more resources for high school career academies and other workforce development programs, he said.

“I talked with a major employer last year and asked what’s your problem, and he said I can’t find anybody to work here, and if I could, I couldn’t find anywhere for them to live,” Clark said.

The 2023 Legislative session is also the first time that newly elected Lt. Gov. Burt Jones will head the Senate while Rep. Jon Burns takes over as House speaker from the late David Ralston, a Blue Ridge Republican who died last November after 12 years heading the chamber.

Jones, a former state senator, said he is also committed to expanding educational opportunities through career academies, the state’s technical colleges, and universities to prepare the state to have enough qualified workers.

He also said he plans for his chamber to pass legislation that targets repeat offenders and gangs as a key focus of crime prevention. Jones presented his plan to end Georgia’s cash bail system, which allows those unable to afford bail to avoid extended time in jail while their case moves through the court system.

“When you get crime around particularly in the city of Atlanta, whether it’s Savannah or Columbus, wherever, when you get people who don’t feel safe about the environment, that’s bad for business, and there’s a ripple effect,” Jones said.

Speaker Burns said he would follow Ralston’s example by focusing on improving mental health reform and providing better health care for Georgians.

Clarkesville special election set for March 21

(NowHabersham.com)

Clarkesville residents will soon return to the voting booth. The city has called a special election on March 21 to fill the Post 5 city council seat.

The seat was left vacant in October when Brendon Ansley resigned.

Ansley was elected last May to fill the unexpired term of Steven Ward, who died in December 2021. Ward was reelected to the Clarkesville City Council the month before his death. The winner of the March special election will serve out the remainder of his term beginning April 1, 2023, through December 31, 2025.

The last day to register to vote in the March 21 special election is February 21, 2023.

Election details

Qualifying for the special election will be held at the Habersham County Office of Elections and Voter Registration from January 30 to February 3. The qualifying fee is $18.

Clarkesville residents who wish to vote by mail may apply for absentee ballots now through March 10. Absentee ballots will be available beginning February 27.

Early voting begins on February 27 and ends on March 17, with Saturday voting on March 4 and 11.

All early voting will be held at the elections office in the Habersham County Administration Building at 120 Jacob’s Way in Clarkesville. Election day voting will occur at the Habersham North Precinct in the Ruby Fulbright Aquatic Center at 120 Paul Franklin Road in Clarkesville.

Regular elections for the Post 2 and Post 3 Clarkesville City Council seats will be held on November 7.

U.S. House Republicans push through two anti-abortion measures in first work week

A ‌leaked‌ ‌draft‌ ‌of‌ ‌a U.S. ‌‌Supreme Court majority opinion overturning Roe v. Wade triggered a large protest to protect abortion rights outside the Georgia State Capitol ‌on‌ ‌May‌ ‌14‌, 2022. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — The U.S. House on Wednesday approved its first abortion-related measures under a new Republican majority, eliciting strong support from GOP members and opposition from Democrats, who rejected the legislation as misleading and incomplete.

Republicans, who secured a four-seat majority during the November midterm elections, said the bill setting medical standards on a national level for a baby born after an attempted abortion and a resolution condemning violence against anti-abortion organizations are central to the party’s ideals.

Democrats contended the medical standards bill from GOP Rep. Ann Wagner of Missouri would circumvent healthcare providers’ medical judgment.

“Despite what its supporters would have us believe, this legislation would do nothing to enhance protections or the quality of health care if an infant is born after an attempted abortion,” New York Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler said during floor debate.

“What it would do, however, is directly interfere with a doctor’s medical judgment and dictate a medical standard of care that may not be appropriate in all circumstances, which could, in fact, put infants’ lives at greater risk,” Nadler added.

Wagner urged support for her bill, saying lawmakers were “considering the protection of infants that have been delivered alive after an attempted abortion.”

“That’s it — plain and simple.” Wagner said.

Rep. Kat Cammack, a Florida Republican, said that “federal law currently recognizes these babies as persons but fails to outline any requirements of care after the infant is born alive.”

Pennsylvania Democratic Rep. Madeleine Dean urged the House to reject the bill, saying Republicans were either unaware infanticide was an already existing crime or engaged in “another extreme political stunt.”

“Politicians have no business making unsound medical decisions. We are legislators, not doctors,” Dean said. “And in the unfortunate case when a child is born with fatal disabilities, this legislation will deny parents a say in how their child spends the final minutes, hours or days of his or her life — whether hooked up to a medical device or in the arms of his parents.”

House lawmakers, who are in their first week of work after Republicans elected a speaker early Saturday on a 15th ballot, ultimately voted 220-210 to approve Wagner’s legislation. It would reinforce the core elements of a 2002 law that passed the U.S. House on a voice vote and the U.S. Senate by unanimous consent.

Texas Democrat Henry Cuellar voted for the bill, while Vicente González, also a Texas Democrat, voted present.

Little future in Senate

The bill passed Wednesday, which is unlikely to make it through the Democratic Senate or be signed into law by President Joe Biden, says that if “an abortion results in the live birth of an infant, the infant is a legal person for all purposes under the laws of the United States.”

The Wagner bill calls on healthcare providers to render the same level of care “to preserve the life and health of the child” as they would for “any other child born alive at the same gestational age.”

Anyone found guilty of violating the standard could receive up to five years in prison. The bill provides a carve-out that would prevent prosecution of the person receiving the abortion as well as parameters for the individual to file a lawsuit.

Dr. Jennifer Villavicencio, lead for equity transformation at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, said in a written statement that it’s a myth that fetuses or newborns “are accidentally born alive during the course of an abortion procedure.”

“It does not happen because the methods of abortion utilized and the expertise of the physician ensures that this does not occur,” Villavicencio said.

“There may be situations in which a devastating and often life-threatening pregnancy condition results in a neonate being born with signs of life and no chance of survival,” Villavicencio added. “These cases almost always involve highly desired pregnancies and are tragic and heart wrenching.”

In those circumstances, Villavicencio said, patients, work with healthcare providers and sometimes spiritual advisers to make a decision about care.

“Forcing clinicians to instead perform futile and invasive interventions for a neonate with no chance of survival is cruel,” Villavicencio said.

Anti-abortion centers

Separately, the House voted 222-209 to approve a seven-page resolution from Louisiana Rep. Mike Johnson that’s designed to draw attention to incidents of vandalism and arson at anti-abortion pregnancy centers and other anti-abortion organizations.

Pennsylvania’s Chrissy Houlahan, González, and Washington’s Marie Gluesenkamp Perez were the three Democrats to vote for the measure.

The measure highlights 35 incidents that have taken place since Politico broke the story in May 2022 that a draft opinion showed conservative justices were slated to overturn Roe v. Wade, the U.S. Supreme Court case that kept abortion legal throughout the nation for nearly 50 years. The court later ended the constitutional right to an abortion, sending the issue back to state lawmakers.

The Johnson resolution condemned the incidents of “vandalism, violence, and destruction against pro-life facilities, groups, and churches” and said the U.S. House of Representatives “recognizes the sanctity of life and the important role pro-life facilities, groups, and churches play in supporting pregnant women, infants, and families.”

It called on the Biden administration to use “all appropriate law enforcement authorities to uphold public safety and to protect the rights of pro-life facilities, groups, and churches.”

Johnson argued during floor debate that lawmakers should support the more than 2,700 anti-abortion crisis pregnancy centers throughout the country.

“We have to stand against violence and vandalism and personal threats and intimidation,” Johnson said. “They do not deserve the treatment they’ve endured, and they certainly deserve that this Congress condemns the violence committed against them.”

Democrats countered that the resolution was incomplete since it didn’t condemn threats, violence, bombings, and murders of healthcare workers at facilities that perform abortions.

Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman, a New Jersey Democrat, said she was appalled Republicans brought a resolution to the floor that “says nothing about the violence against abortion providers that has gone largely unaddressed for nearly 50 years.”

The National Abortion Federation’s 2021 report on violence and disruption showed an “increase in intimidation tactics, vandalism, and other activities aimed at disrupting services, harassing providers, and blocking patients’ access to abortion care.”

Stalking rose by 600%, blockades jumped by 450%, hoax devices/suspicious packages increased by 163%, invasions surged by 129%, and assault and battery by 128% compared to 2020, according to the NAF report.

Oregon Democrat Suzanne Bonamici said during floor debate the Johnson resolution was “a distraction from the real issue regarding crisis pregnancy centers, which is that they regularly provide inaccurate, incomplete and injurious information to people who are seeking guidance and fact-based health care.”

“Crisis pregnancy centers often engage in deceptive advertising to get people in the door, and then they mislead them about the services they provide,” Bonamici said.

Contrast to last year

The two measures the U.S. House voted on Wednesday were a stark contrast to the legislation Democrats brought to the U.S. House floor last summer after the high court ruling.

The Democratic legislation, which passed on mostly party-line votes, would have ensured people the right to travel out of state to access abortion amid discussion in some Republican-controlled state legislatures about trying to make such movements illegal.

A separate Democratic bill would have legalized abortion nationwide and prevented lawmakers from instituting restrictions before viability, which is typically around 22 to 24 weeks into a pregnancy.

Lawmakers would have been barred from restricting abortion after viability when “in the good-faith medical judgment of the treating health care provider, continuation of the pregnancy would pose a risk to the pregnant patient’s life or health.”

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, said Wednesday that the two measures the U.S. House approved would not get past the Democratic-controlled U.S. Senate.

“These bills are doomed in the Senate,” Schumer wrote on Twitter. “American women deserve to have their right to healthcare protected, not undermined.”