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Motorcycle passenger injured in GA 365 wreck

State troopers have charged a motorcyclist in connection with a Monday afternoon wreck that injured his passenger. The accident occurred around 1:19 p.m. on January 16 on GA 365 at LC Turner Road south of Duncan Bridge Road.

According to the Georgia State Patrol, Andres Eduardo Bastidas, 44, of Lilburn, was driving a Honda NC700 X in the left northbound lane of GA 365. Jason Thomas Patton, 37, of Pendergrass, was driving a Ford Super Duty pickup truck in the righthand lane.

Troopers say Bastidas attempted to change lanes and struck the pickup.

The wreck injured the bike passenger, Claudia Yanira Anthony, 34, of Lilburn. She was taken to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville with non-life-threatening injuries.

Troopers from Georgia State Patrol Post 7 in Toccoa investigated the crash and charged Bastidas with making an improper lane change.

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This article has been updated to reflect that the wreck occurred south of Duncan Bridge Road.

Carolyn Mildred Wood Barron

Carolyn Mildred Wood Barron, age 75, of Clarkesville, passed away Sunday, January 15, 2022.

Born in Clarkesville on November 14, 1947, Mrs. Barron was the daughter of the late Swain and Mildred Mize Wood. Carolyn, affectionately known as “Charlie” by some of her family, was a wonderful wife, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, and sister. She was one of the sweetest people you could ever meet. She was a great cook and enjoyed baking. Having a heart of a true servant, Carolyn was always making sure everyone was good. Carolyn was a member of Demorest Baptist Church and was retired from Ethicon. In addition to her parents, Carolyn is preceded in death by siblings Linda Smith, Kenneth “Bud” Wood, and Brenda Henson and granddaughter Wendy Rowden.

Survivors include her husband, Bill Barron of Clarkesville; sons and daughters-in-law Blake and Carolyn Barron of Gainesville and Bryan and Tonilynne Barron of Douglasville, daughter Melissa K. West of Cornelia, brothers Tommy Wood (Debbie) of Clarkesville and Phillip Wood (Peggy) of Clarkesville, sisters Betty Tench (Billy) of Demorest and Leah Smith (Stanley) of Clarkesville, grandchildren Kristen Barron, Tristen Barron, Chase Loudermilk, Aidan Barron, Bella Barron, Brandi Cagle, and Jamie Grier, four great-grandchildren as well as numerous nieces, nephews and extended family.

Funeral services will be held at 2:00 PM, Wednesday, January 18, 2023, at Hillside Memorial Chapel, with Pastor Tony Goss officiating. Interment will follow the service in Bethlehem Baptist Church Cemetery. The family will receive friends at the funeral home on Wednesday, prior to the funeral, from 12 p.m. until 2 p.m.

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, GA. 706-754-6256.

GBI identifies man found dead in burned Cornelia apartment

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation has identified the man found dead in a burned Cornelia apartment on Monday as 57-year-old Thomas Spangler.

Spangler’s body was discovered just before 10 a.m. on January 16. He lived in an apartment in the backyard of a house at 837 Main Street. Authorities say the landlord had not seen Spangler since Friday, January 13, and went to check on him.

According to police, the landlord noticed what appeared to be smoke and fire damage to the outside of the residence. When Spangler did not come to the door, the landlord used a master key to gain entry and discovered the apartment was burned and called 911.

“Upon arrival, the Cornelia Fire Department made entry to verify that the fire was extinguished. Upon inspecting the residence, human remains were located inside,” says Cornelia Police Chief Jonathan Roberts.

Cornelia authorities asked the State Fire Marshal and Georgia Bureau of Investigation for assistance in investigating Spangler’s death.

GBI Public Affairs Director Nelly Miles says the fire “is believed to be related to a propane heater within the home.” She says an autopsy is pending.

UGA offensive lineman, recruiting staffer from Toccoa killed in wreck

UGA offensive lineman Devin Willock and UGA Athletics recruiting staff member Chandler LeCroy died in a single-vehicle wreck in Athens on Jan. 15, 2023. The early morning crash also injured two others. (Perry McIntyre/UGA Sports Communications)

Just one day after celebrating its second straight national championship, the University of Georgia football community is mourning the loss of two members.

UGA offensive lineman Devin Willock and football recruiting staffer Chandler LeCroy were killed in a car wreck early Sunday, authorities said.

Willock, 20, died at the scene of the crash on Barnett Shoals Road. LeCroy, 24, of Toccoa, was transported by EMS to a local hospital, where she died from her injuries, Athens-Clarke County police say.

Two other members of UGA’s football program, offensive tackle Warren McClendon, 21, and recruiting staffer Tory Bowles, 26, are both in stable condition, DawgNation.com reports.

The University of Georgia Athletics Department issued a statement saying the entire Georgia family is “devastated” by the tragic loss of Willock and LeCroy.

“Devin and Chandler were two special people who meant so much to the University of Georgia, our football program and our athletic department,” the statement read. “We ask that everyone keep their families in your prayers during this very difficult time.”

Willock signed with Georgia out of New Milford, N.J. as a member of the 2020 signing class. He played in all 15 games for Georgia this season, rotating in at the guard positions for the Bulldogs. Willock was a Risk Management & Insurance major.

Chandler LeCroy (Instagram)

Willock started games this season against Tennessee and Kentucky as well.

LeCroy worked as a recruiting staffer for the Georgia football program.

Pre-dawn crash

At approximately 2:45 a.m. on January 15, Athens-Clarke County police responded to the crash in the 900 block of Barnett Shoals Road.

According to police, the initial investigation indicates LeCroy was driving a 2021 Ford Expedition southbound in the outside lane. The vehicle left the roadway and struck two power poles and several trees.

This is the first fatal wreck in Athens-Clarke County this year. Police are still investigating the crash.

Anyone with information is asked to contact the Athens-Clarke County Police Department at 762-400-7090 or by email at [email protected].

Kirby Smart statement

UGA head football coach Kirby Smart issued a statement on Sunday following news of the fatal crash.

“Devin was an outstanding young man in every way and was always smiling. He was a great teammate and a joy to coach. Chandler was a valuable member of our football staff and brought an incredible attitude and energy every single day. We grieve with their families for this tragic loss and will support them in every way possible.”

 

Georgia held its national championship celebration Saturday afternoon in Athens. The Bulldogs won their second consecutive national championship earlier this week, beating TCU 65-7.

Biden delivers remarks during visit to Martin Luther King Jr.’s hometown church

President Joe Biden joined U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-GA), former Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and others for a celebration of Dr. Martin Luther King's legacy at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta on Jan. 15, 2023. (GA Recorder)

Democratic President Joe Biden took to the pulpit Sunday at the historic Ebenezer Baptist Church where Martin Luther King Jr. once delivered many powerful and eloquent sermons in the final years of his life.

With an invitation from Ebenezer pastor and U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock, Biden on Sunday became the first sitting president to preach from the pulpit of downtown Atlanta church on what would’ve been the 94th birthday for the slain civil rights leader. Biden’s speech was about the hard path it takes to achieve necessary changes, which exemplifies King’s struggle for equality for Black people.

President Joe Biden listens as Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., a senior pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church, speaks at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, Sunday, Jan. 15, 2023, during a service honoring Martin Luther King Jr. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Despite King’s death at 39 years old, Biden said King’s legacy endures because he remained optimistic while understanding that progress was never easy. The leader of the civil rights movement preached powerful sermons and spread his call for nonviolent social change across many cities before his assassination on April 4, 1968, in Memphis, Tennessee.

Biden on Sunday reflected on some of the social and racial progress made in recent years, including Ketanji Onyika Brown Jackson becoming the first Black woman to become a U.S. Supreme Court justice.

The president also encouraged people to emulate King’s traits as the fight for justice continues.

“It’s always possible that things do get better in our march toward a more perfect union,” Biden said. “But at this inflection point, we know there’s a lot of work that has to continue in economic justice, civil rights, voting rights, and protecting our democracy. And I’m remembering that our job is to redeem the soul of America.”

On Monday, state and federal offices will be closed for the holiday honoring King. Numerous events honoring the civil rights activist have been held throughout the weekend, and many more are set for Monday.

On Friday, state officials and members of King’s family gathered at the state Capitol, not far from King’s boyhood home, for Georgia’s 39th Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration of Service.

Martin Luther King Jr.’s grandniece, Farris Christine Watkins, was presented a state proclamation during the annual celebration in honor of the leader of the civil rights movement. (Stanley Dunlap/ Georgia Recorder) 

The keynote speaker, Georgia Power CEO and president Chris Womack, was introduced by former Columbus Democratic Rep. Calvin Smyre, who returned to the Gold Dome while awaiting his confirmation as U.S. ambassador to the Bahamas.

Georgia House Speaker Jon Burns credited Smyre for his role in making King’s birthday a state holiday in 1984 and securing support for a statue to honor him on the Georgia Capitol grounds in 2017. The state legislation creating the holiday that passed in 1984 didn’t mention King by name, a strategy to neutralize opposition. Bills to create a state holiday had failed in the Georgia Legislature until the U.S. Congress designated the third Monday in January as a federal holiday honoring King the year before.

Womack, a Black man who became the CEO and chairman of the state’s largest utility company in 2021, said King’s dream remains unfulfilled long after the Declaration of Independence decreed “all men are created equal” in 1776.

As part of Womack’s call to keep King’s legacy alive, businesses should continue to diversify their workforce and provide basic necessities to those in need, Womack said.

“We must not accept that condition as reality,” he said. “We must not let that condition reside unattended.”

“We must work collectively with people that are trying to help whether it’s food kitchens, whether it’s shelters, whether it’s need for additional housing,” Womack said. “Things like homelessness, we must not accept that as a reality. We must establish goals in our community that we’re going to completely eliminate (homelessness).”

Several awards were presented at the state’s celebration. The Rita Jackson Samuels Founders Award went to Forest Park executive Wanda Okunoren-Meadows; Albany civil rights leader J.T. Johnson was given the Andrew J. Young Humanitarian Award; Alabama Rev. Fred Taylor received the Rev. Joseph E. Lowery Civil Rights Award; and Georgia Sen. Emmanuel Jones, a Columbus Democrat, earned the John Lewis Lifetime Achievement award.

King’s grandniece Farris Christine Watkins was also presented with the proclamation for King’s holiday.

According to a Harris national poll conducted a year before King’s murder, 75% of the American public disapproved of him. Jim Crow law supporters in the Deep South, as well as many moderate whites in other parts of the nation, opposed full integration and equal treatment of Black people.

Democratic state Sen. Nikki Merritt said Friday that the Georgia Legislative Black Caucus remains dedicated to achieving many of King’s unfulfilled dreams, including improved access to health care, jobs, and education.

Republican Gov. Brian Kemp offered a prayer at the Friday ceremony for people who suffered in the tornadoes that ripped through Georgia the day before. The storm claimed the lives of a five-year-old boy and a Department of Transportation employee who was working to clear a road.

Gov. Brian Kemp said at the state Capitol ceremony he views the racial progress in Georgia as something that lives on in the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr. (Stanley Dunlap/Georgia Recorder) 

Kemp said King’s message of racial equality and moral responsibility still resonates today as he noted King faced hatred and prejudice and threats against his family.

Kemp said he views the racial progress in Georgia as something that lives on in the legacy of the civil rights leader, who faced and overcame so many obstacles.

“Each year we mark this occasion, not just to remember Dr. King or his wisdom, not just to celebrate his contribution to our state and nation, but also to remember his mission, his actions and his inspiring message,” Kemp said. “To remember the man is to consider the man and each of us must consider how we build on his timeless legacy in our own unique ways.”

Min, Miller STAR student and teacher at Rabun Gap-Nachoochee School

Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School 2023 STAR Student Aidan Min with STAR Teacher Chip Miller.

Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School senior Aidan Min has been named this year’s STAR student at Rabun Gap-Nachoochee School. Min, a boarding student from Seongnam-si, South Korea, chose Chip Miller as STAR Teacher for 2023.

The Student-Teacher Achievement Recognition Program, organized by the Professional Association of Georgia Educators, honors the state’s top-achieving seniors and their inspirational teachers. To secure the STAR nomination, high school seniors must have the highest score SAT score at their school and be in the top 10 percent or top 10 students of their class based on GPA.

Min joined the Rabun Gap community in the 20-21 school year and quickly got involved on campus. Academically gifted, Min is currently taking four AP classes and has earned Head of School’s High Honors, which recognizes students with an average not lower than 4.0, with no grade below B since arriving at Rabun Gap. Last year, he was awarded for his outstanding achievements in Pre-Calculus. Aidan has been involved in many activities on campus, including competing on the wrestling and JV baseball teams. He is also heavily involved with the school’s orchestra program and is a prefect in Coit Dorm.

After graduation, Min will attend his top choice school, Georgia Institute of Technology.

Min selected Miller as his STAR Teacher. Miller is a member of the Upper School Humanities department and teaches AP Economics and American Government. This is his second time being honored as STAR Teacher of the Year, the first time being in 2019. He came to Rabun Gap in 2014 after a 22-year career as a trial lawyer. He graduated with a Juris Doctor from Wake Forest University School of Law and holds a BBA from the University of Georgia. He is currently teaching Min in his AP Economics class and is his advisor.

“I chose Mr. Miller as the STAR teacher because he was a lawyer, an entrepreneur, and is now a teacher,” said Min. “His different careers inspired me to think about my future and has made me want to seek constant growth throughout my life as he did.”

Located in Rabun Gap, Georgia, Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School is a private, coeducational day and boarding school for grades Pre-K through 12.

Successful strategies for minimizing stress

January is named for the mythical Roman two-faced god, Janus, who looks forward to new beginnings and backward in reflection and resolution. Janus is the perfect time to catch our breath, which I now find myself doing following a year during which life overwhelmed me. `

Fixing up an aesthetically neglected home, my mother’s mental decline and death, learning a new job, adjusting to a new way of life after a divorce and cross-country move, nursing a physically and mentally injured dog back to health, and the loss of a young friend to suicide left me searching for ways to cope.

I turned to a trusted professional licensed counselor and freed up as much time for myself as possible. I let go of unhealthy habits, people, and situations that added extra stress to my life.

Now, I begin each day with expressions of gratitude and the simple but powerful serenity prayer. I surround myself with family and friends who renew my spirit and reassure me with their love and acceptance that I am doing ok.

Perhaps you, too, are feeling overwhelmed.

Life comes at each of us differently, but our bodies are wired to respond to stress similarly. Still, there are things we can do to minimize the negative impacts of stress and, in some cases, prevent it.

Fight or flight

Stress is a normal reaction that happens to everyone. The human body is designed to experience stress and react to it. Our brain’s primary function is to keep us alive, and a complex but effective response, often referred to as the fight or flight response, allows us to react quickly to acute stress by increasing our heart rate and breathing. Our pupils are dilated to assist us in becoming more visually aware of our surroundings by allowing more light into our eyes. Blood flow is increased to the muscles, brain, legs, and arms, and the body’s clotting ability increases to prevent excess blood loss in the event of injury. You can see that this is an extremely helpful response when faced with an immediate life-threatening event such as being chased by a predator.

The problem with our fight-or-flight response is that it isn’t always accurate. In today’s world, we have to cope with multiple drivers of stress, both real and imaginary. Our brain cannot tell the difference between real and perceived stress. Phobias are a good example of false triggering of this response.

Negative impacts of stress

When we experience long-term stress, continued activation of the stress response causes wear and tear on the body resulting in physical, emotional, and behavioral symptoms. Some examples are aches and pains such as chest pain, trouble sleeping, high blood pressure, digestive problems, and a weakened immune system. Long-term stress can also lead to mental and emotional symptoms like anxiety or irritability, depression, panic attacks, and sadness.

Often, we cope with chronic stress by trying to manage it with unhealthy behaviors such as drinking alcohol too much or too often, gambling, overeating or developing an eating disorder, participating in compulsive behaviors such as sex, shopping or internet browsing, smoking, and using drugs.

Positive coping strategies

Through my medical training and life experiences, I have learned to embrace these positive coping strategies for stress:

  • Exercise – Even a short walk can boost your mood.
  • Set goals – Setting goals for your day, week, and month can help keep you from feeling overwhelmed. Narrowing your view can help you feel more in control of the moment and long-term tasks.
  • Focus on gratitude – Begin each day by taking a moment to reflect on all the things you are grateful for.
  • Focus on achievement – End each day by reflecting on what you accomplished, not what you didn’t get done.
  • Seek counseling – Consider talking with a therapist or a healthcare provider about your symptoms.

Preventing stress

Some ways to prevent stress include daily strategies to help prepare your body to cope better during highly stressful events. These include relaxation activities such as reading, participating in hobbies or volunteer work, meditation, breathing exercises, and yoga. Many programs are available online, in smartphone apps, and at our local gyms and community centers.

Taking good care of our bodies by eating a healthy diet, exercising, spending time outdoors daily, and getting enough sleep is vital to preventing stress.

Accept that you can’t control everything. Learn to say no to additional responsibilities when you feel overwhelmed or stressed.

Stay connected with people who keep you calm, make you happy, provide you with emotional support, and help you with practical things so that stress doesn’t become overwhelming.

NEXT TIME: You may have heard people refer to Dry January. In our next Health Matters, we will discuss one of the most common and unhealthy ways of dealing with stress, excessive drinking.

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Tracy Backer, RN

About the author: Tracy Backer is a Registered Nurse who has worked in the medical field for 39 years. Her specialty is critical care nursing. She is employed by Habersham Medical Center in Demorest. A University of North Georgia Nursing School graduate and Habersham County native, Tracy recently returned home to Northeast Georgia from California. She joins the Now Habersham team as a medical columnist for Your Health Matters. She can be reached at [email protected].

Three injured in 3-vehicle wreck in Clayton

State troopers charged a driver with failure to yield following a wreck in Clayton that sent three women to the hospital. The crash happened around 2:20 p.m. Sunday, January 15.

According to the Georgia State Patrol, 63-year-old John Lawrence Vandergrift was driving a Tesla Model S attempting to cross over GA 15/US 441 from Ramey Boulevard Parkway. A northbound Nissan Sentra driven by Janet Denise Adams, 32, of Clayton, struck the Tesla.

After impact, the Tesla ran into a Nissan Quest stopped at the nearby Ingles grocery store exit.

Adams and two passengers in Vandergrift’s vehicle sustained suspected serious injuries. EMS transported them to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville for treatment. GSP identifies the injured passengers as Lori Ann Otto, 58, of Pompano Beach, Florida, and Nicole Jacqueline Hughes, 58, of Dallas, Georgia.

A third passenger in the Tesla, George William Robbio, 57, of Pompano Beach, was not injured. Vandergrift escaped with minor injuries.

Christopher Purdie, 45, of Clayton, was riding in Adams’ vehicle. Troopers say he was not injured. The Quest driver, Elizabeth Renee Knott, 56, of Buford, complained of injuries but was not taken to the hospital.

Troopers from Georgia State Patrol Post 7 in Toccoa investigated the crash.

SEE ALSO

Driver escapes serious injury in rollover wreck north of Clarkesville

Driver escapes serious injury in rollover wreck north of Clarkesville

North Georgia Technical College police helped rescue a driver in a rollover wreck over the weekend. A passing motorist alerted police to the wreck, which occurred approximately eight miles north of the college’s Clarkesville campus.

The pickup truck overturned at the foot of a hill in the front yard of a house at 9305 GA 197 North. The driver escaped without serious injury. His name has not been released.

Habersham County Emergency Services and sheriff’s deputies also responded to the crash. EMS transported the driver to the hospital for treatment of minor injuries.

The wreck happened around 5 p.m. on Saturday, January 14. Traffic on the two-lane highway near the crash site was temporarily blocked as emergency crews and a tow truck cleared the scene.

SEE ALSO

Three injured in 3-vehicle wreck in Clayton

Neighbors alert 911 to house fire in Cleveland

Firefighters knockdown flames inside this mobile home near the 300 block of Hiawatha Hills Road south of Cleveland on Jan. 14, 2023. (photo by White County Public Safety)

Officials say they still don’t know what caused a fire to break out inside a home south of Cleveland. Multiple neighbors alerted 911 to the blaze near the 300 block of Hiawatha Hills Road shortly before 9 p.m. Saturday.

White County Dispatch sent units from the Cleveland Fire Department and White County Fire Service to the scene. When firefighters arrived, the mobile home was fully involved.

No one was inside the residence at the time of the fire, says White County Public Safety Public Information Officer Bryce Barrett.

(photo by White County Public Safety)
(photo by White County Public Safety)

“Fire personnel worked quickly to extinguish the fire and prevent it from spreading to nearby wooded areas,” says Barrett.

Firefighters remained on the scene, extinguishing hot spots. The cause of the fire is undetermined.

U.S. to hit debt limit much sooner than expected, thrusting Congress into showdown

DEARBORN, MI - SEPTEMBER 08: Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen gives a speech on the economy at Fords Rouge Electric Vehicle Center on September 8, 2022 in Dearborn, Michigan. Yellen toured the factory, which produces the Ford F-150 Lightning, before her remarks. (Photo by Sarah Rice/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — The U.S. government will hit its borrowing limit this week, forcing the new, divided Congress into negotiations over the debt limit much sooner than expected, though a potential date for the nation to default isn’t expected until this summer.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen wrote to Congress on Friday afternoon, telling leaders the United States will hit the debt ceiling on Jan. 19, after which she’ll use accounting maneuvers, which she called “extraordinary measures,” to keep U.S. finances up and running for a few months.

Yellen urged the Republican House and Democratic Senate to get to work on a bipartisan debt limit bill quickly, writing it is “critical that Congress act in a timely manner.” The January date is much sooner than the third quarter of this year, the preliminary estimate the Bipartisan Policy Center released last June.

“Failure to meet the government’s obligations would cause irreparable harm to the U.S. economy, the livelihoods of all Americans, and global financial stability,” Yellen wrote. “Indeed, in the past, even threats that the U.S. government might fail to meet its obligations have caused real harms, including the only credit rating downgrade in the history of our nation in 2011.”

Yellen said use of the extraordinary measures should last until early June, though that’s not a guarantee.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries released a joint statement Friday afternoon calling on Republicans to begin negotiations with Democrats for a bipartisan bill.

“Democrats want to move quickly to pass legislation addressing the debt limit so there is no chance of risking a catastrophic default,” the two New York Democrats wrote. “We’ve seen in previous debt ceiling stand-offs that even the threat of default leads to even higher costs for working families. Republican leaders must do the right thing to protect Social Security, the economy, and our country.”

With the country’s $31.385 trillion borrowing limit on track to consume headlines during the coming months, here’s a rundown of what you need to know about the debt ceiling as Congress and the world economy head toward another fiscal cliff:

Q: What is the debt limit?

A: It gives the U.S. Treasury Department the ability to borrow money to pay for all the spending that Congress has approved, including the dozen annual government funding bills and mandatory spending programs that essentially run on autopilot, like Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security.

Raising the debt limit does not authorize or appropriate new federal spending, but allows Treasury officials to continue paying all the nation’s bills in full and on time. The U.S. government has debt because nearly every year the federal government runs a deficit, meaning it spends more than it brings in from taxes and fees.

Q: What are extraordinary measures?

A: Once the U.S. government reaches the debt ceiling, the Treasury Department can use accounting maneuvers to give lawmakers more time to reach bipartisan, bicameral agreement on a debt limit bill. But the moves can add some uncertainty to financial markets the longer they go on, especially as Treasury gets closer to an actual default date.

Extraordinary measures can include “suspensions and delays of some debt sales and auctions, underinvestment and disinvestment of certain government funds, and exchange of debt securities for debt not subject to the debt limit,” according to a Congressional Research Service report.

Q: What does Congress have to do with the debt limit?

A: Whenever the federal government approaches the debt limit, Congress must pass new legislation to allow the U.S. Treasury Department to continue borrowing to meet all the country’s financial obligations.

Lawmakers can do this by either raising the debt limit to a new dollar amount or suspending the debt ceiling through a set date.

Q: Has the United States ever defaulted on the debt?

A: The country has never defaulted on its debts.

There were some lapses in the 1970s that left the amount of debt above its limit, but those didn’t result in any missed payments that would constitute a default.

Q: What would happen to the federal government if the country were to go past the so-called X-date, or default date?

A: The United States defaulting on its debts would mean that the U.S. Treasury Department no longer had borrowing authority or extraordinary measures to pay all the country’s bills in full and on time.

The Treasury secretary, currently Yellen, would need to limit payments from the federal government to the amount of money on hand on any given day or week. Depending on what programs, departments or agencies were prioritized, that could mean lapses in Social Security payments or delayed Medicare reimbursements. Members of the U.S. military and other federal employees could go without paychecks, and veterans could be shorted on their health care and benefits.

Q: What would happen to the economy if the country were to go past the X-date?

A: Moody’s Analytics Chief Economist Mark Zandi and Assistant Director Bernard Yaros wrote in a September 2021 report that came out during the last round of debt limit brinkmanship that, “Global financial markets and the economy would be upended, and even if resolved quickly, Americans would pay for this default for generations, as global investors would rightly believe that the federal government’s finances have been politicized and that a time may come when they would not be paid what they are owed when owed it.”

“To compensate for this risk, they will demand higher interest rates on the Treasury bonds they purchase,” they added. “That will exacerbate our daunting long-term fiscal challenges and be a lasting corrosive (effect) on the economy, significantly diminishing it.”

Q: What’s the difference between a partial government shutdown and a debt limit default?

A: The federal government begins a funding lapse or a partial government shutdown when Congress fails to pass all 12 government spending bills or a stopgap spending bill by the start of the new fiscal year on Oct. 1 or a subsequent deadline.

Exempt government employees continue going to work without paychecks and non-exempt federal employees are sent home without pay until Congress passes a new spending bill. Partial government shutdowns have a negative impact on federal government operations, like national parks closing, but not nearly the impact a default on the debt would have.

Partial government shutdowns are called that — partial — because the U.S. military and national security personnel continue operations, staff continue feeding the animals at the Smithsonian Zoo in Washington, D.C., and Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid operations mostly go interrupted.

Q: How were debt limit deals worked out during the Trump and Biden administrations?

A: Congress and the Trump administration brokered debt limit agreements three times during his four years in office. There has been one debt limit bill so far during the Biden administration.

In September 2017, the White House and Congress agreed to suspend the debt limit through Dec. 8 in a package that included natural disaster relief and a stopgap government funding bill. The Senate approved the measure in an 80-17 vote and the House sent it to Trump following a 316-90 vote. Republican Reps. Kevin McCarthy, who is now the speaker of the House, and Elise M. Stefanik, now chair of the House Republican Conference, voted for the measure. Louisiana’s Steve Scalise, now majority leader, didn’t vote.

In February 2018, Congress and the Trump administration reached a bipartisan budget agreement to suspend the debt limit through March 1, 2019, and increase spending caps set under a 2011 law by $293 billion during fiscal 2018 and 2019. The Senate voted 71-28 and the House voted 240-186 to send Trump the measure. McCarthy, Scalise and Stefanik all voted for the bill.

In July 2019, Congress and the Trump administration brokered another bipartisan budget agreement that raised the spending caps set by a 2011 deficit reduction law and suspended the debt limit through July 31, 2021. The House voted 284-149 and the Senate voted 67-28 to send Trump the package. McCarthy, Scalise and Stefanik all voted for the bill.

In December 2021, following months of partisan fighting over the debt limit, Schumer and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, brokered an agreement where Republicans would provide the votes needed to get past the chamber’s 60-vote legislative filibuster on a debt limit bill, but not actually help Democrats to pass the bill.

The legislation, raising the debt limit by $2.5 trillion, passed the Senate following a 50-49 vote and the House following a 221-209 vote. Illinois Rep. Adam Kinzinger was the sole Republican in Congress to vote for the measure.

Q: What agreements on the debt limit did McCarthy make in order to secure the votes needed to hold the gavel?

A: The California Republican reportedly agreed that U.S. House Republicans wouldn’t agree to raise or suspend the debt limit without a budget agreement or “commensurate fiscal reforms.” McCarthy and his office have declined to make the various agreements with conservative lawmakers public.

Q: When is this year’s debt limit deadline?

A: The country will reach the debt limit on Jan. 19 at which point the Treasury Department will begin using extraordinary measures, according to the letter Yellen sent to Congress on Friday.

“The period of time that extraordinary measures may last is subject to considerable uncertainty due to a variety of factors, including the challenges of forecasting the payments and receipts of the U.S. government months into the future,” Yellen wrote. “While Treasury is not currently able to provide an estimate of how long extraordinary measures will enable us to continue to pay the government’s obligations, it is unlikely that cash and extraordinary measures will be exhausted before early June.”

Benny Ray Rich

Benny Ray Rich, age 62, of Easley, SC, formerly of Gainesville, passed away peacefully Sunday, January 8, 2023, at Greenville Memorial Hospital.

Benny was born February 1, 1960, to the late Raymond & Evelyn Martin Rich. He was a graduate of Johnson High School. In his early years, Benny had his hand in several areas. He was a former driver with Rich Racing Team #2 and member of the Hall County Fire Department. He went on to work for several years and eventually retired from Moreno Press/Dittler Brothers, where, with his inventive mind, he earned no fewer than 18 patents. After his short retirement, Benny designed and constructed several athletic fields in Northeast Georgia with Sport Fields Unlimited, Inc, as well as owning & operating a landscape design company, Amber Leaf Outdoor Living.

Benny lit up a room as soon as he would walk in; he had that natural draw with people. In his spare time, he loved golfing, fishing, and watching his Georgia Bulldogs play football. However, his greatest joy was watching his children compete in sports. He loved his children and loved to see them thrive. Other than his parents, he is preceded in death by his sister, Sharon Rich & his brother, Robert Rich.

Left to cherish precious memories, wife, Amber Forrester King of Easley, SC; children, Caleb (Teresia) Rich of Denver, CO, Derek (Ansley) Rich & their son, Cooper, of Atlanta, GA, Mallory (William) Shatlock of Birmingham, AL; brother, Christopher Rich of Charlotte, NC; Nephews, Tony (Jessica) Rich & their daughter, Evie of AL & Terry Rich of TX; ex-wife & mother of his children, Kathleen Martin Rich of Orange Park, FL; Benny loved his many cousins & extended family members.

Celebration of Life services will be held at 2 p.m. ET, Saturday, February 18, 2023, at the Pine Crest Baptist Church. The family will receive friends from 1 p.m. until the service time.

The family has asked, in lieu of flowers, please contribute to Prisma Health Palliative Care, Pine Crest Baptist Church, The Pine Crest WMU, or Eagle Ranch.

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 Benny Ray Rich.