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Georgia jobless rate hits new all-time low of 2.8% in July

ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia’s unemployment rate hit a new record low for the third month in a row, falling to 2.8% in July.

The jobless rate dipped from 2.9% in June. A year ago, 3.9% of Georgia workers were unemployed.

More than 5.1 million people said they were working in May, while 150,000 Georgians were unemployed and seeking work.

Georgia’s jobless rate has been falling or stable — never rising — in every month since hitting an all-time high of 12.3% at the start of the pandemic in April 2020.

The number of workers on employer payrolls — the top labor market measure for many economists — rose by 12,000 in Georgia in July, reaching 4.8 million. That’s 214,000 above payroll levels last year.

Payrolls hit a new all-time high for the eighth straight month. Payrolls are measured by a survey of employers, separate from the survey of individuals.

The state released the figures Thursday. They are adjusted to cancel out seasonal fluctuations.

The nationwide unemployment rate fell to 3.5% in July from 3.6% in June. That’s down from 5.4% a year ago.

About 5,500 Georgia workers filed for new unemployment benefits in the week that ended Aug. 13.

The overall number of people collecting state unemployment was about 30,000 in the week that ended Aug. 6.

 

Browns’ Deshaun Watson suspended 11 games, fined $5 million

FILE - Cleveland Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson throws a pass during an NFL football practice at the team's training facility, May 25, 2022, in Berea, Ohio. The NFL suspended Watson for six games on Aug. 1, 2022, for violating its personal conduct policy following accusations of sexual misconduct made against him by two dozen women in Texas. (AP Photo/Ron Schwane, File)

BEREA, Ohio (AP) — Cleveland Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson will serve an 11-game unpaid suspension, pay a $5 million fine and undergo professional evaluation and treatment as part of a settlement with the NFL following accusations of sexual misconduct by two dozen women.

The league had sought to ban Watson for at least one year for violating its personal conduct policy. He was accused of sexually harassing and coercing the women during massage therapy sessions while he was with the Houston Texans.

Watson signed a $230 million fully guaranteed contract after being traded to the Browns in March. Because the team structured Watson’s deal so he’ll make $1.035 million in his first season, he’ll lose $632,500 in salary during the suspension.

As part of the settlement, Watson can return for the Browns’ game in Houston on Dec. 4.

“My whole life I just have to be able to move forward and that’s the plan,” Watson said shortly after the settlement became public. “I have to be able to move forward with my career, move forward with my family, my personal life and everything.”

The settlement ends months of speculation and headed off a ruling from former New Jersey attorney general Peter C. Harvey, who was appointed by Commissioner Roger Goodell after the league appealed a six-game suspension issued by disciplinary officer Sue L. Robinson.

As part of the settlement between the league and the NFL Players Association, Watson will have to be evaluated by behavioral experts and follow their treatment program.

Watson apologized last week before the Browns’ preseason opener for the first time since the allegations surfaced. He tried to offer more contrition Thursday while maintaining he never has been inappropriate with women.

“I’ve always stood on my innocence and always said that I’ve never assaulted anyone or disrespected anyone and I’m continuing to stand on that,” he said. “But at the same time, I have to continue to push forward with my life and my career.

“I’m going to continue to stand on my innocence and keep pushing forward, and I’ve always stood on not disrespecting or sexually assaulting anyone.”

Along with his $5 million fine, the league and Browns are donating $1 million each to a fund that will support nonprofit organizations across the country to educate young people on “healthy relationships, promote education and prevention of sexual misconduct and assault, support survivors, and related causes.”

Watson can practice until the suspension begins on Aug. 30, but coach Kevin Stefanski said he will not play in any preseason games. He won’t be allowed to return to the team’s facility until Oct. 10, roughly halfway through the suspension. Watson can begin practicing again on Nov. 18 and be reinstated two weeks later.

Attorney Tony Buzbee, who represents all 24 women who sued Watson, was critical of the NFL’s handling of the case and settlement.

“By settling this matter the way he has, Roger Goodell has proven one of two things: Either his recent rhetoric was utter baloney, or his bark is much worse than his bite,” Buzbee said in a statement. “My belief is that he is nothing more than a paper tiger.

“The message today to all victims is clear, if you believe you have been sexually assaulted by a powerful person, keep your mouth shut and go away. The NFL has certainly demonstrated that its ownership and the organization doesn’t care.”

Browns owners Dee and Jimmy Haslam, who have been widely criticized for trading for Watson, stood by the QB. They said they expect him to learn and grow from the experience.

“Since Deshaun came into our building in April, he has done everything we have asked of him and more,” Jimmy Haslam said at a news briefing with his wife and Browns general manager Andrew Berry. “And he has been the person, the leader that we expect him to be and I think he understands where he is in his life, it’s a pivotal point, and we as an organization are going to do everything we can to help him not only be the best football player he can be but more important to be the best person he can be.”

Haslam was asked if he’s still comfortable with Watson being on Cleveland’s roster.

“Absolutely,” he said. “100%”

Dee Haslam was pressed on whether she believes Watson is innocent.

“We respect his opinion. I do think in counseling, Deshaun will grow to learn a lot more about himself,” she said.

On Aug. 1, Watson was suspended six games by Robinson, a former federal judge jointly appointed by the league and union to act as an independent disciplinary officer. As part of her ruling, she called his behavior “egregious” and “predatory.”

Watson wouldn’t comment directly on Robinson’s assertions.

“I know who I am,” he said. “I know what type of person I am. I know the character of the person I was raised to be and I have always been. That is the biggest thing for me is continue to show who Deshaun Watson really is, and the people that meet me and that are around me, they will figure out who I really am.”

Believing the suspension was too light, the league appealed and pushed Watson’s case back to Goodell, who had handled all player discipline in the past. The league previously pushed for an indefinite suspension and hefty fine.

At the owners’ meetings this month, Goodell said the league’s pursuit of a yearlong ban was warranted following its investigation and Robinson’s findings.

“She reinforced the evidence,” Goodell said. “There were multiple violations that were egregious, and it was predatory behavior.”

In her conclusion, Robinson cited Watson’s lack of remorse as a factor in her decision.

Watson was asked what was he apologizing for if he’s innocent. “For everyone that was affected by this situation,” he said. “There were a lot of people that were triggered.”

Watson was accused of being sexually inappropriate with the women from March 2020 to March 2021. In the civil lawsuits filed in Texas, the women accused him of exposing himself, touching them with his penis or kissing them against their will. One woman alleged Watson forced her to perform oral sex.

Two separate grand juries in Texas declined to indict Watson, who also settled 23 of the 24 lawsuits.

For now, the suspension ends months of speculation about whether Watson would play in 2022 for the Browns, who outbid several other teams and traded three first-round draft picks to the Texans.

The Browns believe Watson could make them a Super Bowl contender. Without him, they could struggle to simply contend in the AFC North against defending conference champion Cincinnati along with Baltimore and Pittsburgh.

All along, the Browns’ plan was to turn their offense over to veteran Jacoby Brissett, who has made 37 career starts. But it’s now possible Cleveland will explore other options at quarterback.

The suspension also means Watson will be idle longer. One of pro football’s elite QBs, he sat out last season in Houston after demanding a trade and before the sexual allegations surfaced.

 

Clorinda C. Durham

Clorinda C. Durham, age 82 of Clarkesville, Georgia passed away on Tuesday, August 16, 2022.

She was married to Rabon G. Durham for 58 years and had a great life traveling the world together. They have four children: Sheila Mote Green (James Randall Green), Howard Barry Mote, Scott Darrell Durham and preceded in death by her son, Bart Devilin Durham. Clorinda has 6 grandchildren; Justin Randall Green (Amy Stambaugh Green), Chase James Green (Ali Grasty Green), Howard Caleb Mote (Marissa Chitwood), Blaine Garrison Mote, Shi’Ann Denise Olge, Carmen Arizona Mote plus 7 GreatGrands.

Clorinda worked and retired as a Legal Assistant at Hulsey, Oliver and Mahar located in Gainesville, Georgia. She was a member of Demorest Baptist Church. Clorinda was a beloved wife, mother and Nana. She will be greatly missed by all her family and friends but she now resides with her wonderful Savior.

A memorial service is scheduled for Friday, August 19, 2022 at 3:00 pm at the Whitfield Funeral Home North Chapel, with Rev. Jacob Griffin and Rev. Tom Mewborn to officiate the service.

The Family will receive friends at the funeral home on Friday, August 19, 2022 starting at 1:00 pm until 3:00 pm.

Services have been entrusted to Whitfield Funeral Homes and Crematory, North Chapel, 245 Central Ave., Demorest, GA 30535. Telephone (706) 778-1700.

Rosalynn Carter marking 95th birthday with butterflies

Rosalynn Carter speaks at the twenty-fourth annual Rosalynn Carter Georgia Mental Health Forum at the Carter Center in Atlanta, Ga., in May 2019. The forum, established in 1995, is held each May to address a timely mental health policy issue facing the state. (photo courtesy the Carter Center)

Rosalynn Carter, the second-oldest U.S. first lady ever, turns 95 Thursday on a birthday that will be marked not just with cards and best wishes, but with butterflies.

The wife of former President Jimmy Carter, 97, has a fascination with butterflies dating back to childhood, when she was entranced by the colorful insects flitting around her mother’s flowers in Plains, Georgia, longtime friend and neighbor Annette Wise said.

That interest led to the formation of the Rosalynn Carter Butterfly Trail, which was established in the southwest Georgia town after the former first lady grew concerned about the future of butterflies, which are crucial to the pollination of flowering plants.

“She read an article in 2013 about the decline in monarchs and decided she wanted to do something about it,” Wise said.

Wise said she helped Carter establish a garden featuring native milkweed, a prime habitat for monarch butterflies, at the home she shares with the former president, her husband of 76 years, but the public can’t visit it because of Secret Service security concerns. So Wise planted another garden nearby that could be open to visitors, and that helped lead to the butterfly trail, which includes 76 public and private gardens around rural Plains.

The butterfly trail will use Carter’s birthday to promote an annual statewide count of butterflies, the Great Georgia Pollinator Census, set for Friday and Saturday, Wise said.

Last Saturday, at an event held in honor of the former first lady’s birthday, Rosalynn and Jimmy Carter made one of their first public outings in awhile for the dedication of a new butterfly sculpture that’s part of the trail and is on property next door to where she grew up. The former first lady, using a walker, flipped a switch to illuminate the artwork at nightfall.

“They’re not getting out too much. COVID is a real concern, and their ages, too,” Wise said.

Bess Truman, the wife of President Harry Truman, is the only first lady to have outlived Rosalynn Carter, according to The National First Ladies Library. Truman, who was first lady from 1943 until 1953, died in 1982 at the age of 97.

Jimmy Carter, who will turn 98 on Oct. 1, is the oldest living U.S. ex-president. Photos showed him seated in a wheelchair and smiling during the sculpture dedication.

Baty homers first time up in majors, Mets beat Braves 9-7

New York Mets' Brett Baty gestures after hitting a two-run homer in the second against the Atlanta Braves Wednesday, Aug. 17, 2022, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Hakim Wright Sr.)

ATLANTA (AP) — The first time Brett Baty stepped on the field in the big leagues, he simply took a look around.

“I wanted to soak it all in,” he said.

Then came a moment he’ll remember for a lifetime.

Baty homered in his first major league at-bat, Starling Marte went deep twice and the New York Mets held off the Braves 9-7 Wednesday night to snap Atlanta’s eight-game winning streak.

After being outscored 18-1 in the first two games of the series, the NL East-leading Mets jumped to a 6-1 lead and barely made it stand up to push their advantage over the Braves back to 4 1/2 games.

Vaughn Grissom had a two-run single in the ninth, but Trevor May retired Ronald Acuña Jr. — the potential tying run — on a flyout to the warming track to end the game.

New York got a big boost from Baty, one of the organization’s top prospects who got the call to the majors just a week after being promoted to Triple-A.

Baty, the 12th overall pick in the 2019 draft, came up for the first time in the second with a runner aboard and the Mets already ahead 2-0 on back-to-back homers in the first off Jake Odorizzi.

After taking a ball, Baty connected with a hanging curve on his very first swing in a New York uniform.

“I was just looking for a pitch I could drive,” Baty said. “He left one over the plate.”

As the ball sailed toward the tall brick wall in right, Acuña peeled off hoping to play a carom. But it dropped between the wall and the first row of seats, setting off a wild celebration in the stands from Baty’s mother, father, sister and other family members who hastily made the trip to Atlanta to witness his debut.

“To look up (in the stands) and see my family up there, to celebrate in the dugout with my teammates, it’s just pure joy,” Baty said.

Baty became the fifth player in Mets history to homer in his first at-bat — the last being Mike Jacobs in 2005. A worker was able to retrieve the ball, which will become a treasured keepsake.

“For sure, that will be framed up and go on a shelf somewhere,” Baty said. “Hopefully there will be more.”

Atlanta knocked out nemesis Matt Scherzer (9-2) in the seventh without getting a ball out of the infield, loading the bases on two walks sandwiched around a dribbler near the mound.

Adam Ottavino appeared to snuff out the threat when Grissom grounded into an inning-ending double play. But the call was overturned after a video review, giving Atlanta a run that cut the deficit to 6-2.

Robbie Grossman then made a game of it, launching a three-run homer that brought the Braves within a single run.

That was as close as they got. Pete Alonso’s two-run single highlighted a three-run ninth that provided some breathing room.

Scherzer shook off a 34-minute rain delay in the bottom of the third to beat the Braves for the third time this season. He was charged with four runs over 6 1/3 innings, despite surrendering just three hits and three walks while striking out eight.

It was just what the Mets needed after their last two starting pitchers lasted two innings apiece before leaving with injuries.

“The key to the game was Max,” manager Buck Showalter said. “He is so workmanlike. It wasn’t sexy, but he just refuses to give in to the challenges.”

The Mets jumped on Odorizzi (4-5) in the first, homering on back-to-back pitches. Marte launched one over the center field wall, and Francisco Lindor took one out on the very next pitch for his 21st homer of the season.

Marte added his 14th homer off Kirby Yates in the seventh for his first multi-homer game since 2019 with the Pirates.

Braves manager Brian Snitker was tossed in the third by home-plate umpire Will Little after Austin Riley was called out on a third strike he thought was high.

CUP OF COFFEE

Reliver R.J. Alvarez was called up by the Mets on Tuesday and got into a big league game for the first time since 2015.

It turned out to be a short stay.

Alvarez was designated for assignment after he gave up three runs in 2 1/3 innings in a 5-0 loss. Lefty Sam Clay was called up from Syracuse.

TOUGH TIMES

Odorizzi has struggled in three starts for the Braves since being acquired ahead of the trade deadline.

In 13 2/3 innings, he has surrendered nine earned runs on 22 hits and six walks.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Mets: RHP Taijuan Walker (back spasms) underwent an MRI after his short start Tuesday. He’s not seriously injured but may have to skip his next scheduled start Sunday at Philadelphia. … Escobar was placed on the 10-day injured list, retroactive to Tuesday. … RH Tommy Hunter (lower back tightness) is on schedule to come off the IL Sunday after making one more rehab appearance.

Braves: 2B Ozzie Albies (broken foot) was taking grounders before batting practice, but there’s still no timetable on when he will begin a rehab assignment.

UP NEXT

RH Jacob deGrom (2-0, 1.62 ERA) will go for the Mets in the series finale Thursday. The Braves announced after the game that LH Max Fried (10-4, 2.60) will make the start after recovering from a concussion that sent him to the IL.

 

Giuliani says he ‘satisfied’ obligation with Ga. grand jury

Rudy Giuliani arrives in Atlanta on Wednesday morning, Aug. 17, 2022, to testify before a special grand jury investigating possible election fraud. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

ATLANTA (AP) — Rudy Giuliani said Wednesday that he had “satisfied his obligation” after facing hours of questioning Wednesday before a special grand jury in Atlanta as a target of an investigation into attempts by former President Donald Trump and others to overturn his 2020 election defeat in Georgia.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Giuliani said Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis ended his appearance by saying he had “satisfied his obligation under the subpoena.”

“So I was very happy that I satisfied my obligation,” he said.

Speaking upon his return to New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport, Giuliani didn’t provide any additional details about his appearance or testimony, including the type of questions he was asked. He was pushed through the terminal in a wheelchair alongside his lawyer, Bob Costello.

Giuliani’s attorneys tried to delay his appearance before the special grand jury, saying he was unable to fly due to heart stent surgery in early July. On Wednesday, Giuliani said “my plane ride was OK,” noting that it was his first since the procedure.

Costello said the session, which lasted from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. with a half-hour lunch, “went very well. No disputes.” Costello did not immediately address whether Giuliani answered questions or declined.

“Everyone was a lady or gentleman. Professional,” he wrote in a text message, adding that Willis came out to greet Giuliani and his lawyers at the end.

The investigation by the Democratic prosecutor has brought heightened scrutiny to the desperate and ultimately failed efforts to overturn Joe Biden’s 2020 election win. It’s one of several investigations into Trump’s actions in office as he lays the groundwork for another run at the White House in 2024.

Willis opened her investigation after the disclosure of a remarkable Jan. 2, 2021, phone call between Trump and Georgia’s secretary of state, Brad Raffensperger. On the call, Trump suggested that Raffensperger could “find” the exact number of votes that would be needed to flip the election results in Georgia.

Trump has denied any wrongdoing. He has described the call as “perfect.”

Willis last month filed petitions to compel testimony from seven Trump associates and advisers. She has also said she’s considering calling Trump himself to testify, and the former president has hired a legal team in Atlanta that includes a prominent criminal defense attorney.

Other Trump allies swept up in the inquiry include U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. His attorneys filed a legal motion Wednesday asking a federal judge to put Graham’s special grand jury appearance set for Aug. 23 on hold while he appeals an order compelling him to testify.

Prosecutors want to ask Graham about phone calls they say he made to Raffensperger and his staff in the weeks following the vote.

Graham’s lawyers, including former Trump White House counsel Don McGahn, are fighting the subpoena in federal court. They argue Graham’s position in Congress protects him from having to appear before the grand jury. A federal judge rejected that notion and ordered the senator to testify. Graham has said he plans to appeal.

Also Wednesday, lawyers for Republican Gov. Brian Kemp asked the judge overseeing the special grand jury to quash a subpoena for him to testify Thursday. Kemp had been scheduled to sit for a video recorded voluntary interview with the district attorney’s office on July 25, but Willis’ team canceled that and issued a subpoena after Kemp’s attorneys asked about the scope of the interview, Kemp’s motion says.

Kemp’s lawyers accused Willis’ team of using “delay and artificial deadlines” to cause the governor’s “interaction with the investigation to reach a crescendo in the middle of an election cycle.” They say it was issued “for political, rather than investigative, reasons.”

Kemp faces a rematch with Democrat Stacey Abrams in the November general election.

Kemp’s lawyers argue that “sovereign immunity” shields a governor from having to testify about his official duties and they also cited executive privilege and attorney-client privilege. If the judge doesn’t quash the subpoena, they said the judge should establish guidelines regarding what can be asked.

Willis’ office declined comment, but Willis was direct in a July letter to Kemp attorney Brian McEvoy that he filed with the court: “You repeatedly referring to it as a politically motivated investigation, does not make it so. In fact, you repeating it so many times only proves you have become very comfortable being dishonest.”

In seeking Giuliani’s testimony, Willis noted that he was both a personal lawyer for Trump and a lead attorney for his 2020 campaign.

She recalled in a petition how Giuliani and others appeared at a state Senate committee meeting in late 2020 and presented a video that Giuliani said showed election workers producing “suitcases” of unlawful ballots from unknown sources, outside the view of election poll watchers. The claims of fraud were debunked by Georgia election officials within 24 hours. Yet Giuliani continued to make statements to the public and in subsequent legislative hearings claiming widespread election fraud using the debunked video, Willis noted in her filing.

Two of the election workers seen in the video, Ruby Freeman and Wandrea “Shaye” Moss, said they faced relentless harassment online and in person after it was shown at the Dec. 3 legislative hearing in which Giuliani appeared. At another hearing a week later, Giuliani said the footage showed the women “surreptitiously passing around USB ports as if they are vials of heroin or cocaine.” They actually were passing a piece of candy.

Willis wrote in the court filing that Giuliani’s hearing appearance and testimony were “part of a multi-state, coordinated plan by the Trump Campaign to influence the results of the November 2020 election in Georgia and elsewhere.”

Willis also wrote in a petition seeking the testimony of attorney Kenneth Chesebro that he worked with Giuliani to coordinate and carry out a plan to have Georgia Republicans serve as fake electors. Those 16 people signed a certificate declaring falsely that Trump had won the 2020 presidential election and declaring themselves the state’s “duly elected and qualified” electors even though Biden had won the state and a slate of Democratic electors was certified.

___

Neumeister reported from New York. Associated Press writers Jill Colvin in New York and Meg Kinnard in Columbia, South Carolina, contributed to this report.

Northeast Georgia food bank seeks partners to help ease childhood hunger

With school starting again, children who are food insecure are assured of having food available to them. (Photo US Dept. of Agriculture)

“Hunger affects children in so many ways. Tummy aches and tears were common. Certainly, their attention to learning is hindered.” That’s how retired Habersham County school teacher Britt Cody describes the impact hunger has on students. She witnessed it first-hand throughout her education career.

It’s a problem local food banks, nonprofits, schools, and churches partner together to overcome. The government, too, plays a significant role.

In Georgia, the need to help families and children who are food insecure is a year-round effort. The Food Bank of Northeast Georgia has developed several programs to meet children’s nutritional needs throughout the year, and going back to school creates an opportunity to help those who may have been overlooked during the summer.

Food Insecurity in Northeast Georgia

The U.S. government defines food insecurity as “a lack of consistent access to enough food for an active, healthy life.” Feeding America, a national organization that collects food from food producers and retailers to help feed families, explains that food insecurity is not the same thing as being physically hungry. “Food insecurity refers to the lack of available financial resources for food at the household level.” Over 22 million children in the United States experience true hunger during the summer months.

Erin Barger, the president and CEO of the Food Bank of Northeast Georgia, has specific numbers of children who are food insecure in the immediate five-county region:

  • Banks County has 460 children who are food insecure, and 12.7% of its general population is food insecure.
  • Habersham County has 970 children who are food insecure, and 11.8% of its general population is food insecure.
  • Rabun County has 460 children who are food insecure, and 15.5% of its general population is food insecure.
  • Stephens County has 720 children who are food insecure, and 13.6% of its general population is food insecure.
  • White County has 580 children who are food insecure, and 11.7% of its general population is food insecure.

Barger shares, “Schools have become an invaluable role as food distribution centers. During the summer, the Seamless Summer program provides lunches to children in many of our counties, and our Food to Kids 360 program provides assistance as well.” Barger would like to see this program expanded through financial donations, food donations, and partnerships. “The only way we will solve the problem of food insecurity is to partner our way out of it,” Barger emphasizes. “We want to develop partner relationships with other agencies and nutritionists to work together on meeting the need.”

The Food Bank of Northeast Georgia provides food assistance to the most vulnerable people in our community –– children, seniors, and those with disabilities. (Photo Food Bank of NEGA)

During the school year, children who are food insecure have access to free lunches.

“During the Pandemic, universal free lunches met that need,” Barger explains. “But that program has come to an end now. Parents have had to reapply for free lunches for their children.”

Providing lunches is just part of solving the issues for children who are food insecure. Barger says the Food 2 Kids program has been designed to address the most essential need for food insecure children by providing food for the weekend.

The Food 2 Kids program sends weekend meal bags to over 1,500 area students each week who have been identified by teachers and school counselors as chronically hungry. Within each bag are six meals and healthy snacks. The bags weigh approximately 6.2 lbs and are delivered directly to students at school by volunteers.

Helping provide snacks at school

Cody taught for thirty years at Clarkesville Elementary School. What she saw as a teacher has made her passionate about helping provide snacks at schools for students who don’t have any.

“For all classrooms, there are always low-income children, whose parents simply don’t have the money to give them snacks. From lunch to going home is a long time, so the afternoons can be hard on those children,” Cody says.

She noticed other things about these students as well, from tummy aches and limited attention spans to feelings of being overlooked.

“Honestly, the children also felt the emotional impact as others were loved in ways they were not.”

Cody noticed, too, that some children would arrive at school late, missing the breakfast provided there, and without having eaten at home.

“A snack would always put a smile on their faces and help them approach the day stronger.”

As a teacher, Bitt Cody was blessed with compassionate parents as partners who would help her provide snacks for children who couldn’t provide their own. “When teachers don’t have this support,” Cody says, “teachers simply buy the snacks on their own. On average, most teachers probably spend at least $1,000 a year on supplies and snacks. Having a community partner is such a huge help!”

Churches and individuals in the area can “adopt” a class or a grade at one of the local schools and make sure those snacks are provided monthly. Getting started is as easy as calling your local elementary school and finding out what help is needed.

Whitmire named Habersham’s new parks and rec director

Brooke Whitmire

Habersham County has hired Brooke Whitmire as its new Parks and Recreation Director. Whitmire has served the past six years as Director of the Banks County Parks and Recreation Department.

Whitmire has over ten years in the parks and rec field. She grew up participating in community recreation programs and says those experiences helped shape her into the person she is today. Because of her early positive experiences, Whitmire chose to pursue a career through the University of Georgia’s Recreation Management and Leisure Studies.

“I hope to bring tested knowledge and experience of the field, along with fresh new ideas that help to enrich the department and the community,” says Whitmire. “I am enthusiastic and impassioned about what we do as recreation professionals, and I am honored to be the next Parks and Recreation Director for Habersham County.”

Whitmire is from Banks County but has strong family ties in Habersham and the Clarkesville area.

“I grew up spending time between both places with family and friends, and I am overjoyed at the opportunity to move back into the area. The mountains are calling me home!” she says in a press release announcing her hiring. Whitmire adds, “I cannot wait to join the Habersham County team!”

Whitmire takes over the job from Kurt Cooper who resigned to accept a position in property management. Her first day on the job will be Monday, August 22.

Lunsford withdraws from Clarkesville City Council race

(NowHabersham.com)

John Lunsford has officially withdrawn from the Clarkesville Post 2 City Council Race, Habersham County Elections Supervisor Laurel Ellison announced Wednesday.

Lunsford was in a three-person race for the seat vacated when Roxie Barron resigned.

Lunsford’s name will not appear on the ballot for the November 8, 2022, special election. Ellison did not give a reason for his decision to leave the race.

Rick Wood and Brad Coppedge are still in the running to fill the Post 2 seat. Whoever wins will fill Barron’s unexpired term through December 31, 2023.

Dan Gerrells

Dan Gerrells, age 68, of Cornelia, passed away on Wednesday, August 17, 2022.

Born on February 3, 1954, in Demorest, he was a son of the late Herman Gerrells and Bessie Lou Pilgrim Gerrells. Dan worked in construction as a self-employed brick mason and also worked at Habersham Hardware for a number of years. He was an outdoorsman who was fond of Westerns and car racing. Dan was of the Christian faith.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his brothers, Billy Gerrells and Ray Gerrells.

Survivors include his brothers: Richard Gerrells of Cleveland and Ed Gerrells of Tazewell, Tennessee; sisters and brothers-in-law: Lillie Ash of Mt. Airy, Molly and Jerry Johnson of Cleveland, and Sara and Scott Payne of Cleveland; and numerous nieces and nephews.

A memorial service will be held at 1:00 pm on Saturday, August 20, 2022, in the Chapel of McGahee-Griffin & Stewart with Rev. Garvis Kinsey officiating.

The family will receive friends from 12:00 pm until the service on Saturday at the funeral home chapel.

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.

It’s the economy: Kemp, Abrams campaign on competing visions for Georgia’s surplus billions

Gov. Brian Kemp and Stacey Abrams are presenting very different ideas for dealing with the state’s $5 billion surplus. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

(GA Recorder) — Georgia has got a lot of extra money right now. If the state’s estimated $5 billion budget surplus were printed out in dollar bills, it would come up to just under 20 square miles, enough bills to carpet every square inch of the state’s five busiest airports, with enough singles left over to buy five Boeing 737 MAX 8 jets and park one at each tarmac.

And that $5 billion is in addition to the other approximately $5 billion in the state’s rainy-day fund, as well as the remainder of the state’s share of federal COVID-19 relief money.

As Georgians continue to feel the pinch of inflation, the economy remains a top issue among voters. In a July Gallup poll, 35% of Americans listed one of several economic issues like inflation and fuel prices as the most important problems facing the country today.

The two Georgians seeking to lead the state next year, Republican Gov. Brian Kemp and Democrat Stacey Abrams, have wildly different ideas about what to do with the state’s surplus fund.

“The contrasting plans highlight the differences between Democratic and Republican sensibilities about what to spend and how to spend it,” said Emory University political science professor Andra Gillespie.

“Brian Kemp’s philosophy supports a smaller view of government, and so he’s not looking to create or enhance or to buttress an expansive government program or a new government program, he sees the opportunity of the surpluses and opportunity to return money back to taxpayers through tax cuts,” she said.

On August 11, Kemp unveiled a $1 billion income tax rebate mirroring the one state lawmakers passed this year and another $1 billion rebate on local property taxes. Kemp’s office said the former will pay back between $250 for single filers and $500 for married couples, while the property tax rebate will save homeowners $500 on average.

And despite having beaucoup bucks in the state coffers, Governor’s Office of Planning and Budget director Kelly Farr told state agency heads Wednesday not to ask for any more state money next year than they got this year.

“Though Georgia’s economy and state revenues remain strong, inflationary pressures will be a significant driver in the upcoming budget cycle,” Farr wrote.

“Just as everyday Georgians are having to reevaluate their household expenses to meet rising costs on their existing budget, Gov. Kemp is asking state agencies to do the same.”

Kemp signed Georgia’s latest budget in May, and it funds the state through next July. At $30.2 billion, it represents a $2.9 billion increase over the previous year, thanks in part to federal COVID-19 aid. The budget included a $5,000 raise for all state employees including the last $2,000 pay hike in the raise he promised teachers on the 2018 campaign trail.

Abrams has also called for a $1 billion income tax rebate similar to Kemp, but she has far different plans for the remainder of the state’s windfall.

In a speech last week, Abrams pledged to create 25,000 to 45,000 new green energy jobs, expand Medicaid coverage, further boost teacher pay by an average of $11,000, invest $500 million into affordable housing, provide free technical college, expand HOPE Scholarships to include students with a C average and create a small business capital growth fund to provide $10 million to get new businesses off the ground.

Abrams’ plan would include legalizing sports betting and casino gambling to fund her college expansion, and she pledged that none of her priorities would require raising taxes.

“Hear me clearly, we don’t have to raise taxes, all we have to do is raise our expectations of those who lead us,” she said.

There’s an argument to be made for thrift, said Kyle Wingfield, president and CEO of the conservative-leaning Georgia Public Policy Foundation.

“When you think about the budget surplus, it’s important to remember that it’s money you have right now. There’s no guarantee that you’ll have the same amount of money in future years,” he said. “So, what we would hope anyone in a position to influence the budget or state spending would keep in mind that you don’t want to make commitments to ongoing costs because of one-time money, so we would prefer to see expenditures that don’t become ongoing obligations.”

One option would be to get an early start on the tax cuts passed by the Legislature this year and set to go into effect in 2024, Wingfield said.

“A one-time rebate, while it’s nice when people get it in their bank account, it doesn’t really influence behavior in a long-term way,” he said. “What influences behavior to work more, invest more, save more, which is what grows the economy, is knowing what your incentives are long term. And so if you can get to those better long-term incentives that the General Assembly created earlier this year, a year or two sooner than they had intended, that would be a big help to the state economy, because you would start getting that economic boost sooner rather than later.”

What exactly counts as surplus is largely up to the governor, said Danny Kanso, senior tax and budget policy analyst at the progressive-leaning Georgia Budget and Policy Institute.

Each year, the governor sets the state revenue estimate, the ceiling that determines how much the state can spend.

“Georgia is unique in that the power to set our revenue estimate is purely a policy decision that rests with the governor unilaterally,” Kanso said. “And so the governor, kind of using their own judgment, sets that revenue estimate with the advice of the state economist, but that is the final decision. And it doesn’t necessarily have to be based on any actual data or revenue returns.”

The state has a comfortable cushion in its rainy-day fund, so there’s a good argument to make for setting a higher revenue estimate and investing more in state services, Kanso said.

“It doesn’t make a whole lot of sense to have such a massive disconnect between what we’re collecting in revenues and what we’re spending, because to get the highest and best use out of the tax dollars, provided by Georgians, it’s best to spend those funds in an orderly and organized way, rather than trying to figure out one-time uses of the funds after the fiscal year,” he said.

Georgia is set to spend on average $121.32 less per person in the current budget than it did in 2008, according to GBPI, and the number of state employees fell by about 9% between 2018 and 2022, the fastest decline since the Great Recession.

“Across the board, state agencies are struggling to meet their mission to serve Georgians, we see real gaps and public education, in health care, the main functions of the state where most of the dollars the state spends goes to, about 75% of what the state spends goes to either health care and education, and so while we have those massive deficits, it just doesn’t make a whole lot of sense to not use the limited resources that the state has available to their highest and best use.”

Abrams’ big-time promotion of her economic plan could be seen as an attempt to hit Kemp in an area where he has been perceived as strong. The governor has for months been content to compare Georgia’s pandemic recovery with that of other states and to point fingers at President Joe Biden for the nation’s economic distress.

“Some of that message is a bit of a base message and a mobilizing message to try to get Republican voters out, but I think it does provide some headwinds for Abrams,” Gillespie said. “Abrams is not running in an open seat contest this time, in a national political environment where the opposite party is unpopular and in charge of government.”

President Biden’s high disapproval rating – 55.2% on Monday, according to FiveThirtyEight – will be something Abrams will need to wrestle with, Gillespie said.

“So, I think a big question is, does her message of providing economic opportunity and her message highlighting things that could be done to improve healthcare access for low-income Georgians, is that going to resonate enough and override people’s concerns that they have about food prices and gas prices and other things that have been really concerning for people this year?” she asked.

State insurance commissioner blasts Allstate’s rate hike

Georgia Insurance Commissioner John King criticizes Allstate, saying customers are not in good hands after the insurer raises auto rates 40% this year.

Georgia Insurance and Safety Fire Commissioner John King on Monday alerted consumers that Allstate Property & Casualty Company has filed an overall statewide automobile rate increase of 25 percent on their Georgia policyholders.

“I am angry and disappointed that Allstate has chosen to exploit a loophole in state law to implement such a substantial increase in costs on hardworking Georgians when families are already struggling with historic inflation everywhere from the gas pump to the grocery store,” said Commissioner King.

According to King, this latest increase means Allstate has bypassed his office to raise overall rates in Georgia by 40 percent this calendar year. In response, King has begun conversations with legislative leaders regarding changes to state law to give the insurance commissioner’s office additional authority to protect consumers from what he describes as such “inexcusable actions.”

Under Georgia’s dual rate filing system governing automobile insurance rates established in Georgia state law, the insurance commissioner only has the authority to approve or disapprove minimum limits policy filings, while all other filings can go into effect immediately under what is known as “file and use.” The latest rate increase filed by Allstate falls into that category.

This rate increase will go into effect for new Allstate customers on September 12, while current customers will see the increase on their renewals beginning October 16.

King encourages Georgia policyholders to reach out to Allstate to discuss the reasons for the increase and the options available to them. Allstate may be reached by telephone at 1-800- 255-7828, online at www.allstate.com, or on Twitter at @allstate.