Entries from August 2010
Dr. Charles Uhl
JEFFERSON – Dr. Charles H. Uhl, 92, formerly of Ithaca, N.Y., died Sunday, August 29, 2010. He was born on May 28, 1918, in Schenectady, N.Y., the son of the late Harry C. and Florence Haupt Uhl. He served in the United States Navy during World War II and was a Professor of Plant Biology with Cornell University for 50 years. While at Cornell ...
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Sue Hutchinson Clary
JEFFERSON - Ms. Sue Hutchinson Clary, 64, of Hidden Lakes Trail, Jefferson, died Sunday, August 29, 2010, at the residence of her sister in Martinez. A native of Thomson, she had made Jefferson her home since 2000. She was a retired dental hygienist and a homemaker. She was an active member of the Jefferson United Methodist Church and the Pilot ...
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James Howard Dobbs
CLEVELAND – James Howard Dobbs, 60, died Wednesday, August 25, 1010, at his residence following a brief illness. Born on November 26, 1949, in Jackson County, he was the son of the late Berlin and Mary Frances Dobbs. Mr. Dobbs was preceded in death by a son, Benjamin Dobbs. Survivors include his wife, Dale Dobbs, Cleveland; sons, Brad Dobbs, ...
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Daniel Matthews
HULL – Daniel Matthews, 61, died Friday, August 27, 2010, at Athens Regional Medical Center in Athens. Born in Marietta, he was the son of Claudia Eubanks Matthews of Commerce and the late Buck Matthews. He was retired from Jackson EMC and employed at City Tire in Commerce. Mr. Matthews was a veteran having served in the United States Army ...
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Roy Dewitt Sears
FRANKLIN SPRINGS – Roy Dewitt Sears, 59, died Wednesday, August 25, 2010, at the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta. Born in Commerce, he was the son of the late Lloyd and Annie Sue Lockman Sears. Mr. Sears was preceded in death by a son, Dewitt Sears. Survivors include children, Maranda Massey, Tammy Sears, Justin Sears and Lee Sears; ...
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Tommy Garrish
ALTO – Tommy Edward Garrish, 81, died Sunday, August 29, 2010, at Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Hall County. Born on November 22, 1928, in Hall County, he was the son of the late Vadie Wilkerson and Cora Belle Chastain Garrish. He was a retired poultry farmer and was of the Baptist denomination. Mr. Garrish was preceded in death by his ...
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Blocked FG denies CHS in fourth-straight loss to JHS
Jefferson’s Zach Allen blocked Josh Swistak’s 37-yard field goal attempt as time expired Friday to preserve a 17-14 Dragon victory and give Jefferson its fourth straight win over Commerce. Commerce lost despite rushing for 271 yards. Most of that came via a stellar night from quarterback Cody Streetman, who ran wild with 185 yards on 32 ...
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Eagles Fall To White Co. 21-14
The East Jackson Eagles fell just short in their season opener, falling to the Warriors of White County 21-14. After scoring early, the Eagles would carry a 7-0 advantage out of the first quarter. White County would come back to tie the game early in the second quarter, and would score again after recovering an East Jackson fumble with just ...
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First town hall meeting held to promote SPLOST extension
Fewer than 50 people turned out last Wednesday morning (Aug. 18) for the first of several “town hall meetings” promoting the Nov. 2 passage of the special purpose local option sales tax.
Virtually all of the attendees were representatives of the Jackson County Area Chamber of Commerce, which is leading the promotional effort, or the county and municipal governments that would spend the proceeds of the fifth round of the sales tax.
At stake is $47.5 million to be collected over six years if the referendum passes. Jackson County also collects a one-cent local option sales tax (LOST) that is permanent and a one-cent education sales tax that is subject to periodic voter renewal.
The chamber and a political action committee it created called “Citizens for a Better Jackson County” intend to hold meetings in every town in the county in support of the tax. Keith Ariail, Commerce, chairs the Citizens for a Better Jackson County. He is also a director of the chamber.
Chamber president Shane Short used slides to illustrate several points that will likely be repeated in all of the town hall meetings:
•that past SPLOSTs have been well spent
•local governments have extensive capital needs
•a failure to pass the SPLOST will lead to an increase in property taxes
•a sales tax is a “fair” tax because everyone pays it equally
•an estimated 40 percent of the tax will be paid by people from outside the county who shop in Jackson
•a system of accountability will be instituted to make sure all SPLOST money is spent as promised
Short’s presentation touched briefly on what the current SPLOST 4 tax accomplished. Thus far 86.4 percent of the projected revenue has been received, Short said. He pointed out that the county’s portion helped pay off the jail, build a health clinic in Commerce, pay for road and recreation projects, build the new fire training facility, support local libraries and lay miles of county water lines.
That tax will expire June 30. If voters pass the Nov. 2 referendum, SPLOST 5 will begin July 1.
Short also went into some detail as to how each of the governments plans to spend its portion of SPLOST 5. Jackson County, for example, will spend 70 percent of its $33.7 million share to pay off the debt on the jail. It would also build two satellite EMS buildings (in Commerce and Braselton), finance road improvements and pay for land for a new county park.
Each of the cities also has a laundry list of projects on which they’d like to spend SPLOST dollars.
But in addition to what the tax would do, Short also offered two other reasons to support the tax: it’s paid in part by nonresidents and without the tax a property tax increase is likely.
He cited “some estimates” showing that up to 40 percent of the sales tax would be paid by nonresidents.
“If that is true, $19 million will be paid by people from outside the county,” Short said.
And, if the referendum fails, the Jackson County Board of Commissioners “may have no choice but to raise taxes,” he added, observing, “The money has to come from somewhere.”
According to Short, the payment on the jail debt equates to 1.72 mills of taxes - an increase of $101.82 for someone with a $150,000 piece of property.
“There really is not a good option for us at this time,” Short said. “We would hate to take that money that is much needed for these projects, especially the jail debt alone, and roll it back into the general fund. And what happens is when we got a large pool of people helping pay for some of current projects, we’ve got a smaller pool of people that would have to pay for it (if SPLOST fails) and that is the property owners of Jackson County. I don’t think that burden is a good burden to put on the property owners of Jackson County.”
Virtually all of the attendees were representatives of the Jackson County Area Chamber of Commerce, which is leading the promotional effort, or the county and municipal governments that would spend the proceeds of the fifth round of the sales tax.
At stake is $47.5 million to be collected over six years if the referendum passes. Jackson County also collects a one-cent local option sales tax (LOST) that is permanent and a one-cent education sales tax that is subject to periodic voter renewal.
The chamber and a political action committee it created called “Citizens for a Better Jackson County” intend to hold meetings in every town in the county in support of the tax. Keith Ariail, Commerce, chairs the Citizens for a Better Jackson County. He is also a director of the chamber.
Chamber president Shane Short used slides to illustrate several points that will likely be repeated in all of the town hall meetings:
•that past SPLOSTs have been well spent
•local governments have extensive capital needs
•a failure to pass the SPLOST will lead to an increase in property taxes
•a sales tax is a “fair” tax because everyone pays it equally
•an estimated 40 percent of the tax will be paid by people from outside the county who shop in Jackson
•a system of accountability will be instituted to make sure all SPLOST money is spent as promised
Short’s presentation touched briefly on what the current SPLOST 4 tax accomplished. Thus far 86.4 percent of the projected revenue has been received, Short said. He pointed out that the county’s portion helped pay off the jail, build a health clinic in Commerce, pay for road and recreation projects, build the new fire training facility, support local libraries and lay miles of county water lines.
That tax will expire June 30. If voters pass the Nov. 2 referendum, SPLOST 5 will begin July 1.
Short also went into some detail as to how each of the governments plans to spend its portion of SPLOST 5. Jackson County, for example, will spend 70 percent of its $33.7 million share to pay off the debt on the jail. It would also build two satellite EMS buildings (in Commerce and Braselton), finance road improvements and pay for land for a new county park.
Each of the cities also has a laundry list of projects on which they’d like to spend SPLOST dollars.
But in addition to what the tax would do, Short also offered two other reasons to support the tax: it’s paid in part by nonresidents and without the tax a property tax increase is likely.
He cited “some estimates” showing that up to 40 percent of the sales tax would be paid by nonresidents.
“If that is true, $19 million will be paid by people from outside the county,” Short said.
And, if the referendum fails, the Jackson County Board of Commissioners “may have no choice but to raise taxes,” he added, observing, “The money has to come from somewhere.”
According to Short, the payment on the jail debt equates to 1.72 mills of taxes - an increase of $101.82 for someone with a $150,000 piece of property.
“There really is not a good option for us at this time,” Short said. “We would hate to take that money that is much needed for these projects, especially the jail debt alone, and roll it back into the general fund. And what happens is when we got a large pool of people helping pay for some of current projects, we’ve got a smaller pool of people that would have to pay for it (if SPLOST fails) and that is the property owners of Jackson County. I don’t think that burden is a good burden to put on the property owners of Jackson County.”
A virtue of ignorance
By Susan Harper
A friend of mine liked to say that he came from a long line of old people. I come from a long line of storytellers and aphorists, among whom I include both of my parents.
You needed a tough hide to live in our house, so we developed one, growing up. For example, my mother used to say that parenting was so challenging that you needed a child you could practice on and throw away. I always figured that would have been me, since I was the oldest — and I expect there were many times when they would’ve loved to be able to throw me away, as I was given to operatic tantrums. My indulgent aunts once spent the better part of a day letting me ride up and down the escalator at Bloomingdale’s. Apparently that was easier for them than persuading me to get off the escalator. [Full Story »]
A friend of mine liked to say that he came from a long line of old people. I come from a long line of storytellers and aphorists, among whom I include both of my parents.
You needed a tough hide to live in our house, so we developed one, growing up. For example, my mother used to say that parenting was so challenging that you needed a child you could practice on and throw away. I always figured that would have been me, since I was the oldest — and I expect there were many times when they would’ve loved to be able to throw me away, as I was given to operatic tantrums. My indulgent aunts once spent the better part of a day letting me ride up and down the escalator at Bloomingdale’s. Apparently that was easier for them than persuading me to get off the escalator. [Full Story »]



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