GwinnettForum | Number 21.63 | Aug. 30, 2022
FRIGID WORK: The last Mystery Photo showed a plethora of locks clamped onto a bridge. Since the photo was taken previously, the locks have come off the bridge, starting earlier this winter. That was cold, cold work! For the solving of the recent Mystery, and where this bridge is located, see below at the Mystery Photo. (Photo from Susan McBrayer, Sugar Hill.)
TODAY’S FOCUS: The packed SCOTUS will eventually be nonpartisan again
EEB PERSPECTIVE: Wheels of justice eventually move, but usually ever so slow
ANOTHER VIEW: New site helps family decisions about college affordability
SPOTLIGHT: Sugarloaf Community Improvement District (CID)
FEEDBACK: Upset that student loan relief stands values on its head
UPCOMING: Johns Creek Symphony announces upcoming professional season
NOTABLE: Suwanee Arts Center plans “Dam Dinner” on Oct. 14
OBITUARIES: Wilson Offie Holmes III
RECOMMENDED: When God Weeps: by Joni Eareckson Tada and Steven Estes
GEORGIA TIDBIT: Elena Diaz-Verson Amos among wealthiest Hispanic women
MYSTERY PHOTO: Let’s scare up a dozen answers to this cream puff photo
LAGNIAPPE: GACS families donates supplies to Meadowcreek Elementary
CALENDAR: Public health specialist to speak at Norcross library on Sept. 8
The packed SCOTUS will eventually be nonpartisan again
“Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. Fool me three times, you must be Susan Collins.”—Author Stephen King, June 26, 2022.
By Jack Bernard, contributing columnist
PEACHTREE CITY, Ga. | Amen, brother Stephen. Tell it like it is.
The new Supreme Court has become something unrecognizable, something that could have been featured in one of your Stephen King’s novels.
Our current Supreme Court (SCOTUS) has been carefully packed by the Republican Party, resulting in right wing extremists controlling the Court… now and for the foreseeable future. But we all knew, including every senator, that they were right-wing jurists when they were nominated and confirmed. Especially look at the last three nominees who were, and still are, an insult to the integrity and reputation of the court (as opposed to respected traditional conservatives like Chief Justice John Roberts).
As we all know by now, all three Trump nominees lied to Congress about overturning Roe v. Wade (which I believe is a legal issue worthy of action in and of itself). And it is not only “I feel misled” GOP U.S. Sen. Susan Collins of Maine who disingenuously states that she was “fooled” by one or more of the last three SCOTUS nominations. U.S. Sen. Lisa (“Vote based on a solid evaluation of her qualifications”) Murkowski of Alaska now claims that she did not know who she was voting for when Justice Barrett was confirmed. In the Democratic party, U.S. Sen. Joe (“I am alarmed”) Manchin hilariously claimed he was also deceived.
How could sophisticated politicians be so naïve? The answer is that they were and are not. They knew what they were doing when they did it. They felt that voting against one or more of the three extremist nominees would bite them come election time. So, they held their noses and voted for them, knowing full well that they were biased and extreme in their views.
The Supreme Court is one of the three branches of our government enshrined in our Constitution. The Executive branch and Congress are elected and meant to be partisan, but SCOTUS is by design non-political. Its decisions are to be based on the long-standing legal principles of precedent and stare decisis. And throughout its history, the Court has been highly respected because of its non-political nature. That is, with the exception of the current court.
In its actions on abortion, gun control, voting rights and other hot social issues, the current version of the Court has ignored precedent. SCOTUS has found… in nonsensical, inconsistent, poorly thought-out, clearly ideological opinions… that the other Supreme Courts over the last 50 or 100 hundred years were somehow awfully wrong in their findings.
Now, thanks to Trump/McConnell and several gutless wonders in the Senate (note – both parties are disingenuous, about the only bipartisan thing in the Senate), we have a packed Supreme Court. It is an extremist Court that clearly does not represent the will of the American people regarding abortion, gun control and many other core social issues, as numerous surveys have shown.
And, it has clearly lost the respect of our citizens who now see it as a highly partisan body.
It took conservatives, like wily Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, many decades to pack the Court. But they persevered and successfully did so.
Moderates and progressives must not lose faith in our political system, as biased as it is towards smaller, redder states. They must get out the vote, which will eventually result in returning the Court to become an unbiased, nonpolitical institution.
Wheels of justice eventually move, but usually ever so slow
By Elliott Brack
Editor and Publisher, GwinnettForum
AUG. 30, 2022 | The wheels of progress sometimes turn mighty slowly. Yet every now and then, the wheel moves a little so that when changes arrive, it sometimes surprises us.
Earlier this year, the Supreme Court restricted the ability of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ruling to regulate climate change. That thwarted the Biden Administration. But help was soon to be on the way.
It came at the recently passed climate change legislation. It has in it specific language addressing the Court’s ruling to rein in EPA. The new law defines carbon dioxide produced by the burning of fossil fuels as an “air pollutant,” giving the EPA room to regulate it. This is considered a landmark case, in which the Congress clarified what it considered a poor Supreme Court decision.
That’s the same approach that some people are anticipating that the Congress will take some day…..who knows when….on the abortion question. With a majority of the American people opposed to the way the Supreme Court looks upon abortion, relief now focuses on the Congress. It can legislate whether a woman has a right to determine what happens to her body. Many feel it’s a basic right that the Court disregarded, which needs correcting through legislation.
You see many other cases where change comes, but not so quickly.
In Georgia last week, the two-year-old case of the death of Rayshard Brooks found new light after intensive investigation. A hearing resulted in exoneration of the two police officers involved in the killing. Extensive footage of the case was gone over in great detail by the investigators, one of whom was former Gwinnett Attorney General Danny Porter.
Pete Skandalakis, executive director of the Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council of Georgia, who led the investigation, says he believes Officer Garrett Rolfe, who shot and killed Brooks in June 2020, acted appropriately. He also said the second officer involved in the encounter, Officer Devin Brosnan, will not be charged.
“Given the quickly changing circumstances, was it objectively reasonable that he used deadly force? And we conclude it was,” Skandalakis said.
Members of Brooks family may not be satisfied with the ruling. Yet government officials went into great detail, and cost, to thoroughly review the case, and drew an unequivocal conclusion.
This investigation moved rather quickly, concluding in two years.
Yet another case getting a decision recently in Gwinnett County was from several years back, eight years ago, showing justice moving slowly. And it may not be over. This case involved a Ford pickup which killed two Georgians in 2014 in a rollover accident. Jurors awarded a record $1.7 billion punitive verdict against the Ford Motor Company, after awarding the family of the victims $24 million the day before for wrongful death, pain and suffering. (The jury apportioned 30 percent of the damages against Pep Boys, a tire distributor that installed the wrong size tires on the 2002 F-250 truck in 2010.)
Virtually the time the outcome was announced, Ford Motor Company was saying that it would appeal the verdict, meaning more delays in the final outcome. Meanwhile, interest accrues on the judgment, at an enormous rate. Ford should hope the appeal moves quickly.
Also moving at a slow pace is the nation’s effort to bring to light all the allegations involving the 2020 election. The pace seems turtle-like. Citizens probably will not know any conclusions before the midterm elections.
What these unrelated cases show is that our country continues to be ruled by reason, fact and law, if ever so slowly. Time will tell.
- Have a comment? Send to: elliott@brack.net
New site helps family decisions about college affordability
By Lance Wallace
ATLANTA, Ga. | The University System of Georgia (USG) is launching a new tool to help students and families work through critical decisions about college affordability and value.
The new website, Georgia Degrees Pay, provides an array of public data on Georgia’s 26 public colleges and universities. It allows comparisons about the overall cost to attend college, majors and fields of study, average student borrowing and average career earnings of USG graduates.
The comprehensive website features a link to USG’s “Find Your School” web page, where potential students can enter information about themselves and a list of USG institutions that meet their criteria will be generated for them. Georgia Degrees Pay also includes links to information about scholarships, online degrees, online courses and student support efforts such as Complete College Georgia, Affordable Learning Georgia and eCampus, among others.
The tools were developed by the Carl Vinson Institute of Government at the University of Georgia in collaboration with members of the USG Research and Policy Analysis and Communications teams.
Each tool allows users to compare colleges and universities on an array of statistics. For example, in the cost of attendance tool, users can compare tuition and mandatory fees, total cost of attendance, average scholarships and grants and net price.
They can also find student loan outcomes such as the percentage of students who borrow each year, the average amount borrowed each year, the percentage of graduates who have any debt from pursuing their bachelor’s degree, the average amount borrowed among bachelor’s degree graduates, the percentage of graduates who have any debt from pursuing their associate degree, average amount borrowed among associate degree graduates and the loan default rate for graduates.
The website’s new future earnings tool allows users to see the average earnings of USG graduates in Georgia after they receive their degree, as well as earnings for different majors, earnings by alumni from different institutions and a range of earnings by academic area for one, five and 10 years after graduation.
The student success tool gives users the ability to compare the makeup of the student body at two institutions as well as the percentage of students who continue into their second year, the percentage who graduate and how long on average it takes them to finish their degree. The tool also compares the percentage of Georgia students who earn and retain Georgia’s renowned HOPE and Zell Miller scholarships.
For the best results with the comparative tools, users are encouraged to compare institutions from the same sector. USG’s 26 institutions fall into four general sectors – research universities, comprehensive universities, state universities and state colleges – each with unique missions, requirements and academic programs to meet a range of student needs across the state.
- Have a comment? Send to: elliott@brack.net
Sugarloaf CID
Today we welcome a new sponsor. It is the Sugarloaf Community Improvement District (CID). The public spiritedness of our sponsors allows us to bring GwinnettForum.com to you at no cost to readers. The Sugarloaf Community Improvement District (CID) was formed in 2016 to ensure the long-term success of Gwinnett County’s premier business and entertainment district. This is the home to the Gas South District, a regional destination that attracts over a million visitors a year. The CID is also part of one of the region’s top ten employment centers, with 971 businesses and 16,661 employees. Since its formation, the CID has leveraged over $10 million in funding, advanced projects to help make the district safe, attractive, and connected, and expanded the CID to more than five times its initial value.
- To learn more, visit its web site at www.sugarloafcid.org.
- For a list of other sponsors of this forum, click here.
Upset that student loan relief stands values on its head
Editor, the Forum:
Yes, I am furious at Biden’s announcement of student loan relief. Despite colleges and universities irresponsibly pushing loans like crack dealers, each student signed and agreed to pay their loan back with interest. This is a kick in the teeth to the millions of us who worked hard and sacrificed much to pay our own way and that of our children.
Like so much that has happened during and after the 2020 presidential election, student loan relief stands our democracy and values on its head by changing the rules mid-course to benefit a select group. Like changing the voting rules to allow unvalidated mail-in ballots, offering a benefit to a select group based on choices and conditions in the past, and excluding others who followed the rules from the benefit.
Rules should be debated, agreed, and followed by all. That is what gives every citizen a “bite at the apple.” Changing the rules mid-course or retroactively to benefit a select group erodes faith in the system and will cause civil unrest.
– Joe Briggs, Suwanee
Ah, yes, buying votes can come from any side of the aisle
Editor, the Forum:
This is regarding Gov. Brian Kemp’s checks to taxpayers and Biden’s student debt relief. Appreciate your acknowledgement that buying votes is a function of the political class and not specific to a given political party.
– Randy Brunson, Duluth
Send us your thoughts: We encourage you to send us your letters and thoughts on issues raised in GwinnettForum. Please limit comments to 300 words, and include your hometown. The views of letters are the opinion of the contributor. We reserve the right to edit for clarity and length. Send feedback and letters to: elliott@brack.net.
Johns Creek Symphony announces coming season
Johns Creek Symphony Orchestra, a professional symphonic orchestra is announcing its upcoming 2022-23 concert series entitled Resilient Spirit, Resounding Season.
While emerging from the challenges of the pandemic, Johns Creek Symphony Orchestra was moved by the diverse ages of concert goers, generous investments from new area donors and unwavering musical appreciation from audiences near and far. As a result, the orchestra has rebranded to better represent and amplify North Georgia’s enduring culture of tenacity, unity and strength.
Johns Creek Symphony Orchestra’s 2022-23 Season schedule includes:
- October 1 at 7 p.m. – A Night of Symphonic Jazz – Enjoy the musical stylings of Duke Ellington, Cole Porter, Glenn Miller and more in a free concert at Johns Creek’s Newtown Park, 3150 Old Alabama Road, Johns Creek. Gates open at 6 p.m.
- November 12 at 7:30 p.m. – A Veterans Day Salute – Celebrate the cherished holiday with a patriotic homage to our veterans, featuring alto soloist Stacey Holliday of the United States Air Force Band’s Singing Sergeants. (This and all of the concerts below will be at the Johns Creek United Methodist Church, 11180 Medlock Bridge Road in Johns Creek.
- December 17 at 2:30 p.m. – A Kids’ Christmas – Join in the holiday fun at this sensory-friendly concert that the whole family can enjoy.
- December 17 at 7:30 p.m. – Christmas Pops – Johns Creek’s favorite holiday tradition with Banks and Shane and the Johns Creek Chorale.
- March 25 at 7:30 p.m. – On Broadway – Delight in Broadway’s best with this tribute to the renowned songs of musical theater, featuring soprano Jessamyn Anderson.
- May 6 at 7:30 p.m. – With One Accord – Experience the musical talents of seasoned professionals and promising young musicians in this side-by-side performance with students from Northview High School.
Linda Brill, executive director of the Johns Creek Symphony Orchestra, says: “Our diverse audiences are cultured patrons of the arts who understand the inspirational power of the human spirit. We wanted our new brand and the forthcoming concert series to reflect that understanding in a new and timeless fashion
Subscriptions for the new season range from $55-$120, and single tickets will range from $7.50 to $47. To buy individual concert tickets, purchase season passes, or explore sponsorship opportunities, visit johnscreeksymphony.org or call 678-748-5802.
Suwanee Arts Center plans “Dam Dinner” on Oct. 14
Suwanee Arts Center, a non-profit art organization located in Suwanee Town Center, will hold a benefit event called the “Dam Dinner, ” a tongue-in-cheek name, poking fun at the fact that the event will be held on the Dam at Sims Lake Park. The park is located at 4600 Suwanee Dam Road, in Suwanee. The dinner will take place on October 14, 2022 from 6 until10 p.m.
The event is the brainchild of Suwanee Arts Center’s Board of Directors President Sheila Crumrine. “At first the name Dam Dinner was a nickname we used to refer to the dinner on the dam at Sims Lake Park,” says Crumrine. “The board kicked around other names but eventually we realized that an event called the Dam Dinner would get people’s attention.”
The dinner event will raise awareness and garner support for local artists and the Suwanee Arts Center. The event promises to be an eclectic evening of music, entertainment, dinner and drinks. It will include live musical entertainment, a curated chef experience, and a blind date book and wine pull. Attendees will be treated to a “blossoming” surprise at the end of the evening.
- Tickets to the event can be purchased by visiting SuwaneeArtsCenter.org. For further information call (678) 878-2818 or email info@suwaneeartscenter.org. Or visit www.suwaneeartscenter.org/damdinner
Purple Pansies scholarship winner attending Gwinnett Tech
Recent Purple Pansies scholarship recipient Madeline Jacobson attends Gwinnett Technical College where she is pursuing a degree in nursing. Purple Pansies awarded Madeline with a scholarship to honor her resilience and support her bright future. Madeline’s father was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer when she was 14. The difficulty of dealing with such a progressive disease and constant hospitalizations not only matured Madeline but provided her a direction in life. While attending college, Madeline also works at Emory Johns Creek Hospital as an ICU technician. Purple Pansies is located at 1595 Peachtree Parkway, Suite 204-360, in Cumming, Ga. It has raised over $3 million to fund research in pancreatic cancer.
- Have a comment? Send to: elliott@brack.net
Wilson Offie Holmes III
Wilson Offie Holmes III, Norcross, passed away on Sunday, August 21, 2022 at Northside Hospital Gwinnett at Duluth. He was 74. He was born in Greenwood, S.C. He was preceded in death by his parents, Offie Holmes Jr and Estelle Wiley (family name) Holmes.
Offie was married to Martha Gilbert Holmes of Duluth for 49 years, who survives, as do two sons, Daniel Gilbert Holmes of Norcross and John Travis Reynolds of Canton and one granddaughter, Taylor Reynolds, Milton, Fla..
After graduating from Southwest Dekalb High School, Offie attended Reinhardt College in Waleska. He was in real estate, and later worked for and retired from Complete Auto Transit. After that he was an independent owner/operator for several years. He was a member of the Georgia National Guard for six years.
There will be a Celebration of Life on Friday, September 9, 2022 at 11a.m. at Christ Episcopal Church Youth Center at 400 Holcomb Bridge Road, Norcross, Ga. Instead of flowers, if you choose, please make a donation to St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital, 262 Danny Thomas Place, Memphis, TN 38105, or you can make a donation online.
When God Weeps: by Joni Eareckson Tada and Steven Estes
From Susan J. Harris, Stone Mountain: Joni Eareckson Tada’s life is forever changed when she takes a dive on a summer day in 1967. Transformed from an active and eager teenager, she becomes a quadriplegic confined to a wheelchair. In this book, the co-authors use biblical references that point the way to why the unthinkable sometimes happens. Plumbing the depths of doubt, anger, depression, and hopelessness, the reader will gain a glimpse of the mysterious ways of life and how to cope. There are three sections to this book including the following: ‘Who is God?’, ‘What is He Up to?’, and ‘How Can I Hang On?’ Section four is a series of Appendices, one of which poses the question, ‘Can God Experience Grief?’ The biblical references throughout the text and in the appendices provide a wealth of spiritual richness and fodder for prayer and contemplation. A title to be read and lived through more than once. The full title is When God Weeps: Why Our Sufferings Matter to the Almighty
An invitation: what books, restaurants, movies or web sites have you enjoyed recently? Send us your recent selection, along with a short paragraph (150 words) as to why you liked this, plus what you plan to visit or read next. Send to: elliott@brack.net
Diaz-Verson Amos among wealthiest Hispanic women
Philanthropist Elena Diaz-Verson Amos, a Cuban immigrant, was active in educational, philanthropic, and political causes and dedicated to increasing intercultural understanding. Her husband, John Amos, founded the Aflac insurance company in Columbus in 1955. In 1997 the publication Hispanic Business called her the wealthiest Hispanic woman in the United States.
Amos was born in 1926 in Havana, Cuba, to Teresa Bana and Salvador Diaz-Verson, an author and journalist who had also been an anti-communist activist and, at one point, chief of Cuba’s national police. In 1944 she came to the United States as an exchange student at the University of Miami in Florida, where she met John Amos. The couple married and had two children, John Shelby and Maria Teresa.
In 1954 the Amos family moved to Jacksonville, Florida, where John Amos, an attorney, was a partner in the Presidential Insurance Company. Shortly thereafter, he decided to start his own company, and in 1955 the Amoses moved again, to Columbus, Georgia, where John Amos and his brothers founded the American Family Life Assurance Company, which later became known as Aflac.
Throughout her husband’s career, Amos was an active corporate spouse and community volunteer. She hosted many business and social gatherings at their home and served on numerous boards.
Amos also engaged in educational activities in Columbus, particularly those that increased knowledge about Latin America. With her husband, she lobbied the U.S. Army to relocate the School of the Americas, a training center for Latin American military officers and police, to Fort Benning. The school opened in Columbus in 1984 and remains in existence under a new name, the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation.
After her husband’s death in 1990, Amos became increasingly involved in anti-Castro advocacy and humanitarian causes involving Cuba. She served as a director of the Cuban American Foundation of Miami and the Valladares Foundation, a human rights organization.
Amos died on May 3, 2000, of complications from a stroke. The Columbus Ledger-Enquirer eulogized her as “an angel to many in [the] community.” This tradition of service continues through the John Beverly Amos and Elena Diaz-Verson Amos Foundation, which continues to support educational, cultural, and humanitarian causes in Georgia and beyond.
- To view the Georgia Encyclopedia article online, go to https://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org
Let’s scare up a dozen correct answers for cream puff photo
While having some difficult Mystery Photos lately, this one ought to be a cream puff. Let’s see if at least a dozen readers can identify this mystery. If you know this picture, join others in sending in your answer to elliott@brack.net, and include your hometown.
Howard Hoffman, Berkeley Lake, quickly spotted the recent mystery: “I think the mystery photo is Roberto Clemente bridge in Pittsburgh by PNC Park…my hometown. We used to see
the great Roberto Clemente play many times when my little league games were played behind Forbes Field.” The photo came from Taylor Walker of Lawrenceville.
Several readers thought they nailed this photo, remembering a bridge with locks on it in Paris.
George Graf of Palmyra, Va. wrote: “This is a view of the city of Pittsburgh, Penn., from the Roberto Clemente Bridge. Pittsburgh is my hometown, being born and raised in the city until being drafted by the U.S. Army during my senior year in college. Pittsburgh was a smokey city back in my childhood days and at night I could see the red glow from the many steel mills around the area out my bedroom window. Now it is a clean city which went through a renaissance period to develop new and cleaner industries.
“I remember going to baseball games during the 1950’s and 1960’s at old Forbes Field (c. 1909) and seeing Roberto Clemente play right field for our beloved Pirates baseball team. After being demolished, the cookie-cutter ThreeRivers Stadium was built in 1970. The new stadium that replaced Three Rivers is now beautiful PNC Park. The Roberto Clemente Bridge is one of three bridges built between 1924 and 1928 and nicknamed the “Three Sisters”. One is named in honor of Clemente, another for our native son, Andy Warhol, and the other for American marine biologist, writer, and conservationist Rachel Louise Carson.”
Allan Peel of San Antonio, Texas, gave detail of the locks on the bridge: “The Roberto Clemente Bridge crosses the Allegheny River in Pittsburgh. Located next to the PNC Park, the photo was shot from along the pedestrian walkway on the west side at the center of the bridge, which has the largest concentration of the 11,000 ‘love locks’ attached to the sides of the walkway. The locks are currently being removed, one-by-one, using bolt cutters, as part of a $34.4 million bridge rehabilitation project that started on Feb 14, 2022 and will continue through December 2023.
“They started removing the ‘love locks’ on Valentine’s Day 2022! How many promises of eternal love are being destroyed? How many hearts are being broken? But all is not lost, since the locks are being donated to the Industrial Arts Workshop, where students will re-purpose the locks into a new sculpture, with the intention of keeping alive the “hopes and dreams” of all the folks who put their time and energy to attach locks to the bridge.”
Susan McBrayer of Sugar Hill sent along a photo of the locks being removed one cold day.
GACS families donate supplies to Meadowcreek Elementary
Greater Atlanta Christian School families have donated school supplies such as pencils, crayons, notebooks, folders, and disinfecting wipes, for the teachers and students of neighboring Meadowcreek Elementary School. Over 200 individuals attended the service event to prepare the supplies, donated by GAC families, for delivery to 40 classrooms at Meadowcreek Elementary.
Meet the author: A talk with Professor Polly J. Price will be Thursday, Sept. 8 at 7 p.m. at the Norcross Public Library. She is a Public Health Law Scholar who will discuss her new book Plagues in the Nation. Her book sheds light on the U.S. government’s response to epidemics through history–with larger conclusions about COVID-19 and reforms needed before the next plague.
The 21st British Car Fayre will be Saturday, Sept. 10 in downtown Historic Norcross, from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. Join as many as 15,000 who visit this annual event, showing British automobiles and motorcycles from the past. The featured vehicle this year is a 2022 Land Rover. There will be awards, raffle and “boot” sale, with all earnings going to the Amanda Riley Foundation. Visit https://www.atlantabritishcarfayre.com for more details.
Put on your calendar: The 43rd Annual Elisha Winn Fair will be Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 1-2, at the Elisha Winn House, Gwinnett’s birthplace, at 908 Dacula Road in Dacula. Enjoy a living history exhibit, good food, craft vendors, music, blacksmithing, weaving, spinning and military enactors. The fair is sponsored by the Gwinnett Historical Society.
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