NEW for 1/13: On air travel, Georgia football, teacher pay

GwinnettForum  |  Number 22.04, Jan. 13, 2023

LAWRENCEVILLE UPGRADING: Moody’s Investors Service has upgraded the City of Lawrenceville’s general obligation unlimited tax rating to Aa2 from Aa3. Concurrently, Moody’s has assigned an Aa2 issuer rating to the city. The issuer rating reflects the city’s ability to repay debt and debt-like obligations without consideration of any pledge, security, or structural features. The rating applies to revenue bonds that were issued by the Lawrenceville Building Authority, and backed by the city. Lawrenceville has about $91 million in outstanding debt as of June 3, 2021. This is the second recent upgrade of Lawrenceville’s financial position. In 2019, Standard and Poor’s raised the city’s rate from AA (minus) to AA.

IN THIS EDITION

TODAY’S FOCUS: Sometimes, travel by air can be delayed…and frustrating
EEB PERSPECTIVE: Georgia made three mistakes in football championship game
ANOTHER VIEW: Our children benefit when Georgia teaches are paid better
SPOTLIGHT: Howard Brothers
FEEDBACK: Forum is dead-on about naming of Army installations
UPCOMING: Gwinnett Stripers seeking candidates to sing National Anthem
NOTABLE: Alexandra Edgar wins SW Chamber Character Award
OBITUARIES: Marvin M. Wyatt Jr.
RECOMMENDED: 4:50 from Paddington by Agatha Christie
GEORGIA TIDBIT: Former state capital is named for Gov. John Milledge
MYSTERY PHOTO: Classical building is this edition’s mystery
LAGNIAPPE: DAR wreath ceremony honors those at East Shadowlawn site
CALENDAR: Writer’s workshop coming to Norcross Public Library

TODAY’S FOCUS

Sometimes, travel by air can be delayed … and frustrating

By Karen Harris

STONE MOUNTAIN, Ga.  |  Before I started my holiday vacation to Dayton, Ohio, I asked God to stretch my heart. I wanted to have a beautiful and authentic time with my sisters, mother and dad, even though dramatic moments typically can come out at holiday time. 

Harris

In addition to Christmas, we were celebrating Dad’s 98 birthday. After Christmas we learned that my sister’s long time companion was going to join us for Dad’s birthday. I thought that was nice and the holiday visit went well. Soon my  sister and I were off back to New York and Atlanta. Her trip went along fine. 

My flight out of Dayton was at 4:45 p.m. on Delta with a projected arrival at 6:45.  As I walked into the airport, I had a bad feeling. Something felt amiss. I checked my bag and got to the concourse. 

We boarded at 4:15  and nothing happened. Bad weather in Atlanta, and we set off at 5:20. But at  7:30 p.m., we were being diverted to Nashville to refuel since the weather was still bad in Atlanta. We finally arrived in  Atlanta by 9:15.  My bag would be at carousel 2. The terminal was teeming with people. There was no notification of my flight on carousel 2. 

I walked up and down the terminal from carousel 1 to 9 and no flight from Dayton or Nashville was listed. A  long line was forming at the baggage assistance site. I remember saying to myself “Please I don’t need this!” 

I finally got a young woman to help me, and she scanned my baggage slip. She asked if Atlanta was my final stop and I said yes. She said ”Let me check. I will be right back.” I  had a fear that they had mixed my bag up with passengers who had connections and it got misplaced. She got back with me and said that my bag was in pier 7(downstairs), and so far had not been sent to the carousel. 

She said I would have to get in the line to request my bag to be  sent up! I quietly got in line along with the 100 people there. 

By then it was 10:40, and I waited until 11:20 to be helped. It would take an hour or more before my bag would be brought up. I elected to wait because I had no confidence about it being delivered to my home.

There were about 20 of us at Oversize Baggage waiting for our bags. By now my back was starting to hurt as there was no place to sit near Baggage Claim. I actually sat for a brief time on carousel 9. 

At 12:55 a.m. I got my bag. I was tired and honestly hungry because the last I had eaten was a brief snack with dad and my Dayton sister at 2:30 p.m. 

Next step was to call for an Uber ride. One could get me at 1:30.a.m. Finally, the long walk to the rideshare off of Terminal North. The Uber driver was excellent and I arrived home at 2 a.m. 

I was so tired I dropped the bag and just went to bed. I woke up at 7:30 and cried for about five  minutes. It was harrowing, but I learned I could get through a really tough situation for which I had no previous experience. 

Finally, if you pray to be moved to a new place in your heart and soul…it will happen. It won’t be easy, but you will get to the other side. Now,  Happy New Year!

EEB PERSPECTIVE

Georgia made 3 mistakes in the college championship game

Sanford Stadium in Athens; via Wikipedia.

By Elliott Brack
Editor and Publisher, GwinnettForum

JAN. 13, 2023  |  Most Georgians, even us stalwart Georgia Tech fans, must be elated at the way the Georgia Bulldogs dominated the college championship game in defeating Texas Christian University 65-7.  Yes, I’ll admit I was worried about playing TCU, for the manner it had shown in its 13-0 regular season, often coming back to win every game.

Yet Georgia played an almost perfect game. We saw Georgia make three mistakes.

First, it let a TCU player get behind the defense in the first quarter, and this play went for a large gain.

Second, a few plays later, TCU scored a touchdown on a short quarterback run. But that was to be its only score.

Georgia’s third error was missing the extra point after Georgia’s ninth touchdown.

But hey, nobody’s perfect.

Some diehards may say that the Georgia team was running up the score.  You can charge that off by saying that about all Georgia did was to score on almost every time they had the ball. Football teams don’t hold back. And once freshmen were put in, why, of course, they wanted to score.

And at about every turn, the TCU defense was inept over and over. It could have been worse.

Then we remembered hearing about other blowouts. 

On Dec. 8, 1940, the Chicago Bears trounced the Washington Redskins in the National Football League (NFL) Championship by a score of 73-0, the largest margin of defeat in NFL history. 

The Bears, coached by George Halas, brought a 6-2 record to their regular-season meeting with the Redskins in Washington on Nov. 17, 1940. After Chicago lost 3-7, the Redskins owner, George Preston Marshall, told reporters that Halas and his team were “quitters” and “cry babies.” Halas used Marshall’s words to galvanize his players, and the Bears scored 78 points in its next two games to set up a showdown with the Redskins in the league’s championship game on December 8, also in Washington.

Less than a minute into the game, the Bears’ running back Bill Osmanski ran 68 yards to score the first touchdown. After the Redskins narrowly missed an opportunity to tie the game, the Bears clamped down and began to dominate, leaving the field at halftime with a 28-0 lead. Things only got worse for the Redskins, and by the end of the second half officials were asking Halas not to let his team kick for extra points, as they were running out of footballs after too many had been kicked into the stands.

For playoff games in the NFL, the record for the biggest playoff blowout belongs to the Jacksonville Jaguars, which demolished the Miami Dolphins 62-7 in the AFC Divisional round on Nov.8, 2022.

These are examples, similar to Georgia’s 65-7 blowout over TCU, where a coach, in this case Kirby Smart, used the previous game, the 42-41 squeaky victory over Ohio State, to psychologically challenge his team to play at peak performance in the championship.  It worked!

One more record: Georgia Tech people will tell you about the most lop-sided football game ever. That was on Oct. 7, 1916, between the Cumberland College Bulldogs and the Georgia Tech Engineers on the Engineers’ home field of Grant Field in Atlanta. Georgia Tech defeated the Bulldogs 222–0.

ANOTHER VIEW

Our children benefit when Georgia teaches are paid better

“We are at risk of losing many of these highly qualified educators if we do not take a careful look at the factors contributing to burnout in the profession.”—  Richard Woods, State Superintendent of Schools, June, 2022.

By Jack Bernard, contributing columnist

PEACHTREE CITY, Ga.  |  My wife was a Georgia country girl, raised on a farm in middle Georgia. Her father’s first cousin was the county superintendent of schools, and her uncle was a principal in the north Georgia hills. 

I remember her father, an electrician and plumber, telling me many times that teaching is “an honorable profession.” I agree. In fact, my daughter, son-in-law, brother and sister-in-law are all Georgia public school teachers. But despite what many people incorrectly believe, it is not an easy job. 

With 3,112 openings, Georgia has one of the highest numbers of teacher vacancies in the nation. Of the 37 states reporting, only Florida has more teacher vacancies. Georgia is currently in a pitched battle for teachers with surrounding states which also have vacancies. The South has more openings than any region). Many competing states pay better than Georgia. 

Are Georgia’s teachers happy with their profession? A recent report suggests that they are not. 

And this appears to be a long-standing problem, pre-dating the pandemic which just made things much worse. A 2015 study surveyed over 50,000 teachers and found the new teacher attrition rate to be a startling 44 percent. It also discovered that two thirds of current teachers would not recommend going into the teaching profession to high school graduates. “Why? The report identified three key factors:

  1. Poor teacher evaluation methodologies;
  2. Over-emphasis on misguided testing; and 
  3. Lack of teacher participation in key decision making. 

The state responded by restructuring its testing/evaluation system, providing teacher raises and funding for supplies, and adding an active teacher to the State Board of Education, as an ex-officio member. These positive actions were welcome. But they are insufficient to address the growing teacher retention problem. 

So, what are the existing issues? State School Superintendent, Richard Woods, had the wisdom to establish a Task Force on Teacher Burnout, composed of ten of the top teachers in the state and other key parties. The UGA Institute of Government was assigned to assist them. Their survey and report stated that a key factor is burnout.

I found this report to be an excellent evaluation of where we stand regarding teacher satisfaction and retention. It also makes a multitude of recommendations as to actions to correct our deficiencies. Recommendations include items, such as  reducing class size; cutting down on bureaucracy and redundancies; providing extra pay for added tasks; adding support staff; having higher pay based on longevity; assisting teachers with mentoring;, and strengthening existing mental health programs for both students and teachers. 

The state of Georgia, since it collects more tax than needed, has in the Kemp Administration, returned money to taxpayers.  In effect, this is nothing more than buying their votes. 

A far better way to use the state surplus would be to  focus on reducing  the rate of attrition of our public-school teachers. It’s not real complicated.  Just pay ‘em more! 

In the long run, with dedicated, long term teachers who are well qualified and well paid, our children will benefit greatly.

 IN THE SPOTLIGHT

Howard Brothers

The public spiritedness of our underwriters allows us to bring GwinnettForum.com to you at no cost to readers. Today’s sponsor is Howard Brothers Outdoor Power Equipment and Hardware.  John and Doug Howard are the “brothers” in Howard Brothers. This family-owned business was started by their dad, and now John and Doug’s children are helping to lead in the business. Howard Brothers has locations in Alpharetta, Athens, Doraville, Duluth, Lula and Oakwood. They specialize in hardware, outdoor power equipment and parts and service.  Howard Brothers are authorized dealers of STIHL, Exmark, Honda, Echo, and other well known brands in the green industry. Howard Brothers is also an authorized Big Green Egg dealer, and is one of the only Platinum Traeger Grill dealers in the state of Georgia.

  • For a list of other sponsors of this forum, click here. 

FEEDBACK

Forum is dead-on about naming of Army installations

Editor, the Forum: 

You are so correct on the naming of the military bases issue.   How in the world could a country name military bases after men who fought a war to overthrow that country?

I am a lifelong Georgian, raised on the Lost Cause mythology.  So much of what we were taught about history in school was simply wrong. I had to learn the truth on my own, which I’ve been doing over the past 40 years. Hopefully as time goes on, people will become more aware of the facts of history and less connected to the emotions and errors of the past. 

– Darrell Pruitt, Sugar Hill 

House wastes time on IRS bill, which is DOA in Senate

Editor, the Forum: 

 The Republican-majority House of Representatives passed its first bill, which is dead on arrival in the Senate not to mention if it ever were to get to the president. Not only is it misguided, it’s merely performative. What a way to ignore the responsibilities of the House! 

The bill repeals recent funding for IRS staffing to fulfill its federal tax administration responsibilities over the next ten years. We need an agency to administer the federal tax laws, collect taxes due, and put funds into the United States Treasury. How else will the country pay its bills, especially those due to Americans entitled to Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, FEMA benefits after disasters, etc.?

 House leaders say the repeal would save regular Americans from IRS harassment to make them pay more taxes than they really owe. However, repeal benefits mostly wealthy individuals and corporations that have the ability to evade taxes by intentionally understating their taxes and avoiding IRS audits due to understaffing. 

 – Michael Wood, Peachtree Corners

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.

UPCOMING

Gwinnett Stripers seeking candidates to sing National Anthem

The Gwinnett Stripers are again launching a virtual search for National Anthem performers.

 All interested singers, vocal groups (five singers or less), and musicians can send a digital submission (video or audio) of their acapella or unaccompanied performance of the National Anthem to info@gostripers.com by January 31.

 Candidates will be judged on tone, pace (90 seconds or less), and clarity. Beginning in February, top candidates will be invited to participate in virtual auditions. No in-person auditions will be held. Those who have been chosen from the virtual auditions will be contacted to schedule a date to sing the National Anthem during the 2023 season.

Gwinnett Stripers’ Opening Night at Coolray Field is set for Friday, March 31 vs. Jacksonville. Memberships for 2023 are on sale now by calling the Coolray Field Ticket Office at 678-277-0340. For more information, visit GoStripers.com/memberships.

Gwinnett library board elected Wu as its new chairman

The Gwinnett County Public Library marked another milestone in its nearly 100-year history when its Board of Trustees elected longtime board member Jonathan “JT” Wu as the chairman of the library system. Wu is the vice president of Corporate Development for Meadowlark Title, and the founder of the national childhood literacy nonprofit, Preface. Wu, who lives in Norcross, is also the first Asian American to hold the position. He is a graduate of Princeton University.

The board names Adriana Andrade of Peachtree Corners as vice chair.

Town of Braselton to launch Braselton Bee-Team Jan. 24

The Braselton Community Development Office announces the launch of its new volunteer workforce program – the Braselton Bee-Team. 

The B- Team (for short) will be comprised of community members who share a desire to help promote and support events, projects and promotions. B-Team members will serve as ambassadors during large events as well as working behind the scenes directly with staff and other community leaders and organizers.

Those who want to connect and help make a difference in the community are invited to the Braselton Civic Center on Tuesday, January 24, at 6:30 p.m. attend this informational meeting.  They will learn how to plug in talents and skills and share their love for Braselton! B-Team members should be at least 14 years old.

NOTABLE

Edgar wins SW Chamber Character Award

The Southwest Gwinnett Chamber has presented its Character Award to Wesleyan School’s Alexander Edgar. The award was created to recognize outstanding students whose attitudes and actions embody the organization’s mission, passion, and commitment to excellence and community action. High School Principal Joseph Koch says: “Alexandra is a leader because of her kindness to others, ability to follow through with commitments, and setting positive examples.” She has focused her education on attending the Naval Academy or a college where she can participate in Navy ROTC with her goal to join the Navy following graduation.  From left are Joseph Koch; Jennifer Edgar; Alexandra Edgar; James Edgar; and William Corbin, City of Norcross Economic Development Director.

OBITUARIES

Marvin M. Wyatt Jr.

Marvin Mervin Wyatt, Jr., 75, passed away peacefully on Monday, January 9, 2023, surrounded by his family. 

Wyatt

Marvin was born on September 23,1947, in Dublin, Ga., to the late Marvin Mervin Wyatt, Sr. and the late Mary Emily Hobbs Wyatt. He was an active member of Marie Baptist Church. He attended Middle Georgia College in Cochran from 1965 until 1967 at which time he moved to the Atlanta area to attend Georgia Tech. He earned a Bachelor of Science Degree in Engineering in 1969 and a Master’s Degree from Middle Georgia State University. After graduation from Tech, he enlisted in the U.S. Army and later retired in 1990 after 20 years of service at the rank of Lieutenant. Colonel. Marvin served in active duty and also with the Georgia National Guard. 

Marvin was employed by Atlanta Gas Light Company following graduation from Tech. After serving the company for 29 years, he retired in 1998 as the vice president of operations support. Marvin also served as director of operations for the Atlanta Botanical Gardens between 2000 and 2002. Marvin’s last employment was with the Gwinnett County Public Schools system where he served as an area manager, responsible for the facility management of over five million square feet of schools and other buildings. He retired from Gwinnett County Schools in 2017. 

Marvin served in many community organizations in the Atlanta area including as a board member for Camp Amplify, Gwinnett Senior Leadership, and Chateau Elan Military Foundation. He was a member of Gideons International South Gwinnett Camp. He was also an active member of the North Metro Baptist Church. 

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his first wife of 32 years, Nancy Brinson Wyatt of Bay Branch, Ga. 

Survivors include his wife, Sue Hancock Wyatt; children, Meredith Wyatt Hartley (Chris), Zachary Wyatt (Lindsay) and stepdaughter Jennifer Barden (Jared); grandchildren Nancy Carolyn Hartley, Ellis Barden, Wyatt Barden, Caitlin Hartley, Margaret Hartley; sister, Kathy Wyatt Allgood (Jimmy); nieces and nephews, Lanny Allgood, Lauren Katherine Allgood and Lindsay Allgood Atkinson, Elizabeth Brinson Garbin, Laura Brinson Crowley, Ryan Brinson, Emily Brinson, Julie Brinson Bishop; aunts, Helen Payne Hobbs and Eldee Hobbs Rutland; and numerous Hobbs and Wyatt cousins. 

A Funeral Service will be held at 10:30 a.m. on Friday, January 13, 2023, with military honors, at North Metro Baptist Church, Lawrenceville,  with Dr. Frank Cox officiating. Interment will follow at Eternal Hills Memory Gardens, Snellville. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that contributions be made to the Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University Office of Gift Records, 1762 Clifton Road NE, Suite 1400, Atlanta, Ga. 30322.

RECOMMENDED

4:50 from Paddington by Agatha Christie

From Susan McBrayer, Sugar Hill: When Elspeth McGillicuddy awakes from a nap in the first-class compartment of the 4:50 train from London’s Paddington Station, she can hardly believe her eyes. Through the window of a passing train, she watches helplessly as a tall man strangles a woman to death. The local police have no luck in finding this woman and basically give up. No body, no other witnesses, no suspects equal no case. But when Mrs. McGillicuddy tells her friend, the elderly mastermind, Jane Marple, what happened, Miss Marple goes to work immediately. In deference to her advancing years, Miss Marple recruits the aid of a brilliant younger woman to help locate the body and bring the culpable party to justice. This cozy mystery involves a stately country home, a cranky lord of the manor, a houseful of flawed adult siblings and a mystery that seems to point a guilty finger at everyone.

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 

GEORGIA TIDBIT

Former state capital is named for Gov. John Milledge

John Milledge was one of the most important political figures in Georgia during the Revolutionary War (1775-83) and early national period, holding positions as governor, congressman for four terms in the U.S. House of Representatives, and president pro tempore in the U.S. Senate. Milledge, one of the party who seized British colonial governor James Wright at Savannah in January 1776, was also a principal figure in the organization of the University of Georgia

Born in Savannah in 1757 and descended from one of the first families to immigrate to the Georgia colony, Milledge received the best education that his family’s affluence could provide.. As a young man, Milledge was privately tutored and studied law. After admission to the bar, he practiced law in Savannah.

In 1780 Milledge formally entered public service as the attorney general of Georgia. In 1789-90 he served in the Georgia General Assembly. In 1792 he was elected as a Jeffersonian Democratic Republican to the Second U.S. Congress. Elected to two full terms in the Fourth and Fifth U.S. Congresses, he served from 1795 to 1799. He entered the Seventh Congress in March 1801 and subsequently served as the chairman of the committee on elections in that body. Milledge, however, resigned before his term ended in order to run for governor of Georgia in 1802.

In 1801 Milledge (who was still a member of the Seventh Congress), Abraham Baldwin, and James Jackson were appointed commissioners to represent the state of Georgia in negotiations with the U.S. government over Georgia’s western frontier. In 1802 the three men ceded the state’s western lands to the United States.

Later that year, in November 1802, Milledge was elected governor and immediately set out to strengthen state institutions that would make Georgia’s frontier more stable and secure.  In 1804 the state legislature appropriated funds to build a new capital, which was named Milledgeville in his honor. Milledgeville served as the capital of the state for most of the 19th century. 

Milledge left the governor’s office in 1806 and returned to national politics. He was elected by the Georgia legislature to the U.S. Senate and took his seat in June 1806. During the Tenth Congress, he served as president pro tempore of the Senate, ultimately resigning his seat in November 1809 to return to Georgia, where his wife, Martha Galphin Milledge, was gravely ill. Milledge spent the next decade at his plantation, Sand Hills, near Augusta. During his final years, Milledge spent much of his time devising new farming methods, especially in the areas of animal husbandry and horticulture. He died at his plantation on February 9, 1818, and is buried in Summerville Cemetery.

MYSTERY PHOTO

Classical building is this edition’s mystery

Where, and what, is this Mystery Photo? Figure it out and send your answers to elliott@brack.net, and include your hometown. 

Cathy Loew of Peachtree Corners writes of the recent Mystery Photo: “I had a deja vu moment with this mystery picture. That view is mainly inaccessible from land (unless you want to maneuver the rocks).  But you can see a peak with my daughter’s, Olivia’s picture (below), taken mid October. Maine is a beautiful state. I didn’t realize Peyton Place was filmed in Camden.” The photo came from Charles Anderson of Lawrenceville.

Several other readers recognized this photo. They included Stew Ogilvie, Lawrenceville; Bob Forman, Grayson; Lou Camerio, Lawrenceville; Michael Blackwood, Duluth; George Graf, Palmyra, Va.; Susan McBrayer, Sugar Hill; Dr. Luann Hammami, Dacula; and Allan Peel, who wrote: “A photo of the light station that was taken by Mark Walker from Smyrna, Ga., was selected to be on the Acadia National Park’s 2020 annual entrance pass. The photograph appeared on thousands of annual entrance passes.”

Mystery readers: we need more new photos to test our crew who diligently search for answers to the Mystery Photo. Scour your files and send us some new ones pronto! 

LAGNIAPPE

DAR wreath ceremony honors those at East Shadowlawn site

Just before Christmas, 2022,  over 150 people at East Shadowlawn Memorial Gardens in Lawrenceville honored 350 veterans by laying a fresh balsam wreath on each of their graves and saying their names out loud in remembrance of them. This event was the fourth annual Wreaths Across America Ceremony, hosted by the Philadelphia Winn Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR), a volunteer women’s community service organization with a 132-year mission of promoting Historic Preservation, Patriotism, and Education. Special guests included Gwinnett County Board of Commissioners, Chairwoman Nicole Hendrickson, District 3 Commissioner Jasper Watkins III, and City of Lawrenceville Mayor David Still. The guest speaker was Col John Haynes, U.S. Air Force (retired) from Lilburn, who spoke on the importance of remembering veterans and the qualities that they embodied when they served our nation. Marines JROTC Cadets from Parkview High School participated in the ceremony as escorts for veterans and assisted with the distribution of 350 wreaths to sponsors and volunteers. The students included, from left, Parkview H.S. Marines JROTC Cadets Gunnery Sergeant Leslie Dominguez, PFC Cameron Carlotta, Second Lieutenant Benjamin Rodriguez, First Lieutenant Jayden Bateman, Lieutenant Colonel Blake White, Staff Sergeant Gabriel Mocanu, Sergeant Major Alexander Rodriguez, and Staff Sergeant Genevieve Brown.

CALENDAR

Writers’ workshop on family stories: “Creating Genuine Emotion in Your Characters,” will be on Saturday, January 21 at 10:30 a.m. at the Norcross Branch of the Gwinnett County Public Library.  Is 2023 the year to write your family story? Join Susan Beckham Zurenda, author of Bells for Eli, for this workshop.

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