Tuesday, June 16, 2020
Tifton, Georgia
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CITY-COUNTY NEGOTIATIONS
FALL APART
TIFT COUNTY DECIDES TO END SOME SERVICES IN CITY OF TIFTON
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By FRANK SAYLES JR.
Tifton Grapevine
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Years of disagreements between
Tift County
and the City of Tifton have culminated in both governments
deadlocked
over the delivery of
essential services
.
Because of the
deadlock
, the county has sent a letter saying it will
end
specified
services
within the city during the coming months.
This would result in the
city
having to handle its own recreation, tax collections, animal control, city elections, non-emergency 911 dispatching and the housing of city inmates – now overseen by the county.
Recreation, animal control and 911 dispatching are currently paid through the county's general fund by all
Tift countians
, both inside and outside incorporated areas. At no cost to the county, the city directly pays for its elections, pays the tax commissioner for collections and pays the sheriff for inmate housing.
However, the
county
must allow the election office, the tax commissioner and sheriff to work with the city in handling those services. City Attorney
Rob Wilmot
said the county is halting those relationships.
A
neutral mediator
, allowed under state law to help resolve disputes, filed a report dated
Monday
determining that the city and county are at an
impasse
and that the
mediation
has been
ended
.
"The level of
distrust
is such that these parties are talking at cross purposes, and neither side can appreciate the other side's position," wrote
Susan W. Cox
, the third-party mediator from
Statesboro
.
The
impasse
arose when the county's
"final proposal"
stated that the city must accept the county's latest offer as
one bundle
in providing recreation, tax collections, animal control, city elections, 911 dispatching and inmate housing. None of the items could be negotiated separately and should be either
accepted
or
rejected
all together. If rejected, the county said it will stop providing those services within Tifton city limits.
"I confirmed with the county's counsel that their offer was conditioned upon ... an
'all or nothing'
position; i.e., either the city agreed to all of the terms regarding all of the services ... or they agreed to none of them," the mediator wrote.
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"After reviewing the offer, the city could not agree to all of the proposals," the mediator wrote. "If the county's offer had allowed
negotiations
on the six services ... the city felt that further agreement could have been reached."
Tift County Commission Chairman
Grady Thompson
, in a letter to Mayor
Julie Smith
on
June 9,
said the county had hoped its latest proposal would solve all service-delivery issues except for water and wastewater, which is pending in
Superior Court
.
"As has been the case in all previously county-submitted solutions, this plan once again included concessions to the
City of Tifton
in an effort to bring more than two years of service delivery strategy negotiations between the parties to a close," Thompson wrote.
"The City of Tifton's
rejection
of every county proposal, coupled with the city's consistent desire to
cherry-pick
services it will allow Tift County to deliver, leaves no clear pathway forward."
Mayor
Smith
told the
Tifton Grapevine
that if the city had accepted the county's proposal, "we would have had to significantly increase the
millage rate
. We did not feel it was in the best interests of our constituents. We do not want to
raise
millage
rates
or
fees
."
Smith said that "City Council felt that we could provide those services that would not require the millage rate to increase." Her message to
Tifton
taxpayers is "we want to get quality services at cost-effective rates," she said.
"It was an
all-or-nothing
thing. If only we could pull some services out and take them individually. We're happy with the tax commissioner; we're happy with recreation; we're happy with the sheriff housing prisoners. There are some services that we are very comfortable with."
The mayor added, "We're very
receptive
and very
open
to continue discussions. Our ultimate goal is that, hopefully, the city and the county can stay together on some of these things."
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AS TIFT VIRUS CASES RISE,
COUNTY COMMISSIONER TESTS POSITIVE
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By FRANK SAYLES JR.
Tifton Grapevine
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Tift County
now has
433
positive cases of the
coronavirus
, which includes a
local elected official
. There were
327
cases one week ago.
Tift County Commissioner
Melissa Hughes
, who is second vice president of the state's counties association (the Association County Commissioners of Georgia), announced
Monday
that she has tested positive.
"As careful as I have been, wearing my mask, washing my hands, not visiting nor letting anyone visit me – not even my son or grand girls – I have tested
positive
for
COVID-19
," Hughes posted on social media.
"I didn’t or don’t have any major symptoms. I was not reckless in my health. ... So I am saying all this to say, this
virus
is real; it has
not gone anywhere
."
Tift County's
433
cases represent
1,060
per
100,000
residents, said the Ga. Department of Public Health (DPH). Proportionately, that is more than counties in the
Atlanta
area – DeKalb registers
556
cases
per
100,000
residents
; and
Fulton
,
468
per
100,000
. The DPH said there has been a total of
22
deaths of
Tift
residents from the virus and
81
hospitalizations of county residents.
Statewide
, there are
59,078
positive cases and
2,529
deaths, the DPH reported Tuesday. Gov.
Brian P. Kemp
announced Tuesday that the state Department of Community Health has now tested
100
percent of
nursing home
residents in facilities with
25
or more beds.
This marks a
12
percent improvement in one week. Additionally, staff testing in nursing homes is up
12
percent week-over-week, Kemp said. Across all
long-term care
facilities with 25 beds or more,
77
percent of residents and
57
percent of staff members have now been tested, both of which are up
9
percent in the past week.
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TCHS (FINALLY) HOLDS FORMAL GRADUATION CEREMONY
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Tift County High School's
Class of 2020
–
515
strong – held a formal commencement ceremony
Saturday
morning at
Brodie Field
. Delayed three weeks because of the
pandemic
, the school's
largest-ever
senior class sat six feet apart on the field as friends and family observed strict social distancing in the stands.
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16 STUDENTS JOIN STALLION SOCIETY
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Sixteen
students have been selected to serve as members of the
Stallion Society
at
Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College
.
Society leaders,
chosen for their enthusiasm, leadership ability and academic standing,
welcome and aid incoming students.
New members include
Abbi Ladson
, a nursing major from Moultrie;
Alyssa McDaniel
, a business major from Tifton;
Caroline Sullivan
, a biology major from Tifton;
Corley Thacker
, a nursing major from Covington;
Dulce Agundis
, a business major from Hazlehurst;
Haven Hollingsworth
, a nursing major from Pitts;
Kirstin Wickett
, an agribusiness major from Citra, Fla.; and
Klarissa Williamson
, an animal science major from Crestview, Fla.
Other new members include
Madison Lane
, an agriculture major from Gainesville;
Megan
Gaines
, a biology major from Tifton;
Reginae Batts
, a biology major from Tifton;
Shamiyah Williams
, a history and government major from Tifton;
Sydney Thomas
, a rural community development major from Colquitt;
Toxey Tuten
, an animal science major from Waycross;
Torri Williams
, a business major from Sylvester; and
Hailee Rasbury
, an agricultural education major from Pinson, Ala.
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ABAC NAMES WILLIS HONORARY ALUMNUS
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Paul Willis
, executive vice president for finance and administration at
ABAC
, has been named an
honorary alumnus
by Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College's
Alumni Association
.
Willis joined the ABAC administration in
2009
as college enrichment director. He served as director of the Ga. Museum of Agriculture and Historic Village at ABAC, and vice president for external affairs and chief of staff before assuming his current position.
In
2014
, Willis received the E. Lanier Carson Leadership Award for College Administrators and was instrumental in bringing Greek life to the campus. He was also charged with assimilating the Ga. Museum of Agriculture and Historic Village into the ABAC campus in
2010
. Under his direction, the museum expanded with three new historic buildings and increased the number of special events, workshops, and special exhibits.
While vice president, Willis completed structural changes within the ABAC Foundation and the Alumni Association, expanded homecoming activities, helped to increase giving to ABAC, and led the college's strategic planning process.
He previously served in several executive roles at the
University of Florida
.
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The COVID-19 Drive-Thru Testing Clinic is located at:
Eighth Street Middle School
700 W. 8th Street, Tifton
Patients are asked to enter the clinic from 6th Street
(behind the school)
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The clinic is located on the east side of Eighth Street Middle School, between the school building and the football stadium.
Signs around campus will direct patients to enter from 6th Street, behind the track, at the entrance to 6th Street Academy.
Follow the drive around to the Southwell Mobile Clinic for registration.
- Patients need to have proper identification and will not need to exit their vehicle.
- Before coming to the Drive-Thru Clinic, please call Southwell’s COVID-19 Hotline at 229-353-2819
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TIFTON GRAPEVINE'S PET OF THE WEEK
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This dog is currently on stray hold at the
Tift County Animal Shelter
. If not reclaimed, the dog will be available for adoption or rescue. V
isit
the Animal
Shelter from
1-6 p.m. Mondays
through
Fridays,
or call
229-382-PETS (7387).
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Pets of the Week are sponsored by:
Branch's Veterinary Clinic
205 Belmont Ave., Tifton, 229-382-6055
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FIRE DESTROYS SHOPPING CENTER
– JUNE 14, 1972
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What was called the "most
disastrous fire
in Tifton's history" destroyed the
Town and Country Shopping Plaza
on Wednesday night,
June 14, 1972
. The blaze started shortly after
8 p.m.
in the rug department of Roses and quickly spread to adjacent businesses, according to press reports. The loss was upwards of
$10 million
. Looters stole thousands of dollars of merchandise from the burned stores.
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REACH THOUSANDS OF FOLKS IN THE TIFTAREA ~
ADVERTISE IN THE TIFTON GRAPEVINE!
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478-227-7126
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Tifton Grapevine
e-published every Tuesday and Friday
Frank Sayles Jr.
Editor & Publisher
Bonnie Sayles
Managing Editor
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A Service of
Sayles Unlimited Marketing LLC
, Tifton, Georgia
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