ATLANTA – Former Georgia First Lady Sandra Deal died Tuesday at the age of 80 of breast cancer that metastasized into brain cancer.
The wife of former Gov. Nathan Deal died at their home in Demorest surrounded by her family.
“We have lost a wife, mother and grandmother who loved us unconditionally, as we did her. She blessed us, taught us, and enriched our lives,” the Deal family said in a statement.
“Our family knew this day was coming, and we are grateful that it gave us the opportunity to enjoy as much time with her as we could in her final months. We are grieving but celebrate her life and the example she set.”
Sandra Deal served as a teacher and, as first lady, read to students in every county and school district in the state.
“Her generosity of spirit ensured not only that she was beloved by her students, but also an influential force in their lives, leaving an imprint not just on their minds but also on their hearts,” Gov. Brian Kemp and First Lady Marty Kemp said in a joint statement. “She brought the same dedication and a refined spirit to her work as First Lady.”
The Deals occupied the Governor’s Mansion from 2011 through 2018.
The Deal family will host a Celebration of Life for the late first lady on Saturday at 2 p.m. at Lanier Tech in Gainesville. All are welcome.
This story is available through a news partnership with Capitol Beat News Service, a project of the Georgia Press Educational Foundation.
ATLANTA— A juvenile court must reevaluate the sincerity of parents’ objections to their children’s vaccinations, the state Supreme Court ruled Tuesday.
At issue is whether children in temporary state custody can be immunized with routine childhood vaccines over their parents’ religious objections – and how to decide if those objections are sincere or not.
The three young children in this case (now ages 2, 4, and 6) were removed from their parents’ care last year due to the father’s alleged violence. The removal was temporary, with a plan in place to reunify the family after the parents met certain conditions.
When the parents learned of the state foster care agency’s plans to have the children immunized, they asked a Forsyth County Juvenile Court judge to stop the state from going forward, citing religious and philosophical objections to immunization.
The state argued the children needed the immunizations to facilitate their foster care placement, education, and health care.
The juvenile court judge denied the parents’ request, finding their religious objections insincere. The parents failed to regularly attend church, lacked association with a “particular religion,” and held secular objections to vaccination, the judge said.
On Tuesday, the state Supreme Court ruled unanimously that the juvenile court applied the wrong standards for evaluating the sincerity of the parents’ objections to immunization.
The case will now be returned to the juvenile court for another look using the new guidance.
When the juvenile court weighs the parents’ sincerity, it should use a “light judicial touch,” wrote Supreme Court Presiding Justice Nels S.D. Peterson.
Peterson provided some factors the lower court could consider when deciding whether the parents’ religious objections were “truly held.”
These included length of religious belief, amount of knowledge, reliance on religious texts and teachings, and “whether [the parents] have wavered in their actions related to vaccination.”
The state Department of Human Services (DHS), which oversees foster care, changed its policy on parents’ objections to vaccination while this case was pending.
DHS Commissioner Candice Broce sent a memo June 1 directing employees not to seek immunizations for any child in temporary custody if the child’s parents hold a sincere religious objection.
Lawyers for the agency asked the Supreme Court to dismiss the case, saying the new policy made the case moot. But the Supreme Court Tuesday rejected that argument.
“[The] new policy is not legislative in nature; it is an agency memorandum,” wrote Peterson.
There is no guarantee the agency could not change its policy again in the future, the court said.
This story is available through a news partnership with Capitol Beat News Service, a project of the Georgia Press Educational Foundation.
ATLANTA – The Alabama-based company looking to mine titanium near the Okefenokee Swamp has reached an out-of-court settlement that will allow the state to resume consideration of permits for the project.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers suspended review of those state permits in June, declaring that Twin Pines Minerals had not consulted the Muscogee Creek Nation about the project. The Okefenokee is culturally significant to the tribe.
The company sued in federal court, alleging that suspending consideration of the proposed mine violated the Administrative Procedures Act as well as its constitutional rights.
The settlement announced Monday will let the state Environmental Protection Division (EPD) pick up its review of the project.
“This is great news for Twin Pines, for our project, and for Charlton County,” Twin Pines President Steve Ingle said. “We appreciate the Corps’ willingness to reverse itself and make things right.”
Twin Pines originally sought permits for a mine that would have affected about 12,000 acres near the swamp. Later, the company revised its plans to a smaller “demonstration mine” of nearly 900 acres.
Still, the mine is expected to generate hundreds of high-paying jobs and almost double rural Charlton County’s tax base, according to a Twin Pines news release.
Environmental groups oppose the project, citing the threat to the hydrology of the largest blackwater swamp in North America.
“We are exceedingly disappointed in the Corps’ decision to put the polluter before people, again placing at risk the iconic Okefenokee and hundreds of acres of wetlands that are critical to its health,” said Kelly Moser, senior attorney and leader of the Southern Environmental Law Center’s Clean Water Defense Initiative.
Twin Pines officials say the mine does not threaten the environment, noting the propose site for the project is three miles from the southeast corner of the Okefenokee at its closest point and 11 miles from the nearest canoe trail used by visitors.
The company also maintains the land will be restored to its original contours and native vegetation after mining activity is completed.
Moser said Twin Pines still must comply with the federal Clean Water Act, which will require a federal permit in addition to the state permits the company is seeking.
This story is available through a news partnership with Capitol Beat News Service, a project of the Georgia Press Educational Foundation.
ATLANTA – LGBTQ rights in Georgia could be under threat if Republican Gov. Brian Kemp is reelected in November, a group of Democratic LGBTQ state lawmakers said Monday.
Rep. Sam Park, D-Lawrenceville, said Kemp and Georgia Republicans present a “clear and present danger” to LGBTQ Georgians.
The U.S. Supreme Court’s overturning of the constitutional right to an abortion earlier this summer has caused LGBTQ Americans to worry that the court may overturn the right to same-sex marriage, Park said.
Back in 2004, Georgia voters approved a ballot measure that added a ban on same-sex marriage to the Georgia Constitution.
When the Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage in 2015, LGBTQ Georgians gained the right to marry freely.
But the 2004 constitutional ban on same-sex marriage in Georgia could go back into effect if the U.S. Supreme Court overturns the right to marry freely, Park said.
“If he has the opportunity, Brian Kemp will not hesitate to roll back the progress we made,” Park said.
But Kemp spokesman Andrew Isenhour said the governor considers the same-sex marriage issue settled law.
“Governor Kemp’s personal position on same-sex marriage has not changed, but this issue has been settled by the U.S. Supreme Court,” Isenhour said.
Sen. Kim Jackson, D-Stone Mountain, an Episcopalian priest married to a woman, described how many religious denominations have changed their approach to same-sex marriage over the past two decades.
“Brian Kemp … has chosen to ignore the ways in which both the church has evolved and the very people of Georgia have evolved,” Jackson said.
“He’s ignored the evolution of his own fellow Republicans who understand that LGBTQ people have a fundamental right to access to marriage,” Jackson said.
The Democrats said they are confident Georgians would vote in favor of a ballot measure to affirm the right to same-sex marriage in the state if given the opportunity.
However, they noted it could be difficult to get such a measure on the ballot because it would need approval by the Republican-controlled General Assembly.
“Georgia is one of five states in the country that does not have comprehensive civil rights protections in which discrimination is permitted in employment, housing and public accommodations,” Park said.
Rep. Karla Drenner, D-Avondale Estates, the first openly gay legislator in Georgia, said she has proposed such legislation several times but it has never moved forward.
Drenner described how she fought for LGBTQ rights in the Statehouse many times over the last two decades.
One moment of optimism came in 2020 when the state enacted a hate crimes law that provides additional penalties for those who terrorize or physically harm others based on race or sexual orientation.
Lawmakers passed the hate crimes bill four months after Black jogger Ahmaud Arbery was shot to death near Brunswick after being confronted by three white men, who were later convicted of murder.
“I’m here today preemptively to let everyone know … that we’re not going to go back into the shadows and be quiet about any of these issues,” Drenner said.
This story is available through a news partnership with Capitol Beat News Service, a project of the Georgia Press Educational Foundation.