Jackson herald. (Jefferson, Jackson County, Ga.) 1881-current, July 12, 2023, Image 3
WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 2023 THE JACKSON HERALD PAGE 3A MedLink Georgia has announced the remodeling and opening of its new healthcare center in Commerce, located at 611 Hospital Road. It also celebrat ed the launch of its new mobile health clinic. To commemorate this milestone, Jackson County Chamber of Commerce held a ribbon-cutting ceremony on June 28. Ribbon cutting held for new MedLink Commerce office and mobile clinic 1818 Brewing Company submits brewing application MedLink Georgia has an nounced the remodeling and opening of its new healthcare center in Commerce, located at 611 Hospital Road. It also celebrated the launch of its new mobile health clinic. To commemorate this milestone, Jackson County Chamber of Commerce held a ribbon-cut- ting ceremony on June 28. “Our goal is to provide high-quality, patient-centered care that gives our patients the opportunity to live their health iest lives,” said Dave Ward, MedLink Georgia CEO. “Our mission is to promote health and wellness in our communi ty, and we are dedicated to pro viding compassionate care to all patients, regardless of their By Stanley Dunlap Georgia Recorder Georgia conseivationists are putting hunters on high alert about the possibility of a dead ly deer disease crossing the state border after the discovery of a case in north Florida. The Georgia Wildlife Re sources Division will cany out an emergency response once the state has its first detected case of Chronic Wasting Dis ease. It can take as long as two years before an infected white tailed deer shows zombie-like symptoms of listlessness, droopy head, severe weight loss, repetitive walking and drooling. In June, a road-killed doe found 38 miles from Georgia’s southwest border made Florida the 31st state to report a con- filmed case of a condition that has no treatment or vaccine and always results in death of the infected deer, moose and elk. Public health and state wild life officials are conducting a public awareness campaign to inform hunters and others how to react if they see deer in an area with the disease, which is similar to the affliction known as mad cow disease that spread in the 1990s. The strategy for Georgia’s wildlife division is to establish a 5-mile radius where there is a confirmed presence of CWD, with the boundaries shifting as more infections are discovered. An outbreak can present more challenges for game hunt ing inside the infected zones. Hunters in the affected areas are being recommended to get their deer and buck carcasses tested so the wildlife agency knows the location of the out break and what percentage of animals are infected. Scientists have not found any evidence that deer wast ing syndrome can spread to humans or livestock under nor mal conditions. However, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warns against eating venison and urges limit ing contact with potentially in fected animals until the extent of the health risks are better known. Prior to eating deer meat, hunters are also advised to store their venison in the freez er and wait to see if test results come back negative. The pub lic is also encouraged to report roadkill deer and deer display ing unusual behavior to their local wildlife district office. “There will be a response plan that goes in place that is geographic,” Wildfire Re sources Division Director Ted Will said at a recent Board of Natural Resources meeting. “It’s a 5-mile radius, intensive sampling within one mile and hunters are probably bringing (deer) heads to (service drop oft) sites. We’ve got it all laid out.” background or circumstances. We believe that eveiy patient deseives access to quality healthcare, and we are commit ted to making that a reality.” The health center offers a wide range of services, includ ing general checkups, preven tive care, and treatment for acute and chronic illnesses. The MedFink Commerce Fam ily Foot Care office located next door offers podiafiy ser vices. The mobile health clin ic will visit various locations throughout the many commu nities MedFink Georgia serves within its 20-county footprint. MedFink Georgia is a Fed erally Qualified Community Health Center providing qual ity, professional healthcare to The biggest defense to mit igate the spread in the earliest stages of detection involves intensive testing and limiting the movement of deer to other places. The long-term afflic tion can only be diagnosed by examining the animal’s brain after its death. Findsay Thomas Jr., spokes man for the National Deer Association, said that since it takes so long for deer to show symptoms, it is difficult to per suade hunters that it is a prob lem. “The people who are in de nial about this will say ‘I don’t see a problem. This isn’t some thing to worry about,”’ he said. “That’s the way it works. You don’t walk in the woods and see sick and dead deer laying everywhere.” “The message we give hunt ers is this is not the end of the world. It’s nothing to panic about,” Thomas said. “Hunt ing goes on in these zones. It’s just a time for hunters to plug in and get informed and partic ipate in the effort to manage the disease locally.” Georgia has banned the transportation of live deer spe cies from other states since 2005 and has other restrictions on how deer, moose and elk carcasses are handled. Among the safety guidelines are not moving deer carcasses outside of a designated CWD boundary or leaving them to rot in the wild. In areas where the CWD exists, public health officials also recommend more strin gent deer processing, which involves gutting, skinning and aging meat and removing a white-tailed deer’s head to mount as a trophy. The tips include not using a bone saw to cut up a deer, wearing latex gloves, washing hands frequently, and for pro fessional processors to prepare each deer meat separately from other animals. “This is not a bacteria or vi ms,” Thomas said. “It’s a prion protein and it’s veiy durable in the environment. If you take the deer to process at home and don’t leave bones, hide, innards in the woods. That’s a hotspot of CWD prions that if healthy deer come in contact with then they can become infected.” Georgia’s upcoming deer hunting season for archers be gins on Sept. 10. while hunters using firearms have from Oct. 22 through Jan. 8 to bag up to 12 deer. Mike Worley, president and CEO of the Georgia Wildlife Federation, said that CWD poses a threat to the state’s healthy and stable deer pop ulation if not taken seriously enough. The state spent up wards of $300,000 on testing for the disease last year. “It’s a big deal because virtu ally all our conseivation is paid over 60,000 Georgians in rural areas and seiving Northeast Georgian communities since 1979. As part of their mission, they are dedicated to their pa tients, their needs, and their communities within the North east Georgia region. MedFink Georgia has 29 convenient locations providing a wide va riety of patient care tailored to the needs of the community in which it selves. The new MedFink Com merce and MedFink Commerce Family Foot Care facilities are welcoming new patients. For more information on MedFink Georgia or to schedule an ap pointment, contact 706-521- 3113 or visit www.MedFink- GA.org. for by hunters and anglers,” Worley said. “By far the most popular of our game species is white-tailed deer.” “We have a lot of deer and our deer quality is good,” Worley said. “We have people coming from around the coun try to hunt, particularly from Florida.” NEW PROTOCOLS FOR HUNTERS AS DISEASE SPREADS EAST Originally reported in the western United States in the 1960s, CWD has slowly spread to the Southeast in recent years leaving Georgia, Kentucky, and South Carolina as the last states in the region without documented cases. Chronic Wasting Disease is similar to the fatal mad cow disease that briefly caused a public panic after an outbreak in the United Kingdom during the 1990s that eventually re sulted in the first North Amer ican case in 2003. However, in contrast to CWD, mad cow can make hu mans sick if they eat infected beef. In addition to being spread by an animal’s bodily fluids, the current threat can also re mains highly contagious for many more years in soil and plants. As part of Georgia’s efforts to minimize an outbreak, law makers in 2022 gave the state wildlife officials more pow er to limit the movement of deer, moose, elk, and caribou carcasses around the state and counties bordering Georgia where positive tests have been confirmed. Currently, there is no plan by the state to restrict feeders used by many landowners to attract hungiy deer near a CWD in flicted area. “When we have a pop (case), we go into a very small area and try to act quickly,” Will said. “ We don’t want to break relationships with local buy-in and helping us hopefully erad icate it or get it back enough to drive down prevalence in an area.” Some state wildlife agencies will also look to reduce the deer population within a given area in order to keep the spread of disease to a minimum. If certain harvesting quotas aren’t met within the deer hunt ing season, then state wildlife agents might ask for landown ers’ permission to go onto their property to hunt more deer, said Thomas, with the deer as sociation. “It’s kind of a surgical strike,” he said. “Even though it’s a small number of deer, it is ultimately proving useful in maintaining low prevalence rates. Missouri and Illinois are two examples that have used that approach and they’re hold ing disease prevalence in the low single digits across years.” By Alex Buffington a!ex@mainstreetnews. com Commerce leaders are slated to take action on a request later this month that would be a big step toward the opening of the 1818 Brewing Company. 1818 Brewing has sub mitted its request to allow the company to manufac ture and sell beer at the fa cility. The Commerce City Council is slated to take action on the matter at its July 17 meeting. The 1818 project on State Street has faced several delays since work began, but work seems to Five people have been charged following a months- long drag investigation into a fentanyl distribution orga nization operating in Jack- son and Banks counties. The following were charged: •William “Faye” Lo- mack, 48, of Maysville — charged with trafficking fentanyl, possession with intent to distribute fentanyl, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and posses sion of a firearm during the commission of a crime. Lo- mack was booked into the Banks County Jail. •Tony Clough, 54, of Marion, Va. — charged with trafficking fentanyl, posses sion with intent to distribute fentanyl, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime. Clough was booked into the Banks County Jail. •Chante Presley, 28, of Richland, Va. — charged with trafficking fentanyl, possession with intent to distribute fentanyl and pos- have picked up in recent months. A sign has been installed outside the build ing and significant work has been done inside the facility. The owner hopes to be able to open the brewery later this year (possibly Sep tember). OTHER BUSINESS Other items up for a vote July 17 include: •closing a small por tion of Church Street at Clayton and East College streets. The small road/al- ley is not used regularly. The item was tabled last month. •a guaranteed maximum session of Schedule IV Con trolled Substance. Presley was booked into the Banks County Jail. •Nicole Pressley, 37, of Maysville — charged with trafficking fentanyl, traf ficking methamphetamine, possession with intent to distribute fentanyl, posses sion with intent to distribute methamphetamine, posses sion of Schedule II Con trolled Substance and pos session of a firearm during the commission of a crime. Pressley was booked into the Jackson County Jail. • Stephanie “Sticks” Guthrie, 38, of Winder — charged with trafficking fentanyl and possession with intent to distribute fentanyl. Guthrie was at the motel with Presley, but was taken to a local hospital for treatment. Police arrested Lo- mack after a traffic stop in Commerce on June 29. Lomack had approx imately 450 grams of suspected fentanyl, two price for the Civic Center/ City Hall building. The item was tabled from last month. •removing a code or dinance concerning the pre-treatment facility. The city no longer owns the pre-treatment facility after selling it to Kerry Foods. •street closures and an event zone for a third in stallment of the Concerts on Cherry Summer Con cert Series. The concert is planned Sept. 29 at 8 p.m. The Cherry Street parking lot will be closed on that date from 6 p.m. to mid night. firearms and a large amount of cash on him. Police executed search warrants at a Commerce motel and a home in Mays ville, both connected to Lomack. Police found sus pected fentanyl in the mo tel room and seized four firearms, over 28 grams of suspected fentanyl and approximately 28 grams of suspected methamphet amine from the Maysville home. Police also arrested Nicole Pressley at the home. Clough was arrested with Lomack during the traffic stop. Chante Presley was arrested at the motel room. The Banks County Sher iff’s Office, Jackson County Sheriff’s Office, Stephens County Sheriff’s Office, FBI-Gainesville, Georgia State Patrol, GBI’s Human Exploitation and Trafficking Unit and Appalachian Re gional Drag Enforcement Office assisted with this in vestigation. This is an ongoing inves tigation and additional ar rests are expected. HARRIS DOOR AND MILLWORK A Family Atmosphere Work Environment in Pendergrass, GA Now Hiring for Certified Fork Lift Operators Average wage $950.00 paid weekly Monday - Friday 6 a.m. - 4 p.m. Closed Saturday and Sunday • Full Benefits Package • Health Insurance (Starts within 30 days or less) • Dental and Vision (Starts within 30 days or less) • Matching 40IK (Starts Day 1) • 3 weeks paid vacation (Accrual Starts Day 1) • Long Term Disability Insurance (Company Paid) • Short Term Disability Insurance (Company Paid) • 1 hour lunch break and two 15 minute breaks per day (5786 Hwy. 129 N, Suite A) Pendergrass, GA Call 706-693-0060 (Jennifer) or email HR@harrisdm.com State wildlife officials prepare for deadly deer disease ahead of Georgia hunting season Five charged with trafficking fentanyl after months-long investigation