GwinnettForum | Number 25.47 | June 10, 2025
RETIREMENT FLAG CEREMONY: Boy Scout Troop 26 will be conducting a flag retirement ceremony at Christ Church Episcopal, 400 Holcomb Bridge Road, Norcross, on Flag Day, Saturday, June 14, starting at 7:30 p.m. on the graveled parking lot. Join this patriotic service for our country. Bring a chair, some water, and any U.S., State, or military flags in need of retirement. If you are bringing a flag for the ceremony, arrive early so it may be properly prepared for retirement. Flags can also be left at the church office for pick up prior to the retirement ceremony.
TODAY’S FOCUS: A father’s advice to a high school graduate
EEB PERSPECTIVE: What to give an engineering graduate
SPOTLIGHT: Walton Gas
FEEDBACK: Perspective on Trump was not well thought-out
UPCOMING: Gwinnett Police Foundation gets new CEO
NOTABLE: New sidewalks on Crescent Drive benefiting many
RECOMMENDED: Go As A River by Shelley Read
GEORGIA TIDBIT: 1873 Hanging has long impact on state
MYSTERY PHOTO: Check out the foundation on this home
CALENDAR: Norcross has Bluesberry beer-music on June 14
A father’s advice to a high school graduate
By Andy Brack
Editor and publisher, Charleston City Paper
Dear Ellie,
It seems like just yesterday when you donned a navy school shirt and tan skort to head to school. Now, years later, you’re among 3.9 million American high school graduates.
Congratulations to you and students across the country. It’s a big milestone, much like your decision to attend a particular college was your first big life-impacting choice.
Now you’ll face new challenges and opportunities. It will bring fun, heartbreak, frustration and sheer joy.
The big world you are entering is far different from when I crossed the stage decades ago. Back then, there were no cell phones or personal computers. The internet was a dozen years away. Social media was in newspaper classified pages. People used Yellow Pages to find businesses and bought vinyl rock ‘n’ roll albums.
Today’s world is meaner, coarser and faster. The United States of America has lost some of its luster. We’re still strong, but the world is looking at us in new ways as our freedoms seem to shift. Your class is not in competition with other Americans as much as it is with the world.
And that means you and your generation are going to use your well-educated brains to compete in new ways to build more opportunities for your lives. You’re going to have to be faster, smarter and more strategic. You’re going to have to connect in new ways – just like my generation adapted to the deluge of information now available compared to the four national television networks during boyhood.
So as you proceed in college and through your life, here are a few things you may want to keep in mind:
Think. Don’t be rushed into doing something you don’t want to do. If you are unsure, call a personal time-out and think about what’s right. In your heart of hearts, you will know what to do.
Have fun. You’re only here once. Make the most of it. Enjoy each day.
Try new things. Explore our world. Taste different foods. Smell roses in English gardens. Make art. Live beyond South Carolina — and then come back and make it better.
Fail forward. Don’t be scared to fail. Through failure, you learn. Through learning, you find new paths forward. If you don’t fail every now and then, you won’t grow.
Question. Don’t accept everything at face value. Question authority — and then question those questioning authority.
Listen. Slow down and really hear what other people say. You’ll be surprised how much you can learn — and grow — just by listening.
Use common sense. Too many people seem oblivious about too many things. Whenever you are at a decision point, examine it practically and use common sense to figure out the best choice. Listen to your gut and ask for advice.
Laugh. Don’t take things too seriously. Some drama you have today probably will be forgotten by next year. Enjoy life. Laugh at it and yourself. A good sense of humor will take you a long way.
Cultivate deep friendships. Some of the best friends I ever made came from daily interactions in an intense college environment. Find good people throughout your life and learn from their perspectives. Make sure to keep up with them.
Honor your past. Too many people these days don’t have the manners and courtesy that come from being raised in the South. Don’t forget your roots.
Seek truth and justice. People and our country are at their best when they pursue truth and justice. Incorporate those values into your daily living and don’t follow whatever dramatic shiny ball is in the moment.
Read. Turn off the TV and social media as much as you can. Your brain will grow more from reading than it will by being glued to an idiot box or screen.
What’s ahead is exciting and a little scary. But if you follow the core values and beliefs you’ve grown up with, you’ll do just fine. Live large every day.
Love, Dad
- Have a comment? Click here to send an email.
What to give an engineering graduate
By Elliott Brack
Editor and Publisher, GwinnettForum
JUNE 10, 2025 | Several of you may face this problem: what to get a young graduate, from high school or college.
For those going to college, for years we bought a hard-back Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary. We thought that was reasonable for someone about to embark on years of study. But today with cell phones, many have definitions with them at their fingertips.
We were looking for a college graduate’s gift, one who recently completed work on an engineering degree, and is about to enter the workforce. It’s a little more difficult to consider this gift.
Below is part of a letter we sent to this graduate.
Dear Graduate: We decided on a fiction book for an engineering graduate for one main reason: to encourage you to read outside of your chosen field, and to continue to read widely your entire life.
Continual reading will make you a more well-rounded person. You may find, by reading a wide variety of books, that this will contribute to your work as an engineer. It will obviously expand your mind. All in all, it will make you a more well-balanced person.
Now to this particular book, My Italian Bulldozer. First, it is from my favorite author: Alexander McCall Smith, a Scotsman and medical ethicist who now writes full-time. His first book, The Number One Ladies’ Detective Agency, was an instant hit. (The book is set in Botswana, about a lady who finds a book about how to become a detective, opens an office and is successful.) So far, McCall Smith has written 26 books in this series.
McCall Smith also writes stories, in a series of books, about several families in a house on Scotland Street in Edinburgh, or in another series, of an anthropologist who can also solve problems for people, to a hilarious account of three German professors of Portuguese irregular verbs! His scope is amazing. I was going to enclose a list of his books, but it would be too long! Go to the internet for books by Alexander McCall Smith to understand.
One more element: none of his books have foul language. That’s amazing in today’s cuss-word society.
The Bulldozer book we send along is a stand-alone book, not part of any series. The title pulled me into it, and its ending is surprising. We hope you find the pleasure in it that we did.
But mainly, we are wishing that for you, the dedicated precise engineer, you will allow your free time to include continued outside reading for growth and stimulation.
Now enter the world of adults, and enjoy life at its fullest.
New subject: For years we’ve advocated that Gwinnett County should adopt regulations to limit all sorts of disposable plastic, for shopping bags specifically, and switch to paper bags. We’ve also advocated for eliminating plastic straws in restaurants.
One of GwinnettForum’s Continuing Objectives, published in each edition, reads: “Eliminate single-use plastic packaging and straws in Gwinnett and require instead the use of paper products.”
Let’s compliment restaurants in Norcross, which have switched to paper straws instead of plastic. Its “Strawless Norcross” campaign was designed by the Sustainable Norcross Commission citizen board. It’s estimated it will reduce the number of plastic drinking straws by at least 50,000 a year!
We’re glad to see major progress on this objective. We look forward to other cities, and the county, adopting elimination of single-use plastics. Hurrah to Norcross restaurants for their leading role in one manner of keeping more plastic out of our lives. Hurrah!
- Have a comment? Click here to send an email.
Walton Gas
The public spiritedness of our sponsors allows us to bring GwinnettForum.com to you at no cost to readers. Walton Gas is a local natural gas provider that serves homes and businesses all across Gwinnett – and the greater Atlanta area! With an office in Gwinnett, they have a rich history of investing in this community – from civic and business groups to non-profits organizations and scholarships/grants for school students and classrooms. They have received the highest customer satisfaction ratings among all of Georgia’s competitive natural gas providers. To learn more about their outstanding value and service, call 770-427-4328 or, visit:www.waltongas.com/gwinnett.
- Contact Walton Gas at waltongas.com, facebook.com/waltongas or 770-427-4328.
- For a list of other sponsors of this forum, click here.
Perspective on Trump was not well thought-out
Editor, the Forum:
About the item of Elliott Brack’s in GwinnettForum recently (“Trump’s many pardons benefitting his convicted friends”), I will say the editor and publisher of a hometown newsletter sets the tone. I understand emotional writing and your opinion piece on the Trump pardons was emotional and not well thought out. Let’s see if you do better next time.
– Leanne Reitano, Hoschton
Timely comment was responsible journalism
Editor, the Forum:
Your article on Trump’s pardons was very timely. Responsible journalists – like yourself – need to keep Trump’s sins front and center. He is ruining our country and making a mockery out of the rule of law.
– Gary Christensen, Chamblee
June 17 PSC election is key; take time to vote
Editor, the Forum:
To: all Georgia voters. Please vote in the Public Service Commission’s (PSC) primary elections held on June 17. There is early voting now until June 13.
The PSC has only five members who set the rates for our electricity, gas, and internet. The current PSC approved six rate hikes for Georgia Power customers and voted against expanding a popular rooftop solar program. They want to build more fossil fuel plants to supply energy for the influx of Data Centers in Georgia. These centers use an enormous amount of energy and water.
The PSC determines whether our state moves toward cleaner energy sources or remains reliant on fossil fuels, even coal. They are responsible for long term energy infrastructure planning in Georgia but don’t want to consider more sustainable and healthy solutions. We live in a very sunny state and are 43rd in our country for sustainable energy.
Please help us elect some members who will move us toward a safe, sustainable energy future.
– Lili Ouzt, Athens
Good to highlight Accountability Project
Editor, the Forum:
Thanks for highlighting the Gwinnett Accountability Project. Seems all the Board of Commissioners have decided to go along with the growth projections rather than managing them, perhaps to appease their biggest donors who are profiting, the developers and monopoly utilities.
– Robert Blatecky, Buford
Of CNN, Edward R. Murrow and McCarthy play
Editor, the Forum:
On June 7, CNN broadcast a live Broadway play, Good Night and Good Luck. The play was about Edward R. Murrow during the Army-McCarthy hearing of 1954. The play was excellent, but it was incomplete, in that it cut out too quickly and did not broadcast the incredible insult to McCarthy on Murrow’s evening news on CBS.
His coverage of the hearings was incredible. I can remember sitting in my grandfather’s home and watching it night by night until the end. There was a full-length movie of Murrow that came out in 2005, which was much better. Murrow was the CBS reporter of the European side of World War II, so I grew up hearing him virtually every night he was on.
As a sidebar to the above, when I was selling college textbooks in New York and at Columbia University, I saw the name of the producer of Murrow’s news show on a door. The producer of Murrow’s broadcast was Fred Friendly and he was then at Columbia. Being familiar with that name, I knocked on the door and for the next two hours, we talked about Murrow, the news shows of 1954 and the bringing down of Joe McCarthy. There are so many parallels to Trump that it is amazing. Interestingly, McCarthy’s lawyer was Roy Cohn and Trump’s main legal advisor early on was from Roy Cohn. McCarthy died in 1957.
– Raleigh Perry, Buford
Suggests a new name for congressional tax bill
Editor, the Forum:
President Trump decided to follow President Biden’s lead in 2021 with an alliterative title for a 2025 bill introduced in the House of Congress.
- November 2021: Build Back Better Bill
- May 2025: Big Beautiful Bill
I want to suggest an alternative title for the 2025 bill that the Senate has under consideration:
- June 2025: Big Butt-ugly Bill
The 2025 BBB will cause so many harms to most Americans that it’s a travesty. It will increase the national debt starting in 2026. Coupled with the effects of President Trump’s tariffs, it will spark renewed higher inflation and place increased financial burdens on most Americans, while reducing income taxes on high-income American taxpayers.
– Mike 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: ebrack2@gmail.com.
Gwinnett Police Foundation gets new CEO
The Gwinnett County Police Foundation has named Britt Ramroop as its new chief executive officer. A longtime Gwinnett County resident, Ramroop brings more than 15 years of experience to the role.

She most recently served as director of fundholder experience at the Community Foundation for Northeast Georgia. Prior to that, she was with Aurora Theatre for 10 years.
Born in Clarkston, Washington, she grew up in Cheyenne, Wyoming, where her parents were schoolteachers. She is a graduate of Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Calif. She came to Gwinnett County in 2005, and her first job was with Stone Mountain Park.
Ramroop and her husband, Randy, who is with the Georgia Department Community Supervision, live in Loganville, on the Gwinnett side. They have two children, a 15 year old son and a 12 year old daughter.
As CEO, Ramroop will lead the Foundation’s efforts to support the Gwinnett County Police Department through charitable services and community-based initiatives. These include emergency financial assistance for officers, scholarships for their children, and support for youth and outreach programs.
New sidewalk on Crescent Drive benefiting many
Gateway85 Community Improvement District (CID) and Gwinnett County officials celebrated a key milestone in pedestrian infrastructure with a ribbon-cutting event on May 29 at the Gateway85 CID office in Norcross for the newly completed Crescent Drive sidewalk. The project underscores the power of public-private partnerships and the dedication of Gwinnett County to enhancing safety, mobility and economic opportunity through thoughtful infrastructure investments.
Completed entirely by the Gwinnett County Department of Transportation (DOT) in just three months and funded through the County’s SPLOST program, the 3,500-foot sidewalk provides a critical connection between Jimmy Carter Boulevard and Nancy Hanks Drive.
Gwinnett County Commissioner Kirkland Carden says: “This project is a prime example of what we can accomplish when we work together — the county, the cities and our local Community Improvement Districts. Sidewalks are about more than safety; they are about economic health.”
The sidewalk has already proven invaluable for Olé Mexican Foods, one of Gateway85’s largest employers. With more than 1,400 employees across three shifts, many of whom rely on walking or public transit, the new connection has made a tangible difference.
Eduardo Moreno Jr., president of procurement and manufacturing services of Olé Mexican Foods, says: “I see my employees walking on the sidewalk every day. It makes the facility look better, feel safer and helps attract people to want to be part of our company.”
The project highlights a long-standing collaboration between Gateway85 CID and Gwinnett DOT that has delivered numerous improvements to the area — from sidewalk installations along Graves Road and Dawson Boulevard to transformative intersection upgrades like the Diverging Diamond Interchange at Jimmy Carter Boulevard and I-85.
JEMC Foundation grants $76,693 to charities

The Jackson EMC Foundation board of directors awarded a total of $101,529 in grants for organizations during its recent meeting, including $76,693 to organizations serving Gwinnett County.
- $10,000 to The Barrow Ministry Village, Winder, for counseling sessions for residents in Barrow, Clarke, Gwinnett, Hall and Jackson counties.
- $10,000 to Mending the Gap, Inc., Lawrenceville, to provide food boxes for seniors living in Gwinnett County.
- $10,000 to Ser Familia, Inc., which provides preventive family services to equip Latinos with the tools, resources and skills they need to overcome a crisis for counseling sessions for residents in Barrow, Gwinnett, Hall and Jackson counties.
- $10,000 to The United Methodist Church’s Home of the North Georgia Conference for its Healthy Families Program serving residents in Gwinnett and Hall counties.
- $9,893 to Northeast Georgia Care, Inc. (dba Choices Pregnancy Center), Gainesville, for materials and supplies for its My Baby Counts Program for residents in Hall, Banks, Barrow, Clarke, Franklin, Gwinnett, Jackson and Madison counties.
- $7,500 to Nuci Phillips Memorial Foundation, Inc., Athens, which advocates for and helps to alleviate the suffering for those living with a brain illness serving residents in Banks, Barrow, Clarke, Franklin, Gwinnett, Hall, Jackson, Madison and Oglethorpe counties.
- $7,400 to Mosaic Georgia, Inc., Duluth, which serves children and adults impacted by sexual violence and abuse for residents in Banks, Barrow, Clarke, Gwinnett and Hall counties.
- $5,000 to NOAH’s Ark, Inc., Dahlonega, which provides a safe haven and support services for victims of family violence for trauma counseling services for residents in Banks, Barrow, Clarke, Gwinnett, Hall, Jackson, Lumpkin, Madison and Oglethorpe counties.
- $2,500 to Across the Bridge, Inc., Lawrenceville, for entry fees to rehabilitation centers for individuals in all counties served by Jackson EMC who are seeking recovery from addiction.
- $2,400 to Devereux Advanced Behavioral Health, which serves adolescent youth with severe emotional and behavioral challenges for its Grace’s Place Activity Therapy Program serving people in Gwinnett County.
- $2,000 to Wellspring Living, Inc., which serves those at risk for or victimized by sexual exploitation for therapy sessions for Gwinnett County residents.
Jackson EMC Foundation grants are made possible by the 221,697 participating cooperative members who have their monthly electric bills rounded to the next dollar amount through the Operation Round Up program. Their “spare change” has funded 2,054 grants to organizations and 437 grants to individuals, putting more than $21.7 million back into local communities since the program began in 2005.
Go As A River, by Shelley Read
From Karen J. Harris, Stone Mountain: On the family farm near Iola, Colorado, Victoria Nash takes care of home with her father and brother. The trajectory of her life changes when she meets Wilson Moon. Their connection swirls amidst the hatred of Native Americans. Victoria and Wil carve out time together until tragedy strikes. Victoria leaves home, wondering who in her family may be complicit in Wil’s disappearance. She lives in the woods for months. When the town of Iola is submerged by the Blue Mesa Reservoir, her goal is to relocate the family peach orchard and revive all that was lost. This undertaking takes courage, resourcefulness and faith to resurrect the best parts of the family farm and legacy. Go As a River is a lyrical and beautifully rendered story that presents little known history about Iola, Colorado and the people impacted by the Blue Mesa Reservoir in the name of progress.
- 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. Click here to send an email.
1873 hanging has long impact on state
In 1873, Susan Eberhart was convicted of murder and hanged in Preston. Her execution was among the most publicized and controversial in the state’s history and had a significant influence on the administration of capital punishment in Georgia.
In 1871, 18-year-old Susan Eberhart found employment as a servant for Enoch F. Spann, a 36-year-old Confederate veteran, and his wife, Sarah, a disabled woman in her 50s. Enoch Spann made sexual advances toward Eberhart soon after her arrival and began plotting to murder his wife in hopes that he might marry Eberhart. Spann first arranged for his wife to be thrown from their buggy into a swollen stream while traveling to church, but Eberhart intervened and saved her from drowning.
According to rumor, Enoch then considered drowning his wife in a water barrel but never acted upon this plan. In May 1872, neighbors discovered Sarah Spann’s strangled body at the family’s home; Enoch Spann and Eberhart were nowhere to be found.
Gov. James M. Smith offered a $500 reward for their capture, and a posse set out to locate the fugitives. A week later, the party found Spann and Eberhart in Alabama and returned the pair to Webster County to face trial. Members of the posse later testified that both fugitives admitted guilt, but the reward money may have motivated the ascription of blame.
The Superior Court of Webster County found Spann and Eberhart guilty of first-degree murder and sentenced both to death by hanging. According to Enoch’s confession, he strangled his wife with a rope. Jurors debated whether Eberhart was an enthusiastic participant or a coerced victim, but ultimately concluded that Eberhart was guilty, having placed a handkerchief over the victim’s mouth to muffle her screams.
Spann later appealed his conviction on grounds of insanity, but a Webster County jury determined he had been fit to stand trial. Two unsuccessful appeals to the state Supreme Court followed, and on April 11, 1873, he was hanged on the gallows at “Bugger Bottom” in Preston. A carnival-like atmosphere prevailed as some 4,000 onlookers converged on Preston for the hanging.
Though her conviction also carried the death penalty, jurors urged the court to show Eberhart mercy based on their belief she had fallen under the malevolent influence of an older man. Lower courts disregarded that recommendation, however, and when Eberhart’s appeal reached the state Supreme Court, Justice H. K. McCay was unmoved; “We have had too much of this mercy,” he insisted.
Eberhart’s case was the subject of extensive coverage in state and national newspapers, and when her sentence was upheld, an array of sympathizers petitioned Governor Smith to spare her from the gallows. The governor refused, and subsequent attempts to influence Sheriff W. H. Matthews also proved unsuccessful. For her part, Eberhart claimed to be at peace, and observers described her as calm when approaching the gallows for her execution on May 2, 1873.
Fallout from the Eberhart execution continued in the years that followed. Haunted by his role in the affair, and by Eberhart’s prolonged suffering in particular, Sheriff Matthews died by an apparent suicide years later. Governor Smith’s reputation suffered grievously, and he was never again elected to office in Georgia. To avoid a similar fate, subsequent governors would not allow another white woman to be put to death until 2015, when Kelly Renee Gissendaner became only the fourth white woman to be executed in Georgia. Black women were executed on multiple occasions, however.
- To view the Georgia Encyclopedia article online, go to https://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org
Check out the foundation on this older home
Older houses often had a stone foundation, as does this historic home. See if you can determine the significance of this home, and tell us where it is located. Send your idea to ebrack2@gmail.com, and include your hometown.
Scott Mullennix of Peachtree Corners recognized the recent Mystery Photo….because he’s hiked it! He wrote: “The mystery photo is the House O’ Dreams at Berry College. Berry students built this for their founder, Martha Berry, to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the college in the early 1920s. It sits on top of Lavender Mountain on the Berry College campus, which is the largest campus in North America at 27,000 acres.
“We recently went on a hike to the House of Dreams. It is 2.8 miles from the parking lot to the top of the mountain where the cabin is located (and every step is UPHILL!).”
Allan Peel of San Antonio, Texas added. ‘There are two particular aspects of this house that are rather unique – first, is its location, and second, is how it was built.
- It is located on the expansive grounds of Berry College in the foothills of the Georgia Appalachian Mountains. At 27,000-acres, this is the largest contiguous college campus in the world! Pretty impressive!
- The second unique fact is that the house was constructed using materials sourced directly from the mountain itself, entirely by hand and without the use of “modern machinery” that was available at the time (such as powered concrete mixers, gas-powered saws, electric drills, etc.) Instead, the students hand-quarried the stone and transported materials up the mountain using mule-drawn wagons, and employed traditional hand tools such as hammers, chisels, and hand saws. These methods reflect the school’s emphasis on hard work and self-reliance.”
Also sending in the right answer were Jay Altman, Columbia, S.C.; and George Graf, Palmyra, Va. The photo came from Rebecca Baumann of Lilburn.
- SHARE A MYSTERY PHOTO: If you have a photo that you believe will stump readers, send it along (but make sure to tell us what it is because it may stump us too!) Click here to send an email and please mark it as a photo submission. Thanks.
Norcross has Bluesberry beer-music on June 14
Bluesberry beer and music festival will be held June 14 from 5 to 10 p.m. at Betty Mauldin Park in Norcross. Featuring soulful blues music, cold beer, blueberry-themed drinks and treats and exclusive offers from downtown businesses, it’s sure to be a great time
Hydrangeas 101: Have you tried growing Hydrangeas? Are you confused about old wood, new wood? Pink or blue? Sun or shade? How much to water? Learn more about this plant and others when Jennifer Petritz speaks at the Gwinnett Master Gardeners meeting on June 16 at 7 p.m. at the Bethesda Senior Center. In this talk, Jennifer will demystify hydrangeas once and for all! Learn about the four major types of hydrangeas you are likely to find at your local garden center, and how to plant and care for them to ensure a bounty of blooms. These meetings are free and open to the public. If you join for dinner, come at 6:30 p.m. and bring a dish to share.
Writers Workshop: Learn more about writing, network with other writers, and listen to accomplished authors offer tips to improve your writing. In partnership with the Atlanta Writers Club. This workshop is scheduled on June 21 at the Lilburn Branch of Gwinnett County Library.
Author talk: join Katherine Scott Crawford at the Duluth Branch of Gwinnett County Public Library at 6 p.m. on June 24. She will discuss her historical fiction novel, The Miniaturist’s Assistant. Books will be available for purchase and signing.
Taste of Peachtree Corners will be June 26 from 5:30 to 8 p.m. at the Atlanta Marriott at Peachtree Corners, sponsored by the Peachtree Corners Business Association. Enjoy an evening of delicious bites and drinks as you get to sample foods from local restaurants and businesses. Upon check-in, you will receive a Passport highlighting participating restaurants and businesses and their offerings. Advanced registration appreciated
GwinnettForum is provided to you at no charge every Tuesday and Friday.
Meet our team
- Editor and publisher: Elliott Brack, 770-840-1003
- Managing editor: Betsy Brack
- Contributing columnist: Jack Bernard
- Contributing columnist: George Wilson
More:
- Mailing address: P.O. Box 1365, Norcross, Ga. 30091
- Work with us: If you would like to learn about how to be an underwriter to support the publication of GwinnettForum as a community resource for news and commentary, please contact us today.
Subscriptions to GwinnettForum are free.
- Click to subscribe.
- Unsubscribe. We hope you’ll keep receiving the great news and information from GwinnettForum, but if you need to unsubscribe, go to this page and unsubscribe in the appropriate box.
- © 2025, Gwinnett Forum.com. Gwinnett Forum is an online community commentary for exploring pragmatic and sensible social, political and economic approaches to improve life in Gwinnett County, Ga. USA.




