Full issues

NEW for 11/18: S.C. judge, Salvation Army leaders, Saving U.S.

GwinnettForum  |   Number 25.90  |  Nov. 18, 2025

CONCERT ON ITS WAY: “Dreams of Bethlehem Christmas” concert will be presented Dec. 13-14 by the Sugar Hill Choir of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. It will be at the LDS church at 4833 Suwanee Dam Road in Suwanee. This is the 21st year of the Christmas performance and features 65 musicians. There is no charge to attend. The director of the choir is Jim Carter of Gainesville.

IN THIS EDITION

TODAY’S FOCUS: S.C. district judge looking into critical cases in D.C.
EEB PERSPECTIVE: Salvation Army commissioners retire in Gwinnett
SPOTLIGHT: Gateway85 Community Improvement District
ANOTHER VIEW: Here are four ways we can help save our country
FEEDBACK: Send us your thoughts
UPCOMING: Duluth DAR chapter promoting Ken Burns documentary
NOTABLE: Peachtree Corners considers pedestrian bridge over river
RECOMMENDED: Keep the Memories, Lose the Stuff,  by Matt Paxton
GEORGIA TIDBIT:  Julien Green wrote of Georgia roots from France<
MYSTERY PHOTO: Here’s a statue of a famous person to identify<
LAGNIAPPE: GHCA names Chamber foundation as key partner<
CALENDAR: Benefit concert for Ukraine will be Nov. 22

TODAY’S FOCUS

S.C. district judge looking into critical cases in D.C

Federal courthouse in Alexandria, Va.

By Andy Brack

CHARLESTON, S.C.  |  In a week of explosive news that saw the end of the nation’s longest government shutdown and the release of 20,000 pages of documents that may take down a president, you might have missed a really interesting story about a South Carolina federal judge.

Andy Brack

It seems that Senior U.S. District Judge Cameron McGowan Currie of Columbia is doing special duty in a Washington case of great import to the nation.  She’s looking into a critical issue involving the prosecution of two of President Donald Trump’s foes:  Former FBI Director James B. Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James.  

At issue is whether Trump loyalist Lindsay Halligan, the novice interim U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia appointed after her predecessor refused to indict the two, should be a federal prosecutor at all.  Lawyers for Comey and James say her appointment violated federal laws related to interim appointments, which the Justice Department denies.

So Currie, first appointed to the federal bench by President Bill Clinton in 1994 after serving as a chief deputy state attorney general and federal prosecutor, has been brought in to referee the issue before the case really gets going.  And the whole thing is important, legal analysts say, because it calls into question whether a president can install loyalists to prosecute political foes through interim appointments to bypass congressional oversight.

What’s particularly interesting in the cases against the former director and current New York attorney general is how quickly Halligan, who had no prosecutorial experience, got indictments, according to The Washington Post“In both cases, Halligan pursued the charges over objections from career prosecutors in her office who had concluded there was insufficient evidence to support them. She presented the cases to the grand jury herself.”

And this is where everything gets extra delicious if you know anything about Cam Currie’s career:  She knows exactly how grand juries work.  Why?  Because she ran the South Carolina State Grand Jury for five years until she became a federal judge.

As a lawyer and a judge with 31 years of experience on the bench, she knows how the system is supposed to work.  When you realize the core value of her legal career has been a lifelong commitment to the rule of law, you may better understand her stalwart support and belief in due process, legal standards, accountability and making sure that no one – no government, institution or individual – is above the law.  So you can see where we may be headed.

Through the years, Currie’s record has shown a commitment to fairness, due process and the rule of law.  In 2009, she ruled the state of South Carolina couldn’t have a cross and the phrase “I believe” on license plates because it was a First Amendment violation.   In 2023, she ruled that the conservative Freedom Caucus had to be treated like other legislative caucuses when it came to rules on organizing, fundraising and elections.  Most recently, she oversaw a 2025 case involving R. J. May, a former Lexington County legislator who pleaded guilty to five counts of distributing child sexual abuse material.  She’ll sentence him in January.

“Currie’s record reflects a consistent emphasis on procedural rigor and adherence to established legal standards,” according to a Newsweek profile.

It’s anybody’s guess where the cases against Comey and James will end up. But skepticism by Currie about Halligan’s appointment came through clearly at one point Thursday when she seemed to catch Justice Department lawyers in hypocrisy.  In Halligan’s case, they’ve been arguing her appointment as prosecutor was proper. But in a past case involving special prosecutor Jack Smith, appointed to investigate Trump’s mishandling of classified documents, they took the opposite position in trying to disqualify him. 

A ruling is expected by Thanksgiving.  If Halligan is disqualified or the cases are thrown out for some legal reason, one message may become clear – the Justice Department should be off limits to presidents and they shouldn’t use it to seek revenge. 

EEB PERSPECTIVE

Salvation Army commissioners retire in Gwinnett

Jolene and Kenneth Hodder. Photo provided.

By Elliott Brack
Editor and Publisher, GwinnettForum

NOV. 18, 2025  | For Jolene and Kenneth Hodder, there was one reason to choose Gwinnett as their retirement location: to be near their two grandsons, now ages 5 and 7. Their daughter, Jessica, and her husband, Tyler Fagerstrom, live in Lawrenceville, and the Hodders are now residents of Suwanee.  

The couple retired in February, from being the top leaders, the national commissioners, of the Salvation Army in the United States.

Hodder is a sixth generation Salvationist, born in San Francisco. “I never intended to be a Salvation Army officer, but wanted  to be a corporate attorney.” However, he planned to be a “soldier” (lay member) of the Army. His father had served as the national commissioner. Kenneth studied history at Harvard, got a law degree there and began a career with a large law firm in Los Angeles, Calif. 

Meanwhile, he had married Jolene, herself a fourth generation Salvationist from Fort Collins, Colo. They met at a Salvation Army camp in the state of Washington. 

After three years in law, his senior partner, who told him he was doing well, presented him with a bonus check.  “I went back to my office and saw all the piles of paper and transactions, and realized it was not what God intended of me. I knelt at my desk and asked the Lord what was his intention, and he told me to become an officer of the Salvation Army.”

The first person he called was his father. He had always told his father that one day he would buy him a new Cadillac.  His father said: “I guess this means I’m not getting a Cadillac.”

When he told his wife of his intention, she was not convinced. She was in retail with the Carter Hawley Hale and Broadway stores. Two weeks later, she turned off the radio, turned to him and said that God had also called her.

Hodder remembers: “We announced to our firms we would be leaving, sold our car, paid off student loans, and entered training college in 1985 at Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif. The life God has given us is more exciting and more fulfilling and joyful and meaningful than we ever imagined.” 

Their first assignment was to Nairobi, then three years in London, then four years in Kenya, and finally assignments in the USA. “We learned that the Lord never wastes anything. I used my legal training in London as the legal and constitutional adviser for the Commanding General, working with the  Democratic Republic of Congo, then in Kuwait, Nepal and other nations. It was so exciting to see how God never wastes anything.”

He served one assignment in Georgia, living in Duluth, between 2017 and 2020. He was attached to the Army’s officer training college, and spent the time making plans for the international millennial Congress in Atlanta. It was the biggest event in its history, bringing 25,000 people to Georgia, with nearly every country where the Salvation Army serves represented. 

In 2016, he was appointed as the territorial commander for the Western region, and 2020 was named the national commander. In that role he chaired the commissioner’s conference and set policy nationally; spent a good deal of time on Capitol Hill; represented the Army to the corporate community by working with firms like WalMart, Federal Express, Amway and BNSF, and reported to the general in London.

He says: “We look back as having a career with an enormous blessing. We cannot wait to see what is in store for us now in Gwinnett.”

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

Gateway85 CID

The public spiritedness of our sponsors allows us to bring GwinnettForum.com to you at no cost to readers. Gateway85 Community Improvement District is a self-taxing  district that includes just over 800 commercial property owners with a property value of over $1.7 billion. Gateway85 includes the southwestern part of Gwinnett County including properties along Jimmy Carter Boulevard, Buford Highway, Indian Trail Road, and Beaver Ruin Road. Gateway85 is one of five  CIDs to be created in Gwinnett County and is one of the largest CIDs in the state.

The community is an economic powerhouse that helps fuel the regional economy. More than 3,000 businesses employing roughly 47,400 people call Gateway85 home. The jobs in the district account for almost 16 percent of Gwinnett County’s total employment. Gateway85 provides $27.5 billion in economic output for the County and $36.4 billion economic output for Georgia. Gateway85’s mission is to improve property values through increased security, decreased traffic congestion, and general improvements to the curb appeal and infrastructure of the area. Gateway85 CID’s office is located at 6305 Crescent Drive, Norcross, Ga.  30071. 

ANOTHER VIEW

Here are four ways we can help save our country

“Dictatorship naturally arises out of democracy”- Plato

By Jack Bernard, contributing columnist

PEACHTREE CITY, Ga.  |  Most of our citizens believe the USA to be a majority-rules democracy. In reality, we have a very flawed constitutional republic, controlled by a minority of voters from smaller states.     

I can already hear the howling from MAGA about this is the way our Founding Fathers designed it to be. Yes, in the 1700s, the landed gentry aristocracy did not trust the uneducated masses enough to give them a true democracy. That does not make it right.

They also didn’t give the vote to women and African Americans. After the bloodiest war in our history, we corrected those mistakes via Constitutional Amendments. Now, the USA needs to remedy other basic failings, many unforeseen by the Founders. 

Our Supreme Court (SCOTUS) is no help. Because of Senator Mitch McConnell’s unscrupulous tactics, our SCOTUS is currently controlled by partisan “original intent” activists who believe we are still stuck in the 1700s. Many of these justices were appointed by Presidents (W and Trump), who were elected by the Electoral College (i.e. undemocratically). Most citizens voted against W (2000) and Trump (2016, 2024), but because of the undemocratic Electoral College, they took office as  our laws outline.

Here are just a few of the needed changes to our laws and constitution that must occur if we are to ever become a democracy.

  1. Disenfranchisement: Voter restrictions are discouraging participation, especially after SCOTUS decisions invalidating key parts of the 1965 Voting Rights Law (which had been in place 50 years before the activist Roberts’ court). A much stronger Voter’s Rights Bill must be passed by Congress. If the current far right wing SCOTUS rejects it, a constitutional remedy will be required.
  2. Gerrymandering: Those in power stay in power by drawing districts to help themselves, negating the will of voters, via “packing” (concentrating a type of voter in a district) and “cracking” (dispersing voters of a certain type over several districts). Federal laws can be passed to discourage these practices on the part of states. For example, requiring all states to utilize non-partisan redistricting commissions, which are used by a few states now. Again, if SCOTUS rejects these laws, constitutional remedies will be needed.
  3. Transparency of campaign financing: Thanks to SCOTUS’s naive Citizens United decision, dark money has become prevalent, with “Super Pac” spending reaching almost  $2 billion in 2024. Citizens United (and the closely related Speech Now decision) overturned campaign financing laws and regulations designed to prevent corporations from simply buying our elections.  Only a constitutional amendment can counteract this activist court and restore sanity to our elections.
  4. Abolish the Electoral College: Two of the three last presidents were elected at least once with fewer votes than their opposition (W and Trump). In a democracy, every citizen’s vote must counted equally, regardless of state of residence. The Electoral College, a counter democracy contrivance, must go away…especially after Trump’s fake elector plot in 2020.

Will these sorely needed changes take place overnight? No, especially since the wealthy and corporations are controlling the Congress, SCOTUS and presidency via political contributions.

Regardless, it’s past time for the voters, Democrats and Republicans, to demand these reforms.

FEEDBACK

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.  

UPCOMING

Duluth DAR chapter promoting Burns documentary

The DAR William Day Chapter of Duluth remembers its Revolutionary War Patriots in celebration of a new PBS documentary November 16 to 21, The American Revolution, a primetime, 6-part, 12- hour documentary series directed by Ken Burns, Sarah Botstein and David Schmidt. 

DAR is sponsoring the airing of the documentary in various local PBS markets around the country. DAR members of the William Day Chapter descend from Revolutionary War Patriots like those highlighted in the documentary. Below are four representative patriots from chapter members.

DAR is sponsoring the airing of the documentary in various local PBS markets around the country. DAR members of the William Day Chapter descend from Revolutionary War Patriots like those highlighted in the documentary. Below are four representative patriots from chapter members.

From member Erin Hart, Duluth: Patriot Frederick Carn (1758-aft. 1854). “My fourth-great-grandfather, the son of German immigrants, served in 1780 under General Francis Marion. The general earned the moniker, “The Swamp Fox,” because he understood and mastered the terrain of South Carolina swamps, terrain completely foreign to British troops.”

From member Betty Looper, Dacula: Patriot Drury Harrington (1752-1839). “My patriot was a lieutenant in both North and South Carolina. He fought in the Battle of Moore’s Creek Bridge, the first revolutionary battle in the South. He also served under Elijah Clark against the Tories, then at the Battle of Cowpens to defend against Cherokee attacks.”

From member Judy York, Dacula: Patriots William and Lucy Clayton Williams. “My Williams ancestors were both patriots. William Williams was a county clerk in 1776. After his death, wife Lucy paid the Supply Tax in 1783 needed to fund the revolution. They are honored for Civil Service and Patriotic Service, respectively.”

Founded in 1890, The Daughters of the American Revolution is one of the largest and most well-established patriotic women’s groups focused on historic preservation, education, patriotism, and service. To learn more about uncovering a genealogical connection to a Revolutionary War Patriot, reach out to the William Day DAR chapter in Duluth by emailing regent@williamdaydar.org.   

Any woman 18 years or older, regardless of race, religion, or ethnic background, who can prove lineal descent from a patriot of the American Revolution, is eligible for membership. Through the DAR Genealogical Research System (www.dar.org/GRS), the public can access a free database of information amassed by the DAR about these patriots. 

NOTABLE

Peachtree Corners studies pedestrian bridge over river

The City of Peachtree Corners has issued a Request for  Qualifications (RFQ), seeking engineering firms to design and guide development of a new pedestrian bridge over the Chattahoochee River.

The project, known as the Jones Bridge Park Connector, will link Jones Bridge Park in Peachtree Corners to the National Park Service’s Jones Bridge Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area in Fulton County, creating a new way for walkers, runners and cyclists to cross the river and enjoy continuous trail access between the two counties and the two parks. This is where remnants of an older bridge once spanned the river.

According to Greg Ramsey, director of public works and engineering for Peachtree Corners, the city has a master plan for its Corners Connector Trail System, and connecting people and places is a key part of that system. He says: “The National Park Service has a popular unit on the opposite side of the Chattahoochee River from our Jones Bridge Park, and the idea of connecting these two amazing community amenities made sense to our team from the beginning of our trail planning.” 

Key features of the project include:

  • A 12-foot-wide pedestrian bridge with lighting and other safety features.
  • A shared-use path connecting recreational areas on both sides of the river.
  • Planning and oversight for environmental studies, federal permitting, surveying, historic preservation reviews and floodplain analysis.
  • Collaboration with the National Park Service, Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) and other stakeholders.

Peachtree Corners was recently awarded $1,500,000 for initial feasibility and conceptual studies by the Atlanta Regional Commission. The proposed schedule outlines preliminary design starting in 2026, with construction bidding possible around 2030. If all goes according to plan, the river crossing could be open to the public in the next decade.

RECOMMENDED

Keep the Memories, Lose the Stuff, by Matt Paxton

From Susan McBrayer, Sugar Hill: After hosting an Emmy-nominated PBS program and working in the downsizing and decluttering business for more than 20 years, author Matt Paxton promises to tell you how to ‘declutter, downsize and move forward with your life.’ He gives people a step-by-step method to tackle even the hardest categories to declutter and makes suggestions about how to handle the resulting guilt. The current thinking is that ‘nobody wants your stuff.’ But Paxton believes if we curate what we decide to keep and make a ‘legacy list’ of a small number of items that tell our stories, someone may want some of our ‘stuff.’ Here he backs up every suggestion with personal stories from his hands-on experiences. If you are already a minimalist, you may not find anything new in this book. But if you’re just getting started, it could help you kick off your efforts and serve as a useful guide.

  • 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.

GEORGIA ENCYCLOPEDIA

Green wrote of Georgia roots from France

Julien Green, novelist, autobiographer, dramatist, critic, and first non-French national elected to the Academie Francaise (1971), was greatly attached to his American nationality and to his roots in Georgia. A large section of his writing constitutes a quest for identity by an American living abroad in France.

Green was born in Paris of American parents; his mother was from Savannah, his father from Virginia. He was baptized Julien Hartridge Green in honor of his maternal grandfather, Georgia congressman Julian Hartridge. His paternal grandfather, Charles Green, from Halesowen, England, attained great wealth as a merchant in the cotton industry in Savannah, where his ornate Tudor-style mansion, the Green-Meldrim House, was completed in 1861.

Green’s father, Edward, had a bent for speculation that led to financial losses and the acceptance of a post with a cotton agency in Le Havre, France. The family left for Le Havre in 1893 and moved in 1897 to Paris, where their eighth child, Julien, was born on September 6, 1900. Julien’s childhood was imbued with his mother’s stories of the Civil War (1861-65) and her regret that the South had lost the war. His mother died when he was 14, and he was converted to Catholicism at 16. In 1919 he thought of becoming a Benedictine monk but later abandoned the idea.

During World War I, Green enlisted in the American Field Service in 1917 and later transferred to the French Foreign Legion and then to the regular French army. After the war, in 1919, he left for America to enroll at the University of Virginia, where he studied Latin, Greek, English literature, history, German, and elementary Spanish.

This was a significant period in his career. On the level of his quest for identity, he became acquainted with various family relatives in Savannah and elsewhere. On a personal level, there was his encounter with a man whom he called Mark. This platonic relationship left Green burdened with his inability to express his love. He realized he was homosexual, which intensified his inner religious struggle between flesh and spirit, sin and grace. 

Green returned to France in 1922, but he visited America again in the 1930s and spent the World War II years (1941-45) there as well.

Green’s first novel, Mont-Cinere (1926; published in English as Avarice House), occurs in Virginia on the property of Kinloch, owned by one of Green’s relatives. His novels of the 1930s and 1940s deal with family relationships, violence, the quest for identity, and escape into the fantastic and the world of dreams. 

Green’s masterpiece is undoubtedly Moira (1950; published in English under the same title), an autobiographical novel set at the University of Virginia and dominated by the conflict between flesh and spirit, sin and grace. The culmination of Green’s quest for his Georgian roots is his series of novels on the Civil War, “the Dixie trilogy,” written in the 1980s and 1990s. Here Green gives full vent to his passion for the South in a vivid and sometimes sentimental evocation of life in Savannah before and during the Civil War.

Julien Green died on August 13, 1998, and is buried in Klagenfurt, Austria, where he frequently spent his holidays.

MYSTERY PHOTO

Here’s a statue of a famous person to identify

Today’s mystery photo is of a major player in world history, “back in the day.”  See if you can figure out who this statue depicts, and where it is located. Send your ideas to ebrack2@gmail.com, and include where you live.

Mikki Root Dillon of Lilburn immediately recognized the last mystery. “Wow! It’s the Norcross Gallery and Studio building on Carlisle Street in Norcross! It’s a wonderful place to go and meet artists, tour their studios and wall spaces and view their beautiful works of art! It’s open Thursday through Saturday from 11-4, plus receptions for exhibitions year around. Appointments are available for visiting artists too. Classes are also available.” The photo is from the archives of GwinnettForum.

Michelle Morgan of Snellville sent this in: “Today’s mystery photo is of the old Norcross public library building. My grandmother, Betty Wingo, was the librarian there.  There used to be a garage building next to it that held the old city fire truck.  The last thing I know, it was being used as some sort of arts building.” 

Also recognizing the facility were Stewart A. Woodard of Lawrenceville; Bill McLees, Norcross; John Titus, Peachtree Corners; Lucy Brady, Suwanee; Jay Altman, Columbia, S.C.; Molly Titus, Peachtree Corners; Alexis Kelley, Norcross; George Graf, Palmyra, Va.; James Feeley, Peachtree Corners; Susan McBrayer, Sugar Hill; and Allan Peel of San Antonio, Texas, who told us: “The building is owned by the City of Norcross, which, in 2006, entered into a long-term lease agreement to allow Kudzu Art Zone, Inc. to convert the space into a group of artists’ studios with a light and airy art gallery to display their members’ artwork. All this was done in support of Norcross’ long-term strategic plan to cultivate a growing environment for the creative arts community and to promote continuous growth and development in the city.”

  • 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.

LAGNIAPPE

GHCA names Chamber foundation as key partner

The Georgia Hispanic Construction Association (GHCA) recognized the Gwinnett Chamber Foundation (GCF) as the 2025 Community Partner of the Year during the Building Georgia Awards, at The Westin Atlanta Gwinnett. Gwinnett Chamber Foundation Executive Director Deirdra Cox (left) and GCF Board Member Ruthann Savage (right) accept the award on behalf of the organization. Gabriela Matute, executive director of the Georgia Hispanic Construction Association, says: “Partnership is at the heart of GHCA’s mission, and the Gwinnett Chamber Foundation has consistently demonstrated a deep commitment to empowering the Hispanic construction community. Their work has strengthened relationships and created opportunities that contribute to the economic vitality of our state.”

button size=”small”]CALENDAR[/button]

Benefit concert for Ukraine will be Nov. 22

The Story of Raymond Santana of the Central Park Five will be presented November 18 at 7 p.m. at the Duluth Branch of Gwinnett Public Library. Join Raymond Santana, one of the Central Park Five, as he discusses his young adult illustrated memoir, Pushing Hope, which reflects on his wrongful conviction and tireless fight for his 2002 exoneration. Books will be available for purchase and signing.

The Norcross PDC (people drinking coffee) meets each Wednesday at 8:15 a.m. at the 45 South Café in downtown Norcross. Speaker for the November 19 meeting will be Bill Diehl, attorney for the City of Norcross. The event is free and visitors are welcomed. 

Join Jeannine A. Cook as she discusses her debut novel, It’s Me They Follow, set in a world where a book shopkeeper becomes a reluctant matchmaker, bringing soulmates together through books. This will take place on November 20 at 6:30 p.m. at the Duluth Branch of Gwinnett County Public Library. Books will be available for purchase and signing.

Lilburn will begin the holiday season on Saturday, November 22 at Lilburn Park. Starting at 4 p.m., families can enjoy a tree lighting ceremony plus a one-of-a-kind holiday drone show lighting up the night sky. Local school groups and churches will fill the air with festive music while food trucks and holiday treats will be present. Kids can get hands-on in the craft corner and capture special memories with photos with Santa. The holiday fun continues with the Holiday Parade on Saturday, December 6, beginning at 10 a.m.

Benefit concert for Ukraine will be November 22 at 6  p.m. at the Lawrenceville Arts Center. It will be a night of music, storytelling and compassion with John McCutchen, a six time Grammy-nominated folk legend, author and performer. Joining him will be Ukrainian bandura player Olena Kovban, who will share the soulful sounds of Ukraine’s national instrument, and an art exhibit featuring children’s works from Kharkiv, created in underground shelters during the war. Proceeds provide safe classrooms, education, and art therapy for nearly 200 Ukrainian children.

Gwinnett Symphony Chorus will start the Christmas season with a Messiah Sing-along! This event is free and all are welcomed. This will be at the Lawrenceville Presbyterian Church, 800 Lawrenceville Highway, at 3 p.m. on November 23. Audience members are invited to sing or simply sit back and enjoy the performance. (Choral scores will be provided.) Singers interested in joining the choir may attend the rehearsal on Sunday, November 15, from 6-8 p.m.

Enjoy a free holiday quilt exhibition at the Norcross Welcome Center and Museum, 17 College Street, from November 24 to December 30. See more than 15 festive quilts created by members of the Spirited Quilters Guild. Open Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. , except holidays. After-hours and weekend visits available by appointment. Contact exhibition organizer Linda DeMaris with questions at 414QuiltsnMore@gmail.com.

ABOUT GWINNETT FORUM

GwinnettForum, which has been published online since 2001, is provided to you at no charge every Tuesday and Friday. The publication offers an online community commentary for exploring pragmatic and sensible social, political and economic approaches to improve life in Gwinnett County, Ga. USA.  Learn more:

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