Walker County Messenger

Technical College System awarded $4.85 million in Strengthen­ing Community College Training Grants

- From Technical College System of Georgia

The U.S. Department of Labor (USDOL) announced the award of $4.85 million to a consortium of Technical College System of Georgia (TCSG) colleges to help meet labor market demands for a skilled workforce.

The Strengthen­ing Community Colleges Training

Grants aim to address the skill developmen­t needs of employers and to support workers in gaining skills and transition quickly from unemployme­nt to employment. The grants also build the capacity of community and technical colleges to address challenges associated with the Coronaviru­s pandemic, such as expanding online and technology­enabled learning.

“One of the Peach State’s greatest economic strengths is our workforce,” Gov. Brian Kemp said. “As we continue to mitigate the economic impact of COVID-19, it is critical that we build on that strength to ensure Georgians are able to find work and opportunit­y in the days ahead.

“Our economic developmen­t team continues to announce projects in every region of the state, and these grants will help our technical colleges ensure businesses find a team of skilled, hardworkin­g Georgians ready to meet their needs no matter where they locate,” Kemp said.

Georgia’s grant recipients are a consortium of technical colleges that are undertakin­g capacity building and systems change at the state level.

The consortium will work with workforce developmen­t partners and employer partners to train a broad spectrum of workers, including dislocated workers, incumbent workers and new entrants to the workforce.

The industries of focus in Georgia are healthcare, informatio­n technology and manufactur­ing.

The museum is open Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. (EST). Admission is $5 for adults,

$3 for students, and children five and younger are admitted free. PINES Library Card holders receive free admission. Groups of 10 or more will receive special admission of $3 per person, with Sunday tours offered by appointmen­t only between 1-4 p.m. (EST). For more informatio­n about the exhibit or to schedule your group tour, contact the 6th Cavalry Museum at 706-861-2860, visit the website at www.6thcavalry­museum.org or e-mail chris@6thcavalry­museum.com.

Joe Biden has always opposed eliminatin­g the Senate’s filibuster rule, and for good reason. Proponents of its eliminatio­n ignore the reality that today’s majority will surely be in the minority again. And the losers will then realize the value of being able to thwart the winners’ worst impulses.

This is not a hypothetic­al question. In 2013, Democrats foolishly altered the filibuster rule — which requires 60 votes to end debate

— so it no longer applied to federal judgeships. Four years later, Republican­s followed their lead, ending the filibuster for Supreme

Court nomination­s and enabling President Trump to fill three seats in four years.

Do you think Democrats might regret being powerless to block Amy Coney Barrett’s elevation to the court in the waning days of Trump’s presidency?

But now Biden faces a crisis, an inflection point, that’s forcing him to reconsider his position on the filibuster. Following their defeats last fall, Republican­s across the country are mounting a concerted effort in state legislatur­es to change the rules and make it harder to vote. The Brennan Center for Justice counts 253 bills introduced in 43 states that would restrict the franchise and damage basic democratic norms.

Michael McDonald, an expert on election law at the University of Florida, warns: “I don’t say this lightly. We are witnessing the greatest rollback of voting rights in this country since the Jim Crow era.”

A Washington Post editorial adds that Republican­s “have embraced a strategy of voter suppressio­n because they fear that, if the rules are fair, they will lose.”

What makes the crisis even more acute is that the Supreme Court, with its 6 to 3 conservati­ve majority, is unlikely to uphold legal challenges to those laws once they’re passed. The best option for Biden and the Democrats is to adopt federal legislatio­n that sets national guidelines and impedes the GOP’s attempts at voter suppressio­n.

Two bills are moving steadily through Congress that would do just that. One measure, which has already passed the House on a party-line vote, would mandate procedures like automatic voter registrati­on, expanded early voting and free mail-in ballots. The second proposal would restore provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 — gutted by the Supreme Court in 2013 — that imposed federal supervisio­n over states and districts with a history of discrimina­tion.

Here’s Biden’s first problem: Those bills will inevitably be blocked in the Senate by Republican filibuster­s. So the new president must make a choice: stick with his loyalty to the filibuster and lose on voting rights? Or alter his position and entertain changes to the Senate rules?

The argument for change is rapidly gaining strength. For one thing, the entire Republican voter suppressio­n effort is premised on a Big Lie: that the last election was somehow stolen by the Democrats, and that stricter laws are necessary to prevent future fraud. But, as countless courts, election officials and Trump’s own attorney general have concluded emphatical­ly, THAT IS NOT TRUE.

Here’s the president’s other problem: Even if Biden were to change his position, Democrats almost certainly don’t have the votes to eliminate filibuster­s entirely. With only 50 seats in the Senate, they can’t afford to lose anybody, and Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia has made his position very clear. Asked if he’d consider ending the filibuster, he recently told reporters, “Never!”

But there is another option, one that Manchin has indicated he might support: amending the filibuster rules to make an exception for bills on voting and civil rights. Those rules are hardly sacrosanct; they have been altered many times. For instance, the number of votes needed to break a filibuster was dropped from 67 to 60 in 1975.

Carve-outs already prevent filibuster­s on budget bills, trade deals and military base closings. Voting rights are at least as important — if not more — than any of those issues. In his eulogy last July for civil rights icon John Lewis, Barack Obama made this precise point: “If all this takes eliminatin­g the filibuster, another Jim Crow relic, in order to secure the God-given rights of every American, then that’s what we should do.”

In 1965, my late father-in-law, Hale Boggs, then a congressma­n from Louisiana, risked his career to endorse the Voting Rights Act. Boggs said on the House floor, “I shall support this bill because I believe the fundamenta­l right to vote must be a part of this great experiment in human progress under freedom which is America.”

Biden and the Democrats must amend the filibuster rules to protect that “great experiment” once again.

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Roberts

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