News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Riverside Parkway’s big rig problem | FOX 5 News
SUMMARY: Riverside Parkway, a busy corridor in Douglasville, Georgia, faces issues with big rigs causing traffic hazards and neighborhood disruptions. Residents report trucks parking overnight on roadsides and bike lanes, dumping food, and creating unsafe conditions by speeding and making dangerous turns near warehouses. Despite no-parking signs, marked bike lanes, and added signage, enforcement remains inconsistent. County officials acknowledge the problem and are exploring long-term solutions like designated truck parking areas after hours. Frustrated residents, who pay high taxes, demand stronger action from local authorities. Efforts continue amid growing concerns over safety and quality of life in this rapidly developing area.
Big trucks are causing big headaches in a fast-changing stretch of metro Atlanta. Riverside Parkway is a growing corridor that sees traffic from several counties, primarily Cobb and Douglas.
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News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Expect beef prices to go up, as imports from Mexico remain in short supply due to screwworm fears
SUMMARY: Meat prices in the U.S. are expected to rise due to ongoing restrictions on Mexican cattle imports caused by New World screwworm infestations. The USDA halted and reinstated bans after cases were found in southern Mexico, including Veracruz. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins ordered an immediate shutdown of live cattle, bison, and horse trade across the southern border to protect U.S. livestock. Mexican beef producers report losses of $25-30 million monthly and a 20% price increase. The screwworm larvae attack healthy tissue, causing severe wounds and infections. Efforts continue to eradicate the parasite in Mexico before reopening border livestock ports.
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has called the U.S. decision to pause Mexican livestock imports “totally exaggerated.”
The post Expect beef prices to go up, as imports from Mexico remain in short supply due to screwworm fears appeared first on www.wsav.com
News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Brandon Blackstock, ex-husband of Kelly Clarkson, dies: reports
SUMMARY: Brandon Blackstock, the 48-year-old ex-husband and talent manager of singer Kelly Clarkson, has died after battling cancer for over three years. Clarkson postponed her Las Vegas residency to support their children during his illness. Blackstock passed away peacefully, surrounded by family. He shared two children with Clarkson, whom he divorced in 2020 after a contentious split involving custody and support disputes. Blackstock also had two children from a prior marriage and was a grandfather. His father, Narvel Blackstock, was Clarkson’s manager, and his family is well-known in the country music industry. The family requests privacy during this difficult time.
The post Brandon Blackstock, ex-husband of Kelly Clarkson, dies: reports appeared first on www.wsav.com
News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Attorneys push for the release of Georgia immigration activist detained by ICE during check-in
by Maya Homan, Georgia Recorder
August 7, 2025
A Macon activist who helped call attention to conditions at a federal immigration detention center in south Georgia in 2020 has been in the custody of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement since March, despite her claims that she is a U.S. citizen.
Alma Bowman, 58, was detained by ICE during a routine check-in and is being held by immigration authorities for the second time in what her lawyers say appears to be retaliation for her efforts to advocate for herself and other immigrant women.
Now, her lawyers are filing a complaint against state and federal immigration authorities, arguing that Bowman’s detention violates her constitutional rights and calling for her release.
Dispute over citizenship
Bowman was born in the Philippines to a Filipina mother and an American father, who was serving in the U.S. Navy at the time of her birth. Her parents later married, and brought her to the U.S. when she was 10 years old. Under the immigration laws that were in place at the time, Bowman’s lawyers say, this should make her a citizen.
But the U.S. government has refused to recognize her as such, citing a 1977 letter sent to Bowman’s mother from the U.S. Embassy in Manila casting doubt on whether her father was biologically related to her.
According to Bowman’s lawyers, it’s not uncommon for foreign-born children of U.S. service members to face roadblocks to having their citizenship recognized.
“There was a common practice in the mid-1900s, when the U.S. was involved in all of these wars in other places, of trying to deny the citizenship of the children that were born from American military men going abroad,” said Kayla Vinson, a staff attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights who is representing Bowman. “The laws of the time made those children citizens, and the U.S. military and the U.S. government have a practice of trying to deny the existence of those children and the U.S. citizenship claims of those children.”
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement may also face logistical roadblocks as they seek to deport Bowman. In July, the Philippine government told ICE that it was unable to issue travel documents for Bowman, according to the complaint, “because under Philippine law in effect at the time of Ms. Bowman’s birth, her citizenship would follow that of her father—an American.”
It’s unclear whether new policies allowing the Trump administration to deport immigrants to third-party countries will play a role in Bowman’s case.
For most of Bowman’s life, she believed she was a U.S. citizen, according to her attorneys. But in 2013, she was convicted for writing bad checks amounting to roughly $1,200, according to reporting from the Macon Telegraph. She also pleaded guilty to three counts of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and one count of possession of methamphetamine, and learned that her immigration status — according to the U.S. government — was one of a lawful permanent resident, not a citizen.
She was transferred into federal immigration authorities’ custody in 2017, where she remained for the next three years, until her release in 2020.
ICE detention
Up until March 2025, when Bowman was detained by immigration authorities for a second time, check-ins at the federal agency’s Atlanta Field Office had been a matter of routine.
Bowman had been required to attend check-ins at the field office every three months as a condition of her release in 2020. Eventually, the check-ins were reduced to an annual visit to the Atlanta field office.
But President Donald Trump’s push to increase the number of people arrested to 3,000 per day has resulted in immigration agents pursuing new tactics.
“We started hearing reports in January of this year that people were, in fact, being detained at their check-ins,” said Samantha Hamilton, a staff attorney at Asian Americans Advancing Justice – Atlanta who is representing Bowman.
In March, Bowman attended her check-in accompanied by family members and her lawyer, Hamilton, as a precaution. Supporters rallied outside the entrance, holding signs with her name and calling for the end of mass deportation policies.
But during the check-in, authorities quickly separated Bowman from her lawyer and family, transporting her to a detention facility in south Georgia.
“They said that they were going to take Alma to a separate room to get fingerprinted,” Hamilton said. “But what she says happened was that they immediately took her out of that waiting room, into the elevator and downstairs onto an SUV, where they promptly drove her to the Stewart Detention Center.”
The circumstances surrounding Bowman’s arrest indicate “that the decision to detain her had been made before she even arrived that day, and suggest that she was targeted, likely in part because of her advocacy work,” Vinson added.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement did not respond to a request for comment.
During Bowman’s previous ICE detention, she was held at the now-defunct Irwin County Detention Center, which ended its partnership with federal immigration authorities in 2021. She was also one of the women who came forward to report allegations of medical abuse they said they experienced at the hands of a doctor at the facility.
In the years since her initial release from ICE custody, she has advocated for Congress to pass the Equal Citizenship for Children Act, which would have made it easier for children of U.S.-citizen fathers to be recognized as citizens.
Now, as she once again sits in detention at a facility with a long history of misconduct allegations, she is working to help connect her fellow detainees with resources and support, even as her lawyers say she is routinely denied necessary medication prescribed for her diabetic neuropathy.
“The fact that she is continuing to do that work in the face of such restrictive repression in these dire conditions that she finds herself in is truly remarkable,” Hamilton said.
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Georgia Recorder is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Georgia Recorder maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jill Nolin for questions: info@georgiarecorder.com.
The post Attorneys push for the release of Georgia immigration activist detained by ICE during check-in appeared first on georgiarecorder.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Left
This article presents the story of Alma Bowman with a focus on human rights, immigration justice, and government accountability, themes commonly associated with a center-left perspective. The language highlights systemic issues within immigration enforcement and portrays Bowman sympathetically as an activist facing potentially unjust detention. The piece emphasizes calls for reform and legal advocacy, aligning with progressive concerns about immigration policy and civil liberties. However, the article remains factual and does not adopt an overtly partisan tone, maintaining a largely balanced narrative while clearly leaning toward advocacy for immigrant rights and criticism of enforcement practices.
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