AAA is bringing back a popular contest for 8th graders, where the winners are taken on a week-long educational river cruise in Europe. There is no cost to enter the contest and the prize includes the cruise, airfare, travel insurance and money for passports – for the student and a parent or guardian.
Summerville Main Street is proud to present “A Day of Music Downtown” on Saturday, August, 20. This event will highlight a variety of genres of music on the sidewalks of Downtown Summerville between the hours of 11:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. Locations to enjoy live music downtown on the sidewalks include: the Local Loans Building, the Chattooga County Commissioner’s Office, the Tooga Theatre, the Chattooga County Courthouse, the Montgomery Knitting Mill, beside Sugarville Bakery, the Chattooga County Tax Office, and beside The Market At DIRT.
Local resident and Trion alumni Paul Cavin, who writes articles for fetchyournews.com (FYN) recently penned an article about the 90th anniversary of the Trion High School football program. Click on the following link to read the article Trion Celebrates 90th Football Season
There’s Hope for the Hungry will be at South Summerville Baptist Church on Wednesday August 17 from 10:00 a.m. until
1:00 p.m.
Insurance and Safety Fire Commissioner John F. King today is alerting consumers that Allstate Property & Casualty Company has filed an overall statewide automobile rate increase of 25 percent on their Georgia policyholders.
Here is the latest arrest report from the Chattooga County Sheriff’s Office for Tuesday, August 16, 2022:
Chattooga County Commissioner Blake Elsberry will be holding a millage rate meeting this evening at the Chattooga County Civic Center in Summerville. The commissioner says that he will be setting the millage rate at 16.0706 mills and that is the lowest millage rate the county government has set in five years.
The state of Georgia now has the fourth most confirmed monkeypox cases in the United States, according to the CDC.
A federal appeals court this past Friday ordered that statewide elections for two Georgia public service commissioners be put back on the November ballot, only a week after a federal judge postponed the elections after finding that electing the five commissioners statewide illegally diluted minority votes.
















