Health & Wellness Sponsored section ►►PAGE 20
Construction closure ahead Portion of Parsons Rd. closed Jan. thru Sept. ►►PAGE 6
Students get more choice?
FCSS explores options outside mandated attendance zones ►►PAGE 28
Alley-Oop
HS basketball returns to North Fulton ►►PAGES 36 – 37
December 11, 2014 | johnscreekherald.com | 75,000 circulation Revue & News, Johns Creek Herald, Milton Herald & Forsyth Herald combined | 50¢ | Volume 18, No. 49
Candidate forum sets election table JCCA sponsors House candidate roundtable By HATCHER HURD hatcher@appenmediagroup.com
HATCHER HURD/STAFF
Members of the Consecrated Women, a Catholic evangelical singing group, rehearse for the Johns Creek Symphony Orchestra Christmas Gala. Their music will add a new dimension to the annual concert.
Consecrated Women make joyful noise Will highlight JC Symphony Orchestra’s Christmas Concert By HATCHER HURD hatcher@appenmediagroup.com JOHNS CREEK, Ga. – The Johns Creek Symphony Orchestra’s Christmas Concert is just full of surprises. To start, there is the first-time venue at the Johns Creek United Methodist Church. The second surprise is Maestro J. Wayne Baughman’s musical guests, the Consecrated Women. They are quite simply Catholic women who have joined the church’s evangelical efforts in the world.
Consecrated Women spokeswoman Emily Roman said they want to bring Christian values back into society. “It is a style of giving your life God,” she said. While the Consecrated Women are not nuns, they do live communally and spend a lot of time in prayer together as well as serving the laity. That they also perform singing is not really so unusual either. “Singing is what we do as a part of daily life in mass
See CONCERT, Page 12
If you go What: Johns Creek Symphony Orchestra Christmas Gala Concert When: 7 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 20 Where: Johns Creek United Methodist Church, 11180 Medlock Bridge Rd Tickets: $30/Adults, $25/Seniors (55+), $15/Students Group Rates for 10 or more available. More info: johnscreeksymphony.org or call 678- 748-5802
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. – A hastily arranged candidate forum Dec. 8 by the Johns Creek Community Association at Thornhill subdivision clubhouse may be the only time the five candidates square off before the Jan. 6 Special Election. Libertarian Christine Austin, Independent Paul Troop and Republicans Royce Reinecke, Brad Raffensperger and Kelly Stewart are all vying for the Georgia House Seat 50. Forum moderator Cleve Gaddis peppered the candidates with questions on a range of issues to elicit their positions on topics ranging
from Common Core to the Fair Tax. The following is a synopsis of the candidates based on their responses to the JCCA questions. Christine Austin: She is a mother and serves as PTA board member, HOA board member and community liaison. She says she does not want to be a politician but a representative for the people of Johns Creek. As a Libertarian she wants “a lot more freedom” and more personal responsibility in government. Speaking about transportation, Austin said she does not want federal funding because “federal dollars come with strings attached.” She said the real transportation problem is people can’t live where they work. For instance laws prohibiting boarding houses means
See FORUM, Page 4
HATCHER HURD/STAFF
District 50 candidates are from left Brad Raffensperger, Christine Austin, Royce Reinecke, Kelly Stewart and Paul Troop.