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Tag: Senator Jon Ossoff

  • Vigil held to honor the life of Amber Nicole Thurman and Candi Miller on the anniversaries of their deaths 

    Three years have passed since the tragic death of Amber Nicole Thurman, a Georgia mother. A year has passed since Candi Miller, also a mother, lost her life. Both women lost their lives due to Georgia’s extreme abortion ban.

    Amber’s mother, Shannette Williams, and Candi’s sister, Turiya Tomlin-Randall, joined alongside Free&Just, community members, and local leaders for a vigil at Free & Just’s mural in Atlanta to mark the third anniversary of Amber’s passing and demand justice for all those impacted by abortion bans.

    In November 2024, ProPublica reported on the preventable deaths of Amber and Candi.

    Details included in reports from Georgia’s Maternal Mortality Review Committee, which investigates pregnancy-related deaths in the state, confirm both women’s deaths were preventable and the result of limited access to prompt medical care. 

    Williams only learned of the details of her daughter’s passing after ProPublica’s investigation surfaced previously withheld information. In response to ProPublica’s reporting, officials in Georgia dismissed all members of the state’s Maternal Mortality Review Committee, which investigates the deaths of pregnant women across the state.

    Instead of working to keep Georgia women safe or addressing the state’s alarmingly high maternal mortality rate among Black women, Georgia health authorities are being called out for circling the wagons and attempting to make it more difficult to understand how and why pregnant women across Georgia are suffering poor pregnancy outcomes and even preventable deaths.

    Abortion bans are killing women across the country, and instead of working to expand access to care, Trump and extremists in Congress have jammed through dangerous cuts that will strip millions of people from health care, leaving more lives at risk.  

    Williams also says her grief turned into a fight when she learned the truth about her daughter’s death. 

    “The discovery of what happened to Amber is what made my grief turn into a fight, not to harm, but an advocacy for rights,” she said.

    Amber Nicole Thurman’s mother, Shannette Williams (in yellow), and Candi Miller’s sister, Turiya Tomlin-Randall (left), joined alongside Free&Just, community members, and local leaders for a vigil at Free & Just’s mural in Atlanta to mark the third anniversary of Amber’s passing and demand justice for all those impacted by abortion bans. Photo by Isaiah Singleton/The Atlanta Voice

    Williams says she is at a loss for words and has mixed emotions, but it doesn’t stop the fight.

    “I am just taken by the fact that I must go to the cemetery to visit my baby. Amber’s death was preventable, and the fact that I hear crickets now, considering the President and Vice President acknowledged her death was preventable. Yet, they are not doing anything to save the other women,” she said.

    She adds that the Trump administration is trying to strip women of everything that could save them. Williams also says her daughter Amber was affected as other women are being affected now, and that it’s her earthly purpose, goal, and breath she takes to make sure she fights for justice for Amber and all the other women who have been affected or lost their lives.

    “Bringing other women together by my strength empowers me to keep going. I don’t have a ‘give up’ bone in my body because our family has suffered a tremendous loss,” she said. “When my grandson expresses how much he misses his mom and breaks out in tears, and we cannot console him… do you know what it means to be a grandmother to go to all lengths and measures to ensure her grandchildren are happy? I can’t quit.”

    She also said this is what happens when the community allows politicians to have a voice and sends a message to Georgia politicians and the Trump administration to “get the h—out of our business.”

    “Can anyone tell me, as a man, what I’m going through at this point? The relationship between me and my physician has been tainted because I don’t trust them anymore, and that’s a profession I’ve been in over half my life,” she said.

    With experience in the healthcare field, Williams says she, without a doubt, knows women may have the same symptoms, but each woman is different, and their body is not the same.

    “We don’t even trust the people that took the oath to say, ‘we’re not going to do any harm, but we’ll do whatever it takes to save lives,’ that statement has been tainted,” she said.

    Tomlin-Randall said she doesn’t go a day without thinking about her sister, and, unfortunately, she and Shannette had to meet under these circumstances.

    “Meeting Shannette has been one of the greatest blessings I’ve had because she gave me courage to come forward on behalf of Candi. Who would be if I wasn’t her voice?” she said. “Adriana, Candice, Amber, and all of the other women we don’t know about, no one should have to do this.”

    She continues saying Candi’s name was not a talking point, and not just a memory, because when everyone stopped saying their names, their loved ones had to wake up every day facing it.

    “The biggest loss is for her children who would never get to see their mother again, especially her then-three-year-old, who was in the bed with her when she passed because she was too afraid to go to the hospital because Georgia law said if she took an abortion pill, she would be in prison,” she said. “It’s unthinkable, and the worst part is I didn’t even know for a, almost two years, year and a half the real cause of her death; Clayton County waited almost six months to give me an autopsy, to make it make sense.”

    Photo by Isaiah Singleton/The Atlanta Voice

    Senator Jon Ossoff also made an appearance to speak a few words and said it’s hard to believe it’s been three years since the death of Amber. He also said he has reflected on parenthood over the last few months as he and his wife introduced their second child, a baby girl, into the world recently.

    “You pour everything into your child. There is nothing more precious in your life, there’s no relationship or possession that can rival the irreplaceable value of a child,” he said. “To lose a child in an unnecessary death because of decisions made by selfish, foolish politicians, it’s a burden that both Shannette and Turiya have borne with such tremendous grace, strength, and tenacity.”

    He also says to both Shannette and Turiya, the community, himself, people across the country and state are determined to do whatever they can to support them as they continue to bear their losses.

    Additionally, Williams says she wants to bombard the Trump administration and the Supreme Court because they are the ones responsible for overturning Roe V. Wade.

    “Why aren’t we in their faces? Why is it so hard to get to them? Half of my family is ripped apart because my daughter is gone, and we were once a strong, solid family,” she said. “I’m beyond standing on the podium, I want to see politicians face to face. I want to see change now.”

    As for advice, Williams says she wants every mother who is experiencing loss and thinks they do not have a voice, or has just buriedd thinks their child is forgotten, to muster the strength to make the world remember thei their child, anr child.

    “You must muster up the strength to make the world remember your child. We went through nine months of connection and how old your child is before death,” she said. “Why would you quit? Why would you not fight? Why would you let your child’s name and memories be forgotten and buried with them? You must fight as a mother, it’s what we do.”

    Furthermore, Williams said this fight is not just about her and her family, but she stands on the strength of God to bring change for every woman.

    “A ‘no’ to me doesn’t mean a thing. Looking at what’s going on at the White House, I could care less because my God is the President and he made a promise and he will not break his promise,” she said. “Together we stand, and we will get through it, and we’re going to get change.”

    Isaiah Singleton

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  • Sen. Jon Ossoff sat down with The Atlanta Voice to talk about working for Georgia’s Black families

    Sen. Jon Ossoff sat down with The Atlanta Voice to talk about working for Georgia’s Black families

    Photo by Kerri Phox/The Atlanta Voice

    Georgia Senator Jon Ossoff, in his trademark suit without the tie, walked over to a position in front of the new Ebenezer Baptist Church, where a group of people were waiting. Among the people waiting were school-aged Black children on a field trip, former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations and Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young, and other local and statewide civil rights leaders.

    “I’m here to thank these distinguished civil rights leaders,” Ossoff said as he explained how he got the Federal Prison Oversight Bill, which he first introduced in 2022, passed. The bill was recently signed by United States President Joseph R. Biden. 

    Following the press conference on Tuesday morning, Ossoff dropped by The Atlanta Voice office to speak with newspaper leadership about other moves he is making to improve the lives of millions of Black families around the state.

    Photo by Kerri Phox/The Atlanta Voice

    The Atlanta Voice: What makes you want to fight for Black families the way you continue to do in the U.S. Senate?

    Sen. Jon Ossoff: When I ran for the Senate I focussed on health, jobs, and justice. When I think about the challenges faced by Georgia’s African American community, the health disparities in our state are vast, the gap in economic opportunity and empowerment are vast. The justice gap also remains vast, so I have focused legislative energy, both in terms of oversight and reform efforts and tangible deliverable resources appropriated to the state of Georgia on addressing those critical gaps.

    AV: What has some of that legislative energy wrought?

    JO: There’s a huge shortage of facilities and resources for Black Georgians. That’s on the southside of Atlanta, but also in rural communities across the state. That’s why I have appropriated funds for example, to Southern Regional Hospital. That’s why I appropriated funds to clinics in rural areas in Georgia, as well as to transportation services that help folks in rural and underserved areas get to their appointments, get to the pharmacy, get what they need.

    AV: There is a huge gap between Black and white women in maternal services in Georgia. What’s up with that?

    JO: The maternal health gap in Georgia, the racial divide is so extreme. Georgia has been at the bottom of the national rankings, basically last or second to last, in maternal health overall for over a decade. By some measures in recent years, maternal mortality for Black women in Georgia has been higher than maternal mortality in Iraq, a country that has been in a state of active conflict for more than two decades.

    Georgia Senator Jon Ossoff (above) with a copy of The Atlanta Voice inside a conference room at The Atlanta Voice office on Tuesday, August 5, 2024. Photo by Kerri Phox/The Atlanta Voice

    Editor’s note: Ossoff recently held a senatorial hearing highlighting the testimony of OBGYN’s and maternal health doctors from Georgia. During the hearing Georgia’s six-week abortion ban was the main topic of discussion.

    JO: We heard testimony about women who were miscarrying, who were unable to get health care until they became sicker, sicker, and sicker. We heard testimony about a Georgia woman who had to leave the state, fly to Massachusetts to get healthcare, lost the pregnancy while traveling, and then upon arriving in Massachusetts went into sepsis. The extreme laws in Georgia are criminalizing the practice of obstetric medicine and worsening our shortage of OB GYN doctors in Georgia, who provide that vital prenatal care.

    AV: Medicaid is very important to millions of American families, and particularly to the state’s Black families, so why do you think it’s not as equally important to some of Georgia’s leaders?

    JO: Georgians pay the same federal taxes as residents of every other state in the country, but we are one of just 12 who refuse to get those resources back to help working families access health care. It doesn’t just deprive working families of healthcare, it deprives our hospitals of revenue. Because of there being insured patients coming through the door, there are uninsured patients coming through and the hospitals have to foot the bill. 

    AV: That might be why hospitals like Atlanta Medical Center were so easy to close?

    JO: They don’t have an insured patient population, because the state still refuses to expand Medicaid. And really, the only reason is that the underline legislation was advanced by former United States President Obama. There are still those lingering petty political grievances over the Affordable Care Act from more than a decade ago. So we have to think about health and in particular maternal health and the health of Black women. 

    AV: Part of that health is eating right, correct? There are so many counties in this state that aren’t as fortunate to have supermarkets and farmers markets within minutes like we do in Atlanta.

    JO: I’m introducing legislation called the Fresh Foods Act to help incentivize grocery stores, whether they are local community family-owned grocers or big supermarkets, to open new locations in underserved areas where they will sell fresh fruits and vegetables. If you’re somewhere there’s no hospital, no health clinic, no grocery store offering fresh fruits and vegetables, the state hasn’t expanded Medicaid, so there’s a lack of access to health insurance, it’s not like it’s a mystery why health outcomes are so much worse. 

    AV: Why are organizations like Big Brothers Big Sisters of Metro Atlanta, for example, so important for you to get federal funding?

    JO: I look at my job as a legislator and I think about it in the context of an entire human life. I thought about how we can focus on mentorship to children and adolescents, so I delivered resources for the organizations that specialize in mentorship, but for organizations here [in Georgia] that are healing place mentors and mental health professionals in schools too. 

    Photo by Kerri Phox/The Atlanta Voice

    Editor’s Note: Mentorship and mental health resources, after school opportunities, community centers, and safe public parks are also things Ossoff mentioned were targets of his funding efforts. “These are all areas where I have delivered resources to upgrade facilities on the southside of town and in rural communities, and will continue to do so,” he said.

    AV: Lastly, I want to talk to you about the Federal Prison Oversight Act that you helped get to the president’s desk and now into law. How important was that bill to you personally, and to Georgia’s Black families that are so oftentimes most affected? 

    JO: My political upbringing and my first introduction to public life was working as a very young man for Congressman John Lewis. What’s happening behind bars across the country is a humanitarian crisis. It makes a mockery of the Eighth Amendment of our Constitution which prohibits cruel and unusual punishment. 

    It is an issue that I care about, it is an issue where I’ve focused oversight and investigative resources. And now with passage of the Federal Prison Oversight Act, we have passed the most significant prison transparency and inspection legislation in many, many years. 

    Donnell Suggs

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  • Biden and Trump surrogates set sights on the Black vote in Georgia

    Biden and Trump surrogates set sights on the Black vote in Georgia

    Gina Palmer, owner of She Salon, is flanked by Senator Jon Ossoff (right) and Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens, spoke of having to watch many of her friends close their small businesses during the Trump administration. “I have seen my friends close their businesses because they were struggling to get by,” Palmer said. “Because of the Biden-Harris administration we are making a comeback.” Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    With the 2024 presidential election just a little more than four months away surrogates for both the Biden-Harris administration and for former United States President Donald J. Trump are hitting the campaign trails throughout Georgia. For voters, Democratic and Republican, having respected political figures show their political cards can go a long way to steering certain voter blocks – seniors, small business owners, young voters, Black voters, for example- to the polls in November.

    A sign on the wall inside Rocky’s barber shop. Photo by Julia Beverly/The Atlanta Voice

    The voice coming over the speakerphone was a familiar one. Inside Rocky’s Barber shop on Piedmont Road in Buckhead and outside the door via a speaker that was set up to accommodate the dozens of media members that were there to cover a roundtable discussion with Trump surrogates and Black small business owners on Wednesday, June 26, former United States President Donald J. Trump began to speak. 

    “As you know I cut taxes and regulations more than any administration ever,” Trump said. He went on to say that during his time in office his administration say the lowest percentage of Black unemployment in history and they now “have great support from the Black community.”

    Donnell Suggs

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  • GOP votes down bill codifying right to contraception

    GOP votes down bill codifying right to contraception

    U.S. Senate Republicans voted against a federal law that would enshrine access to birth control. While the Right to Contraception Act failed to meet the 60 vote threshold to advance debate, Democrats were on the offensive after the bill died.

    “Today Senate Republicans blocked the Right to Contraception Act and refused to defend access to birth control for Georgia women,” Senator Jon Ossoff said in a statement. “I will continue to fight back against any effort by extremists to ban birth control for Georgia women.”

    The bill was largely a test vote to see if the Senate could put forth a bipartisan bill before the election. Democrats worry reproductive rights might hang in the balance in November. Moreover, if Donald Trump wins November’s presidential election, Republicans could forbid the sale of birth control.


    Itoro Umontuen currently serves as Managing Editor of The Atlanta Voice. Upon his arrival to the historic publication, he served as their Director of Photography. As a mixed-media journalist, Umontuen…
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    Itoro N. Umontuen

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