ICE wanted to build a detention centre - this small farming town said no
3bn (£29bn) plan to open up dozens of immigration detention centres across the US.
Those plans have faced fierce opposition, not just in Democratic communities, but in conservative towns like Social Circle, which overwhelmingly supported Donald Trump in the last election - including his campaign promise to deport millions of undocumented immigrants.
"People have different reasons for aligning with the exact same message," Fenley said.
"That message is: 'Detention centre, not welcome here. '"
"I can't let that happen without knowing what the ultimate impact is going to be. "
Now those plans for a 10,000-person detention centre appear to be on hold.
The department also signalled that it is pausing plans to buy more warehouses like the one in Social Circle - though the fate of facilities it already has spent millions on remains unclear. DHS did not directly respond to a comment from the BBC about Social Circle's facility.
Residents are cautiously optimistic.
"We're anxious to see what happens out of this review.
They have already pulled the trigger on it.
"This is surely a social circle," the stranger replied.
Nearly 200 years later, Social Circle's wells are at the heart of residents' fight against ICE.
ICE has said the facility on its own will require one million gallons a day.
"It's the same story over and over," he said.
"Communities weren't informed.
"I understand the why, but I just don't understand how they're handling it. "
Bringing in gallons of water on Social Circle's two-lane roads poses problems too.
"That's six or seven trucks every hour, 24 hours a day," Miller said.
"Where's the sewage supposed to go?"
he asked.
"We don't have the capacity to support a million gallons of sewer coming off that site. "
Other communities who have been tapped for similar projects also have fought back.
She worries about reports of people being abused in detention centres.
Others raised alarms not only for those inside the facility, but the community around it.
"We have one high school, one zip code, one grocery store, one stoplight.
"We're going to be overwhelmed. "
"It's unnerving," Joy Coker, a mother of three in the area, said of the warehouse's location.
But he couldn't believe the news when he learned the detention centre was coming to his hometown.
"I just thought it was crazy to put something like that in this community, with no forethought, no prior authorisation, not even asking the community," he said.
"I'm all for doing what's best for the country, but is it best for this community?"
he added. "
Miller said he understood why some would be confused by the Republican town's reaction.
"Now," he said, "we're going to be known as Georgia's greatest little detention centre. "
"We want to be good partners. "
Social Circle's facility was originally slated to open in April, but work appears to have stalled.
"We can enjoy our small town life," she said, "for at least a little while longer, we hope
Logic Quality Breakdown:
- Updated_At:
- Truth_Blocks:
- Analysis_Method: