Cobb schools oppose student anti-gun protests; vow disciplinary action for those who disrupt classes

Cobb schools gun protest
Students at Walton High School, along with others at Lassiter, Pope and Wheeler, are planning to walk out of classes for 17 minutes on March 14.

Shortly before 3 p.m. today the Cobb County School District issued the following statement about planned walkouts on March 14 that include those organized by students at four East Cobb high schools to protest gun violence

The safety of our students and employees is the top priority of the Cobb County School District, and the success of our students is our one goal.

We are aware of the desire of some students to participate in a demonstration of empathy for the lives lost at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on February 14, 2018. The Cobb County School District leadership will work with students to identify the best methods to accomplish this demonstration of empathy without interruption of normal school operation, which is a policy violation and potentially jeopardizes student and staff safety.

The Cobb County School District does not support or endorse walkouts/protests that cause interruption to normal school operations.

Students who choose to disrupt the normal operation of a school may be subject to consequences in accordance with the Student Code of Conduct.

Cobb schools superintendent Chris Ragsdale, who received an open letter from the East Cobb student organizers earlier this week, met with high school principals earlier today in a scheduled school district leadership meeting that included a discussion about about how to handle the protests.

Cobb schools spokesman John Stafford told East Cobb News that while the district is “not trying to stop the students from doing something positive” to honor the Florida shooting victims and protest gun violence, “what they don’t have the right to do is disrupt the normal school day.”

He said the decision was made by senior school district leadership and that the issue of school safety was a paramount factor.

At least 500 Walton students have signed up for what’s being called the National School Walkout, and a total of several hundred more have done likewise at Lassiter, Pope and Wheeler.

The protests are scheduled from 10 a.m. to 10:17 on March 14, the one-month anniversary of the Florida shootings, and could include students leaving school buildings and gathering outside. The 17-minute duration is for the 17 students and staff at the Florida school who were killed by a gunman. A former student has been arrested for their deaths.

“There is a proper way to do it, and it’s not to disrupt the school day,” Stafford said.

At a Cobb school board work session the day after the shootings, Ragsdale explained the challenges of security at high schools, and said the district would conduct unannounced “code red” drills to assess preparations for the possibility of an active shooter situation.

Stafford said that a number of alternatives were suggested at today’s meeting, including a candlelight vigil and other commemorations before the school day, and that discussions about those and other possibilities will continue.

The Cobb decision was announced on Wednesday shortly after students at Dalton High School were locked down, and then evacuated, after gunfire was heard inside a classroom building. News reports indicate a teacher has been taken into custody peacefully, and that the teacher barricaded himself in a classroom and fired his gun through a window.

The AJC also reported Wednesday a student at South Cobb High School has been arrested for threatening violence at that school.

Stafford would not specify what type of disciplinary action might be taken if Cobb students walk out as they have indicated, since the district handles student discipline cases on a case-by-case basis.

Although Marietta City Schools and DeKalb schools have said they would allow student protests, Stafford said Cobb “is not alone in what we are doing.”

Hannah Andress, an organizer of the Lassiter protest, told East Cobb News that she and her fellow students are going ahead with the protest as planned, and that she was told by Principal Chris Richie today that they will be given a “safe space” to conduct their walkout.

She said they will be having their protest on the home side of the Lassiter football stadium that will be accessible only by one entrance and exit point. Andress said students and staff will have to show their ID card. The school’s resource officer will be there “and we are looking into the feasibility of getting more security.

“We are working in close contact with administration and student council to ensure student safety and participation,” Andress told us.

She also forwarded to us the message she sent Ragsdale after the Cobb schools decision was announced:

“Thank you for providing me with teachers and resources for my education. However, your statement will not deter us. We will stand as a united front to protest the inaction of our government. We will not be a statistic and our voices will be heard so that 100 years down the line students will not have to dry their tears wondering where in history they lost their voice.”

Walton organizer Lily Lefter said the protests at her school also will go on, and she and her walkout co-hosts will be meeting with Principal Judy McNeill Thursday morning. Here’s what else she told us:

“We are of course a bit frustrated with the Cobb County statement because their primary ‘concern’ with endorsing/supporting the walkouts was the issue of safety. However, we are participating in the walk to stand up for gun law reform for our safety. If anything, we’re even more determined now. We aren’t going to be stopped by the threat of potential disciplinary actions because we are peacefully walking out to show respect to those affected as well as walk out because the 17 people who died cannot.”

 

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Civil rights icon Terrence Roberts: ‘There is no present without a past’

Terrence Roberts, Little Rock Nine
Terrence Roberts speaking Monday night at the Wheeler High School Performing Arts Center. (East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

Near the end of Black History Month, Terrence Roberts, a civil rights figure from the early years of the movement, made a return appearance in East Cobb.

One of the “Little Rock Nine” who integrated Central High School in 1957, Roberts recounted his participation in that event as part of a lifelong commitment to racial equality.

“There is no present without a past,” Roberts said to an audience Monday at the Wheeler High School Performing Arts Center. He was speaking at an event organized by the East Cobb Middle School Foundation.

Terrence Roberts.
Austin and PJ Goodloe, the grandsons of Terrence Roberts.

Roberts’ grandsons PJ Goodloe, a Wheeler student, and Austin Goodloe, who attends ECMS, introduced him. Roberts’ address, “Hope in a Time of Chaos,” was attended by a mostly adult audience, but the thrust of his message was geared toward young listeners.

The arrival of the first African slave ship in 1619 “set the tone for who we are,” Roberts said in drawing a timeline to nearly 400 years later. “That continues today.

“There’s a very direct connection between 1619 to 2018,” said Roberts, who is a recipient of the Congressional Gold Medal.

Roberts, now 76, ranged between two key Supreme Court rulings, in 1896 that upheld a separate but equal doctrine, and in 1954 outlawing segregated schools, as part of that history, as well as his own birth in 1941.

He was 15 years old when he and eight other black students faced repeated gauntlets of angry white students, even though they were ushered in by National Guard troops ordered to Little Rock by President Dwight Eisenhower.

While “the law was on our side,” he said, ingrained social, cultural, psychological and religious attitudes have remained, and this Roberts believes is still where much progress must be made.

Terrence Roberts

“I was 15 but I knew the truth of the matter,” said Roberts, who finished high school in Los Angeles and still lives in southern California, having a long career in the social services field, academia and now in management consulting.

The psychological torment he and the other students faced, and especially their families, might have produced the biggest scars.

Roberts told about how his mother received a phone call with a false report that he had been beaten at school. The mother of another of the Little Rock Nine, Gloria Ray, lost her job with a white employer for refusing to take her child out of Central High.

“We hung in there for the year,” he said. “Eight of us made it through the school year.”

Terrence RobertsHe credited his parents for “their great strength. I have been so blessed.”

Roberts also recalled a rare white schoolmate who expressed empathy for the black students, and who was “psychologically beaten down.” Going against the grain during such a momentous time took a toll.

“If you do what other people do, that’s not peer pressure, that’s stupidity,” he said.

Roberts was asked if he would try to change anything about that experience, and he didn’t waver in his answer.

“I would have tried to have a dialogue with the kids who were beating us up,” he said.

He also addressed notion that social progress is inevitable, and that Americans have made sufficient progress in racial relations in the 61 years since he became a participant in that movement.

“We are preparing to make progress,” Roberts said, describing the word as “a concentrated effort to rid ourselves of the underlying problem” of racism.

Roberts, who proudly called himself a member of the “Civil Rights Army,” said those efforts continue, because “we have a responsibility to recognize that we are part of the problem.

“Humans choose what they choose to do. We choose best when we know that we have more options.”

After his remarks he autographed copies of his books, “Simple Not Easy: Reflections on Community, Social Responsibility and Tolerance,” and “Lessons From Little Rock.”

 

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East Cobb students plan National School Walkout protest on gun control

A student-led effort to honor the victims of the Feb. 14 school shootings in Florida and demand gun control legislation is being embraced by students at four East Cobb high schools for what’s being called the National School Walkout on March 14.

Students at Lassiter, Pope, Walton and Wheeler high schools have sent a letter to Cobb County School Superintendent Chris Ragsdale and his executive cabinet stating their intention to walk out of their classes for 17 minutes on that day.

That’s in honor of the 17 students and staff killed by a gunman at Marjory Stoneham Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. A former student at the school has been arrested for the shootings.

The protests will begin at 10 a.m. and continue to 10:17 a.m. on March 14, which is a Wednesday. The walkout grew out of the Women’s March Network, and invites students nationwide to organize their own protests.

Lily Lefter, a junior at Walton, said in an e-mail to East Cobb News that she and seven other Walton students organized a protest for their school. A member of that group later participated in a groupchat with the Pope, Lassiter and Wheeler students to prepare a joint message.

In their letter to Ragsdale, which was signed by organizers at each of the four schools, they wrote that:

“The students at our high school will not be a statistic. Because this directly affects our education, our friends, our teachers, our brothers, our sisters, our mothers, our fathers, and our entire community we will not sit idly by waiting for lawmakers to decide policy change.

“As a collective group, we, the students of Lassiter, Pope, Walton, and Wheeler, have formed an alliance across the county to inform you of our decision to stand united and walk out of class for 17 minutes. We have passionately embraced the call for smart and nonpartisan gun control laws to be enacted which has consequently begun the organization of the walkout across Cobb County.”

Cobb schools have not announced a policy decision for the protest. Over the weekend Marietta City Schools said it would not discipline students who took part in protests, along with others in metro Atlanta.

Lefter said the students have not heard back from officials at Cobb schools, which resumed this week after last week’s winter break. She said Walton students e-mailed Principal Judy McNeill last week and they would like to set up a meeting if they don’t hear back by Wednesday.

Lefter said more than 500 Walton students have signed up on the protest page in the five days since it was created.

She also said the Lassiter administration “has endorsed the walkout,” and she understands that Pope administration is in the process of setting up a meeting with students.

Lefter said she got involved because she’s always been vocal about politics, “and, particularly for something as significant and relevant as gun control:”

“I feel it is my duty as a citizen to not only send my condolences and respects to the victims and families of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, but also to take action to push for policy change. In addition to walking out, my fellow hosts and I are planning to have people make calls to their legislators in order to take it to the next level to show that we are voters, and if we’re not 18 now, we will be come this next election, and we will not support nor let stand the complacency to the lack of comprehensive gun regulation in America.”

The day after the Florida shootings, Ragsdale announced at a Cobb Board of Education meeting that the district would be conducting unannounced “code red” drills at selected high schools to assess readiness for active shooter situations.

Every school in the Cobb district is required to have a code red drill each semester.

The National School Walkout group also was planning a similar protest for April 20, the 19th anniversary of the Columbine High School shooting in Colorado.

 

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East Cobb Muss & Turner’s restaurant closes abruptly

 

Muss & Turner's, East Cobb restaurant scores
East Cobb News file photo

After less than year in business, the East Cobb Muss & Turner’s restaurant has closed, effective today, at 1205 Johnson Ferry Road, in the Woodlawn Square Shopping Center.

Here’s the message that was posted on the restaurant’s social media pages, as of around 4 p.m. today:

“After a year of giving it our best shot, we have made the difficult decision to close our East Cobb location. We feel honored by the amount of support we have received from loyal fans (old and new) and are grateful to have forged such incredible relationships within this neighborhood. Thank you for your loyalty and support over the last year. It was truly a pleasure serving you. Thank you for joining us on this ride!”

Muss & Turner’s will continue to operate its original location in Smyrna, and partner Ryan Turner explained more about the decision to close in a release:

“Dining patterns among the East Cobb market varied significantly from our Smyrna location and, unfortunately, didn’t prove a financially viable model for our concept.”

Muss & Turner’s East Cobb was part of the Unsukay Concepts partnership, which operates the Smyrna Muss & Turner’s as well as Eleanor’s Restaurant in Smyrna and the Local Three Kitchen & Bar in Buckhead.

Turner, Todd Mussman and Chris Hall were part of a group that ran Common Quarter, which operated at the same Johnson Ferry Road location from 2013-17. After closing Common Quarter, they expanded the Muss and Turner’s concept into East Cobb and opened in March 2017.

Muss & Turner’s said it will honor East Cobb gift cards and loyalty points at the other Unsukay restaurants.

On Sunday the East Cobb Muss & Turner’s restaurant had been promoting its Sunday brunch menu, and in a comment thread on its Facebook page indicated that staff had been told earlier on Monday of the closing.

 

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The East Cobb News weekly newsletter for Feb. 25, 2018 is out!

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Jon Ossoff won’t run for 6th Congressional District seat in 2018

After falling short in the most expensive campaign in U.S. House history last year, Democrat Jon Ossoff announced Friday he will not seek the 6th Congressional District seat in Georgia in 2018.Jon Ossoff, 6th Congressional District race

Ossoff, defeated by Republican Karen Handel in a special election runoff last June for the seat that includes East Cobb, said on his Twitter account this afternoon that he will not be making another challenge.

In a series of Tweets Ossoff said that “I’ve decided that this is not the moment for me to run again for Congress. But I’m not going anywhere. Your trust, energy, and support last year meant the world to me. I’m in this with all of you for the long haul.”

Ossoff said he is continuing his work as an investigative documentary filmmaker but that “I’ll be actively supporting great Democratic candidates in 2018.”

Qualifying for 2018 elections in Georgia begins March 5, with primaries scheduled for May 22 for federal, state and local races.

Ossoff, a former Congressional aide from DeKalb County, earned nationwide attention and raised nearly $30 million in his bid to succeed former U.S. Rep. Tom Price in a seat that has been in Republican hands since Newt Gingrich’s arrival in 1978.

He won a “jungle primary” last April with 48 percent of the vote, barely missing outright election in what would have been a major upset. Instead, he faced Handel, a former Georgia Secretary of State and candidate for governor and U.S. Senator, in a two-month runoff.

He used much of his campaign funding for television commercials that flooded Atlanta airwaves for months, as well as frequent mailers, phone calls and text messages and door-to-door leafletting.

In her ads, Handel, who’s from Roswell, made frequent reference to Ossoff’s residence in DeKalb County, outside the 6th District boundaries.

She got a strong showing from heavily Republican precincts in East Cobb to defeat Ossoff 51-48 for the right to fill the remainder of Price’s term. He vacated the seat after the 2016 election to become U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services,but was forced to resign in September after reports that he spent several hundred thousand dollars at taxpayers’ expense flying charter planes, sometimes for personal as well as government reasons.

 

 

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Peachtree Curling Association holding Olympic gold-medal watch party

Peachtree Curling Association

To follow up on our story from last weekend about the East Cobb-based Peachtree Curling Association (Facebook page): They’re having a “lock-in” event to watch the U.S. men’s Olympic team face Sweden in the gold-medal match very late tonight.

Since that’s in Korea, it means overnight here, and to specific it’s 1:30 a.m. local time. The Peachtree Curling rink is located at 4880 Lower Roswell Road, right behind the Marietta Ice Center and East Cobb Library.

They had a tailgate for the semifinals, which the Americans won in an upset over Canada to reach their first-ever gold-medal match.

Keep in mind that if you’d like to watch in person, to bundle up before you come: Low temperatures overnight tonight are expected in the 60s, but the curling building will be cold, only 45 degrees. It probably will feel even colder with the ice temps at 25 degrees.

In addition to wearing a jacket or coat, it might not be a bad idea to bring a cap and gloves and to wear socks, as we found out the hard way.

 

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Dr. Seuss Storytimes return to Gritters Library in ‘Read Across America’ event

At the end of winter break week, Sprayberry High School is once again sponsoring a Dr. Seuss Storytimes session Saturday at the Gritters Library (880 Shaw Park Road).Read Across America, Gritters Library

It’s part of the Read Across America program sponsored by the National Education Association, and the Sprayberry community has been taking part for 20 years. Here’s more about the program from the Cobb County Public Library System:

The high school students visit local elementary schools-this year adding our local library branch–and read their favorite children’s literature with the children. Families will then enjoy a special craft activity to do with the children that connects to the book they shared. The SHS students remember when they were read to on Read Across America Day when they were little, and they love passing that experience on!

Saturday’s events at Gritters are grade-specific for pre=schoolers through fifth graders according to the following schedule:

  • 1:20-1:45 p.m.: Toddlers and Pre-K;
  • 2-2:30 p.m.: Grades K-1;
  • 2:45 p.m.-3:15 p.m.: Grades 2-3;
  • 3:30-4 p.m.: Grades 4-5.

You’ll need to register by calling the Gritters Library at 770-528-2524.

 

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North Marietta Parkway exit ramp from I-75 closed Thursday night to Friday morning

 

North Marietta Parkway exit ramp, Northwest Corridor Project

The latest rolling closure in the continuing Northwest Corridor Express Lanes Project will take place from 8 p.m. tonight to 5 a.m. Friday at the southbound North Marietta Parkway exit ramp from Interstate.

Georgia DOT says the ramp will be closed for asphalt work.

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Self-storage facility approved at former Mountain View ES site; Canton Road ‘blight’ case held

The Cobb Board of Commissioners voted 5-0 Tuesday to approve a request for a self-storage facility at the former Mountain View Elementary School site, despite opposition from some nearby residents.

The three-story building will be part of a mixed-use development on the 14-acre site on Sandy Plains Road that will include restaurants, shops and other retail businesses.

Some residents of the adjacent Cutters Gap subdivision complained that their privacy would be diminished, and there would be noise and other issues.

They also accused the developer of a “bait and switch” by not including the self-storage plans when the zoning for the full project was granted in October. However, the developer, Brooks Chadwick Capital, had to get a special land-use permit, which is required for self-storage facilities to be approved.

Kevin Moore, an attorney for Brooks Chadwick, reiterated that point, saying his clients still would have to have applied for the SLUP even if they had known at the time there was interest from a potential storage facility builder.

Additional stipulations proposed since the Cobb Planning Commission recommended approval earlier this month include a 42-foot height limit for the nearly 100,000-square-foot building, down from 45 feet.

Other restrictions include no overnight parking or vehicle idling, and limited hours for unloading, including none during overnight periods.

Brooks Chadwick also agreed to keep a 50-foot buffer between the development and nearby homes as part of the original zoning.

When some residents pointed out that there were more than a dozen storage facilities in the area, District 3 commissioner JoAnn Birrell said: “It’s free enterprise,” a subject that is “not what we’re here to consider” in a zoning matter.

The East Cobb Civic Association also spoke in favor of the SLUP, as it had for the redevelopment in general.

The commissioners agreed to hold another zoning case in Northeast Cobb, this one involving a proposal to improve a blighted property in the Canton Road corridor (previous East Cobb News coverage here) that has been delayed before.

Canton Road

PetroPlex ventures wants to rezone 0.87 acres at 2120 Canton Road, near the Canton Road connector, for a low-rise office building. It’s on the site of a gas station that closed in 2003 and has become increasingly deteriorated.

Tom Mitchell, an attorney for the applicant, presented revised plans for remodeling the building, including architectural and other changes recommended by the planning commission.

But Carol Brown of Canton Road Neighbors said the revised proposal doesn’t meet Cobb development standards and guidelines set forth in the Canton Road Corridor project.

Specifically, she objected that a canopy that was part of the gas station would remain, but the only proposed improvement to it would be a repainting.

The structure, she said, “needs more than a fresh coat of paint. . . . Please don’t ignore 13 years of community planning and investment” for improving what she called “one of the most blighted properties” on Canton Road.

Another contested East Cobb zoning case was withdrawn Tuesday. Robert Licata, a pediatrician, had proposed converting empty office space at Johnson Ferry Road and Lassiter Road for a restaurant, gym, medical offices and retail shops.

The planning commission recommended denial, saying that 37 proposed parking spaces wouldn’t be enough, and there was no rear loading space. Residents at the adjacent Lassiter Walk subdivision and the East Cobb Civic Association also were opposed.

 

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Former East Cobb wrestling coach sentenced in Pa. for sexual abuse

A former East Cobb wrestling coach who volunteered with the Pope youth program has been sentenced to a long prison term in Pennsylvania for sexually assaulting young boys he once coached, according to news reports there.

Ron Gorman, 52, will serve 20-40 years, according to WNEP-TV. He pleaded guilty in November in Monroe County, Pa., to two counts of involuntary deviate sexual intercourse with a child.

According to Monroe County prosecutors, Gorman also was required to enter a guilty plea in Georgia as part of his plea deal in Pennsylvania.

Ron Gorman, former Pope wrestling coach
Ron Gorman after he was taken into custody in Monroe County, Pa., in March 2017.

The district attorney’s office said the crimes in Pennsylvania began in 2006 in the East Stroudsburg area, where Gorman lived and coached.

He moved to the Marietta area in 2009, and was a volunteer coach with Pope Junior Wrestling, which feeds into the Pope High School program, one of the best in Georgia and a winner of several state championships. Gorman later was a coach at Life University before he was charged in Pennsylvania.

According to the Monroe County District Attorney’s Office, Gorman’s victims, now 20, accused him of a long series of abuse beginning when they were 10 years old and while they were involved in a youth wrestling program where Gorman was a volunteer coach.

Gorman was arrested at his East Cobb home in March 2017 and eventually was charged by Pennsylvania authorities with a total of 513 counts, including child rape and statutory sexual assault.

After being detained in Pennsylvania, he was held on $1 million bail. His accusers claimed Gorman subjected them to frequent and continuous assaults, sometimes on a weekly basis, for several years, including in Georgia.

News reports last March and earlier this month quoted a Cobb woman who said she became concerned about Gorman in 2011 when he she saw a crude, sexually themed Facebook message sent by him to her son, then 12, and a member of the Pope junior wrestling program.

She told the AJC she went to then-Pope principal Rick Beaulieu, whom she said told her not to go to police.

Gorman eventually was investigated in Georgia, and that probe alerted authorities in Pennsylvania, according to WFMZ-TV in Allentown, Pa.

Gorman also has been accused of other molestations in Monroe County that were reported to police there in the late 1980s, but they could not be prosecuted due to a statute of limitations, the district attorney said.

The district attorney’s office also said at the time of Gorman’s guilty plea that he will be required to register as a sex offender for the rest of his life.

 

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Cobb commissioners approve ‘transformative’ project for Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill area

Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill development

By a 4-1 vote, the Cobb Board of Commissioners on Tuesday morning approved rezoning for a project in the Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill area that its developer and a nearby citizens group are hailing as a cornerstone of community redevelopment.

More than 100 citizens, many from the Powers Ferry Corridor Alliance, applauded wildly after the commission vote to rezone nearly 24 acres at the northwest corner of the Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill intersection to regional retail commercial (RRC).

The developer, Eden Rock Real Estate Partners, wants to build what it’s calling MarketPlace Terrell Mill, anchored by a Kroger superstore, restaurants and retail shops and an apartment building and self-storage facility.

Those last two components were opposed by residents of the Salem Ridge condominium adjacent to the East Cobb mixed-use development, and around 30 of them were in attendance Tuesday.

District 2 commissioner Bob Ott, who suggested the RRC category, said in his 20 years of public service, as a county commissioner and planning commissioner, “I’m not sure I’ve seen so many people come out from a community in support of a zoning.”

Those in favor cheered at that remark, which was part of Ott’s lengthy presentation about the zoning request, and the challenges of redeveloping the area.

The Powers Ferry Corridor Alliance, a citizens group formerly known as the Terrell Mill Community Association, has been vocal about the rezoning as a last chance to upgrade development in the area.

The assemblage of land currently includes Brumby Elementary School, which will be moving to Terrell Mill Road in August, as well as aging office and retail buildings, for a total of five different zoning categories.

The developer had sought planned village community (PVC) zoning. The Cobb Planning Commission recommended community retail commercial (CRC) and the multi-family RM-12 for a 298-unit apartment complex.

Ott said RRC was a better fit because of its unified provisions. Cobb zoning office director John Pedersen said RRC also would reduce the number of variances, to around five.

The number of variances bothered Northeast Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell, along with the residential density, and she was the only vote against the rezoning. The commissioners approved the storage facility 5-0 in a separate vote.

Initially the rezoning request had 21 variances, many of them vigorously opposed by Salem Ridge residents.

MarketPlace at Terrell Mill landscape plan

Amy Patricio, who spoke on behalf of them at Tuesday’s hearing, restated objections to a project that “is too much in too little space,” and claimed the area is “saturated” with apartment units and storage facilities.

She also said Salem Ridge homeowners had been kept “in the dark” about updated site plans, variance requests and stipulation letters from the developer.

But Ott disagreed, saying community input has been part of the process all along, and that Eden Rock’s many variations of the site plan have been the result of meetings with residents.

Ott pushed for a Powers Ferry Master Plan that was approved in 2011, in large part to redevelop a sense of community and attract residents to a clogged commercial corridor.

He said it has taken “years” for the community to come together to fix the area.

“It has become obvious to me that you are just opposed,” Ott said to the Salem Ridge homeowners. After 62 changes to the site plan and “months” of discussions, “we’ve pretty much reached an impasse.”

Ott then held up a thick, clipped stack of printed e-mails, saying he’s received 261 e-mails in favor and 30 opposed.

The Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill area got an initial boost in 2012, when the Terrell Mill Village Shopping Center was redeveloped, with an L.A. Fitness Center as the anchor, and with other restaurants and shops moving in.

At the time, Ott said that “I’ve always felt that if we could get something like that, we could get the whole area.”

The arrival of SunTrust Park and the Atlanta Braves also has stimulated commercial and residential development further down on Powers Ferry.

MarketPlace at Terrell Mill will include traffic signals on both Powers Ferry (opposite the entrance to the MicroCenter shopping center) and Terrell Mill (across from Terrell Mill Village).

Other traffic solutions include the opening of managed lanes along Interstate 75 later this year, including a Terrell Mill Road exit, and the construction of the Windy Hill-Terrell Mill Connector starting in 2020.

Ott said other traffic issues concerned carpool lines at Brumby Elementary School that continued out onto Powers Ferry.

Brumby will be relocated adjacent to the new location of East Cobb Middle School on Terrell Mill Road, just east of Powers Ferry. Carpool queues for both schools will be contained on school property.

“Those three things will have a major improvement on traffic” in the Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill area, Ott said.

 

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East Cobb County Council of PTAs honors teachers, classified employees

ECCC PTA Teachers of the Year
ECCC PTA Teachers of the Year honorees.

On Feb. 8 the East Cobb County Council of PTAs held its annual “Story Time Brunch” to honor teachers and classified employees of the year.

The event was held at the Holy Family Catholic Church and was organized by the Wheeler High School cluster. Cobb Board of Education members Scott Sweeney and David Banks were among those in attendance.

ECCC PTA story time brunch

Thanks to Hailey Kramer, Kristy Flowers and Kimberly Webb of the ECCC PTA for the photos and information from the event.

Brumby ES Steel Drum Band
The Brumby Elementary School Steel Drum Band provided entertainment.
Mt. Bethel ES, ECCC PTA
Mt. Bethel Elementary School Classified Employee of the Year Shayla Thomas, Principal Jessica Appleyard and Teacher of the Year Cindi Cabral.
Wheeler HS, ECCC PTA
Wheeler teacher of the year Vickie Massey, principal Peter Giles, Lisa-Marie Haygood, classified employee of the year Jackie Escott, Gretchen Buchanan, Daniel White, Andrea Jewell, and Nancy Mann.
Mountain View Elementary School, ECCC PTA
Mountain View Elementary School teacher of the year Kristin Shildneck, principal Renee Garris and classified employee of the year Barbara Glynn.

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East Cobb Robotics team advances to state-level competition

East Cobb Robotics Team 11096

Thanks to Emily Yewell Volin for the above photo and information below about an East Cobb Robotics team that will be spending the winter break week this week getting ready for state competition on Saturday:

East Cobb Robotics FIRST Tech Challenge Team 11096 is excited to announce their advancement to the State level of competition. During a League Championship tournament, the 15-member community team, comprised of middle and high school students, earned the first place Think award, an honor to their engineering design process throughout this season.

The team was also awarded the 2nd-place Inspire award, celebrating them as ambassadors and role models for FIRST, were finalists for the Motivate, Design and Rockwell Collins Innovate awards and were the first pick for the competition’s 3rd alliance finalist round of competition.

ECR FTC 11096 will compete at the state level competition in Georgia on Saturday, February 24. The team is proudly coached by Mrs. Kimberly Clark, 6th grade math teacher at Dodgen Middle School, and Dr. Curtis Volin, Quantum Systems Division Chief at Georgia Tech Research Institute. East Cobb Robotics FTC 11096 is sponsored by General Electric.

All FIRST robotics events are free and open to the public and the State Championship will be broadcast via live feed. For more information visit: http://gafirst.org/ftc/ and http://gafirst.org/ftc/first-tech-challenge-live-stream.

 

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Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill development leads off Tuesday Cobb commissioners zoning hearing

Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill development, MarketPlace Terrell Mill

If you plan to attend Tuesday morning’s Cobb Board of Commissioners zoning hearing, you need to get there well in advance. The proposed Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill development is the first item on the agenda, and it’s expected to attract a full house.

Two homeowners associations on either side of the Z-12 application by SSP Blue Ridge LLC are urging their members to show up early. The hearing (agenda summary here) starts at 9 a.m. in the 2nd floor meeting room of the Cobb government building at 100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta.

After more than a year’s worth of delays since the initial filing, the proposed development by Eden Rock Real Estate Partners for what’s being called the MarketPlace at Terrell Mill may finally get a resolution.

The 24 acres at the northwest corner of Powers Ferry and Terrell Mill currently includes Brumby Elementary School and an aging office park and strip shopping center. The proposed $120 million project would include a Kroger superstore, restaurants and retail space, and the most contentious parts of the application, a 298-unit apartment complex and self-storage facility.

The Cobb Planning Commission recommended approval of the application on Feb. 6, but made some significant changes to a last-minute zoning category request by the developer. The board approved rezoning to community retail commercial (CRC) and RM-16.

The latest agenda released on Thursday, the deadline for making any formal changes, didn’t include anything new.

Related coverage

To the Powers Ferry Corridor Alliance, a citizens group that supports the project, the planning board “tweaks” do not make the proposal viable. The organization sent out a notice over the weekend that saying that Z-12 “is not a cinch to be approved. There is a real risk the community could lose this huge opportunity for long-overdue revitalization of its commercial core.”

The group is asking the commissioners to approve the project as the developer submitted, with a request for the planned village community (PVC) designation.

The alliance warned in its message that if the MarketPlace at Terrell Mill project is not approved, “the developers will have no choice but to walk away.”

Eden Rock partner Brandon Ashkouri said at the planning commission hearing that the latest site plan is the 61st version of the project, which has taken more than three years to put together. The relocation of Brumby to Terrell Mill Road next year was the final piece of the puzzle, and that’s where the Kroger store would be located.

The Powers Ferry Corridor Alliance is gathering at the Cool Beans coffee shop (31 Mill Street) near the Marietta Square, from 7:30-8:30 Tuesday morning before the zoning hearing.

The Salem Ridge Homeowners Association represents residents in a condominium complex next to the proposed development, and in particular the apartments and storage facility they say are too dense and too close to their homes.

They’re also urging their members to attend Tuesday’s hearing to protest a project they also say will add too much noise and traffic to a clogged intersection:

“We care and support regulated development. Redevelopment is a necessity. We only ask for the zoning commission to comply with the Powers Ferry Master Plan, established codes/statutes and laws already in force for parcels like MarketPlace at Terrell Mill.

“The developers have been cooperative, yet unless our objections and stipulations are recorded and in writing, we will not be protected.”

The storage facility request will be taken up later in the hearing, and the case number is SLUP-8. Cobb requires self-storage facility requests to be granted special land-use permits, even if they’re part of larger developments.

Another special land-use permit request for another proposed storage facility in East Cobb is on the commissioners agenda Tuesday. SLUP-3 would permit a three-story building on the site of the former Mountain View Elementary School on Sandy Plains Road.

It would be part of mixed-use development approved last fall. Despite community opposition, the self-storage facility was recommended for approval by the planning commission (previous East Cobb News post here).

 

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The East Cobb News weekly newsletter for Feb. 18, 2018 is out!

Catch up with all of the past week’s headlines and take a look at what’s coming up this week with the convenient East Cobb News weekly newsletter.

The East Cobb News Digest is delivered to your e-mail inbox every Sunday, and contains so much more, including the best calendar listings anywhere in East Cobb and convenient community information.

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During Olympics, Peachtree Curling Association clinics spread enthusiasm for the sport

Peachtree Curling Association
The Peachtree Curling Association offered adult clinics Saturday and has a free kids clinic from 2-5 Sunday. (East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

While mild winter weather was expected to reach into the 70s on Saturday, a couple dozen people huddled inside the Peachtree Curling Association facility in East Cobb, bundled up in jackets and pullovers.

“Sweep! Sweep!” shouted Canadian Olympic gold medalist Jamie Korab during a clinic at the club’s climate-controlled building behind the Marietta Ice Center and Parkaire Landing Shopping Center.

Inside the building, the temperatures are 45 degrees. On the nearly two inches of ice that extends over 9,000 square feet, it’s 25 degrees.

While the Winter Olympics continue in South Korea, the Peachtree club is using the occasion to spread the gospel of curling, and it’s one that several members admittedly have been soaking up in recent years.

Peachtree Curling Association
Jamie Korab won a gold medal for Canada in curling at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin.

One of them is Jessica Sammis of Lilburn, who commutes regularly to the only curling rink in Georgia. She got interested in curling after watching the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver, which sparked greater interest below the Canadian border (curling became an official Olympic medal sport in 1998).

“It’s a very approachable sport,” said Sammis, a former PCA board member.

Not only are the equipment costs low, she said, “this is something that you can come out and start learning to do in a short amount of time. But it takes a lifetime to master.”

In curling, participants aim a 42-pound stone down a straight line, for a distance of 148 feet, scoring points for how close they can come to placing the stones in the center rings at the other end of the ice.

Altering the direction and the speed of the stones is where the sweeping comes in, and Saturday’s clinic broke down the fundamentals in very elementary ways.

After learning how to “throw” the stone—which is polished granite and made in Scotland, the sport’s ancestral home—participants were instructed in sweeping. While the motion looks similar to what you might do at home on your kitchen floor, the equipment isn’t something you can pick up at a retail store.Peachtree Curling Association

“This is the only sweeping I do,” joked Sammis.

She was among the organizers of the Peachtree Curling Association, which got started in 2015, and then got word that a youth hockey rink behind the Marietta Ice Center might be closed.

The curling group offered to turn the rink into a dedicated curling facility. After the building was donated, more than 40 volunteers worked to bring it to curling specifications.

The non-profit Peachtree Curling Association is one of 165 curling groups in 43 states, according to USA Curling, and has around 75 members. Nationwide, the national governing body claims 20,000 members.

“The vast majority of our club members started after the Olympics four years ago,” said Bob Hogan, current president of the Peachtree Curling Association. What he likes about the sport is how it draws participants of all ages, and that range was evident at Saturday’s clinic.Peachtree Curling Club

He’s played with his family, including daughters in their early 20s.

The U.S. has only one medal in curling, a bronze in 2006, in a sport dominated at the international level by Canada and northern European nations. Exposing youngsters to the basics is a major component of USA Curling’s outreach.

Sunday’s clinic for kids ages 11-18 will take place from 2-5 p.m. and is free.

Other adult clinics continue Saturday at 3:30 and 7 p.m., and the cost is $30 a person.

The group also offers beginner (101) and intermdiate (201) clinics during its “season,” which continues into May. The building is closed during the summer, and reopens in October.

The Peachtree Curling Assocation is located at 4880 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 910.

 

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Lassiter Band fundraiser nets $12K for Roses parade trip

Lassiter Band fundraiser

Lassiter Band students held a mattress sale fundraiser last weekend for their 2019 appearance at the Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena, Calif. Band mom volunteer Sharon Renaud sent us this photo, band vice president Richard Stinson hoisting a check for $12,000, the proceeds from the event.

She adds that fundraising efforts will continue throughout the year. Students will be raffling off  2018 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sport 4×4, donated by Ed Voyles, and the drawing will be held Nov. 17.

Tickets are $10 each and may be purchased from Lassiter Band students, parents, or by emailing JeepRaffle@lbba.org. The booster association web page can be found here.

 

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Georgia Arbor Day observed with tree planting at Skip Wells Park

Georgia Arbor Day, Skip Wells Park

A special tree was planted at Skip Wells Park in Northeast Cobb on Friday to celebrate Georgia Arbor Day. While the federal holiday began in 1872, Arbor Day in Georgia was first proclaimed in 1890, and there’s been an official state designation since 1941.

From L-R: Donovan of U.S. Rep. Karen Handel’s office; Ga. State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick; Georgia Forestry Commission arborist Joe Burgess; Richard Trapanese, grandfather of Skip Wells; and Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell.

 

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Sprayberry Crossing Shopping Center owners issued ‘blight tax’ letter

Sprayberry Crossing Shopping Center

The Cobb Community Development Department has sent a notice to the owners of the Sprayberry Crossing Shopping Center demanding it address conditions at the decaying retail property that may run afoul of the county’s new “blight tax” provision.

The letter, delivered Thursday to Brannen Goddard, an Atlanta commercial real estate agency representing Sprayberry Crossing Partnership (PDF here), said the owners have 30 days to provide a “reasonable” plan to make improvements to the shopping center, located at the southeast corner of Sandy Plains Road and East Piedmont Road.

Sprayberry Crossing has long been the subject of complaints from nearby residents. Although several small businesses operate there, most of the shopping center is vacant and has been in deteriorating conditions for years.

Related coverage

The community development office conducted an inspection of the property in late January and concluded that Sprayberry Crossing met three of the conditions for designation as a blighted property: having an uninhabitable, unsafe or unsound structure; being conducive to “ill health” to those in close proximity to the property; and being the subject of repeated reports of illegal activity on the premises.

The letter included photographs from the inspection showing boarded-up windows and holes in the structures and a list of 28 reports of criminal incidents dating back to 2014.

In the letter, written by Cobb community development director Dana Johnson, the findings of the inspection include evidence of gang activity near the former bowling alley at the back of the property, no proper storm drainage provisions, vandalized mechanical equipment, utility lines laying across the parking lot and signs of repeated break-ins.

Last July the Cobb Board of Commissioners approved a code amendment called the Community Improvement Tax Incentive Program, which allows for the county to set forth several criteria for determining a blighted property. It can then conduct inspections of run-down businesses and rental properties and prompt repairs. Ultimately, the county could impose a fine of seven times the current millage rate for violators.

Blighted properties that meet compliance after that would be eligible for a millage rate reduction for up to two years.

Joe Glancy, creator of the Sprayberry Crossing Action Facebook group that’s been pushing for a solution, wrote that while the letter from the county represents “a victory for our community and another step in the right direction. . . . I’m sure most of you also know, this is hardly the end.”

The citizens’ group has been frustrated by what it has said is a lack of cooperation from the property owners. Glancy urged his group to “to turn up the heat on the ownership group and county to move this process forward.”

The group has scheduled a community meeting on March 21 at Sprayberry High School.

We’re getting in touch with the property owner and will post a response if and when we get it.

 

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