Editor’s Note: After voting comes the hard work of citizenship

Editor's Note voting and citizenship
The last day of early voting in East Cobb was like the first day—featuring long lines. (ECN photos)

The deluge is almost over.

The inane commercials—a candidate is being demonized because as a defense attorney he represents criminals!

The race-horse punditry of polls, soundbites, “October surprises” and dubious partisan narratives as deep (and dreary) as battlefield trenches.

The mailboxes stuffed with flyers, a constant flurry of text messages, e-mails (some with emojis!), phone calls and knocks on doors, soliciting, above all, whatever donation amount you can afford!

The sledgehammer assault and sensory overload that’s been waged upon the citizenry for months now just to vote has been unprecedented.

GOP signs 10.31.20
Republicans wave at motorists to honk support at Shallowford and Sandy Plains Road Saturday.

By party hacks and campaign toadies, democracy mavens and corporate virtue-signalers, celebrities, athletes, famous people and everyday folk who need you to vote a certain way so they can have health care, a job, the right to vote and their lives back from sinister forces that have conspired against them for far too long.

Companies, sports teams, non-profits and other institutions will be taking off all of election day to exercise their franchise on Tuesday. And they’ll let you know ceaselessly, especially on their social media feeds.

If you believe the overheated rhetoric, in just a few days’ time we will be conducting the most important election of our lifetime!

By my count, this has been the case for at least the last 20 years, when a bitter presidential election was determined by a single vote in the U.S. Supreme Court—after a farcical episode of butterfly ballots and hanging chads in Florida.

Another epic—and ridiculously expensive—presidential campaign is commanding much of the oxygen this fall, with two aging boomers striving to goad outdated and increasingly polarized party bases to turn out like never before.

Yard signs for local Democratic candidates in an East Cobb neighborhood.

For the vast majority of us who don’t fall into either tribalized camp, this feels like the most dispiriting election of our lifetime.

We’ve been ready for this to be over for months, and not because we don’t think elections are important.

They are. But what comes after them is even more important.

Whether you’ve already voted or will do so on Tuesday, exercising your franchise is the easiest part of citizenship. It’s purely transactional, with no further commitment to follow the exploits of those elected to serve us.

Nearly 60 percent of Cobb’s nearly 540,000 registered voters have already cast their ballots, and it’s roughly 50-50 between those voting in person and those mailing in or dropping off absentee ballots.

Two U.S. Senate races in Georgia, a battleground election in the 6th Congressional District and several high-priority legislative races in East Cobb are driving the turnout as much as the presidential race.

So are vigorous races for seats on the Cobb Board of Commissioners and the Cobb Board of Education that could result in Democrats taking control of both.

In East Cobb, where Republicans have dominated for decades, Democrats are contesting everything, including races where GOP incumbents rarely had to worry about any kind of a challenge.

Whatever your politics may be, it’s good to see more candidates running in either major party, especially those who have never sought elective office, and who are younger and represent an upcoming generation pining to make a difference.

The State House District 43 race in East Cobb is one of the most expensive legislative campaigns in the state this year.

What happens here at home—in the Georgia legislature, the halls of Cobb County government and on the increasingly fractious Cobb school board—has never mattered more.

As the last eight months have shown, decisions by state and local elected officials or appointed leaders serving at their pleasure have affected every single aspect of life for every single citizen.

The response to COVID-19 in Georgia and Cobb County will last for many months, if not years, to come.

Whatever you think of how the pandemic has been handled, keep in mind that all of these decisions—to force businesses and schools to close or go online, restrict public gatherings, curtail civil liberties and deprive us of many of the activities that make life worth living—were done without any public discussion, votes by elected bodies or the consent of the governed.

The landslide winner in this year’s batch of canned political flyer photos—front-line medical workers.

In Georgia, as in every other state and many nations of the world, once a public health emergency was declared, decisions affecting nearly every single aspect of society were made outside of the usual democratic channels, heavily based on guidance by unelected public health advisers.

This cannot and should not continue indefinitely. There need to be specific goals and objectives that are made clear to citizens, not continuously extended emergency declarations.

It’s incumbent upon governors, mayors, county officials and school superintendents to weigh the cost-benefit factors of a COVID response that considers the economy, education, and social well-being of all citizens as well as public health.

If you haven’t yet voted, think about whom you would trust to make these decisions in the future. Regardless of how you voted—or didn’t—the most serious obligation all citizens have is to hold these leaders to account.

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee demonstrates a perverse method of getting people to vote.

Even if you’re politically homeless like I am—my first vote for president was the Republican Congressman-turned-independent John Anderson in 1980—the supposed perils of not voting are being used to humiliate you publicly.

Among the most noxious items in this year’s political mailbag was not one, but two flyers from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, reminding me that I didn’t vote in 2018.

I’m not embarrassed by that, but this is a particularly slimy way to shame people into voting: Mailing you a flyer anyone can read and assigning you a “voter score” that is “average” and won’t cut it in their minds. As though any voter has an obligation to meet the muster of a partisan political action committee that sent an unsolicited mailing.

The second flyer was even more galling, saying that in order “to improve your voting record” I must vote. “Remember: Who you vote for is private, but whether you vote is public record.”

This from a political party that has made “voter protection” a major part of its agenda.

If I hadn’t voted before I got these flyers, I would have made sure that anybody I did vote for would work to change laws like this. Whether or not you vote ought to be nobody else’s damn business any more than whom you voted for—or against.

Such are the stakes of an election that’s gone on seemingly forever, and may last well after election day.

Many of those hopelessly, shamelessly obsessed with getting you to vote will soon skunk away, at least until the next election. Those of us more concerned with what those elected to office will do with their power have never had a more daunting task.

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Northeast Cobb legislative incumbents face election challenges

Georgia runoff elections

Two established members of the Georgia House Republican leadership and a Democrat who unseated a GOP incumbent two years ago are all facing opponents in the Nov. 3 general election.

The latter is first-term State Rep. Mary Frances Williams, of the 37th District, who is facing Rose Wing, the former head of the Cobb Republican Party.

In 2018 Williams upended Rep. Sam Teasley in a tight race, then withstood a recount to break an all-Republican roster of state representatives with East Cobb constituencies.

Wing, who was defeated as Cobb GOP president after the 2016 elections, is making her first run for public office.

Both candidates are residents of the city of Marietta, which makes up most of the district. It includes an area of East Cobb along Piedmont and East Piedmont roads, down to Barnes Mill Road and east of Interstate 75 (map here).

Candidate websites: Williams | Wing

During her first term, Williams sponsored legislation requiring the release of audio and video law enforcement body camera recordings and supports repealing “Stand Your Ground” laws.

A former lobbyist for education and children’s issues, Williams said the state’s response to COVID-19 is her top priority, and she supports Medicaid expansion and measures to curb surprise medical billing.

Wing, a retired former prosecutor in the Cobb District Attorney’s Office, said she wants to promote conservative values, especially keeping taxes low to spur business and economic growth and to “protect an environment for local businesses to succeed.”

The daughter of a teacher, Wing also said her priorities include COVID response and strengthening public education and public safety.

State House District 44

First elected to the Georgia General Assembly in 1994, State Rep. Don Parsons has a Democratic opponent for the second consecutive election.

The district stretches from Wade Green Road to Hembree Road (map here).

Parsons, a Republican, is chairman of the House Energy, Utilities and Telecommunications Committee and also serves on the Appropriations and Ways & Means committees.

Parsons is touting that experience, along with what he said is his commitment to fiscal responsibility, including tax cuts. He also voted for Hate Crimes legislation the last two years

He supported a bill that would extend hate-crime protections for police officers and other enforcement personnel who are threatened, harassed or intimidated because they are first responders. That bill was signed by the governor and becomes law next year.

Campaign websites: DiCicco | Parsons

Running against Parsons is Connie DiCicco, a former chief of staff for Mary Frances Williams.

A parent in the Addison Elementary School area, she said her priorities include improving health care access, including Medicaid expansion, better funding for public education, environmental justice and protecting voting rights.

DiCicco also supports “common sense” reforms to encourage gun safety and while she advocated the main Hate Crimes bill that passed last session, she said “Georgia still has a long way to go to end systemic racism in our justice system.”

State House District 46

Since winning a special election in 2011, State Rep. John Carson has risen quicky in the ranks of House Republican leadership.

District 44 includes the northeast corner of Cobb and part of southern Cherokee County (map here).

He’s vice chairman of the Transportation, Ways & Means and Energy, Utility and Telecommunications subcommittees.

A certified public accountant, Carson stresses a platform with low taxes, including eliminating state corporate income taxes, and he opposes Obamacare.

He has voted for a public school teacher pay raise but also has sponsored legislation to allow for a tax credit for private school tuition.

Candidate websites: Carson | Holko

His Democratic opponent is Caroline Holko, who got 48 percent of the vote against District 3 incumbent Joann Birrell in a run for the Cobb Board of Commissioners in 2018.

Her priorities are Medicaid expansion, voter protection, what she calls reproductive and environmental justice, full funding of public education and legalizing cannabis in Georgia.

Holko, who is a supporter of unabashed liberal causes, has had to explain during her campaign using a racial slur a decade ago in a blog post about black males and crime.

In September, on her campaign blog, she wrote that that 2009 blog post “was written in ignorance and anger” and that “my position has drastically changed since then.”

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Mt. Bethel church cemetery graves damaged by uprooted trees

Mt. Bethel church cemetery graves damaged

A reader let us know about two trees at the Mt. Bethel church cemetery that were uprooted during the Zeta storm Thursday, and damaged some graves there.

We took a look on Friday, and it was a stunning sight—a massive tree was pulled out of the ground, toppled over and struck a number of markers. A smaller tree also caused extensive damage.

The cemetery is located on Johnson Ferry Road, just above Lower Roswell Road, and between a Zaxby’s and the Northside medical building.

That’s near where the second location of the church, which dates back to the 1830s, once stood. The cemetery along Johnson Ferry opened in 1870, when the church moved to two acres donated by a nearby farmer.

The original cemetery still exists at the original church site on Richmond Hill Road, off Lower Roswell Road and east of Johnson Ferry, going back to the 1840s.

Some of the markers damaged at the Johnson Ferry cemetery are so old that there’s nothing legible on them. Family names we could make out include Bloodworth, Darnell and Tillerson.

Both Mt. Bethel cemeteries are listed in a catalog of more than 200 historical cemeteries by the Cobb Genealogical Society.

We’re contacting the Cobb Cemetery Preservation Commission about the storm damage.

Mt. Bethel church cemetery graves damaged

Mt. Bethel church cemetery graves damaged

Mt. Bethel church cemetery graves damaged

Mt. Bethel church cemetery graves damaged

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Send us information about conditions in your area, and photos to share, if it’s safe for you to do so: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

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Emergency precinct change made for East Cobb polling place

Holy Trinity Lutheran Church

Cobb Elections announced Friday afternoon that an “emergency” change has been made for the venue for the Elizabeth 05 voting precinct in Tuesday’s general election.

The precinct is located at Sandy Plains Baptist Church, but county spokesman Ross Cavitt said in a release that storm damage from Hurricane Zeta has prompted the change.

The polling station on Tuesday will be just up the road at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church (2922 Sandy Plains Road), in the photo above. It’s located next to a U.S. Post Office and is at the intersection of Sandy Plains and Ebenezer Road.

The polls at all precincts in Cobb County will be open Tuesday from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Early voting concluded on Friday and there is no in-person voting until Tuesday.

Voters with absentee ballots have until 7 p.m. Tuesday to have them postmarked if they’re mailed, or to drop them at a designated secure absentee ballot drop box.

Those 16 absentee ballot locations in the county (listings here) are available 24/7 until the polls close.

In East Cobb those drop boxes are located at the following:

  • East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road)
  • Sewell Mill Library (2051 Lower Roswell Road)
  • Mountain View Regional Library (3320 Sandy Plains Road)
  • Gritters Library (880 Shaw Park Drive)

The Georgia Secretary of State’s office has created an absentee ballot tracker that lets you follow the status of that ballot after you return your ballot.

If you have an absentee ballot but wish to vote in-person on Tuesday, bring your absentee ballot with you to your precinct and it will be cancelled there. That must be done before you can vote in-person.

There are cancellation instructions that can be found here. If you don’t have your ballot with you when you arrive at the poll on the Nov. 3 election day, you’ll have to fill out an affidavit and poll workers will have to call the Cobb Elections office to have the ballot cancelled.

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New COVID cases in Cobb schools include 9 East Cobb schools

New Brumby Elementary School

The Cobb County School District is reporting 61 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 this week, including seven schools in East Cobb that previously had no cases.

According to the district’s weekly update on Friday, confirmed cases among staff and students were reported in 30 schools.

That’s the most in any week since the district began revealing weekly updates in September.

Overall there have been 443 confirmed cases since July 1.

All of the schools reporting cases this week have 10 or fewer cases, as has been the case since the district began breaking down the numbers. Those breakdowns don’t indicate how many students and how many staff members have confirmed cases.

The East Cobb schools reporting cases this week are as follows:

  • Bells Ferry ES
  • Brumby ES
  • East Side ES
  • Murdock ES
  • Powers Ferry ES
  • Shallowford Falls ES
  • Tritt ES
  • Daniell MS
  • East Cobb MS

This is the third time that COVID cases have been reported at Shallowford Falls and the second time for Powers Ferry.

Middle school students returned to in-person classes in Cobb last week, and high school students will be coming back Nov. 5.

The district also said this week there is a confirmed COVID case within the Pope High School football program. The Greyhounds’ varsity games this week and next have been cancelled, all football activities have been suspended and contact-tracing has been taking place.

The rate of reported COVID-19 cases has been edging upward in recent weeks in Georgia, including in Cobb County. At one point the 14-day average of cases per 100,000 population dropped just below 100, which is considered high community spread.

As of Thursday, that two-week figure is 129 cases per 100,000 people. That’s been a key metric used by Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale. He ordered the start of the school year to be all online when that average was in the 300-400 range, then called for a phased reopening when the average dropped between 100-200.

Cobb has had 22,059 cases of COVID-19 since March and 457 deaths.

In explaining its COVID reporting procedures, the Cobb school district said that in accordance with student and health privacy laws, “the Georgia Department of Public Health recommends refraining from publicly publishing numbers of cases or quarantined students or staff that are less than 10 unless the number is 0.”

Cobb and Douglas Public health will “communicate confirmed cases to affected students/staff/ parents,” according to CCSD protocols.

Those guidelines also state that those who test positive “will isolate until 10 consecutive days have passed from their positive COVID-19 test and they are asymptomatic.”

The district details health and safety protocols in this FAQ and encourages parents to follow a daily well-being checklist before sending students to school. More health and safety information can be found here.

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East Cobb food scores: Bradley’s; Chicken Salad Chick; more

East Cobb restaurants opening, Bradley's Bar and Grill

The following East Cobb food scores from Oct. 26-30 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Bradley’s Bar & Grill
4961 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 117
October 28, 2020 Score: 91, Grade: A

Chicken Salad Chick
4101 Roswell Road, Suite 811
October 27, 2020 Score: 90, Grade: A

Indian Hills Country Club Dining Room
4001 Clubland Drive
October 26, 2020 Score: 91, Grade: A

Indian Hills Country Club Pool Snack Bar
4001 Clubland Drive
October 26, 2020 Score: 100, Grade: A

The Picture Show
4400 Roswell Road, Suite 110
October 27, 2020 Score: 95, Grade: A

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East Cobb road closures, traffic updates in the wake of Zeta

East Cobb road closures Zeta

SATURDAY UPDATE:

Several thousand electric customers in Cobb remain with power, and a number of roads are still closed due to downed trees and power lines.

On Saturday afternoon Sewell Mill Road was closed off at Benthill Drive, also close to Pine Road, which can be used as an alternate.

A little further up in the Mountain Creek neighborhood of East Cobb, reader Tracy Cullo sent in photos of her house getting hit by trees early Thursday morning.

She reports that everyone is safe; the tree landed on a roof and nearly missed one of her daughter’s bedroom windows by six inches.

Send us information about conditions in your area, and photos to share, if it’s safe for you to do so: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

ORIGINAL STORY:

Earlier Thursday we got a reader photo of a downed utility pole and trees across Sewell Mill Road.

As the sun came out Thursday afternoon, the same vicinity of Sewell Mill, on either side of Bill Murdock Road, had been blocked off.

There are downed power lines amid the trees, and there was no sign of any work crews that had arrived to repair the damage.

We took the photo above at the intersection of Sewell Mill and Mooregate Drive, the entrance to The Oaks subdivision, and it was one of many areas closed off to traffic and likely will be into Friday.

We drove around some other areas of East Cobb and can report that Robinson Road is closed at Fox Hollow Parkway, near Indian Hills, as Cobb DOT crews are on the job cleaning up a significant amount of downed trees and electrical crews are repairing power lines.

A bit west of that, also along Robinson Road, tree damage was serious at Fullers Park Drive, and the westbound stop sign also had been blown down.

Robinson Road at Fullers Park Drive

We also saw that Old Sewell Road is closed off at Brookcrest Drive, at the southern entrance to the Gant Quarters subdivision.

We’ll be adding more road closures here as we get them; as of 4 p.m. Cobb DOT hadn’t issued a specific list.

Period updates by Cobb government are being provided on the county website.

As of 4 p.m. Thursday, many, many traffic lights are still out in East Cobb, including at major intersections, creating lengthy bottlenecks.

If you come to an intersection without a functioning traffic signal, treat it as a four-way stop.

Roswell E Piedmont no lights

The wind and rain that swept through East Cobb early Thursday morning from Hurricane Zeta left massive amounts of tree damage, with limbs, leaves, pine straw and other debris strewn about the area.

At 3:30 p.m. Thursday, the Cobb County School District announced that all Friday classes were canceled, but extracurricular activities would go on depending on whether a school has power.

More than a million metro Atlanta electricity customers lost their power during the storm, and quite a number of them in Cobb are still without power.

Cobb EMC reported that as of 4 p.m. Thursday, 50,000 of its customers are without power, and it has restored service to 42,000 customers.

If you’re a Cobb EMC customer, here’s an outage map that shows several thousand customers also without power, but no estimates are available yet.

Georgia Power also is reporting customers without electricity in East Cobb and has an outage map and the estimated number of customers without electricity.

Octavia Lane tree 1

Octavia Lane tree 2

Also be on the lookout for damage on side and neighborhood streets, which figure to be the last to be cleaned up by work crews.

Here’s a tree nearly pulled out of the ground in the front yard of a home on Octavia Lane at Octavia Circle, between Roswell and Sewell Mill Roads and west of Old Canton Road.

Reader Ann Maxwell sent in the photo below of some new visitors to her neighbor’s back yard in the Murdock Road area, after the storm knocked down a fence.

Foxes at Murdock

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Cobb schools cancels Friday classes due to Zeta damage

This just in from the Cobb County School District, which had been having some classes remotely on Thursday but is calling the whole thing off for Friday:Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

In the aftermath of Hurricane Zeta, many of our students, families, and staff continue to be without power and are recovering from the impact this hurricane has had on their homes and schools. At this time, many schools are still without power and, to make sure every student can enter a healthy and safe classroom, all classes will be canceled on Friday, October 30th.

Local school and central office staff will work remotely.

Essential employees will receive specific instructions from their respective Executive Cabinet members.

Elementary after-school program is canceled, and extracurricular activities will continue as scheduled if power conditions allow.

If you have any specific school or extracurricular related questions, please contact your local school or coach.

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Cleanup begins as East Cobb gets clobbered by Hurricane Zeta

East Cobb clobbered Hurricane Zeta

Jeff Sheehan, an East Cobb marketing and social media pro, took this photo of a downed utility pole and trees on Sewell Mill Road Thursday morning, as high winds brought down power lines, trees and other debris all over metro Atlanta.

Cobb DOT is saying that downed trees and power lines are at more than 350 locations in the county, and they’re asking people not to travel unless its necessary as crews work to clear the roads.

Traffic lights are out in many places, and hundreds of thousands of Cobb and metro Atlanta residents are without power, affecting schools, businesses and other activities.

Sustained winds of 40-50 mph swept through the area in the early-morning hours, just before daybreak, along with rain showers, the remnants of Hurricane Zeta, which hit the Louisiana Gulf Coast Wednesday afternoon.

Cobb government offices and services began on a delayed schedule at 10 a.m., including early voting that continues through Friday. But those openings depend on whether there’s power at a location, and here’s the notice we’re getting now:

Cobb Elections currently has workers surveying their 11 advance voting locations to see which ones may have power or internet issues. They will open sites that are available as close to 10 a.m. as possible. Check cobbelections.org and the wait times list to see which sites are available. Open sites will have times listed, sites not available will be in gray.

Cobb libraries are closed for the rest of Thursday, and those branches that have reopened since July will resume their normal operating hours on Friday.

Police, fire and emergency services, Cobb DOT and other crews are responding to hundreds of calls for cleanup. Here’s the county update around 10 a.m.:

From Cobb DOT:
344 tree down calls
260 traffic signals out or damaged
125 roads remain closed

From Cobb Fire and Emergency Services:
15 rescue calls – 13 to rescue people from houses hit by trees, 2 in cars hit by trees
2 people transported to the hospital with injuries

We don’t have any specifics on roads yet but will update here; Sheehan said there’s widespread debris like the photo above where he’s ventured out in East Cobb.

At 11:45 a.m., Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce said more than 280 homes have been struck by falling trees.

Only essential county personnel are reporting to work today, he said, and he asked Cobb residents to consider Thursday a “snow day.”

“It’s important right now that you take all the necessary precautions,” he said in a video message. “Stay home, and if you are home and need our help we can respond.”

Periodical updates are being provided on the county website.

As for power outages, here’s an outage map from Georgia Power showing where power is still out, and the estimated number of customers without electricity.

Several thousand East Cobb customers of Georgia Power area still without electricity as of 11 a.m., but there aren’t any estimates being provided as of now for when power may be restored to those areas.

If you’re a Cobb EMC customer, here’s an outage map that shows several thousand customers also without power, but no estimates are available yet.

Send us information about conditions in your area, and photos to share, if it’s safe for you to do so: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

 

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Wheeler student leaders seek ‘dialogue’ on school name change

Wheeler name change

Several students at Wheeler High School said Wednesday they want to “start a dialogue” about possibly changing the school’s name in the wake of online petitions that were started over the summer.

Several students and their faculty adviser met on a Zoom call that included invited media representatives (including East Cobb News), as they organize around an effort that includes an online survey and possibly a rally in the spring semester.

All of the students spoke in favor of changing Wheeler, named after Joseph Wheeler, a Confederate general in the Civil War.

East Cobb News first reported in June that online petitions had been created to change both Wheeler and Walton. The latter is named for George Walton, a Georgia signatory to the Declaration of Independence who was a slave owner.

The petitions came about in the wake of the George Floyd death in May and Black Lives Matter protests that followed this summer.

The Wheeler petition, started by a group called “Wildcats for Change,” has more than 4,600 signatures, including Cobb Board of Education member Charisse Davis, who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters.

The Wheeler student petition is a separate effort that includes a website with background information and a survey for current students to fill out.

The mission statement reads in part:

“A name change would be a statement that Cobb County stands with its students against racism and white supremacy, and fights for inclusion and diversity. Now is the time to make change for good.”

The Wheeler students also have spoken during a public comment period before the Cobb Board of Education in favor of changing the name.

Caroline Hugh, a Wheeler student government co-president, said on the call “we are a product of our time” who said she never thought about taking action until the online petitions surfaced.

Wheeler opened in 1965, just as the Cobb County School District integrated. For Hugh, a senior, the timing “is one of the biggest problems” she has with the Wheeler name.

“It was made clear that they didn’t want to integrate,” said Wheeler senior Sydney Spessard, who said even as a student at East Cobb Middle School she was made to feel the stigma about going to school in a majority-minority attendance zone.

She said she has been asked “often” if she felt unsafe at a school with a significant black student enrollment.

“I sensed the atmosphere of racism,” said Spessard, who is white.

According to the Georgia Department of Education, Wheeler had a black student body of 811 out of a total enrollment of 2,159 as of March 5.

Last month school board member David Morgan expressed a desire to change board policy about naming and renaming of schools, and wants to create a committee to take up the issue.

He didn’t mention Wheeler by name, but said there isn’t a school in the 112-school Cobb district that’s named after an African-American.

That sparked the Wheeler student leaders to do research—they’ve been in touch with Davis—and they’ve e-mailed other board members about the issue. The board hasn’t formally created a committee to examine its naming policy.

Jake McGhee, a Wheeler senior, said he did some research on Joseph Wheeler a couple years ago, and “didn’t know there was anything we could do until this summer, when I saw the change.org petition.”

Wheeler, who grew up in Georgia, was readmitted to the U.S. Army after the Civil War and served in Congress from Alabama. He’s one of the few Confederate officers buried in Arlington National Cemetery.

The students didn’t mention that portion of Wheeler’s biography in their meeting Wednesday and it’s not included on their website, which has links to other schools named after Confederate leaders and the Wheeler plantation in Alabama.

Cameron Ward, a Wheeler Latin teacher, said on the call that “the students have done all of the work” and found that the district doesn’t have a policy for renaming an existing school, only for naming new ones.

“We just want the dialogue started,” said Ward. “We want to be able to find out what the community wants.”

Hugh said she wants the school board to “re-evaluate” the Wheeler name, which she said “does not represent our student body. It’s a bad representation of us as a student body.”

Another petition was created in August by a Connie Behensky, Wheeler graduate, urging that the school name not be changed. That petition has nearly 700 signatures.

When East Cobb News asked the students if they’ve had discussions with other current students who may want to keep the Wheeler name, Hugh said the student government wants “to make sure it’s a two-way communication.”

She said “they just want it to be a dialogue. That was the whole problem in 1965—people at the top deciding.”

Spessard was clear about where she stands on the matter:

“I want to be proud of our diversity,” she said. “But when we walk into a building that’s named after [Wheeler] you can’t feel that pride.”

She said the students are planning to speak out again before the school board at its Nov. 19 meeting. They tried last month, but weren’t aware the board had resumed meeting in person, and she was dismayed some board members weren’t wearing masks.

“We have a lot to say,” Spessard said. “But every time we try we are stopped one way or another.”

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BREAKING NEWS: Cobb schools to go all-remote on Thursday

Due to heavy rains and stormy weather in the forecast from Tropical Storm Zeta, the Cobb County School District has announced that all Thursday classes will be held remotely.Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

Here’s an advisory the district released Wednesday afternoon:

This decision was made in keeping with our commitment to student and staff safety, with particular concern for our youngest bus riders.

All students are asked to report to class remotely through the Cobb Teaching and Learning System (CTLS) with further instruction provided by your teacher unless you, your family, or your home are impacted by Hurricane Zeta.

Local school and central office staff will work remotely. Essential employees will receive specific instructions from their respective Executive Cabinet members.

Elementary after-school program is canceled and extracurricular activities will continue as scheduled. If you have any school-specific questions, please contact your local school.

Zeta is expected to hit the Louisiana Gulf Coast later Wednesday, and the National Weather Service in Atlanta issued a Tropical Storm Warning that began at 11 a.m. today for the Marietta area.

That warning includes possibly heavy amounts of rain overnight, between 1-2 inches in some places, and strong winds.

More rain is forecast for Thursday morning with wind gusts between 30-40 mph and as high as 55 mph in some areas.

A flash flood watch is also in effect for Cobb County and most of North Georgia until Thursday night.

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Nearly half of registered Cobb County voters have cast ballots

From the Georgia Secretary of State’s office, with numbers through Tuesday:cobb advance voting, Cobb voter registration deadline, Walton and Dickerson PTSA candidates forum

So far, 265,540 of Cobb County’s 537,565 registered voters have already turned out to vote early, representing 49% of the total registered votes in the county. This significant early turnout number tracks with the record turnout seen across Georgia and throughout the country.

Of the 265,540 ballots cast in Cobb County so far, 123,498 absentee by mail ballots have been returned by mail or through the more than 200 absentee ballot dropboxes that have been installed across the state. The drop boxes were first allowed following a rule passed by the State Election Board, which is chaired by Secretary Raffensperger, earlier this year at the request of county elections officials.

Much of the surge in early voting has come from record early, in-person voting. In Cobb County so far, 142,042 voters have cast ballots early, in-person.

Early voting continues through 7 p.m. Wednesday and on Thursday-Friday from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.

You can check wait times at early voting places by clicking here; voters can return absentee ballots 24/7 until 7 p.m. election day at any of 16 absentee ballot drop boxes, including locations at the Mountain View, Sewell Mill and Gritters libraries and the East Cobb Government Service Center.

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Cobb commissioners revoke Tokyo Valentino business license

Tokyo Valentino East Cobb

By a unanimous 5-0  vote Tuesday, the Cobb Board of Commissioners voted to revoke the business license of Tokyo Valentino, a sex shop that opened in East Cobb in June.

The store had its license suspended in September, pending an appeal, and had been allowed to remain open. The hearing was delayed by a month at the request of Tokyo Valentino.

After a due-cause hearing that lasted more than two hours, commissioners rejected appeals by the store’s attorney that the county’s action to suspend the license was based on arguments that were “not material,” and posed constitutional issues.

The county’s business license division in September alleged that Tokyo Valentino’s owner, Michael Morrison, misrepresented the intent of his business with the application of a license under the name of 1290 Clothing LLC as a general retail clothing store.

That license was granted in March, but when the business opened on June 9 at the former Mattress Firm store at 1290 Johnson Ferry Road it was as Tokyo Valentino.

Morrison owns five other adult retail stores under the Tokyo Valentino name in metro Atlanta and a similar store in Brookhaven called Stardust.

Scott Bergthold, a private attorney from Chattanooga hired by the county and who specializes in defending local adult retail ordinances, said the change from 1290 Clothing to Tokyo Valentino “was a clear bait and switch.”

He presented exhibits during the hearing showing that adult retail items not listed on the business license application—lotions and lubes, sex toys and smoke products—comprised 70 percent of what was on display at the East Cobb Tokyo Valentino store.

Clothing—specifically lingerie—accounted for only 14 percent of the inventory, according to a listing introduced as an exhibit.

Cary Wiggins, the attorney for Tokyo Valentino, pointed to several businesses in Cobb that ended up doing something different than what they indicated in their business licenses, but they were not shut down.

He said the county had no proof that Morrison, listed on state business formation documents for 1290 Clothing as the manager but not on the county business license application, was the head of the East Cobb business.

The person listed on the latter, Tomika Hugley, left that job, and in an August e-mail presented by Bergthold, said she “wanted to cut all ties.”

According to an e-mail Bergthold presented, Hugley contacted Ellisia Webb, the county’s business license division manager, that she wanted the 1290 Clothing business license to be cancelled.

“I was not involved in the ordering of any inventory or products,” Hugley wrote in the e-mail. “I have pleaded for my previous partners to make changes and they have refused to do so. . . . The store that currently exists should apply for a proper business license.”

Wiggins said comments by Morrison made in news media accounts, including East Cobb News, and cited in the allegations were not relevant to the county’s case.

“Mr. Morrison has the right to not give the papers a straight answer,” Wiggins said. “You are allowed to lie.”

Wiggins also said his client “did not intend to break the law. It’s a good business. It’s a clean business. To hold those newspaper quotes against him are improper.

“Who did he mislead? The reporter for the East Cobb News? Well good.”

In late May, East Cobb News first reported that a business named 1290 Clothing had received a business license amid concerns that it would become a Tokyo Valentino store instead.

When East Cobb News reached Morrison for contact, he said that “I have no idea what you are referring to.”

Morrison told other outlets he wasn’t sure what might go into that space, and at one point said it would sell “electric dance music” and “festival clothing.”

That was before the store opened on June 9, and it didn’t need needing any rezoning due to the general commercial rezoning for the property that’s been in effect since the 1970s.

A number of local residents signed an online petition, and in September commissioners overhauled the county code—with provisions drafted by Bergthold that place more restrictions on sexually oriented businesses.

East Cobb commissioner Bob Ott told Wiggins that other businesses that misrepresented themselves have been shut down, especially restaurants that don’t sell enough food to meet requirements to hold an alcohol license.

“You did not make your case,” Ott said shortly after midnight, near the end of a contentious hearing.

Tokyo Valentino has been embroiled in legal disputes in other metro Atlanta jurisdictions, but this was its first store in unincorporated Cobb.

In June, the Marietta City Council revoked the business license of a Tokyo Valentino store on Cobb Parkway for 180 days, saying the store inventory didn’t match what was on its application.

Tokyo Valentino is appealing that decision in Cobb Superior Court. The East Cobb store is likely to remain open with an expected appeal of the commission’s decision.

Wiggins hinted at possible legal action Tuesday, citing the Equal Protection clause of the U.S. Constitution, as well as the First Amendment.

Lisa Cupid, the only attorney among the commissioners, told Wiggins that she wondered if “there was an intent to mislead when you don’t list the core of the business. It makes me perceive that there is some desire to mislead.”

Wiggins said later that he “would hate to see a county revoke a business license because some people—a small majority—don’t like it.”

He said his client “did its best within the bounds of the law to complete the application.”

Before the vote, however, chairman Mike Boyce said “I can’t get over an application by somebody who bowed out,” a reference to Hugley.

“I have a lot of questions about that.”

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Sprayberry Crossing rezoning case delayed until December

Sprayberry Crossing virtual town hall

For the third time, the Sprayberry Crossing rezoning request is being delayed.

Cobb Zoning Staff is continuing the case, which was to have gone before the Cobb Planning Commission on Tuesday, to Dec. 1.

When the case was delayed last month, the reason cited was that a new site plan was in the works. The Sprayberry Crossing project would include 61,500 square feet of office and retail space (30,000 for a major grocer), 178 apartments, 122 senior-living apartments and 50 townhomes on more than 17 acres.

There are no changes shown in a preliminary agenda item or in any case folders with the Cobb Zoning Office. The continuance is being made at the request of the developer, Atlantic Realty Acquisitions Inc., as those proposed revisions are continuing.

Shane Spink of Sprayberry Crossing Action, a group of residents who’ve been pushing for redevelopment of the blighted shopping center, said “we have not had any conversations or heard from for the developer for many months so we are not privy to what those revisions may be or any other reason for the delays.”

Atlantic Realty is seeking a rezoning category called redevelopment overlay district (ROD), for the first time since it became a category in 2006.

The ROD use allows for redevelopment of blighted properties, and specified that any development would not set a precedent for the surrounding area.

But there’s been some opposition to apartments and some have questioned whether they’re allowed in the ROD category, citing stipulations approved by the Cobb Board of Commissioners for that specific property in 2006.

The December zoning meetings will be the last until February 2021, since zoning cases are not heard in Cobb County in the month of January.

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East Cobb presidential donors give more to Trump than Biden

East Cobb presidential voters

With the 2020 election exactly a week from today, the most expensive presidential race in history figures to get even more costly down the home stretch.

More than $2.4 billion already has been raised by both major-party candidates, and Democratic former vice president Joe Biden has generated $1.7 billion of those contributions, according to an analysis by The New York Times.

Republican president Donald Trump has raised more than $734 million, according to those estimates, which were published Monday and revealed in various interactive maps.

They include a ZIP code breakdown that shows that while Biden’s campaign has received more individual donors in East Cobb, Trump’s has generated more money from the four primary ZIP codes in the community. 

Trump campaign contributions in East Cobb total $734,081, compared to $664,294 for Biden, for an overall total of $1,398,375. 

The reporting periods are from April 1 to Oct. 14, and include contributions of $200 or more.

Suburban areas are considered battleground territory, including metro Atlanta, where Biden was campaigning Tuesday. From the Times analysis:

“In Georgia, the data shows that many of the suburban ZIP codes surrounding Atlanta, which are helping turn the state into a true presidential battleground for the first time in decades, are solidly Democratic when it comes to the number of donors, all the way deep into Gwinnett County, a swing county trending Democratic.”

Georgia is considered a toss-up state by some pollsters, and an AJC poll released Monday has Biden holding a 47-46 lead over Trump, who won the state with only 51 percent in 2016. 

According to the same data from The New York Times, here’s how the contributors from East Cobb break down, showing it to be an outlier, at least on the money-raising front:

30062

  • Total contributions: Biden 1,408; Trump 1,038
  • Contribution amounts: Trump $217,021; Biden $165,640

30066

  • Total contributions: Biden 1,031; Trump 858
  • Contribution amounts: Trump $161,457; Biden 87,527

30067

  • Total contributions: Biden 723; Trump 501
  • Contribution amounts: Trump $169,136; Biden $103,280

30068

  • Total contributions: Biden 898; Trump 655
  • Contribution amounts: Trump $186,467; Biden $142,207

The 30075 ZIP code includes most of Roswell and a small portion of Northeast Cobb. Biden got 1,591 contributors to Trump’s 1,096 there, but the president outraised the former vice president $266,480 to $208,187.

How that money may translate into votes is another matter. Trump won all but six of the 47 precincts in East Cobb in 2016, and won many of the heavy-turnout precincts handily (you can read through the results here).

Although East Cobb has been a strong Republican area for the last few decades, since Trump’s election its politics have become more competitive, even down to the local level.

That’s part of a broader Democratic surge in Cobb County and parts of metro Atlanta.

In 2018, Lucy McBath became the first Democrat to win the 6th Congressional District seat in 40 years, dating back Newt Gingrich’s first election victory. 

Also two years ago, Democrats won a legislative seat in the East Cobb area (District 37, by Mary Frances Williams) and a Cobb Board of Education seat that includes the Walton and Wheeler school zones (by Charisse Davis in Post 6).

Democrats are contesting every race that’s up in East Cobb, and in many cases their candidates got more votes than Republicans in the primaries.

Here’s more from the Times about some of those changing political trends: 

“Whit Ayres, a Republican pollster who studies demographic trends, said ‘the donations mirror voting patterns,’ as white voters with college degrees have swung sharply toward the Democrats in the last decade, with the trend expected to accelerate further in 2020 with Mr. Trump on the ticket.

“ ‘It makes perfect sense,’ Mr. Ayres said of the donation data. ‘Basically, Republicans have traded larger, more upscale, fast-growing suburban counties for smaller, down-scale, slower-growing rural counties. That’s not a promising trend for future victories.’ ”

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Pope football team sidelined due to confirmed COVID-19 case

Pope football, East Cobb football

The varsity football team at Pope High School team has suspended activities after a confirmed COVID-19 case was reported to Cobb and Douglas Public Health.

That comes from the Cobb County School District, and a district spokesman said the following Monday afternoon:

“The team will not meet until contact tracing protocols have been completed. Once the contact tracing is complete, it is our expectation that the team will resume activities.”

He did not respond to a question about when the confirmed case was reported. The Greyhounds defeated Wheeler 28-21 on Friday and are scheduled to play Kennesaw Mountain this Friday, but no announcement has been made about that game.

The spokesman did not indicate when the contact tracing may be completed.

Over the summer there was a confirmed COVID case within the Pope football team as it gathered for off-season workouts.

That’s among the 382 confirmed COVID cases within the Cobb school district that have been reported since July 1.

Cobb high school students will return to classroom learning on Nov. 5, but a number of extracurricular activities, including athletics, have been taking place on campuses.

The district does not break down the numbers of students and staff who are confirmed COVID cases.

There have been an unspecified number of confirmed COVID cases at several East Cobb elementary and middle schools since classes resumed at those grade levels within the last month.

Earlier this month, varsity and junior-varsity football activities at Kell High School were cancelled for what the Cobb school district said were COVID protocols and contact-tracing.

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Five Cobb library branches to be closed on Election Day

Mountain View Regional Library

The Mountain View Regional Library and the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center in East Cobb will be closed on election day because they’re being used as voting precincts.

They’re among the five library branches that will be used for that purpose, according to the Cobb County Public Library System.

The others are the South Cobb, West Cobb, and Vinings libraries. Polls open at 7 a.m. and close at 7 p.m. next Tuesday, Nov. 3. These libraries will reopen 10 a.m. November 4.

The Mountain View Regional Library (3320 Sandy Plains Road) will serve as the polling station for the Simpson 01 precinct.

The Sewell Mill Library (2051 Lower Roswell Road) is the polling station for the Powers Ferry 01 precinct.

Those precincts formerly had been at schools, and the moves are part of a continuing effort by Cobb Elections to relocate polling stations away from schools, mostly for security reasons.

Earlier this year the Cobb Board of Commissioners approved several precinct changes along those lines, including moves away from Dickerson and Dodgen middle schools in East Cobb.

A full list of precinct names and addresses can be found here. That’s where all voters casting their ballots in person will go next Tuesday, Nov. 3.

Voters can check assigned precinct locations and view specific sample ballots at Georgia’s My Voter Page site at www.mvp.sos.ga.gov.

Early voting continues this week from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday at the East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road)  and The Art Place (3330 Sandy Plains Road).

There is no early voting this Saturday or next Monday, Nov. 2.

Cobb GIS has created an estimated wait-time map at each of the early voting locations in the county.

The link to the map can be found here; if you click the information icon in the upper-right corner you’ll find a color-coded legend explaining the wait-times and other information.

Through Saturday Cobb Elections said 115,948 Cobb voters have voted early in-person, and 106,683 out of 180,242 requested absentee ballots have been returned.

Voters can return absentee ballots 24/7 until 7 p.m. election day at any of 16 absentee ballot drop boxes, including locations at the Mountain View and Sewell Mill libraries, the East Cobb government center and Gritters Library (880 Shaw Park Drive).

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Cobb school board virtual candidates forum takes place Thursday

The East Cobb County Council PTA and the South Cobb Council PTA organizations are holding a Cobb Board of Education candidates forum Thursday and are inviting the public to submit questions.

The deadline for doing so is 12 p.m. Monday, and questions should be submitted via e-mail to president@ecccpta.org AND southcobbcouncil@gmail.com.

Candidates for all four school board posts on this year’s ballot have been invited to participate in the forum, which lasts from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Members of both PTA organizations will be moderating the event, along with high school students.

Post 5 candidate profiles

Login information for the forum is below.

Cobb school board candidates forum

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East Cobb resident named to Tommy Nobis Center board of directors

Submitted information and photo:Jerry Chang, Tommy Nobis Center Board of Directors

Tommy Nobis Center, a Marietta-based nonprofit that helps individuals with disabilities enter or return to employment, recently elected Jerry Chang as a new board member.

Chang is senior managing director and partner at Ankura, a management consulting firm with clients in the legal, corporate, government, and nonprofit sectors.  Chang has over 25 years of experience specializing in valuation and financial advisory, including mergers and acquisitions, strategic partnerships, strategic planning, and litigation support. He attended Georgia Tech before earning his BBA in finance, with honors, from Georgia State University and his MBA in business and finance from Emory University’s Goizueta Business School. He holds the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation and was a member of Leadership Atlanta’s class of 2020.

“I am honored and excited to serve on the Board of Directors of Tommy Nobis Center,” says Chang. “I am looking forward to helping transform the lives of many people with disabilities.”

Chang believes that people with disabilities deserve to be treated with respect and dignity and given the opportunity to work toward financial independence. He supports the inclusion of all people in the workplace.

“Jerry’s experience and passion will be an incredible asset to our board,” says Dave Ward, President and CEO of Tommy Nobis Center. “His expertise and servant’s heart are the perfect combination for helping us achieve our mission and change lives.”

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East Cobb under flash flood warning through early Sunday morning

The National Weather Service in Atlanta has issued a flash flood warning that includes East Cobb through 1:30 a.m. Sunday.East Cobb flash flood warning

The warning area includes north Fulton, most of the city of Atlanta, DeKalb County and part of south Gwinnett.

Nearly three inches of rain fell in metro Atlanta Saturday afternoon, and low-lying areas of of warning area—especially along the Chattahoochee River and Sope Creek in East Cobb—is susceptible to flooding.

Cobb County government some areas already are flooding, but we don’t have any specific roads as of yet, beyond the East-West Connector in South Cobb.

It doesn’t take much rain for some roads in East Cobb to contain hazardous levels of water; two weeks ago a similar amount of rainfall closed Columns Drive for a while.

The flooding conditions and potential for more flooding will extend into Sunday, with more rain expected.

Drivers are advised not to drive through flooded roads, but should turn around.

The chance of rain in the East Cobb area is 20 percent on Sunday, with patchy fog during the day and the skies clearing by the evening.

 

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