More delays likely for East Cobb mixed-use rezoning cases

East Cobb Church rezoning case delauyed
A rendering of East Cobb Church, including a parking deck, fronting Shallowford Road.

The Cobb Zoning Office on Friday said the East Cobb Church mixed-use zoning request won’t be heard on Tuesday.

It’s been pulled from the Cobb Planning Commission agenda and is being continued (you can view the agenda here).

There wasn’t any further explanation in the case filings for the continuance.

The proposal for a church, retail and townhomes at the southwest corner of Johnson Ferry and Shallowford roads has drawn community opposition as well as support.

East Cobb Church, which is run by Northpoint Ministries, is planning to sell a portion of the 33-acre assemblage to Ashwood Development for 125 townhomes.

That’s the part of the mixed-use proposal that’s drawn most of the opposition, as well as for traffic concerns.

The zoning staff recommended denial of original application in October, but site plan revisions have been underway.

As we noted on Monday, another major East Cobb redevelopment project was also to finally be heard, several months after being proposed.

The Sprayberry Crossing case is still scheduled for Tuesday, according to the meeting agenda, but the developer has asked for another continuance until April.

That’s according to the Sprayberry Crossing Action, a citizens group on Facebook that has been pushing for the blighted shopping center to be redeveloped for years, as well as a group opposed to the project.

Atlantic Realty, an apartment developer, made the request for a continuance on Thursday, a day after the deadline for getting an automatic delay.

When that happens, the planning commission must vote whether to grant a continuance or not.

If the planning commission denies a continuance, the Sprayberry Crossing case would be the first item to be heard following the consent agenda.

Those against the project are strongly opposed to apartments coming to an area dominated by single-family subdivisions.

Atlantic Residential has reduced the number of apartments and townhomes in the project, which includes a grocery store, other small retail and event space.

The meeting begins at 9 a.m. Tuesday and can be seen on the county’s Facebook Live and YouTube channels, as well as Channel 23 on Comcast Cable. 

Limited in-person attendance is available in the meeting room, the 2nd floor board room of the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., in downtown Marietta.

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Powers Ferry Road communities oppose mixed-use proposals

Powers Ferry Road communities oppose mixed-use proposals
Homes along Meadowbrook Drive, on the site of a proposed mixed-use project off Powers Ferry Road.

Residents in two older neighborhoods along the Powers Ferry Road corridor have been organizing for several months to fight mixed-use proposals filed with the City of Marietta.

After several delays, both of those cases are scheduled to go before the Marietta Planning Commission Tuesday night (you can view the agenda here). 

Both proposals are on either side of the South Marietta Parkway, on land that’s in the city of Marietta, and both projects would be developed by Macauley Investments, an Atlanta firm that specializes in mixed-use projects.

The Nexus Gardens project we’ve written about before would have apartments, senior living and restaurants on nearly 17 acres, mostly undeveloped and facing Interstate 75. Some of those parcels include 19 single-family homes, as seen above on Meadowbrook Drive, and all of the land is owned by Ruben McMullan, an East Cobb resident, or his related entities.

Sole access to Nexus Gardens would be via Meadowbrook Drive, which is in unincorporated Cobb. That’s one of the major objections, in addition to the density of the project, which calls for two five-story apartment buildings totalling 280 units served by a three-story parking deck, a five-story senior-living building with 160 units, 39 townhomes and restaurants and retail space.

A group called Save Marietta has been created to oppose the project, and includes residents of the Meadowbrook neighborhood that’s partly in the city and also in the county.

McMullan’s real estate interests also include an assemblage of 22 parcels on 30 acres, mostly undeveloped but some with single-family homes, also off Powers Ferry and across the Loop.

That’s being proposed by Nexus Marietta for a 204-unit townhome development called Laurel Park.

Like the Nexus Gardens project, this one also has singular access via a residential street on Crestridge Drive, in the Cloverdale Heights neighborhood.

That’s entirely within the city of Marietta, and a community group has formed to oppose that project. 

The full agenda packet for the Marietta Planning Commission meeting, with proposal details, maps and traffic information, can be found here.

The Marietta Planning Commission meeting starts at 6 p.m. Tuesday and will be streamed live on the city’s website

The Marietta City Council make final decisions on March 10.

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Jefferson Township Parkway lane closed due to rain erosion

Jefferson Township Parkway lane closed

Cobb County DOT is saying this weekend that traffic on Jefferson Township Parkway, located off Sandy Plains Road in northeast Cobb, is reduced to one lane for the time being.

The cause is erosion due to heavy rain.

The road is residential, serving the Jefferson Township neighborhood off Sandy Plains Road, near Alabama and Woodstock roads, and close to the Cherokee County line.

The county didn’t indicate how long the closure might last, but said it would do so until repairs can be made.

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Cobb school COVID cases continue drop as vaccine prep begins

The day after Gov. Brian Kemp announced plans to vaccinate school teachers in Georgia against COVID-19, the Cobb County School District said Friday it had briefed staff members with more details.Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

In a news release, the district said it would be working with Cobb and Douglas Public Health to implement a vaccination program, and that staffers will be eligible for vaccines starting March 8.

That program includes the creation of mass vaccination sites for district staff once vaccine supplies are sufficient.

Three educators in the Cobb school district, including a paraprofessional at Sedalia Park Elementary School, have died since December due to COVID-19.

Those deaths led to emotional calls by some teachers and parents to go to all-remote learning.

School nurses, police officers and school staff 65 and older already have been able to get vaccinated through other providers.

Starting March 8, school employees can book an appointment for a vaccine at any public health agency in the state. But they’ll have to vie with others already on the eligible list for those vaccines, including people over 65, health care workers and first responders.

Cobb and Douglas Public Health has not been booking new appointments for the last three weeks due a shortage of vaccine supplies, and has said it may not get an increase until March or April.

The Cobb school district’s message to staff indicated that “as soon as vaccine supply is in hand, we will quickly schedule our mass vaccination drive-through events for Cobb educators. Specific dates, times, and locations will be made available once vaccine supply is in hand. At this time, only full-time and part-time school staff are eligible.”

Those appointments will be booked online and eligible individuals will be required to have an appointment to get a vaccine. The district said the vaccines are not mandatory.

Timber Ridge Elementary School teacher Laurie Weiner, who is older than 65, has received both doses of the vaccine. In the district’s release, she said that “I am appreciative of the seamless sign-up and procedures taken through the process. . . . Timber Ridge has implemented suggested guidelines as well. I feel more secure teaching my students since I have received both vaccinations.”

COVID-19 case rates in the Cobb school district continued their fall this week after staff and students returned from winter break.

The district announced in its weekly update on Friday that there were 229 new confirmed cases of the virus, the lowest weekly figure since before the Thanksgiving holidays.

On Feb. 12, before last week’s winter break, that figure was 232 new cases, which aren’t broken down between students and staff.

Kell High School in East Cobb was the only school in the 112-campus district to report double-figures in new cases, with 11 this week. There were nine new cases at Pope High School.

Since the district began compiling figures last July 1, there have been 3,960 cases reported. The district recently began indicating cumulative cases per school, and Walton High School and North Cobb High School have the most, at 102 cases each.

There have been 94 cases at Lassiter High School, 9 each at Pope and Kennesaw Mountain High School.

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Cobb Family Justice Center leaders to begin ‘Listening Tour’

Submitted information:

Cobb District Attorney Flynn D. Broady Jr. announces the Family Justice Center “Listening Tour” kickoff, hosted by Cobb’s FJC Site Coordinator TaNesha McAuley, and Jenny Aszman of Georgia’s Criminal Justice Coordinating Council.

The Listening Tour will begin March 1 with the FJC’s Core Partners and service providers. 

“The listening sessions will give us the opportunity to meet each of our Core Partners in small-group sessions to hear why they believe a Family Justice Center in Cobb County would be ideal and to gain perspective into how we can ensure that all of our ideas come together to best serve the needs of individuals who have been harmed by domestic or family violence or other types of interpersonal violence,” McAuley said. 

Cobb was one of three counties in Georgia awarded a grant last fall through the Victims of Crime Act to implement this model, which has proven to reduce domestic violence, sexual assaults, child and elder abuse, and human trafficking. The four-year grant, worth up to $400,000, is administered through Georgia’s Criminal Justice Coordinating Council.

The Family Justice Center initiative is one of the most inclusive and evidence-based models that brings all our partners together in one location to best meet the needs of victims and survivors of abuse.

The listening sessions will be held with Core Community Partners of the FJC, including Cobb’s Public Safety Department; the Cobb Solicitor General’s Office; liveSAFE Resources; SafePath Children’s Advocacy Center, Inc.; Kennesaw State University’s WellStar College of Health and Human Services, and others.

The Listening Tour will expand into our Cobb communities as we invite residents to be part of the planning, development, and implementation of Cobb’s FJC. Earlier this year, dozens of community members responded to the readiness assessment, providing input to tailor the FJC to meet Cobb’s specific needs. Also, a recording of the December 2020 kick-off meeting is available online at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=koyu5s3P090.

For more FJC updates, visit www.cobbda.com or email fjccobb@cobbcounty.org.

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East Cobb business and civic leader Johnny Johnson dies

East Cobb Citizen of the Year, Barbara Rhodes
Johnny Johnson presented Brenda Rhodes of Simple Needs GA the 2018 East Cobb Citizen of the Year Award. Johnson was a former recipient of the honor. (ECN file).

Johnny Johnson, the owner of a jewelry store in East Cobb, a former member of the Cobb Board of Education and a longtime community leader, died on Wednesday.

The East Cobb-based Kiwanis Club of Marietta Golden K said that Johnson, who turned 75 in December, died of complications from COVID-19.

“Johnny was a great Kiwanian and leaves a legacy of passion and service that is rare but sets a high standard which we should all strive to emulate.”

For more than 40 years, Johnson was the owner of Edward-Johns Jewelers, located at Woodlawn Square Shopping Center on Johnson Ferry Road for many years until moving to the nearby Regency Park office building in 2018.

He served on the Cobb school board from 1997-2008, one of many public roles he took on after settling in the East Cobb area in the 1970s.

He was a leader of the East Cobb Area Council of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce, which names a citizen of the year each fall. After being named an East Cobb Citizen of the Year, Johnson had the honor of presenting future recipients with the same award.

Johnson also dressed up as Santa Claus for the Holiday Lights celebration at East Cobb Park, riding in on a sleigh and visiting with children.

Each December he would dress up as Santa at his Edward-Johns store and pose for free pictures with children.

Johnson was an active member of the Golden K Kiwanis, as well as Kiwanis International and its board of trustees, and was a past president of the Cobb County YMCA.

Holiday Lights East Cobb Park

 

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Cobb seeks injunction against Tokyo Valentino during litigation

Tokyo Valentino East Cobb

Cobb County has filed a motion to enjoin the Tokyo Valentino adult retail store in East Cobb from doing business while local and federal court cases continue.

On Feb. 4, Scott Bergthold, a Chattanooga attorney hired by Cobb County to handle the Tokyo Valentino matter, filed a motion for an interlocutory injunction, seeking to close the store on three grounds.

The county says Tokyo Valentino is currently open without a general business license and without a sexually oriented business license, and is operating an adult business “in a zone where it is not allowed.”

Bergthold said in his motion that Tokyo Valentino has not applied for a general business license or a sexually oriented business license for 2021, and the current General Commercial category zoning where the store is located does not include and adult business.

The Cobb Board of Commissioners voted in October to permanently revoke Tokyo Valentino’s business license, a decision that was appealed.

The store has remained open pending that appeal, and in November, days after the county legally sought to close the store, Tokyo Valentino filed a lawsuit against the county in U.S. District Court in Atlanta.

During a contentious due-cause hearing, the county argued that the Tokyo Valentino store, which opened in June, was issued a business license in March under false pretenses.

The company that applied for the license, 1290 Clothing Co., LLC, indicated on its application that it would be for a general retail store at 1290 Johnson Ferry Road, in the former Mattress Firm location.

But the county argued that after the store opened as Tokyo Valentino, a vast majority of the inventory consisted of lotions and lubes, sex toys and smoke products not included on the application.

Only 14 percent of the merchandise, mostly adult lingerie, was clothing, according to evidence presented at the due-cause hearing.

Commissioners voted 5-0 to revoke the business license, and Tokyo Valentino’s lawsuit includes each of them, including former chairman Mike Boyce and retired commissioner Bob Ott of East Cobb, among the defendants.

Cobb County Attorney Bill Rowling told East Cobb News through county spokesman Ross Cavitt this week that “the filing speaks for itself,” and declined further comment.

Cavitt said a hearing for the injunction motion has not been scheduled (you can read it here), and it wasn’t clear when that might take place given COVID-19 restrictions that have delayed court proceedings.

“They have filed in federal court, we have filed in Cobb Superior Court where we believe the case belongs, so there will eventually be a determination where the venue should reside,” Cavitt said.

In a dismissal motion filed in Cobb Superior Court Feb. 1, Tokyo Valentino attorney Cary Wiggins said Cobb County “is rather transparently attempting to prevent Tokyo from litigating a pending case in Tokyo’s chosen forum, i.e., federal court.

“And because the County is attempting to punish Tokyo’s exercise of constitutional rights of petition and free speech by tying up its resources and driving up the costs of litigation,” the Cobb court also should “strike the complaint.”

When contacted by East Cobb News for comment this week, Wiggins said in reference to the East Cobb Tokyo Valentino location that “the store is a high-end, couples boutique. It’s a well-run operation, and a good corporate citizen. My client is disappointed that the county is spending a great deal of money trying to shut it down.”

In that Feb. 4 motion, Bergthold asked for an injunction “because Tokyo’s illegal activity is systemic, continual and contrary to governing law.

“Denying injunctive relief,” the motion states, “would appear to ratify Tokyo’s unlawful business practices and embolden them to operate in violation of the law.”

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

The store didn’t need rezoning as a clothing retail business to open in the general commercial (GC) category under the Cobb County Code.

The Cobb County legal dispute is the latest for Tokyo Valentino founder Michael Morrison, who has taken several metro Atlanta jurisdictions to court over his adult retail businesses.

Bergthold, who has been hired by local governments across the country in seeking to restrict adult businesses, also was retained by the county as it overhauled Cobb’s adult business code last fall.

He has served as the attorney for the cities of Atlanta, Brookhaven and Doraville in their attempts to shut down Morrison’s stores.

In December, the libertarian magazine Reason profiled Morrison in a story with the headline “The Atlanta Sex Toy Magnate Who Can’t Stop Picking Fights,” and interviewed him at the East Cobb Tokyo Valentino store.

He said choosing the location across the street from Merchants Walk and Whole Foods was intentional: “‘We like to be by organic grocery stores,’ he says. That means the shoppers in the area have ‘expendable income’ and are ‘liberal and more educated.'”

But there was plenty of community opposition voiced against Tokyo Valentino by East Cobb residents, who said the store’s proximity to Mt. Bethel Elementary School and Johnson Ferry Baptist Church is inappropriate.

East Cobb resident Daniel White, who started an online petition last summer against Tokyo Valentino, e-mailed East Cobb News on Feb. 4, when the county’s latest motion was filed.

He said he had not received a response from Ott’s successor, newly elected commissioner Jerica Richardson, and urged other residents to contact her as the case goes through the courts.

“While the order has been to shut this location down, of course the owner has appealed. It is the same strategy used in other counties and with their other locations,” White said. “Legal troubles are not uncommon for this owner. Nor are the legal stalling techniques. Maybe the community will bore of it. Maybe the news will stop covering it. Maybe the new commissioner will reprioritize it.”

All six of Morrison’s stores remain open, including his original store on Cheshire Bridge Road in Atlanta. The city has been trying to limit activities there, including the rental of private suites.

Morrison, who opened that store as Inserection in 1998, filed a civil rights lawsuit against Atlanta in 2015, after he had rebranded his business under the Tokyo Valentino name.

A federal appeals court ruled in favor of the city in 2018. Tokyo Valentino’s federal lawsuit against Cobb is on similar grounds (you can read it here).

Among the chief claims of that suit is that Cobb revised the adult business code specifically to put Tokyo Valentino out of business.

The other Tokyo Valentino stores are retail-only, including the Johnson Ferry Road store, Morrison’s first business in unincorporated Cobb County.

The Marietta City Council voted to shut down a Tokyo Valentino store on Cobb Parkway last summer for 180 days, claiming the store inventory didn’t match what was on its business license application.

Tokyo Valentino also has filed a federal lawsuit against Marietta on First Amendment grounds.

In the Reason interview, Morrison discussed his ongoing legal issues with metro Atlanta jurisdictions, including Brookhaven, which has tried to close his Stardust adult store for several years, claiming he’s lied about the intent of his business there.

“We’ll get this thing rectified,” Morrison told the magazine. “At the end of the day, [Brookhaven] will have spent a million dollars to fight something where ultimately they lost.”

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Cobb schools Code Red alert investigated as cyber attack

The Cobb County School District said Wednesday that its emergency alert system that was set off on Feb. 2, prompting a brief Code Red lockdown at all schools, was not a false alarm but a deliberate cyber attack.Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

The district said in a news release that what’s being investigated as a cyber crime by the Cobb Police Department is continuing.

Spokeswoman Nan Kiel said in the release that the district can’t reveal more details, but “we have been given permission to share the Technology Based Crimes Unit’s conclusion that the false alarm signal occurred through a targeted, external attack of CCSD’s AlertPoint system.”

AlertPoint is an emergency alert system which allows each employee within a school—including administrators, teachers and other staffers—to activate a device should an emergency occur. This includes fires, active shooters and other intruders, physical altercations and medical emergencies.

The system was implemented starting in 2017 and is one component of the district’s CobbShield emergency and safety program developed in recent years.

When an AlertPoint device is activated, alert information is relayed via computer and mobile devices to school-level administrators and security personnel, as well as at the school district office, within seconds.

The location and identity of the person sending the alert also is transmitted. When a “Code Red” alert is triggered, flashing lights, beeping sounds and voice messages ring out, and the intercom system indicates a lockdown situation is underway.

The AlertPoint system is patterned after existing school fire emergency procedures.

After the Feb. 2 incident in which AlertPoint was triggered at all 112 schools, the district said the cause was a systemwide malfunction and that no students or staff were threatened.

On Wednesday, however, the district said it immediately asked for police assistance in investigating the matter as a possible cyber attack.

“Fairly quickly, it appeared that the false alarm signal (1) was intentionally triggered rather than a malfunction, and (2) was uniquely limited to the AlertPoint system in CCSD,” according to the statement, which said the district then contacted police,

“We do not yet know the motives of those attacking the District’s AlertPoint system,” Wednesday’s district statement said, which did not indicate possible suspects.

“However, it appears the crime was committed to disrupt education across the District, create district-wide chaos, and produce anxiety in the District’s students, parents, and staff. This was not a ‘prank,’ nor will it be treated like one.”

Kiel said that anyone with information related to the cyber attack is asked to contact the Cobb County Police Department’s Tip Line at 770-499-4111 or the CCSD Police Department’s Tip Line at 470-689-0298.

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East Cobb food scores: Capozzi’s; J. Christopher’s; more

Capozzi's Shallowford, East Cobb food scores

The following East Cobb food scores from Feb. 22-26 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Asahi Japanese Steak & Sushi
2960 Shallowford Road, Suite C9-11
February 24, 2021 Score: 84, Grade: B

Capozzi’s 
2960 Shallowford Road, Suite 101
February 22, 2021 Score: 93, Grade: A

China Dynasty
3605 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 105
February 26, 2021 Score: 96, Grade: A

Dunkin Donuts
4661 Woodstock Road, Roswell
February 25, 2021 Score: 93, Grade: A

Ege Sushi & Japanese Cuisine
2100 Roswell Road, Suite 2112
February 24, 2021 Score: 93, Grade: A

El Rincon Salvadoreno Bakery 
2100 Roswell Road, Suite 2104
February 24, 2021 Score: 73, Grade: C

J. Christopher’s 
1275 Powers Ferry Road
February 23, 2021 Score: 89, Grade: B

Johnboy’s Home Cooking
3050 Canton Road
February 25, 2021 Score: 75, Grade: C

Sterling Estates of East Cobb
4220 Lower Roswell Road
February 23, 2021 Score: 99, Grade: A

Yeero Village
4751 Sandy Plains Road
February 23, 2021 Score: 90, Grade: A

Zaxby’s 
2756 Sandy Plains Road
February 22, 2021 Score: 95, Grade: A

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NOWAMOM spring consignment sale scheduled for March 13

NOWAMOM spring consignment sale

Submitted information:

Everything babies and kids need for Spring & Summer! Mark your calendars now for the NOWAMOM Kids Consignment Sale on Saturday, March 13th, 2021 from 9 AM – 2 PM at Sandy Plains Baptist Church in Marietta. (near Sprayberry High School)

Save 60- 90% on warm weather clothes & gear, brought to you by NOWAMOM, the Northwest Atlanta Moms of Multiples club.

While most of our sellers are moms with twins or triplets (or more!), the sale is OPEN TO THE PUBLIC! We have baby and children’s clothes, toys, and gear all the way to Junior’s sizes!

Psst: Visit our webpage www.NowamomSale.org to score an early bird pass to get in before the public!

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Cobb Senior Services to offer free food distribution on Friday

Submitted information:

Cobb Senior Services staff will hold drive-up services for Cobb residents age 60 and older to get shelf stable food from 11 a.m. until noon, or while supplies last, on Friday, Feb. 26. An ID showing date of birth and Cobb County home address for each senior is required upon arrival. No appointment needed. The address is Cobb Senior Services, 1150 Powder Springs St., Marietta.

You can help these distribution events continue by donating needed food and supplies. CSS staff is currently accepting donations by appointment only due to COVID-19. Please do NOT leave any items outside. Call 770-528-2009 to schedule a time for drop-off. To view a list of needed items, visit cobbseniors.org.

If you would prefer to make a financial donation to help continue this food drives, click “Donate” at cobbseniors.org.

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Zoning update: Sprayberry Crossing, East Cobb Church filings

Sprayberry Crossing zoning case
For a larger view click here.

After months of delays, the Sprayberry Crossing rezoning case has been placed on the March zoning calendar and the Cobb Zoning Office has conducted a formal analysis of the redevelopment project.

The office released its March agenda on Monday, ahead of next Tuesday’s Cobb Planning Commission meeting.

The zoning staff is recommending approval of the retail, townhome and apartment proposal by Atlantic Realty, an apartment developer, with conditions.

The proposal was first revealed last year, and included a virtual town hall meeting with the community.

But it’s a community that’s been divided over the project, with some citizens adamantly against apartments, and concerns about increased traffic.

The latest site plan (at the top) calls for 125 apartments, 125 senior living apartments, 44 townhomes, 36,000 square feet of retail and 8,000 square feet of office space. Most of the retail space would be for a supermarket, which on the latest map indicates a Lidl store.

The apartment numbers have been reduced from nearly 200 and the story height has come down from five to three, but community green space and a buffer around an existing cemetery that were on earlier site plans have been eliminated.

ROD projects are “site plan specific,” meaning that there aren’t minimum lot sizes, setbacks and buffers that are required in most rezoning cases.

At least 10 percent of the housing units in an ROD project must be set aside for residents making no more than 80 percent of an area’s average median income.

Last month Cobb commissioners voted 5-0 to eliminate the category, which stands for Redevelopment Overlay District.

That action doesn’t affect the Sprayberry Crossing case. The agenda item overview can be found here; here is the staff analysis. The full packet can be found at the first link in this post, pages 45-131.

Also on the agenda after two months of delays is another proposed redevelopment, for a campus of the new East Cobb Church and townhomes at Johnson Ferry and Shallowford roads (summary here).

North Point Ministries wants to purchase 33 acres at the southwest corner of that intersection to build the new East Cobb Church and an accompanying parking deck (latest site plan here).

North Point would sell the back portion of the property to Ashwood Development for 125 townhomes. There also would be some retail use.

The Cobb zoning staff has recommended denial for density, traffic and land-use reasons. Opponents are calling for low-density single-family housing. Citizens opposed to the project have made similar arguments, while others have applauded the addition of a new church to the community.

Kevin Moore, North Point’s attorney, said the single-family category is economically unfeasible; a 2016 rezoning case seeking a single-family development on the same property was withdrawn.

He repeated that claim during a virtual town hall earlier this month with Cobb Commissioner Jerica Richardson and Cobb Planning Commission member Tony Waybright, who offered a “conceptual plan” incorporating changes he said were suggested by community members.

Full packet information can be found on pages 244-271 of the meeting agenda.

Next Tuesday’s meeting will be the first for new Cobb Planning Commission member Deborah Dance. She’s formerly the Cobb County Attorney and was appointed by Commissioner JoAnn Birrell to represent District 3, which includes the Sprayberry Crossing property.

Dance succeeds longtime planning board member Judy Williams, who died of COVID-19 in January.

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Keep Cobb Beautiful recycling spots include two in East Cobb

Submitted information:

To best serve our residents and environment, a free recycling drop spot is located in each district. There is signage at each location.

  • District One
    3858 Kemp Ridge Road, Acworth
  • District Two
    4400 Lower Roswell Road, Marietta
  • District Three
    2905 Library Lane, Marietta
  • District Four
    4700 Austell Road, Austell

Items accepted:
Paper/newspapers, junk mail, magazines/books, clean plastics (1-7), clean aluminum, clean steel, clean tin cans, clean cartons and flatten cardboard boxes

Items NOT accepted:
Trash, glass, polystyrene or styrofoam, grocery bags yard waste, electronics, tires, propane tanks, hazardous material (paint, batteries, bulbs, oil, etc.)

For more information, visit cobbcounty.org/keep-cobb-beautiful.

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Cobb COVID deaths surpass 800; East Cobb’s total nears 200

Cobb COVID deaths surpass 800
To view Cobb COVID data by ZIP code, age, sex, race, etc., click here.

While the case and hospitalization rates for COVID-19 in Cobb County continue to drop, the number of deaths attributed to the virus continues to lag behind those metrics.

The death toll in Cobb County as of Saturday afternoon was 814, the third-highest in Georgia behind Fulton County, which has 1,022 deaths, and Gwinnett, with 864.

Since the middle of January, there have been six separate days in which double-digit death totals were reported in Cobb County, according to the “date of report” category.

Those include Wednesday and Friday, when 12 new deaths were confirmed each day.

According to the “date of death” category, those figures also have been higher in recent weeks—including 10 deaths on Jan. 26, according to the Georgia Department of Public Health—are starting to come down.

That category is subject to a 14-day window in which statistics are likely to be updated.

Thus far in February, there have been 52 deaths in Cobb County. In January, there were 154 deaths, the most for any month since COVID-19 data began to be compiled in March 2020.

The newest figures come as state of Georgia COVID figures have reached milestones. As of Saturday there have been 803,349 cases and 14,629 deaths.

Cobb’s case total stands at 54,441. But those case rates have been coming down substantially in February, according to Dr. Janet Memark, director of Cobb and Douglas Public Health.

Community spread figures that shot up to a 14-day average of more than 1,000 cases per 100,000 people also have fallen rapidly in Cobb, to October levels when the Cobb County School District resumed in-person classes.

The spread figure now is at 282 cases per 100,000. A “high” figure is 100 per 100,000.

In East Cobb, there have been 14,046 COVID-19 cases since last March, and 187 deaths, according to data compiled by Cobb and Douglas Public Health.

Those figures break down as follows via ZIP Codes:

  • 30062: 4,070 cases, 46 deaths;
  • 30066: 3,874 cases, 51 deaths;
  • 30067: 3,334 cases, 32 deaths;
  • 30068: 2,223 cases, 55 deaths;
  • 30075: 536 cases, 3 deaths.

Among the deaths in East Cobb are 31 residents of long-term care facilities, according to Georgia Department of Community Health figures.

While the countywide case and death figures are broken down by age, sex and race, the ZIP Code figures are not.

In Cobb, more than 87 percent of the fatalities are people ages 60 and older. Only 45 are ages 49 and under.

Those ratios have been fairly consistent over the last 11 months.

Cobb COVID deaths surpass 800

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Cobb 4-H accepting plant sale pre-orders for March pickup

Submitted information and photo:

Cobb 4-H staff is hosting its annual plant sale to raise funds for 4-H youth development, programming, supplies and scholarships. The quote “To Plant a Garden is to Believe in Tomorrow” by Audrey Hepburn is this year’s plant sale theme. Not only is gardening therapeutic, but many of the plants offered will get your yard ready for spring by adding color and vibrancy to brighten your days.

Plant sale pre-orders are being accepted through March 5 at the UGA-Cobb Extension Office. There are limited quantities of all varieties, so plants are sold on a first come, first serve basis. You can pre-order by stopping by the Extension Office 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday-Friday, and placing your order in person with a Visa/MasterCard/Discover Card, cash, check or money order. You can also mail your plant sale order form with a check or money order to: 678 South Cobb Drive, Suite 200, Marietta, GA 30060. Make all checks payable to Cobb Extension/4-H.

Plant sale pick up will be held 9 a.m.-1 p.m. on Saturday March 20, at the Jim Miller Park covered arena. For more information, call 770-528-4070.

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Birney Memorial Rose Garden in Marietta honors PTA founder

Birney Memorial Rose Garden

Wednesday was PTA Founder’s Day, and in Marietta, those behind the Birney Memorial Rose Garden, which honors the work of Alice Birney, one of the co-founders of the national organization, had their own celebration.

The Marietta Daisies Garden Club, which looks after the Garden, is seeking donations, and sent along the following information about the work they do:

“The Birney Memorial Rose Garden, originally named ‘The Sun Court,’ was dedicated in 1942 to honor Alice Birney as the co-founder of National PTA. This historic garden is situated on the, now, Marietta Middle School campus. At the center of the court there is a sun dial and it is surrounded by square, stone slabs representing each of the 50 state PTAs. Outlining the courtyard are garden beds showcasing 40 varieties of roses.

“The Birney Memorial Rose Garden is maintained by Marietta Daisies Garden Club volunteers, known as the ‘Daisy Darlings.’ Collectively, the Daisy Darlings donate more than 130 man-hours/year to prune, plant, and nurture this community treasure.

“ ‘Our members are extremely dedicated to preserving the memory of our Marietta PTA legacy —  Alice McLellan Birney,’ states Carol Fey, Marietta Daisies president. ‘Our membership has a passion for gardening, but also education. Many of our members are former/current teachers and PTA members.’

“Donations are accepted to help with the maintenance and repair cost. Most recently, Daisy Darling/artist, Melissa Snyder, created a beautiful illustration which has been made into notecards and will also be sold as a limited-edition print to help offset expenses of stone replacement. Notecards are available for sale through Marietta retailers, White Rabbit Cottage and Market with a B.

“Founded in 2015, the Marietta Daisies Garden Club is an organization of women committed to beautification, education, service and leadership in our community. The organization is a member of the Laurel District, within the Marietta Garden Council, Inc, which is overseen by the Garden Club of Georgia.

“Visit mariettadaisies.wixsite.com/gardenclub for more information or to make a donation.”

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Jim Miller Park COVID-19 vaccines cancelled due to shortages

Jim Miller Park COVID vaccine appointments

Cobb and Douglas Public Health on Friday cancelled all scheduled COVID-19 vaccine appointments at Jim Miller Park for Saturday and Monday because of more supply shortages.

Crippling winter weather elsewhere has interrupted the supply chain of vaccine shipments, according to the agency, which indicated it was already running out of vaccine doses on hand before the week was out.

“Please be assured that you will be first in line for vaccination appointments next week when we receive vaccine. We will communicate by email, text or phone to reschedule,” the Cobb and Douglas Public Health message states.

For the last three weeks Cobb and Douglas Public Health has not been accepting new appointments for its drive-up venues at Jim Miller Park and Arbor Place Mall in Douglasville.

In Cobb, only a few hundred vaccine doses were available to distribute per day.

Cobb and Douglas Public Health Director Dr. Janet Memark has said that sufficient vaccine supplies may not be available until March or April.

Until then, only people with previously booked appointments will be able to get vaccines.

She’s scheduled to brief the Cobb Board of Commissioners on Tuesday night with more updated information.

Cobb and Douglas Public Health is resuming COVID-19 testing at Jim Miller Park starting Monday. You must pre-register online by clicking here. The test is free (your insurance will be billed), and once you sign up, you can come by at your convenience from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday-Friday.

If you don’t have access to a computer, smartphone, or internet, you can call 844-625-6522, then press 1 and ask for registration help.

Those individuals eligible in the A+1 category to receive vaccines have been struggling to find any place to book an appointment.

The state of Georgia gets close to 200,000 vaccine doses a week from the federal government, but it’s not coming close to filling the demand.

The Georgia Department of Public Health recently unveiled a new vaccine dashboard that shows that more than 1.6 million vaccines have been administered in the state. Of that total, 1.1 million are first doses.

In Cobb County, more than 110,00 vaccine doses have been administered, with 71,000 of those being first doses. An average of just under 15,000 vaccines a week have been given per 100,000 people in Cobb, according to the dashboard.

Those figures include vaccines provided by public health agencies as well as private providers, including physicians and at pharmacies.

Georgia DPH has created a vaccine locator service indicating where vaccine supplies are available.

However, many of those locations say they are out of vaccines, or all available appointments have been booked.

Like other states, Georgia is working to secure more supplies of the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines that became available in January.

Gov. Brian Kemp announced Thursday that the Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security agencies will open four mass COVID-19 vaccination sites in underserved areas of the state, starting on Monday.

They are near the Atlanta airport, as well as in Albany, Clarkesville and Macon, and will be offering drive-up vaccinations Monday-Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. They will be able to distribute more than 20,000 vaccines per day combined.

Appointments will be necessary and are available to people categorized as A+1 under the state’s tiered priority list. That includes seniors 65 and older and their caregivers, long-term care residents, health care workers and first responders.

The state has created a new website, MyVaccineGeorgia.com, for booking appointments and for related information about vaccine appointments.

Those who aren’t yet eligible also can sign up at that site and receive updates.

The new mass vaccination sites are open to any legal residents of Georgia, but they must book an appointment at the link above and fall into the A+1 category:

  • Delta Air Museum, 1220 Woolman Place, Hapeville
  • Albany Forestry site, 2910 Newton Road, Albany
  • Habersham County Fairgrounds, 4235 Toccoa Highway, Clarkesville
  • Macon Farmers Market, 2055 Eisenhower Parkway, Macon

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East Cobb Food Scores: Red Curry Thai; Hibachi & BBQ; more

Red Curry Thai, East Cobb food scores

The following East Cobb food scores from Feb. 15- have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Goiano Restaurant and Catering
1475 Terrell Mill Road, Suite 103
February 16, 2021 Score: 75, Grade: C

Hibachi & BBQ
2856 Delk Road, Suite 305
February 15, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

Jameric
3349 Canton Road, Suite 201
February 17, 2021 Score: 74, Grade: C

Mr. Wok
1750 Bells Ferry Road, Suite B
February 17, 2021 Score: 87, Grade: B

Red Curry Thai
4724 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 500
February 16, 2021 Score: 88, Grade: B

Wingstop
2900 Delk Road, Suite 100
February 15, 2021 Score: 91, Grade: A

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Grand jury clears Cobb officer in deadly shooting of black teen

Cobb grand jury clears officer
“As an African-American, you hate to see an African-American shot down,” Cobb District Attorney Flynn Broady said Thursday. “But the fact is we have to follow the law.”

Cobb County District Attorney Flynn Broady said Thursday he will not prosecute a Cobb Police officer who fatally shot a black teenager last summer after a grand jury declined to return an indictment.

Broady said at a press conference at the Cobb Police Training Academy in Austell that as far as he is concerned, the case involving the officer who shot and killed Vincent Truitt, 17, last July 13 after a traffic chase, is closed.

Broady’s remarks came after the grand jury deliberated all day Thursday to review police reports from the officers and video camera footage taken from police vehicles and body and surveillance cameras.

A video from one of the pursuing police cars was shown during the press conference, including the shooting of Truitt. He was a passenger in a car that was suspected of being stolen, and whose driver took police on a high-speed chase in South Cobb, and ultimately behind an industrial building off Riverside Parkway.

The death was ruled a homicide by the Cobb County Medical Examiner’s Office, and after a probe by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation—which investigates all officer-involved shootings—the case was turned over to the Cobb DA’s office.

Truitt’s family said earlier this month it is planning a $50 million lawsuit against Cobb Police, alleging he was running away from police and wasn’t armed.

They also have been asking for months for the release of camera footage of the shooting, accused former DA Joyette Holmes of not properly investigating the case and demanded the resignation of Cobb Police Chief Tim Cox.

Broady and deputy chief assistant DA Jason Salibi said the footage seen by the grand jury on Thursday clearly showed Truitt brandishing a weapon. He suffered two gunshot wounds and died 12 hours later at Grady Memorial Hospital.

Broady said the unnamed officer followed all proper departmental procedures for use-of-force as well as state law.

“As an African-American, you hate to see an African-American shot down,” Broady said. “But the fact is we have to follow the law. And the law says the officer is within his rights.

“If you see the the video, you see plenty of places where that young man could have hid and presented an opportunity to ambush the officer or the officers who were chasing the other assailant.”

Salibi said Truitt’s family was called to the Cobb court chambers Thursday and briefed in a separate room about the grand jury proceedings, including the decision not to indict.

Broady said footage that wasn’t shown to the grand jury, out of deference for Truitt’s family, was when a wounded Truitt asked police why he had been shot.

“Because you had a gun,” Broady quoted the police officer as saying.

Salibi said that in the aftermath of the shooting, police rendered aid to Truitt, who lived in Fulton County.

The week before he defeated Holmes in the November elections, Broady appeared with Truitt’s family at a Cobb Board of Commissioners meeting that involved a group called Movement 4 Black Lives.

According to the Cobb County Courier, Truitt’s family’s attorney has been critical of Broady since he took office, and said that they “will be presenting Truitt’s case to the United Nations as an example of the ‘police brutality epidemic’ in the United States.”

Broady said Thursday that although the officer was never charged with a crime, the grand jury was presented evidence as though it were a criminal case, as part of a policy of his office to have a grand jury review any officer-involved shooting.

When asked what message he may have for those in the community still troubled by the shooting, Broady said that “we cannot let emotions dictate how we see things, that we have to look at the facts.”

Quoting Malcolm X, Broady said, “I am for justice, no matter who it’s for or who it’s against. It’s my job as district attorney that I look out for everybody. Not just for the victims but also the offenders, to make sure that they get a fair hearing based on the evidence, and that’s what we did today.”

At a later media briefing, Cox said that “I recognize that the loss of life is tragic. I pray for that family every day.”

He said that the police officer who shot Truitt has been under heavy stress, “and I pray for that officer” as well.

 

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Update: Willeo Creek bridge replacement closures, detour map

Willeo Creek bridge replacement closures
For a larger view, click here. Source: City of Roswell.

Some initial lane closures got underway this week for the upcoming Willeo Creek Bridge replacement project we noted a few weeks ago, when final funding was approved.

Cobb County Government and the City of Roswell announced this week more of the timetable for the joint project, which which close the bridge entirely for four months.

The 60-year bridge will be replaced with a wider bridge that will include room for cyclists and pedestrians, linking existing sidewalks and trails between Willeo Road and Lower Roswell Road.

The full project, which has been delayed a few years due to amendments with an intergovernmental agreement, will take a year to complete.

Another such amendment will come before the Cobb Board of Commissioners on Tuesday. Another cost increase has pushed the final tab from $2.3 million to $3 million with Cobb and Roswell paying for an equal share.

According to Tuesday’s agenda item (details here and here) the additional funding is necessary for environmental mitigation purposes.

According to a video released by Cobb on Wednesday, the bridge closing is expected to begin sometime in the late spring or early summer, although a specific date has not been determined.

That means that East Cobbers using the bridge that connects the roundabout at Lower Roswell Road and Timber Ridge Road with Willeo Road for riverfront recreation and other activities in Roswell will have to use an alternate route while the bridge is closed.

The City of Roswell has drawn up a map of that detour above, and the Cobb video said further updates on when that alternate route will begin will be provided on the city website.

That includes taking Timber Ridge to Roswell Road (State Route 120) and heading east as it becomes the Marietta Highway in Roswell, then turning right on Willeo Road.

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