B’nai Brith Enlighten America essay contest open to middle school students

B'nai Brith Enlighten America essay contest

Thanks to East Cobb News reader Vic A. for passing along this invitation to middle school students: It’s the B’nai Brith Enlighten America essay contest, which the organization says is “designed to combat the issues of bigotry and prejudice, and encourages respect for all people.”

This year, the contest is expanding to accept essays on the topic of bullying. Cash prizes are $750 for first place, $500 for second place and $250 for third place. The winning student’s school also will receive $500;

Here’s more about what’s behind the initiative:

“The actions of bullying and tragic, horrific mass shootings in schools, nightclubs and other public gathering places are often brought on by bigoted, prejudicial attitudes that result from hatred and misunderstanding.”

Here’s more about what students will be writing about this year:

Our 2018 essay contest examines the words of George Washington in his letter to the Touro Synagogue, Newport, Rhode Island, 1790…when he wrote that ours is a government which “gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance.”

We ask all contestants to write what they think the message of Washington’s letter means in our society today. Students should reflect on the significance of tolerance and equality by writing about issues of bigotry and prejudice, how those issues have been addressed (or not addressed) in recent years, and how they affect our quest for peaceful coexistence among our friends and neighbors, and throughout the world.

As an alternative, you may select a quote attributed to a local community leader or another American President. Or, use an event in your life or an event in history.

Tell us why you chose your quote or event, and its relevance to the issues of bigotry or prejudice.

We encourage students to consider the following, and express their thoughts via their contest entries:

Are Washington’s words and thoughts applicable today? How? Where? Why?

Are there corresponding responsibilities that we share today?

How do violent “hate crimes” incited by bigotry affect the victims? The perpetrators?  Everyone else?

The organization is also looking for donors and sponsors, including local business owners, to make contributions for the prize money. If you’re interested, contact Art Link, Program Chairman, at ReadThisNow@yahoo.com, or call 770-807-5113.

The Enlighten America contest rules page has plenty more on what you’ll need to do to sign up, and where to send your completed work.

The contest is open to students who attend public or private schools or who are home-schooled in Cobb, Fulton, DeKalb, Clayton, Douglas, Forsyth and Hall counties.

Eligible students must be in 7th or 8th grades by next month and must be attending by February 2019. The deadline to submit an essay is Nov. 16.

More youth and school news

 

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Cobb STEM Distinguished Educator Awards include Simpson, McCleskey teachers

Press release: Simpson McCleskey teachers honored, Cobb STEM

The Cobb County School District recently presented 16 teachers with the Cobb STEM Distinguished Educator Award.

“This program is designed to recognize exceptional K-12 teachers in our district who have made a commitment to meaningfully implementing science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) in their classrooms,” said Tania Pachuta, STEM Professional Learning Specialist for the district.

Teachers apply by submitting a portfolio of evidence documenting the various STEM experiences they have engaged in and provided for their students throughout the year. For example, Mableton Elementary School teacher Alana Davis runs the afterschool aerospace engineering club, STARBASE 1.5, that skypes with NASA engineers. Kerri Waller is a Simpson Middle School teacher who has received national recognition in Arts & Activities Magazine for her STEAM work with students. Portfolios are reviewed and points are awarded based on certain criteria. The program is modeled after the Georgia Department of Education STEM Educator Laureate Program.

Award winners receive various prizes, with the top winner earning a Sphero robot for use in the classroom, along with a trip to a Georgia educator conference of the winner’s choice. This year’s top STEM educator, Paulette Allard, teaches at Harrison High School.

“It is rewarding to have achieved such a high level of recognition for participating in the program, but I am also immensely thankful that it gave me a springboard to help my students achieve great things through their STEM experiences as well,” said Allard.

Awards are generously sponsored by nexAir, LLC, a leading distributor of atmospheric gases and welding supplies with locations across the mid-south, including Marietta.

The top five winners include Paulette Allard, Harrison High School; Alana Davis, Mableton Elementary School; Sean Splawski, Mableton Elementary School; Annette Simpson, McCleskey Middle School; and Michael Lee, McEachern High School.

More information about the program, including a full list of award winners, can be found at www.stemcobb.com.

 

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Commissioners approve East Cobb Restaurant Row rezoning request

Powers Ferry Restaurant Row project

By a unanimous vote Tuesday county commissioners approved an East Cobb Restaurant Row rezoning request to transform a long-existing eyesore in the Powers Ferry Road corridor.

After a lengthy discussion, which included a history of the area’s changing demographics, commissioners made few changes to the request by Powers Ferry Road Investors LLC to convert 8.8 acres to a regional retail commercial category that’s used for large mixed-use projects.

In moving to approve the request (agenda item packet here), District 2 commissioner Bob Ott included conditions that reduce the maximum number of apartment units from 290 to 280 and senior living units from 181 to 171.

The development will contain 578,885 square feet, all but 10,000 of it for residential buildings, with the rest for restaurant and retail space. The multi-family building will be six stories, and the senior building will have five stories. A 3-story parking deck and other parking on the property will provide 711 spaces.

Related stories

The only business that is there now is the Rose and Crown Tavern, which is surrounded by three other empty former restaurant buildings occupied by Sal Grosso, Famous Dave’s and TGI Friday’s.

Some of them have been sitting empty for years. Ott noted that the Rose and Crown, which opened in 2013, is different because it is a bar as well.

The land is adjacent to the Wildwood office park.

Bob Ott, East Cobb Restaurant Row
Commissioner Bob Ott lives near the Restaurant Row area on Powers Ferry Road.

The restaurants did well during lunch hour because of its proximity to Wildwood, but suffered during dinner hours.

“Restaurants don’t survive,” said Ott, who lives in the nearby Terrell Mill Estates community. “It is a blighted property.”

While the Powers Ferry Corridor Alliance supported the request, some citizens living in the nearby Horizons at Wildwood condominiums were opposed, citing density, environmental, traffic and safety reasons.

Eric Meadows, a Horizons resident who has led the opposition, took issue with a claim by James Balli, an attorney for the applicant, that there aren’t any hazards to citizens walking along Windy Ridge Parkway.

As he stated at a Cobb Planning Commission hearing earlier this month, a resident was struck walking his dog on the road, which surrounds the back of the Restaurant Row land, and went to the hospital

“Does it take us for someone to be killed before we do something?” Meadows said.

Rose and Crown, East Cobb Restaurant Row rezoning
The Rose and Crown Tavern is slated to become part of the new development on Restaurant Row.

Ott said the Restaurant Row property has been eyed by potential developers for more than two years. Located at Powers Ferry and Windy Hill Road, it once was seen as the nucleus of the corridor.

But that core area now, he added, is Powers Ferry at Terrell Mill Road, where commissioners approved the MarketPlace Terrell Mill mixed-use project earlier this year.

Another key change over the years has been the string of apartment complexes in the corridor. Many of them were built as adult-only, but were forced to open their doors to families after a court ruling in the 1970s.

That affected nearby schools in the Wheeler cluster, especially Brumby Elementary, but also things like restaurant patronage.

Another condition for the rezoning is for future residents to be notified in their least agreements of potential noise issues, since the area is in the flight path of nearby Dobbins Air Reserve Base.

 

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Wheeler Magnet student scores a composite score of 36 on the ACT

Alessa Cullinan, Wheeler Magnet student

Thanks to Maureen Klinkmueller, clerk for the Wheeler Magnet school, the Center for Advanced Studies, for passing along some great news about and the above photo of junior Alessa Cullinan, who has scored a composite score of 36 on the ACT.

Alessa scored 36 on the Math, Reading, and Science sections for a Composite score of 36. Maureen tells that in 2017, only 0.136% of more than 2 million test takers nationwide earned a composite ACT score of 36.

Some other news about the magnet students at Wheeler, which this time a year ago was designated the first STEAM school in the state by the Georgia Department of Education:

  • Samuel Adkins, ’19, James Briley, ’19 and Stephanie Yao, ’19, are the newest 800 Club members after scoring an 800 on the Math portion of the SAT;
  • Rebecca Simonson, ’19 for getting a 36 on the Reading and English sections of the ACT, and Zachary ElJiche, ’19, who scored a 36 on the English section;
  • Cori Mayne scored a 36 on the Reading section of the ACT;
  • 2018 Design It Digital Contest Finalists Shair Sekhar and Gareth Thompson are two of six high school finalists who will be winning a prize package. The winner of the competition will be announced at  International Woodworking Fair (IWF) Atlanta on August 22-25 at the Georgia World Congress Center;
  • Elijah Pritchett, ’19, scored an 800 on the Math portion of the SAT.

Related stories

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Delk Road motel trafficking arrests: 4 charged after girl calls 911

Marietta Police said today they’ve made four arrests for human trafficking activity they say was taking place at a motel in the Delk Road area.Marietta Police, Delk Road motel trafficking arrests

Police said they got a 911 call early Monday morning from a 15-year-old girl who said she was forced to have sex with multiple men in a room at the Days Inn (2191 Northwest Parkway). The girl said she was told she would be killed if she tried to leave, according to police.

Police said Marietta detectives rescued the girl and took out search warrants for two rooms at the Days Inn, arresting three suspects there and another at a nearby motel.

Marietta Police say the following individuals have been charged and were taken into custody at the Cobb County Adult Detention Center Monday afternoon:

  • Kamari Bolden, 22, of Atlanta, trafficking;
  • Laura Waugh, 17, of Morrow, trafficking and giving a false name and date of birth;
  • Kenneth Thomas, 22, of Fairburn, keeping a place of prostitution and pimping;
  • Douglas White, 26, of Dallas, trafficking and pimping.

Bolden, Thomas and White are being held without bond and Waugh is being held on a $25,000 bond, according to Cobb Sheriff’s Office records.

Police said the investigation is continuing and anyone with information is asked to call Marietta Police Detective Mark Erion at 770-794-5363.

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Man convicted for 2014 East Cobb murder sentenced to two life terms

A Stockbridge man convicted for an East Cobb murder more than four years ago was sentenced to two consecutive life terms without parole on Monday.Johnathan Allen Wheeler, East Cobb murder

Cobb Superior Court Judge Mary Staley Clark issued the sentence to Johnathan Allan Wheeler Monday afternoon, not long after he was found guilty of malice murder by a jury.

Wheeler, now 35, was on trial last week for the murder of Jerry L. Moore, who was found stabbed 32 times at his home on Gracewood Drive, off Holly Springs Road, on Jan. 25, 2014.

Wheeler also was convicted of felony murder, aggravated assault, armed robbery and first-degree burglary, according to the Cobb District Attorney’s Office.

Cobb prosecutors said during the trial that Wheeler worked at a Woodstock bakery run by Moore’s roommate, Ross Byrne. Moore, who was 46 at the time of his death, was a half-owner in the business but wanted to get out, according to assistant Cobb District Attorney Jesse Evans.

Evans said during the trial that Byrne had been a business mentor to Wheeler and had moved out of Moore’s home a few weeks before the murder. After the stabbings, Evans said, Wheeler went to Byrne’s residence.

Wheeler’s cousin testified during the trial that he confessed to the murder. Cynthia Wheeler agreed to testify against Wheeler after being sentenced in 2016 for helping him clean up the home after the crime and stealing household items there.

The Cobb DA also said that Wheeler confessed to the murders to his brother and stepfather, both of whom testified at the trial.

“This was a relentless, sustained, malicious attack by a cold-blooded killer,” Evans told jurors in his closing statements  while showing them pictures at the crime scene, according to the DA’s office. “The defendant pursued, out of greed and out of malice. No human being should ever have this inflicted on them.”

Wheeler served nearly a decade in prison for robbery and assault in Cobb and Cherokee counties, and was released in 2010.

Over the last two years, Wheeler had written frequently from the Cobb County Adult Detention Center to the court in pleas for a speedy trial, according to documents filed with the Cobb Superior Court Clerk’s office.

More courts and trials news

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East Cobb Restaurant Row, Wigley Road zoning cases up for action Tuesday

Chance Powers Ferry, Powers Ferry corridor, Powers Ferry Restaurant Row
Rendering of a proposed 290-unit apartment complex on Powers Ferry Road at Windy Ridge Parkway, where the vacant TGI Friday’s building sits.

Just a quick final glance at items we’ve tracked previously that are on Tuesday’s Cobb Board of Commissioners zoning hearing (agenda summary here), which includes the East Cobb Restaurant Row and Wigley Road applications, with information updated as of Friday:

Here’s the agenda item packet for the Restaurant Row application on Powers Ferry Road, which got a 4-1 vote to recommend approval from the Cobb Planning Commission but still has some vocal opposition.

Here is additional correspondence posted Friday, including a revised stipulation letter from Garvis Sams, attorney for Powers Ferry Investors LLC, the applicant, on Thursday, and a letter from Sheldon Schlegman, an architect with a practice nearby on Windy Ridge Parkway and a resident of the adjacent Horizons condominium building and who is against the application as presented.

Also in the Restaurant Row correspondence file are more traffic concerns about development in the Powers Ferry corridor and addressed to Cobb DOT by Patricia Zerman. She’s the president of the Salem Ridge HOA, which opposed the MarketPlace Terrell Mill project, and that county officials admitted would create more traffic problems in a clogged area:

“I am curious as to how the Cobb DOT plans on addressing the appalling outrageous increase in congestion, not withstanding the [MarketPlace] Development.”

Another Powers Ferry Road case, in fact just across the street from the Restaurant Row tract, also is on the docket. Here are the file details for the Chance Powers Ferry application to tear down the old Powers Ferry Woods office park for a mixed-use project on less than four acres, with 300 multi-family housing units and office space. The planning board also recommended that delayed request for approval.

Here is the agenda item packet for the Wigley Road application that was whittled down to 91 single-family homes when the planning board voted 4-1 to recommend approval.

A few East Cobb-area cases that won’t be heard Tuesday, after being continued by Cobb zoning staff to September:

The Cobb BOC zoning hearing starts at 9 a.m. Tuesday in the 2nd floor boardroom of the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., in downtown Marietta.

 

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EDITOR’S NOTE: A free press and the health of local news

free press

Earlier this week a few hundred newspapers and other news organizations around the country published editorials in response to President Donald Trump’s charged rhetoric against a free press and to advocate for what journalists do.

I’m not sure such a coordinated effort had much of an impact, especially given the state of the newspaper industry. As one national press observer wrote, this tactic played into Trump’s hands, and I tend to agree.

You don’t have to like Trump’s declaration that the press is “the enemy of the people”—it’s an outlandish, false assertion, like so much of what he says—to understand his objectives of inflaming his political base and pushing journalists back on their heels.About East Cobb News, Wendy Parker

Ever since he first ran for president, Trump has engaged in press-bashing that’s truly alarming. While the news media has plenty of shortcomings, including getting much of its coverage of the last election dreadfully wrong, no president should speak like this.

However, I’m more concerned about what public officials do rather than what they say, as demonizing and unbecoming as Trump’s nonsense about “fake news” has been.

One of the papers that editorialized against Trump’s words this week is the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, which has been aggressively attacked by public officials for its reporting of a story of great local and national interest.

The Fort Lauderdale newspaper published details about the alleged gunman in the Parkland high school shootings that the school system there released unintentionally.

A local judge was incensed, not by the schools trying to hide vital public information, but by the newspaper, which she threatened to hold in contempt.

The Sun-Sentinel isn’t backing down, although the political and legal power being brought to bear against it is formidable.

Forget all the hot air coming from Washington, Trump as well as an often grandstanding national political press corps that continues to misunderstand what propelled him to the White House.

The Sun-Sentinel case illustrates to me that the real battles for a free press are being fought at the local level, where journalists are in increasingly shorter supply these days.

That’s because chains and hedge funds are scooping up what’s left of independent and locally owned papers, strip-mining them of whatever value is left in a dying business, and leaving their communities to fend for their own news and information needs.

Trump’s newsprint tariffs, reaching 30 percent, are taking a big toll as well, affecting even our local daily newspaper.

For those of us in local news, the retort to Trump shouldn’t be to him at all but to keep doing what we pledge for our communities. The news.

Dan Whisenhunt of Decaturish, who like me is a member of the Local Independent Online News (LION) Publishers, put it simply: Answer attacks on journalism with more journalism.

It’s not a new sentiment.

Kevin Riley, editor of the AJC, where I proudly worked for nearly 20 years, wrote that “We’re not engaged in a shouting match with the President. We are working on stories like these,” and then rattled off some of its recent reports.

In the year-plus since I launched East Cobb News, I’ve been grateful to connect with local citizens about critical issues facing our community.

Even when we don’t agree, as was the case with a previous commentary I published this week, hearing from engaged readers and citizens is essential for a free press and the community.

I’m encouraged to be in touch with these East Cobb citizens and taxpayers, regardless of their views, and especially regarding our heated budget process this summer, and continuing discussions on growth, county finances, schools and more.

There’s a lot going on here just in our corner of Cobb County, and I’m eager to continue to build this site and foster important community conversations.

I don’t intend to use East Cobb News as a soapbox like this very often. I want this to be your platform more than anything.

If you care deeply about what happens in East Cobb, don’t be bashful about it.

If you don’t agree with what’s published here, sound off. That’s what the comment section is for on every post.

If you don’t like what you seeing being done in your name as a taxpayer, parent, citizen or in any other capacity, let’s hear it. Let’s talk about it. Let’s get to the heart of the matter, through reporting and discussion.

I’ve seen good results along these lines in the early months of this site, and I look forward to hearing more from you in the months to come.

 

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East Cobb football update: Walton routs, Kell hangs on in Corky Kell Classic

The high school football season for East Cobb teams concluded with a bang Saturday morning at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in downtown Atlanta.

The Kell Longhorns led 36-21 in the fourth quarter of the Corky Kell Classic, then almost frittered away that advantage.

East Coweta narrowed the score to 36-28, then got possession on an onside kick and scored a touchdown in the dying seconds to trail 36-34.

However, a two-point play that would have tied the game was broken up by Stefan Green, and Kell ran out the clock to claim a 36-34 win.

A quarterback draw by Evan Conley, Kell’s talented senior quarterback, earlier in the fourth quarter provided the winning margin.

The Longhorns are off next week.

In the second game of the day, the Walton Raiders fell behind Mill Creek early. Then the senior duo of Austin Kirksey and Dominick Blaylock went to work.

Kirksey, the quarterback, threw to Blaylock for three touchdowns and scored two of his own on the run as the Raiders won going away, 48-27.

Kell LogoWalton, ranked in the Top 10 in Class 7-A in several pre-season polls, plays a second consecutive game against a Gwinnett County team when it travels to Collins Hill next week.

On Friday, Wheeler opened its season on the road, and came away with a 28-14 win at Lambert.

Sprayberry was playing at home in its season opener, but fell to South Forsyth 26-6.

Next Friday, Sprayberry visits Wheeler in an all-East Cobb rivalry game.

The other East Cobb team completing Friday night was Lassiter, which was routed at home 48-0 by Harrison.

Next Friday, the Trojans will play host to Pope, which did not play this week.

 

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College admissions workshop Sunday at Emerson Unitarian congregation

For parents of college-bound students, or those who may or will be, the Emerson Universalist Unitarian congregation is holding a workshop on Sunday afternoon.Carol Lee Conchar, Emerson UU college admissions workshop

It’s titled “Beyond the Numbers: Demystifying the College Admissions Process,” and it starts at 2 p.m. Emerson UU is located at 4010 Canton Road.

The speaker is Carol Conchar, Regional Director, Undergraduate Admissions, George Washington University in Washington, D.C. Carol lives in Atlanta and serves GW throughout the Southeast and is an Emerson congregant.

Here’s more from what Emerson has sent out about the workshop, which is free and open to the public:

The goal of all admissions offices is to build a community among its student body through the careful and thorough application review process. At competitive colleges and universities, admissions committees take more than the GPA, SAT/ACT and class rank into consideration. This highly interactive session will examine how admissions decisions are made so students can identify a “good fit” and to help them have a better understanding of the college search and admissions decision process. Come and learn how that is done when admissions committees look “beyond the numbers.”

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East Cobb sports update: Kelly Barnhill honored by Pope softball

Kelly Barnhill, Pope softball

Former Pope softball star Kelly Barnhill had a special unveiling on the left field wall before Friday’s doubleheader against Sequoyah and North Paulding.

She was home in East Cobb for only a few days this week after helping the USA softball national team win the World Championships in Japan and qualify for the 2020 Olympics.

“It’s just nice coming home and being around people who helped make me who I am,” Barnhill said, mentioning family, friends and her former Pope coaches.

Kelly Barnhill

Barnhill got to throw out the first pitch, and met with fans and signed autographs.

Barnhill, who was the 2017 national college player of the year at the University of Florida, returns to Gainesville on Saturday.

 

The Greyhounds rallied for two runs in the bottom of the sixth inning to win the first game 5-3 over Sequoyah. In the nightcap, North Paulding won as Pope’s record is now 4-2 on the season.

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Piney Grove Creek bridge at Casteel Road has reopened

Piney Grove Creek bridge

Cobb DOT reports (along with snapping the above photo) that the Piney Grove Creek bridge has reopened at the intersection of Casteel Road, Bill Murdock Road and Oak Lane.

Originally slated to open by the start of the school year, the reopening was delayed for a couple of weeks.

The expanded span includes a wider passage and sidewalks, as well as metal and stone guardrails, the project also includes a reconfigured intersection.

Related stories

Got a news tip about East Cobb road improvements and traffic? Want to have a question answered about roadwork near you? Get in touch with us! Send your inquiries/tips/photos to: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

 

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Lions Club vision screenings include East Cobb Library date in September

We posted earlier this week about free eye exams and glasses for Brumby Elementary School students. The Cobb County Public Library announced this week that the Lions Club will have some vision screenings for the general public in September, including one at the East Cobb Library.Lions Club vision screenings

That screening on Sept. 21 will be conducted by the East Cobb Lions Club, which will be at Brumby later this fall and does many screenings at Cobb schools.

Here’s more about the screenings from Thomas Brooks at the library system, who says the screenings are for adults and children six months and older, and that walk-ins are encouraged:

Lions Club volunteers use a screening device to detect possible vision issues that require follow-up professional care. Vision issues have a significant impact on quality of life, including children’s success in school and injury risks for all ages.

Lions Club volunteers are providing Vision Screening events in September as part of Cobb County Public Libraries’ Falls Prevention Awareness Initiative.

The costs due to falls injuries are substantial for Cobb families, a major national healthcare burden and public safety challenge. The average hospital cost is more than $30,000 for a fall injury, according to the CDC. Reports by the Georgia Department of Public Health show about 10,000 emergency room visits by Cobb residents each year due to fall injuries.

  • Saturday, September 8, 2 pm to 4 pm: North Cobb Lions Club at the Kennesaw Library. 2250 Lewis St., Kennesaw 30144. (770) 528-2529.
  • Tuesday, September 11, 2 pm to 4 pm: Paulding-West Cobb Lions Clubat the West Cobb Regional Library, 1750 Dennis Kemp Lane, Kennesaw 30152. (770) 528-4677
  • Tuesday, September 18, 1 pm to 4 pm: South Cobb Lions Club at the South Cobb Regional Library, 805 Clay Rd., Mableton 30126. (678) 398-5828
  • Wednesday, September 19, 1 pm to 4 pm: South Cobb Lions Club at the Sibley Library, 2539 South Cobb Dr., Marietta 30060. (770) 528-2520
  • Friday, September 21, 12 pm to 2 pm: East Cobb Lions Club at the East Cobb Library, 4880 Lower Roswell Rd., Suite 510-B, Marietta 30068. (770) 509-2730

Another East Cobb entity that provides free health care assistance announced today the renewal of another popular event. The Mansouri Family Dental Care practice on Lower Roswell Road said its annual free dental exams will take place on Nov. 10.

For several years the Mansouris have enlisted volunteer dentists to provide exam for those in  need. We’ll have more details when we get them.

 

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East Cobb Weekend Events: Jazz concert; football kickoff; coffee with a cop; ‘On Golden Pond’ closes; fishing rodeo and more

East Cobb weekend events, KSU jazz band

There’s something for everyone with East Cobb Weekend Events Friday-Sunday, including the start of football season, the closing of a popular theater production, a combo jazz concert and even a kids’ fishing rodeo.

On Friday morning, bring your questions about crime and public safety to Sterling Estates East Cobb (4220 Lower Roswell Road) and ask officers from Cobb Police Precinct 4. It’s the latest Coffee With a Cop, from 10 a.m. to noon, led by the department’s community affairs unit;

Kick off the weekend in relaxing, jazzy style Friday night at the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center (2051 Lower Roswell Road) for the continuation of the Sewell Mill Summer Concert Series in the amphitheater. From 7-9:30 p.m. treat yourself to the sounds of Will Scruggs and the KSU Jazz Combo (above), in this free event sponsored by the Cobb Library Foundation;

The weekend is the finale for CenterStage North’s presentation of “On Golden Pond,” which has shows at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and at 2 p.m. Sunday at The Art Place (3330 Sandy Plains Road). Tickets are $16 and must be purchased at the CSN box office, not by going to the facility;

Another Family Movie Night is on tap from 6:30-9 p.m. Friday at the Northeast Cobb YMCA (3010 Johnson Ferry Road), with “Coco” showing on the big screen. Admission is free for Y members and $5 for guests;

The high school sports season is already underway, and it shifts into full gear on Friday with the start of football season. Lassiter is home to Harrison and Sprayberry is playing home to South Forsyth, while Wheeler is at Lambert. Kell and Walton will be playing Saturday morning in the Corky Kell Classic at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in downtown Atlanta;

Also on Friday is a special sporting event at Pope High School, whose football season starts next week. Ex-Greyhound softball star Kelly Barnhill, a college standout at the University of Florida and member of the USA team that just qualified for the Olympics, will return to throw out the first pitch against Sequoyah and sign autographs. The game starts at 6 at the Pope softball complex (3001 Hembree Road), and admission is free;

More sporting fun on Saturday, for kids 3-16: The Cobb Parks Fishing Rodeo takes place from 9-12 at Hyde Farm (726 Hyde Road), with prizes in various age groups. It’s free to cast your line in the water, but you’ll need to bring your own poles and gear.

On Sunday afternoon, hear the inspiring story of a family’s service dog from Roswell author Donnie Winokur. She’s the author of “Chancer,” the Golden retriever who served as a companion to her adopted son, who’s afflicted by fetal alcohol syndrome. She’ll be discussing the story, doing a demonstration and signing books from 3-5 at Georgia Veterinary Rehabilitation & Pain Management (230 Johnson Ferry Place).

Check our full calendar listings for more things to do in East Cobb this weekend, and beyond.

Did we miss anything? Do you have a calendar item you’d like to share with the community? Send it to us, and we’ll spread the word! E-mail: calendar@eastcobbnews.com, and you can include a photo or flyer if you like.

Whatever you’re doing this weekend, make it a great one! Enjoy!

 

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Report: Sage Woodfire Tavern Windy Hill restaurant put up for sale

Sage Woodfire Tavern Windy Hill

Less than a year after it opened, the Sage Woodfire Tavern Windy Hill restaurant is on the auction block.

ToNeTo Atlanta, which covers Atlanta-area restaurant and retail doings, reported Tuesday that the restaurant at 3050 Windy Hill Road and Powers Ferry Road has been listed for sale with a selling price of around $250,000 and a monthly lease of just under $25,000.

Last month the Atlanta Business Chronicle reported that the Sage Woodfire Tavern group filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, but there was no indication if any of its restaurants would be individually closed or put up for sale.

The Windy Hill location is adjacent to what’s known as Restaurant Row along Powers Ferry Road, and which has a rezoning case for a mixed-use development coming before the Cobb Board of Commissioners next week.

That project would include apartments and an active senior living community and retain the Rose & Crown Tavern, the only existing business surrounded by vacant restaurant space.

The Cobb Planning Commission recommended approval, but some nearby residents are opposed.

The Sage Woodfire Tavern property, which was once the site of a Houston’s restaurant, is not part of that assemblage.

The Sage Woodfire group also briefly operated the Sage Social Kitchen at the Merchants Festival. It closed last fall after only a few months in business.

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Brumby students get vision screenings, eyeglasses in mobile clinic

Brumby students vision screenings
Musasy Ba, a first-grader at Brumby Elementary School, gets a basic eye exam from volunteer Cheryl Kefalas. (East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

Earlier today a mobile clinic pulled up outside of Brumby Elementary School, and a table with glasses frames was being set up around the corner.

Inside the 45-foot van, volunteers with VSP Vision Care, a health insurer, and the Georgia Optometric Association were screening several dozen Brumby students (as well as those from higher grade levels) who had been selected for the exams.

Those deemed to need corrective vision were then fitted for prescription glasses, which were prepared on-site while the students waited.

The mobile van, one of three VSP Vision Care vehicles that travels the country this way, was scheduled to make stops in the Cobb County School District thanks to the Georgia Optometric Association.

Around 50-60 Brumby students were selected for the screenings, and about the same number were also examined at Smyrna Elementary School. The medical services and glasses were donated by VSP Vision Care and the optometrists’ group.

“There is a need here,” said Rita Shoneye, the parent of a Brumby fourth-grader who has glasses but was examined Wednesday for a back-up pair. She and another Brumby mom, Kirti Shukla, were asked by school leaders to volunteer to help students and their parents with the exams, which will continue on Thursday.

(The screenings are not open to the public and no walk-in patients will be accepted.)

The VSP Vision Care’s Eyes of Hope project that comes to schools aims to address eyesight problems early in the school year. Many of the Brumby students chosen for the exams come from low-income or uninsured families, and some of them have not had an eye exam.

Brumby teachers and staff have been encouraged to identify students who may be having vision problems. Brumby social worker Charlene Brisco ticked off some of the signs:

“Squinting. Saying ‘I Can’t See.’ This is helping them to look more closely” to notice if a student may be having some trouble seeing.

Dr. Rebecca Briggs Garnier collects data for Musasy Ba’s prescription.

She said another Brumby student who got glasses was in tears, as was his mother, and they were “tears of joy. We all just lost it.”

Dan Curran, a media representative for the optometrists’ group, said this is the first time the VSP Vision Care mobile van has stopped in Georgia since 2011.

The organization estimates that one in four students nationwide has an undetected vision problem. When the van rolls away, the needs for many of them will continue.

For students who require follow-up visits or additional care, Brisco said that gift certificates will provide for those services. The East Cobb Lions Club also will be coming to Brumby in October to conduct more screenings.

“Kids are getting sight,” she said.

Rita Shoneye, mother of a Brumby student, looks over the eyeglass selections.

 

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Powers Ferry Restaurant Row rezoning opponents begin petition drive

Powers Ferry Restaurant Row
The former TGI Friday’s restaurant at Powers Ferry Road and Windy Ridge Parkway has been sitting empty for years. (East Cobb News file photo)

This just in from Eric Meadows, a resident of the Horizons at Wildwood condominiums who spoke against the Powers Ferry Restaurant Row rezoning proposal before the Cobb Planning Commission last week:

Earlier today a coalition of residents from  Wildwood, the Powers Ferry area, the Cumberland Improvement District and Cobb County, GA came together to launch a petition that opposes the redevelopment of Z-47 2018, or Restaurant Row because it is not good for Cobb County, the Community or the Chattahoochee River.

The petition is titled: 
 
Z-47 is Not Good for Cobb County, the Community or the Chattahoochee
Additional details are available at:
The Cobb Board of Commissioners is scheduled to act on the matter next Tuesday, Aug. 21.

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East Cobb Biz Note: RaceTrac now open at Roswell Road and Old Canton Road

The RaceTrac gas station and convenience store that’s been under construction in front of the Olde Mill Shopping Center for the last few months is now open.

Inside the store is a coffee shop with WiFi. It’s just across the intersection from the QuikTrip, and the competing businesses are matching each other on fuel prices.

The Carwash USA that used to be located where the new RaceTrac is now will be re-opening soon, but hasn’t announced a specific location.

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Former Pope softball star Kelly Barnhill to appear at Greyhounds’ game Friday

Fresh off a Team USA performance that resulted in Olympic qualification, former Pope softball star Kelly Barnhill will be making a homecoming visit on Friday.

Kelly Barnhill, former Pope softball star

The University of Florida pitching standout will appear at the Greyhounds’ home game on Friday against Sequoyah.

The game starts at 6 p.m. and admission is free. Barnhill will be throwing out the first pitch, meeting fans and signing autographs.

Barnhill, who led Pope to its first Georgia state championship in 2014, was part of the U.S. team that last week repeated as world champions. That resulted in an automatic berth for the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo.

Olympic softball is returning after being dropped in 2008. Barnhill has been a gold medalist for Team USA in the 2016 and now 2018 world championship tournaments.

Here’s what she posted on social media after the Americans’ victory in Japan over the weekend:

She will be a senior at Florida, where she has been an All-American and in 2017 was the national college player of the year.

The Greyhounds, who were playing Cambridge at home on Tuesday, have started the season with a 1-1 record. They also play at Chattahoochee on Thursday before the Friday game honoring Barnhill.

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EDITOR’S NOTE: Series on Cobb County growth issues misses the mark

Ebenezer Road park preview, Cobb growth issues
Cobb commissioners spent $1.7 million this year to buy Ebenezer Road property for a future passive park. (East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

Last week a national organization that examines municipal and local governance concerns published a series of posts about Cobb County growth issues, especially in the years since the recession.

The organization is called Strong Towns, which I have not heard of before. It describes itself as a non-profit media organization that’s based in Brainerd, Minn., a small town with a population of 13,000 or so, not close to a metropolitan area.

On Tuesdays I like to focus on local government, since that’s when many Cobb Board of Commissioners meetings take place. Today’s meeting has been cancelled, and I thought I’d delve a little into this interesting, but flawed examination.

The five-part Strong Towns report, which has gotten some chatter on Cobb citizens social media groups, refers to Cobb as “a suburban region that epitomizes the folly of going into debt to build more and more infrastructure with no ability to pay for it.”

Cobb growth issues
Condominiums along Powers Ferry Road are part of a high-density community spreading out from SunTrust Park.

While that’s certainly how many locals around here feel about what’s happening in the county, I think the premise is faulty, and I’m skeptical of some of the claims made in this report.

Strong Towns misses one of the biggest points of all: Cobb remains a very attractive magnet for jobs because of its diversified economy and a well-educated workforce, the partial byproduct of another major attraction here, excellent public schools.

Cobb isn’t as “addicted to growth,” as the initial post is titled, as much as new residents and employers are continuously drawn by quality services and low taxes. A heavy pipeline of development bottled up during the lean years of the recession is taking shape.

These realities were not examined by Strong Towns, but I will link to all the posts in this series so you can read for yourself:

In an evergreen post elsewhere on its site, Strong Towns claims that many cities and counties in America are falling for a “Growth Ponzi Scheme,” which it further asserts as “the dominant model of suburban growth since the mid-20th century.”

The final post about Cobb started off with a reference to Bernie Madoff, who’s serving prison time for defrauding investors.

Really? To try to make a link between criminal behavior and the development and financial issues of a bustling suburban county, albeit one with major budget problems, borders on being irresponsible, as well as willfully misunderstanding.

Cobb growth issues
Cobb commissioners this spring adopted the long-delayed Johnson Ferry Urban Design Guidelines to guide future growth in the busy commercial corridor.

I will always detest the Atlanta Braves stadium deal because the process was a total sham. But that doesn’t explain the county’s budget, tax and spending issues, which go back many years.

The county wasn’t chasing growth as much as it wasn’t sufficiently funding the growth that was already here or on the way, or was having trouble keeping up with the pace of the growth.

(Here’s a good example: When our family moved to East Cobb in the early 1970s, our home was still on septic tank, with the Sope Creek sewer line still under construction.)

There is an anti-suburban sentiment behind this report, and this is the biggest problem with it:

“Much of Cobb County . . . feels like nowhere. It has no center of gravity. It has no thriving urban core to serve as a tax-revenue cash cow.”

Cobb growth issues
A citizen living near a proposed townhome community near Olde Town Athletic Club demonstrated to county commissioners this spring the building heights that were part of the initial plan.

Ironically, the area around SunTrust may prove to be just such a place. Cobb does have many misplaced priorities, symbolized by the Braves deal, and which I wrote not long ago stripped away the illusion of supposedly fiscally conservative government.

Instead of really trying to understand the unique challenges facing a Sunbelt community that has gone from mostly rural to suburban and now urban in many spots, and in about a half-century or so, Strong Towns wants Cobb to be more like Brainerd, I guess (a place where I’ve never been).

From what I’ve read about this organization, it wants every place to be like small-town America, with bucolic downtown cores, pedestrian-friendly shops and restaurants and adaptable to a  “traditional development pattern.”

While that sentiment does have some conservative support, and it’s appealing to me as I continue on in middle age, it has never really come about in Cobb, for better or for worse.

It’s a nice ideal, but it doesn’t offer any practical solutions. Strong Towns produced a lot of words about Cobb County but with little real local knowledge on the ground about its subject.

That matters.

 

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