Revised Holly Springs Road senior living proposal reduces number of units

Holly Springs Road senior living proposal

An initial look at the Cobb zoning calendar for February shows a significant revision to a proposed senior living development on Holly Springs Road that was held by county commissioners in December.

Loyd Development Services had sought zoning for a 16-unit single family subdivision for seniors 55 and older on 4.3 acres near the Davis Road roundabout, but nearby residents complained about traffic and density concerns.

Commissioner JoAnn Birrell asked the applicant to consider an R-15 residential zoning instead of RSL (residential senior living) to get under the Cobb zoning staff’s recommendation of 2.5 units an acre.

A stipulation letter filed with Cobb zoning office on Jan. 22 does more than that in reducing the number of units from 16 to 10.

Those 10 units would come to 2.32 units an acre, and Loyd has revised the application to seek R-15 rezoning.

Garvis Sams, an attorney for Loyd, indicated in his letter the developer is continuing to meet with residents in adjoining neighborhoods.

Part of the new site plan is a 20-foot buffer between the Loyd development and homes on Intrepid Close, an adjacent street.

Here’s the full letter, with additional stipulations and the revised site plan.

The Cobb Planning Commission meets next Tuesday, but this case doesn’t have to go back before that board and will be heard by Cobb commissioners on Feb. 19.

Here’s Tuesday’s full agenda. Individual case files can be retrieved at the Cobb zoning office website. (The county website is being overhauled and for now this is how zoning cases are being organized.)

A couple of East Cobb cases to note: The zoning staff is recommending denial of an application by Mohammed Vasigh to rezone 3.4 acres on Paper Mill Road at Gateside Place from low-density residential to R-15. Currently, one home is located there, and the applicant wants to build a 7-home subdivision.

There is R-15 zoning in the Gateside neighborhood, but the land up for consideration is in the low-density category on the Cobb future land use map. Vasigh also has hired Sams in a case that has been continued.

Something from the December zoning hearing that also was delayed is a proposed sports stadium at the Post Oak Tritt Road campus of Mt. Bethel Christian Academy that has drawn community opposition.

There’s nothing new in the case files on that and we’ll update that story when we get more. The Mt. Bethel proposal also will be heard on Feb. 19 since it’s in the “Other Business” category that doesn’t go before the planning board.

The Planning Commission meeting starts at 9 a.m. Tuesday in the 2nd floor meeting room of the Cobb government building at 100 Cherokee St. near the Marietta Square.

 

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East Cobb Senior Center to conduct Smoveys fitness class series

East Cobb Senior Center

Starting in February and lasting until April, the East Cobb Senior Center (3332 Sandy Plains Road) will be holding a fitness class involving Smoveys.

They’re molded hollow rings with stainless steel balls that create oscillating vibrations to stimulate body and mind.

Benefits include balance, stability, power, walking, mobility, endurance, coordination, strength and speed. Participants also can take part if they need to be seated.

The classes will be held every Monday starting Feb. 11 and ending April 8 from 9:15-10:15 a.m. There will be no class on Feb. 18 and April 1.

Participants must have a Cobb Senior Services membership to sign up. The class fee is $21 for Cobb residents and $26 for non-residents.

Visit the Cobb Senior Services page for information and to sign up.

 

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Former Pope principal named Buford school superintendent

Robert Downs, who was a principal at Pope High School and an assistant principal at Wheeler and Sprayberry, has been named superintendent for Buford City Schools.Robert Downs, former Pope principal

The Gwinnett Daily Post reported Wednesday that Downs will start his new duties Feb. 25.

In his most recent role with the Cobb County School District, Downs has been an area assistant superintendent overseeing a cluster of middle schools, including Daniell, Dickerson, Dodgen, East Cobb, Hightower Trail, Mabry and McCleskey.

Downs came to Pope in 2012 after serving as principal at Lost Mountain Middle School, and was at the East Cobb high school for four years.

He succeeds Gaye Hamby, who resigned last August after audio recordings of him allegedly making racist comments were made public.

Buford City Schools has four schools and enrolls 4,300 students.

 

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New East Cobb coworking business holding open house, networking events

New East Cobb coworking business, Brilliant Coworking
Photo: M Harris Studio

Thanks to Michelle Gibson for passing along the news about a new coworking business she and her husband are opening in East Cobb that they’re calling Brilliant Coworking.

The venture is located at 2440 Sandy Plains Road, Building 5 (just across from Sprayberry High School). On Friday they’re offering free headshots for business professionals as part of an open house from 1-7 p.m.

You’re asked to sign up for that event here, as well as a networking event on Feb. 9 from 6-8.

The Gibsons moved here from Seabrook Island, S.C. She’s from East Cobb, he’s from England, and they met while living in Charleston, where she went to college. After starting a family (they have daughters ages 6 and 3) they moved here to be closer to her family.

His background is in management for Chick-fil-A as well as photography, and she has an advertising, creative writing and graphic design background.

They’ve been previewing the coworking space to prospective clients during January. There’s space for “solopreneurs” as well as private offices and meeting rooms. Plans run from $20-$40 an hour for meeting room pricie and starting at $199 a month for designated spaces.

Here’s more on what the Gibsons are envisioning for Brilliant Coworking:

“We want to be a resource for the community to provide meeting spaces, offices, coworking and networking events. Joseph being a photographer would also love to build out the 2nd phase to include studio space to serve the arts community in the local area by providing a place that can be shared and rented.

“Currently we provide meeting space downstairs with a small coworking space upstairs. Our goal is to expand into more of the building and build upstairs and provide private offices, flexible work space and a photography studio for the community. We want Brilliant Co to be a resource that Cobb can be proud of and bring people together.”

 

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Chattahoochee NRA services gradually restarting after shutdown

The Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area was affected by the recent U.S. government shutdown, and is almost back at full strength in terms of staffing and services.

The park issued a message Tuesday saying that the Island Ford Visitor Center in Fulton County has reopened, and that some automated machines in the park are being reactivated:Ford Island Visitor Center, Chattahoochee NRA

“It’s great to be open and we’re looking forward to greeting our visitors. Most importantly we want to give a big thanks to all our VIPs (Volunteers In Parks) and visitors that helped keep the park clean during the recent shutdown. That last bit of good news is that all of the restrooms have been reopened.”

The one exception: The restroom facility at the Cochran Shoals Unit Interstate North entrance is closed for unrelated reasons. Water line repairs are being made by Cobb County, but nearby portable toilets are available.

 

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East Cobb cityhood lobbyist is experienced in municipal campaigns

The Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb, Inc. has retained a lobbyist who has worked on behalf of other groups in metro Atlanta in recent years that have sought incorporation, as well for as a contractor that has provided services to some of those cities.

John Garst registered on Monday as lobbyist for the East Cobb group, according to the Georgia Government Transparency and Campaign Finance Commission.John Garst, East Cobb cityhood lobbyist

He runs Rosetta Stone Communications, an Atlanta-based political consulting and polling firm, and it is the official polling organization for WSB-TV.

His previous lobbying for cityhood efforts include the City of Brookhaven, the City of Stonecrest, the Eagles Landing Educational Research Committee and CH2M.

The latter, formerly known as CH2M Hill, was a Colorado-based engineering and operations firm with an office in Atlanta that has provided municipal services on contract for the cities of Sandy Springs, Milton and Johns Creek.

CH2M also has contracted with other newer municipalities, including Tucker and Chattahoochee Hills in South Fulton. In 2017, CH2M was sold to another Colorado engineering firm.

Phil Kent, a spokesman for the cityhood group, told East Cobb News that Garst, who specializes in a Republican clientele, will be paid “slightly in excess of $10,000 for this year. He will now begin educating and pitching various state lawmakers and the legislative leadership on the benefits of East Cobb cityhood, monitor future legislation, attend meetings, and perform other duties associated with the legislative process.”

Joe Gavalis, an Atlanta Country Club resident who is the chairman of the cityhood committee, wrote a column that was published Tuesday in The Marietta Daily Journal, making his case for “local control over local affairs.”

His column repeats arguments he has made previously, and including obtaining feedback from a group of citizens about a feasibility study for a proposed City of East Cobb:

“Conversations with numerous east Cobb citizens also include concerns over actions taken by a majority of Cobb County commissioners who don’t reside in our community. The recent vote on a property tax increase, for example, passed by a 3-2 vote. Our sole east Cobb commissioner was out-voted. Indeed, there is a perception that county funds are not being spent prudently, and that public safety services and road improvements are not top priorities. If this concerns you in east Cobb, there is a solution. The answer is self-determination through cityhood!”

The proposed map of the City of East Cobb (with a population of 96,000) does not include all of what is generally regarded as East Cobb. The northern boundaries match, nearly identically, the boundaries of Cobb Commissioner Bob Ott’s District 2.

East Cobb’s other commissioner, JoAnn Birrell, also voted against the tax increase.

In the column, Gavalis continued to decline to name other individuals in the cityhood organization, saying only that they are “a group of concerned east Cobb citizens.”

On the East Cobb Cityhood website, he said that besides commercial real estate business owner G. Owen Brown, other donors who paid for the feasibility study “for now, wish to be unidentified due to possible personal harassment or media attacks/smears from opponents.”

Gavalis also has declined to identify those in the citizens group (East Cobb News has contacted a few, including one who quit over what he called a lack of transparency), saying only that “many chose to remain anonymous since this Committee was merely exploring the concept of cityhood.”

He said the group has made the following recommendations:

  • Conduct community meetings to educate the public on the process;
  • Recruit volunteers for study panels;
  • Develop a communication plan;
  • Develop “frequently asked questions and answers” as well as “facts vs. myths” materials;
  • Develop a comparison of the GSU study data versus our study panel estimates and also comparing research with comparable cities;
  • Educate citizens living in adjacent properties about requesting annexation into the city after it is created. (Changing the proposed city boundaries now would require a new feasibility study).

Gavalis did not indicate in his column when cityhood backers would inform the broader public or seek to introduce legislation to establish a local referendum. The earliest citizens could vote on whether to create a City of East Cobb would be in 2020, but only if a bill is passed this year.

Kent reiterated “that the cityhood movement is still in its very early stage.”

He also said that “dates are currently being discussed for community meetings” and that they will be announced to the public when they are scheduled.

The feasibility study, for which the cityhood group paid $36,000, concluded that the City of East Cobb was financially viable without levying taxes higher than the current Cobb County general fund millage rate, and would even start with a budget surplus.

After a recent speaking engagement in East Cobb, Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce told East Cobb News that none of the six existing cities in Cobb have lower overall millage rates than the county.

“Unless you can show me there’s a big difference in the quality of services, you’re going to be paying extra to get those services” in a City of East Cobb, Boyce said.

Gavalis said the study committees would be involved in creating a charter, and he is seeking volunteers with expertise in taxes and finance, planning and zoning, public works and engineering, governance and administration and police and courts. Said Kent:

“A lot of feedback is already coming in via our website from east Cobbers and others with various areas of expertise who want to volunteer to be on study panels that are being established by the East Cobb cityhood committee.”

 

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Winter weather advisory cancelled in Cobb; schools resume classes Wedneasday

The National Weather Service is continuing a hazardous weather outlook until 7 p.m. tonight but has cancelled a winter weather advisory for Cobb and metro Atlanta after this morning’s rain.

At 11:40 a.m. the NWS in Atlanta revised its weather outlook to include Cobb and much of North Georgia. Patchy black ice could accumulate in extreme North Georgia this afternoon and could be possible across most of the state tonight as temperatures plunge below freezing.

Cobb schools and government were closed today, as well as many businesses, churches and other organizations.

UPDATE, 3:15 p.m. Tuesday: Cobb schools said all classes and activities will resume as scheduled on Wednesday.

Cobb County government will open at 8 a.m. Wednesday.

There are some reports of minor flurries in areas of East Cobb, but nothing is expected to stick. Temperatures were in the mid-to-high 30s around noon.

By the time the sun goes down, the forecast is for temperatures to drop below freezing, all the way into the low 20s overnight.

Georgia DOT closed the Northwest Corridor Lanes at 11:30 a.m. today, and they will stay closed until the weather event is over.

Wednesday is expected to be sunny, but cold, with highs in the high 30s, and lows in the low 20s. Thursday and Friday will be a bit warmer, into the mid 40s and low 50s, but with below-freezing overnight lows.

 

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Cobb schools and government closed Tuesday as winter storm approaches

Cobb schools and government closed

The Cobb County School District and Cobb government both sent messages out around noon Monday that they will be closed Tuesday, due to a winter storm that’s headed to metro Atlanta and north Georgia.

Their decisions came after Gov. Brian Kemp and Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms held a joint news conference, announcing that state government in the storm area, as well as Georgia’s largest city, would be closing on Tuesday.

Other metro Atlanta governments and school districts also have announced closures for Tuesday, including Marietta City Schools.

State government offices in 35 counties, including Cobb, will be closed on Tuesday, according to Kemp.

The area is bracing for cold, wet weather starting later Monday evening and lasting through Tuesday night.

On Sunday, the National Weather Service issued a winter storm watch that includes Cobb.

Monday afternoon, the NWS upgraded that status to a winter storm warning, including Cobb, from 3 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday. Travel could be hazardous due to snow and ice accumulations, including black ice.

Cobb schools spokeswoman Nan Kiel said the following in a statement:

“Knowing that it interrupts the school day and the education process, we did not make this decision lightly. However, given that our District serves more than 112,000 students and their families, as well as 18,000 staff members, and that the safety of our students and staff are paramount, we chose to act on the side of safety.

“The District will continue monitoring the situation, with an eye towards the condition of our roads, and we’ll be sure to update the community further by 5 pm Tuesday evening.”

All events and activities scheduled at schools also have been cancelled or postponed.

Cobb government spokesman Ross Cavitt said the county’s shutdown will begin at 6 a.m. Tuesday, and will reopen depending on when conditions improve. County Manager Rob Hosack said in a statement:

“With a great deal of uncertainty about the timing and amount of snow, we thought this proactive action would be best to ensure the safety of Cobb County workers.”

Cobb DOT crews will be on the job overnight and into Tuesday, Cavitt said, preparing equipment and pre-treating roads starting around sunrise.

Cavitt said the crews will work in 12-hour shifts until the weather event is over, using a salt-sand mixture to treat “known trouble-spots,” especially around curves and on bridges and overpasses.

Other closings

We’re compiling closings of other schools, businesses and organizations and any cancellations or postponements of events for Tuesday. E-mail us: editor@eastcobbnews.com with your information:

  • St. Catherine’s Episcopal preschool closed;
  • Catholic Church of St. Ann closed;
  • Transfiguration Catholic Church closed;
  • Wood Acres School closed;
  • Primrose School East Cobb closed;
  • Faith Lutheran School closed;
  • Mt. Bethel Christian Academy closed;
  • Orange Theory Fitness Sandy Plains and Marietta-East Cobb opening 3:30 p.m.;
  • Thrive Wellness Center closed;
  • Mt. Zion UMC closed;
  • Wesley Chapel UMC basketball cancelled;
  • Johnson Ferry Christian Academy closed;
  • Eastside Christian School closed;
  • The Walker School closed;
  • East Cobb Tutoring Center closed;
  • Mansouri Family Dental Care closed;
  • East Cobb and NE Cobb YMCA closing at 4 p.m. Tuesday, all group exercise programs before 4 are scheduled (subject to cancelletion), all paid programs are cancelled;
  • East Cobb Business Association Community Breakfast postponed;
  • MUST Ministries program centers in Marietta, Smyrna and Canton and main donation center closed;
  • All locations Marietta Eye Clinic closed, including Marietta Eye Surgery;
  • Dentistry at East Piedmont closing at 12 p.m.;
  • Olde Towne Athletic Club closed;

Weather forecast

The forecast calls for Cobb to get around an inch of snow, with temperatures reaching as high as the low 40s during the day on Tuesday, but dropping to around 20 degrees on Tuesday night.

Monday is the five-year anniversary of a winter storm that crippled metro Atlanta, stranding thousands of motorists and forcing some students, teachers and staff to shelter overnight in schools.

Monday is also the first full day of Super Bowl-related activities in the Atlanta area.

 

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Wheeler STEM program ranked No. 2 in the country

Wheeler STEM program
Wheeler Magnet School student Ryan Davis demonstrates his “Reactive LED Hoodie” at the school’s STEAM symposium in April 2018. (ECN file)

The Wheeler STEM program is regarded as the No. 2 STEM program in the country, according to an educational survey.

Study.com placed the Wheeler STEM program only behind Stuyvesant High School in New York City on a list of the Top 30 STEM programs in American high schools.

According to Study.com, which describes itself as an online educational resource, the Wheeler STEM program:

” . . . also [has] been recognized for their outreach in helping other schools develop STEM programs. The STEM Center offers an accelerated and advanced course of study focusing on medical biotechnology, engineering/robotics, chemical engineering and advanced chemistry. The program culminates in senior research and internships with local business and institution partners. Students have the opportunity to take twice as many math and science courses as they would in a traditional curriculum.”

The formal name for the Wheeler STEM program is the Center for Advanced Studies. It was started as a magnet program in 1997. (STEM is an acronym for Science, Technology, Engineering and Math.)

In 2017 Wheeler became the first high school in Georgia to be certified as a STEAM school, which includes an arts component.

For the last six years, Wheeler also has held a STEAM symposium that reaches out to the whole student body.

Many of the other schools on the Study.com list are schools specializing in STEM programs, including the Gwinnett School of Mathematics, Science and Technology, as well as elite private schools in the Northeast and San Francisco Bay Area.

 

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Winter storm watch issued for Cobb, North Georgia with snow on the way

Cobb winter storm watch

At 3 p.m. Sunday the National Weather Service issued a winter storm watch for Monday night going into Tuesday that includes Cobb County, metro Atlanta and most of northwest Georgia.

UPDATED, 12:26 p.m. Monday: Cobb schools and government will be closed on Tuesday.

The watch begins at 4 a.m. Tuesday and continues until 10 p.m. Tuesday along and north of a line from Franklin to Gainesville to Jonesboro.

Snow is in the forecast, and for now the NWS is saying Cobb could get up to an inch. Up to three inches could fall in the mountains, but much of the area could get up to two inches.

The NWS is warning that “travel could be very difficult. The hazardous conditions could impact the morning or evening commute.”

The warning also reminds motorists that black ice could accumulate even with a little snow.

Monday is expected to be partly cloudy with high temperatures in the mid 50s. But colder weather is coming Monday night, with lows around 40 and rain starting to move into north Georgia.

On Tuesday, the high is expected to be only in the low 40s, with the highest chance of rain before 11 a.m. The chance of precipitation in Cobb is expected to be around 80 percent, with lows dipping to around 20 by the evening.

Wednesday’s high is expected to be in the high 30s, and the low on Wednesday could fall into the teens.

Thursday won’t be much warmer, but the sun will return and sunny weather with temperatures in the mid-50s is in the forecast for Saturday.

UPDATE: Around 5:30 p.m. the Cobb County School District issued the following statement:

“We are monitoring possible winter weather arriving as early as Tuesday. Knowing that none of us know when or even if it will snow, you can know that we will tell you what we do know as early as possible. You can expect an update from us by Monday at 5:00 pm. In the meantime, learn more about what our staff is doing to make the very best decision for students, families, and staff here https://apple.co/2QE3udN and here:”

 

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Cobb Sunday alcohol hours extended just in time for Super Bowl

Last fall, Cobb voters extended Sunday alcohol hours by approving a “brunch bill” that would allow adult beverage service to begin at 11 a.m.Cobb brunch bill, Cobb Sunday alcohol hours

Last week, Cobb commissioners voted to amend the county code to allow restaurants and bars to serve alcohol until 2 a.m. on Mondays.

Previously, last call was at midnight Monday.

The new hours began today, and are permanent, but they also were timed for the Super Bowl, which takes place this coming Sunday in Atlanta.

The new rule applies only to establishments that derive at 50 percent of their revenues from food service or the same percentage of revenue from overnight room rentals.

Before the elections, Sunday alcohol service and retail sales could begin only after 12:30 p.m.

But the “brunch bill” was approved with more than 71 percent of the vote in unincorporated Cobb, by far the largest margin for any item on the local ballot.

 

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Once and Again Books closing on Shallowford Road

East Cobb is losing another locally owned, independent bookstore. Earlier this week, Casey Herron, owner of Once and Again Books on Shallowford Road, said the shop will be closing by the end of March, and possibly sooner.Once and Again Books closing

The store is selling all books, except for special orders, at 15 percent off, and store credits can be used for half of a purchase. They’re also selling bookcases, bookstands and other items in the store.

Last fall, the Bookmiser store on Sandy Plains Road closed, and the Bookmiser store on Roswell Road remains open.

Here’s part of the message Dillon shared with customers announcing the news of the Once and Again closing:

We will be making one last new book order on Feb. 3rd. We will special order books for purchase at list price (no discount) and you can apply store credit towards ONLY 25% of that price. We’re only offering this to help our loyal customers use some of the credit they have built up.

We are no longer buying books. You’re still welcome to donate good condition books. We’ll sell what we can and donate the rest.

No other discounts apply. All sales are final. It’s first come, first serve at this point. Other than special orders, we are not holding books.

We’re so thankful for the support through the years and will miss our wonderful customers.

Once and Again Books is located at 2421 Shallowford Road, Suite 116, at the intersection of Trickum Road. It’s in the Shallowford Crossing Shopping Center, where there’s a Mellow Mushroom and Moxie Burger.

The bookstore hours are 10-7 Monday-Friday, 10-6 Saturday and 12-6 Sunday.

 

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East Cobb traffic alert: Part of Paper Mill Road closed due to downed power lines

At 3:40 p.m. Friday Cobb DOT said Paper Mill Road between Woodlawn Drive and the Sope Creek Bridge will be closed to through traffic “for the next few hours” because of downed power lines.

U.S. government re-opens as talks continue on border security issues

What a difference a day makes: The day after the U.S. Senate failed to pass votes to end the partial U.S. government shutdown, Congressional leaders worked out a temporary spending bill with President Trump on Friday.

The three-week agreement to re-open and fund government operations goes through Feb, 15 and includes no border wall funding, as the president wanted, while negotations continue.

U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson of East Cobb, one of six Republicans who voted Thursday for a Democratic bill that didn’t get a two-thirds majority of votes, hailed Friday’s actions. His office issued the following statement:

“I’m glad the leadership of the House and the president have come to an agreement and hope that we can now sit down and negotiate in earnest to secure our border and get the government back in operating order.”

Ga. Senator David Perdue, a Republican from Warner Robins, said the following:

President Trump just announced a bipartisan solution to reopen the government while border security negotiations continue. We still have a crisis at our southern border, and President Trump is exactly right to address it. I applaud the President for continuing his efforts to enter into good faith negotiations with Democrats in the House and Senate.

Many Democrats have previously supported border security. Unfortunately, throughout this process they’ve clearly demonstrated they want to keep immigration a political issue instead of finding a real solution. If Democrats refuse to come to the negotiating table to tackle this national priority over the next three weeks, President Trump will do what is necessary to protect America.

Ultimately, this situation underscores the total dysfunction of Washington’s funding process. These conversations should have been completed last year, not four months into this fiscal year.

Trump made an announcement about the temporary deal at the White House early Friday afternoon. That followed news from the Federal Aviation Administration that flights were being grounded at East Coast airports, including LaGuardia in New York, due to shortages of air traffic controllers, and causing delays elsewhere

They were among the many thousands of federal employees who have not been paid during the shutdown, the longest in U.S. history at 35 days.

Last week, Isakson had expressed concern that the shutdown would adversely affect plans for the Super Bowl, which is being played next Sunday in Atlanta.

 

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East Cobb Weekend Events: Polar Bear Run; Pope Band Recycling; Walton Chorus Fashion Show; GSO Concert; and more

Georgia Symphony Orchestra, East Cobb Weekend Events

From dawn to dusk on Saturday, this weekend’s East Cobb leading events on Saturday offer something for everyone.

It’s to be cold all day and all evening, led off by the 31st annual Polar Bear Run at Johnson Ferry Baptist Church (955 Johnson Ferry Road), which starts around 8 a.m. and raises funds for the church’s music mission trip. The race is one of the first local qualifiers for the Peachtree Road Race, but there are shorter races for kids, including a “Cub Run” for those ages 4-5;

Doing some winter reorganizing and cleaning out? Haul unwanted items over to Pope High School (3001 Hembree Road) between 9-4 for the Pope Band Recycling Day. The cost is $10 a car and additional charges apply for electronics and paint;

Professional organizer Linda Diamond offers tips on Decluttering Your Home from 11-12 Saturday at the East Cobb Library (4880 Lower Roswell Road);

The sun’s supposed to come out, warming things up enough for some youth sports activity. The Sandy Plains Softball Fun Day takes place from 12-2 at the organization’s fields at 2977 Gordy Parkway, and they’ll have food, fun, prizes and walk-up registration for the spring season.

Not far way, Sandy Plains Baseball is holding Instructional Clinics at Harrison Park (2653 Shallowford Road) from 11-1 for ages 9-12, and at Sweat Mountain Park (4346 Steinhauer Road) from 2:30 p.m. for ages 5-8. All participants should bring a glove, bat and helmet and arrive at least 20 minutes beforehand;

The arts take center stage Saturday night (and indoors too!). The Walton Chorus Fashion Show is themed “Reaching for the Stars,” and it’s a fundraiser that costs $18 at the door. Showtime Saturday is 6 p.m. at the Walton auditorium (1590 Bill Murdock Road);

The Georgia Symphony Orchestra will performs a “Musical Mirrors Concert” at 8 p.m. Saturday at the Lassiter Concert Hall (2601 Shallowford Road, photo above). Works by Franz Schubert are featured, and the ticket prices range from $10-$25.

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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Isakson votes to re-open U.S. government, but shutdown continues

As the longest shutdown in U.S. government history continues, Georgia Sen. Johnny Isakson broke party ranks Thursday and voted for a Democratic spending bill without border wall funding demanded by President Donald Trump.

Sen. Johnny Isakson

UPDATED: The shutdown ended temporarily on Friday with a three-week budget extension.

Isakson was one of six Republicans who supported a budget bill that would fund the government for three weeks and have Congress continue negotiating border security issues while providing back pay to furloughed government employees.

That bill passed 52-44, but it needed 60 votes to end a filibuster. The other Republicans voting for the measure were Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, Susan Collins of Maine, Cory Gardner of Colorado, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Mitt Romney of Utah.

Georgia’s junior Senator, Republican David Perdue, voted against that bill.

He and Isakson, an East Cobb resident. had previously voted for a bill that would have given Trump his $5.7 billion in border funding and provided some immigrants with certain legal protections.

That bill failed 50-47, so the 34-day stalemate between Trump and Congress will continue indefinitely. Here’s Isakson’s statement from the Senate floor Thursday:

“You know a lot of people think Congress’ job is to come to Washington and change things for the better. When it comes to immigration, all we ever change is the subject. We never end the debate, we never pass a result, and often times we would call each other names for the wrong reason.

“I’m here for one reason: To thank the colleagues that are on the floor here and all those others that are ready to do some business. I’m ready to do some business.

“It’s time we put the workers in our government back to work. It’s time we were doing what we promised the people of the United States of America we would do, and it’s time we went to work. Because when everybody’s out of work, it’s our fault. These are the people who carry the mail, empty the garbage, cook in the cafeteria, clean up the parks, and do everything they do without any complaint whatsoever. But they’re out there, many of them not even being paid right now, while we’re sitting here debating a subject that we can’t reach a solution on, period.

“We need to take our armor off, leave our weapons at the door, walk in the room, shake hands. . . . Let’s sit down, and let’s pass a bill we can both agree on that gets Americans back to work and restores the spirit of Ellis Island and the pride of the United States of America.”

Isakson earlier this month co-sponsored federal legislation to permanently end government shutdowns.

Isakson said little good comes from shutdowns, and he cited the five shutdowns in his time in Washington.

“Idle hands are never good,” he said.

Here’s what Perdue, a strong Trump supporter, said after Thursday’s votes:

“Many of us fought to keep the Senate in session last August to avoid this funding situation in the first place. President Trump has tried to reopen negotiations with a reasonable proposal that not only fully funds the federal government, but also addresses critical border security and disaster relief. It is unacceptable that Senate Democrats continue to reject every opportunity to compromise in good faith. In the real world, both sides have to negotiate to find a solution. It’s time to work together to tackle these national priorities.”

 

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Former Kell teacher sentenced for sexual assault of student

A former Kell High School teacher who pleaded guilty last week to sexually assaulting a student on campus will serve five years in prison.Spencer Herron

That’s the sentence that was handed down to Spencer Herron by Cobb Superior Court Judge Robert Flournoy, who also gave the former video production instructor 15 years on probation.

Court records show that Herron, 49, who was arrested on June 1, 2018, pleaded guilty last Friday to five counts of sexual assault on a student on the Kell campus.

They involved multiple sexual encounters with a female student that started in 2016, and continued through the 2017-18 school year, according to his indictment in August.

According to his sentencing document, Herron was given sex offender status by Flournoy. As a first-time offender, Herron could have his criminal record cleared if he meets the terms of his probation.

After his release from prison, he is not allowed to have any contact with minors, take up a residence with minors or contact with the victim. He also must abide by other restrictions while on probation.

Herron was a teacher at Kell for 16 years and was the school’s teacher of the year in 2016. In what turned out to be his final year as a teacher, Herron was a member of the Cobb County School District’s Superintendent’s Teacher Advisory Council.

 

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Cobb Schools to hold Resource Fair for students with disabilities

Press release:

On January 28 from 6:30-8:30 p.m., more than 40 businesses, and organizations will be on site at Palmer Middle School to share information about extracurricular opportunities available for students with disabilities. Cobb County School District, Cobb schools student disability resource fair

Representatives from museums, performing arts centers, camps, sports organizations, and clubs are attending the Cobb County School District Community Connections Resource Fair to help Cobb parents learn more about the opportunities available for their students. 

Parents will be able to gather information about the accessibility options, programs, and special events offered for families of students with disabilities. Some of the attendees include the Atlanta Braves Exceptional Fans, Zoo Atlanta, Acworth Horizon League, Autism Improvised, Tellus Science Museum, Fernbank Museum of Natural History, Cobb Therapeutics/Special Olympics, Georgia Ballet, Art Station-Big Shanty, NCG & Studio Movie Grill, and more. 

There will also be information about camps, classes, and sensory-friendly events.  

Parents can reserve their spot for the program by calling the Special Education Parent Mentor Office at 770-529-0046 or by registering here.  

 

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Polar Bear Run registration continues through Friday

Online registration has closed for Saturday’s Polar Bear Run at Johnson Ferry Baptist Church, but you can sign up in-person through Friday at Big Peach Running Co. (1062 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite C).Polar Bear Run

Other Big Peach Running stores in Kennesaw (1625 Ridenour Boulevard, Suite 304) and Brookhaven (705 Town Boulevard, Suite Q340, Atlanta) also are handling registration.

It’s the 31st annual Polar Bear Run that benefits the church’s high school music mission trip programs, and is one of the first Peachtree Road Race qualifiers of the year.

Conditions ought to be suit the name of the event perfectly—Saturday’s early-morning lows could be below freezing, with sunny skies and highs in the high 40s later in the day.

Big Peach is where you can also pick up race packets from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Friday, as well as on-site at the race starting at 6:30 a.m. Saturday.

Here are more details on the race courses, where to park and how to get a race t-shirt.

 

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Cobb economic incentive proposals delayed by commissioners

Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell
Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell

After adopting several economic incentive policies last year to spur business growth and relocation, Cobb commissioners have put on hold their approval of several proposals stemming from those changes.

Four of the five proposals, totaling more than $400,000 in county incentives, were withdrawn at Tuesday’s Cobb of Commissioners meeting because they are in District 2 and commissioner Bob Ott was absent.

But after a sometimes pointed discussion, commissioners also agreed to withhold the other incentive package on the agenda, for a planned office building in District 3 in northeast Cobb.

Last February, commissioners implemented the Special Economic Impact Program, which reduces or waives certain fees for companies that meet specific criteria for moving to or expanding in Cobb.

The companies must be in the financial, insurance and professional services sectors (including legal and accounting), as well as transportation, manufacturing and emerging technologies industries.

They also must add at least 150 jobs, invest $30 million or more in the county and pay average salaries at least 1.25 times the county average, as determined by the Georgia Department of Labor.

Qualifying companies also must agree to invest in Cobb for a minimum of 10 years or the incentives are revoked.

District 3 commissioner JoAnn Birrell and Chairman Mike Boyce were strongly in favor of a county incentive package totaling nearly $125,000 for Edison Chastain Office, LLC, which wants to build a 152,000-square-foot office building on Chastain Meadows Parkway near Bells Ferry Road.

“I think this is a good fit for this program,” Birrell said.

The incentives for Edison Chastain would cap development permit fees (proposed incentive agreement here). According to the Cobb Community Development Agency, Edison Chastain would invest $35 million and create 150 jobs once the building opens.

But commissioner Lisa Cupid of South Cobb questioned the wisdom of allowing breaks on fees for companies when the county has had major budget problems in recent years.

Community development officials estimate the break-even point for the Chastain Meadows incentives would be in 2022.

“I have grave concerns that five [economic incentive proposals] are coming up at one time,” she said, “when it might take several years to recoup [the incentive amounts]. At the same time, we’re struggling year-to-year to provide core services.”

Birrell responded that the facility eyed by Chastain Meadows was initially slated to be a warehouse. “Now it’s an office building. It’s eligible and it meets the requirements,” she said.

Boyce said such incentives will help the county enrich its tax digest, which is the best way to meet increasing service needs.

“Getting the resources depends on getting those companies to come here,” he said. “The [tax] millage rate brings in a certain amount, but [a growing] tax digest brings in even more.”

Cupid asked if the county was “doing things in a healthy way,” then tried answering her own question by saying that “I don’t see it at all.”

Replied Birrell: “If [qualifying companies] are not here, we’re not going to get the revenue at all.”

She agreed to withdraw the Edison Chastain proposal and asked interim community development director Michael Hughes for background information on the incentive program.

Floor & Decor wants to relocate its HQ to a near-vacant building at Wildwood.

Two of the four incentive proposals previously withdrawn are in Windy Ridge Parkway area near East Cobb:

Also seeking incentives are Home Depot ($213,750) for expansion in and around its headquarters in the Cumberland area, and construction firm Brasfield & Gorrie ($90,798) for renovating its new headquarters near SunTrust Park.

The county incentives are unrelated to tax abatements that the companies have sought with the Development Authority of Cobb County.

 

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