Columns Drive reopens after flooding; sunny weather this weekend

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The rain projected for Thursday and Friday didn’t amount to much at all, at least in Cobb County, where the only road still shut down from last week’s storms has now reopened.

Around 6 p.m. Cobb government announced that Columns Drive, located off Johnson Ferry Road and along the Chattahoochee River, has been reopened to traffic.

For the last week, it was shut down between Atlanta Country Club Drive and Willow Knoll Drive after heavy rains left the area heavily saturated.

As the Cobb DOT photos show, the standing water remained due largely to clogged drains.

Cobb government said rangers from the nearby Chattahoochee National Recreation Area, furloughed due to the partial federal government shutdown, helped clear up a clogged drain at the end of Columns Drive.

Crews also had to clear away a beaver-caused clog, and that helped drain away a good bit of water.

Cobb had been under a flash flood watch through Friday, but very little rain occurred after the morning.

Sunshine is in the forecast for the weekend, with partly cloudy skies and highs in the high 50s on Saturday.

Sunday will be sunny with highs in the mid 60s.

 

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Windy Hill Road motel sued in sex trafficking case by Cobb DA’s office

The Masters Inn, Windy Hill Road motel sued
Source: OpenStreetMap

Cobb District Attorney Vic Reynolds said Friday his office has filed a lawsuit to force a Windy Hill Road motel to address sex trafficking and drug activity on its premises or be subject to forfeiting its property.

A release by the DA’s office said the “public nuisance” measure was being applied to The Masters Inn, 2682 Windy Hill Road, located near the Windy Hill Hospital, the junction of Interstate 75 and SunTrust Park.

UPDATED, Wed., Jan. 9, 11:55 a.m.: The AJC is reporting the motel has closed temporarily for renovations, and that the owner has reached an agreement with the DA’s office to address the crime issues.

ORIGINAL STORY CONTINUES:

Authorities say the motel has been a haven for drug and sex trafficking and was the scene of a deadly shooting in 2015. In late 2017 Cobb Police arrested a man there on felony drug charges and discovered he had been holding a female against her well and using her for sex trafficking, according to the release.

The DA’s office said it was approached earlier last year by a lawyers’ group, Civil Lawyers Against World Sex Slavery, and along with Cobb Police compiled data on hotels in the county with high levels of arrests, especially for drugs, prostitution and trafficking.

RELATED STORY

According to the lawsuit, filed in Cobb Superior Court, The Masters Inn was known to police as “notorious hotbed of criminal activity that has been the subject of countless investigations.”

The release said The Masters Inn ownership must take the following steps:

  • contact and cooperate with police about suspected criminal activity;
  • require valid photo identification of all guests;
  • maintain complete guest rosters and a list of those previously arrested there;
  • require staff training to recognize and prevent human trafficking;
  • hire a licensed and armed security guard;
  • install outdoor lighting, video surveillance and fencing;
  • ban loitering.

According to the release, the first of several compliance hearings will be held before Cobb Superior Court Judge Kimberly Childs on March 14.

The DA’s office said the suit is believed to be one of the first in Georgia aimed at curbing sex trafficking activity.

The announcement of the lawsuit comes at the end of a week of public events in the state about sex trafficking. Georgia is regarded as one of the busiest states in the nation for sex trafficking, and January is National Sex Trafficking Awareness Month.

Earlier this week, dozens of school buses formed a caravan to reflect the estimated 3,600 children authorities say are used for sex trafficking in Georgia.

Among those taking part were Attorney General Chris Carr and Governor-elect Brian Kemp. The faith-based group Street Grace also has been leading the charge.

The upcoming session of the Georgia General Assembly is expected to include sex trafficking legislation, and efforts are underway to crack down on sex trafficking ahead of the Super Bowl, which takes place in Atlanta in early February.

 

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Land acquisition for new Cobb Fire Station 12 site on commissioners’ agenda

Cobb Fire Station 12

The purchase of three parcels of land on Canton Road for a new Cobb Fire Station 12 is on the Cobb Board of Commissioners agenda next Tuesday.

The current station, located at 810 Brackett Road in the Shaw Park area, is 55 years old. It’s one of four stations in the Northeast Cobb area but the only one serving the Canton Road corridor.

On the agenda is a request to purchase property located at 3852, 3592, and 3686 Canton Road owned by Chastain, LLC, and to be assembled with a parcel at 3587 Centerview Drive, which also is on the agenda.

According to the agenda item, the total purchase price for the three Canton Road properties is $1.1 million. They are located on the east side of Canton Road, between Kensington Drive and Chastain Corners Road.

The purchase price for the Centerview Drive property, currently owned by the Cochran Family Trust, is $263,000.

The cost to construct a new facility is estimated to be $4.1 million.

Also on Tuesday’s meeting agenda is a request from Cobb DOT to condemn four parcels of land for the planned Windy Hill-Terrell Mill Connector. DOT says that while negotiations continue with property owners, condemnation is needed for right of way acquisition if talks fall through.

The four parcels are 1.4 acres at 1557 Terrell Mill Road (Forest Ridge at Terrell Mill Apartments), and 1,206 square feet each at three townhomes located at 1631 Turnberry Lane, 1617 Turnberry Lane and 1613 Turnberry Lane.

The land is located near the northern portion of the road project, close to its intersection with Terrell Mill Road.

It would be the second such condemnation of property in the path of the Connector, an 0.8-mile stretch. Commissioners voted in November to condemn portions of apartment complexes near Windy Hill Road.

Tuesday’s meeting begins at 9 a.m. in the second floor board room at the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta. The full meeting agenda can be found here.

 

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McBath sworn into Congress; casts first vote for Nancy Pelosi

Shortly after Lucy McBath took the oath as a member of Congress on Thursday, she dedicated the first action of her tenure to her late son.

Georgia 6th Congressional District candidate Lucy McBath
U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath

McBath, a Marietta Democrat who narrowly defeated Republican incumbent Karen Handel for the 6th District seat in November, voted for Nancy Pelosi to become Speaker of the U.S. House.

As she did so, McBath said she was doing it “in memory of my son Jordan Davis.”

He was a student at Marietta High School in 2012 when he was shot and killed at a gas station in Jacksonville, Fla. The man later convicted of the shooting and sentenced to life in prison was complaining about loud music coming from a parked car in which Davis was a passenger.

McBath, a former Delta Air Lines flight attendant, became a gun-control advocate as a result, working for the Everytown for Gun Safety and Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense organizations.

She was planning to run for a state house seat, but cited the Parkland, Fla., high school shootings last February in switching to become a candidate for Congress.

The 6th District includes most of East Cobb, much of Sandy Springs and North Fulton and North and Central DeKalb. She is the first Democrat to serve in the seat since 1978, when Newt Gingrich was first elected.

Pelosi was elected Speaker for the second time, getting 220 votes to 192 for Republican Kevin McCarthy, previously the House Majority Leader. Former Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams got one of the other Democratic votes.

McBath’s official Congressional website has just been activated. Her committee assignments and district office locations have not been announced. The Washington office phone is 202-225-4501.

 

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Columns Drive remains closed as flash flood watch continues through Friday

Columns Drive closes

Another week, and another flash flood watch has been issued for Cobb, metro Atlanta and much of north Georgia. Last week’s rains closed Columns Drive in East Cobb, and it’s expected to remain closed through at least Friday.

That’s the word coming from Cobb DOT, which is still clearing out flooded areas along Columns Drive between Atlanta Country Club Drive and Willow Knoll Drive.

A message sent out this morning by Cobb commissioner Bob Ott said that Cobb DOT is working with contractors to pump out remaining water on Columns Drive, which borders along the Chattahoochee River and is mostly residential. It provides access points for several apartment complexes as well as trails in the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area.

“Please do not drive past the barricades, your interruption slows their effort in the area. And some drivers have caused private property damage by driving onto their neighbor’s yards,” Ott said.

Cobb will be under a flash flood watch starting at 7 p.m. Thursday through Friday evening. The National Weather Service is forecasting between 1-2 inches of rain, and possibly more in some areas. Those areas that were saturated with last week’s rains are more prone to flooding again.

The chance of rain Thursday is 70 percent, and 90 percent tonight and on Friday. The rain is supposed to taper off on Friday night and sunny skies will return on Saturday and through the weekend and into the first of next week.

 

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Chastain, Davis to be sworn in at Cobb school board meeting Monday

Two of East Cobb’s three representatives on the Cobb Board of Education will take the oath of office Monday in the first of two special-called meetings next week.

David Chastain
David Chastain

David Chastain and Charisse Davis will be sworn in, along with Jaha Howard, in a meeting that starts Monday at 7 p.m. in the board room at the Cobb County School District Central Office (514 Glover St., Marietta).

Chastain, a Republican who represents Post 4 (the Kell and Sprayberry clusters), was re-elected to a second term in November.

Davis is a Democrat who ousted two-term Republican Scott to represent Post 6, which includes the Walton and Wheeler clusters. Howard, a Democrat, also is newly elected in Post 2, which includes the Campbell and Osborne clusters.

There is no other business on the Monday meeting agenda.

Charisse Davis
Charisse Davis

On Tuesday morning, the newly comprised board will elect officers for the calendar year 2019. Each year they choose a chair and a vice chair, and that meeting will take place in the same place, starting at 9 a.m.

Chastain was the vice chairman in 2018 and previously has served as a chairman.

With the changes to the school board, the partisan split also has changed. Republicans held a 6-1 majority, but this year they hold a 4-3 edge.

After electing officers, the board will go into executive session for a student discipline matter.

The first regular board meeting of 2019 will take place Jan. 17.

 

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Revised East Cobb cityhood study adds $1.4M in annual ad valorem revenues

A week after a group touting East Cobb cityhood released a rosy financial feasibility study, the report was revised with a projection of additional annual revenue.

The report, prepared by Georgia State University researchers and made public Dec. 11, initially included no revenue from the state title ad valorem tax (TATV), explaining that the proposed city of East Cobb has no car dealerships.

But the revised report, which was dated Dec. 18 and made public today, acknowledges that the TAVT calculation is based on where motor vehicles are registered.

The revenue based on vehicles in the proposed city of East Cobb, according to the revised report, would come to nearly $1.4 million a year.

Here’s a link to the revised study, which explains the calculation in detail on Page 8. The estimated revenue table on Page 22 and shown in the chart above includes that line item, which was absent from the initial study (PDF here).

The estimated annual revenue for the City of East Cobb would rise from $48.4 million to $49.8 million. The estimated annual expenses are unchanged, at around $46 million a year.

The expenses would include police, fire and emergency services, planning and zoning and for general administration.

The updated report still concludes that East Cobb cityhood is financially feasible. The Committee for East Cobb Cityhood, Inc. paid $36,000 to commission the report by GSU’s Center for State and Local Finance.

It’s one of two entities, along with the Carl Vinson Institute of Government at the University of Georgia, that conducts required feasibility reports for those seeking cityhood.

The two-year process includes state legislation that would call for a referendum to be voted on by residents of a proposed municipality. New cities must provide a minimum of three services.

The revision of the 22-page East Cobb cityhood study noted the addition of the ad valorem revenue and said “no other material changes were made.”

In an e-mail response to a request by East Cobb News, Phil Kent, the public relations consultant for the cityhood group, said the revised study also “answered critics with additional references to the base year 2017 for its property tax analysis.”

We’ve followed up for a further explanation and will update when we get it.

The proposed city of East Cobb includes unincorporated areas of Cobb Commission District 2 that are east of I-75 and outside the Cumberland Community Improvement District.

The population of that area comes to around 96,000.

The initial GSU study was circulated to a select group of community influencers in East Cobb right before Christmas, and some of them had concerns about the numbers and methodology.

One of those citizens, Joe O’Connor, resigned in protest, accusing the cityhood group of a lack of transparency.

Little is known about who is behind the cityhood drive other than its president, Atlanta Country Club resident Joe Gavalis, and G. Owen Brown, founder of the East Cobb-based Retail Planning Corp.

Thea Powell, a former Cobb commissioner who also is part of the ad hoc citizens advisory board, said she found information about East Cobb businesses outdated, going back to 2012, during the aftermath of the recession.

The East Cobb cityhood group has not indicated what its next steps may be or when the public may be informed of its plans.

 

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Sherlock Holmes Film Festival showing at Sewell Mill Library

Friday’s the last day of the holiday break for students, and the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center (2051 Lower Roswell Road) is showing several youth-themed movies in its Sherlock Holmes Film Festival.Sherlock Holmes Film Festival, Sewell Mill Library

The event, which celebrates the 100th anniversary of the fictional detective character, is from 1:30-9 p.m., and it’s all free, in the black box theater. Here’s the schedule, with information provided by the Cobb County Public Library System:

1:30 PM – The Great Mouse Detective  (1986, 80 min) – G

Basil embarks on the greatest case of his career when London’s master toymaker is kidnapped – and ends up pitting his wits against his old adversary, Professor Ratigan, who wants to become “supreme ruler of all mousedom.”

3:00 PM – Sherlock Gnomes  (2018, 86 min) – PG

After a string of garden gnome disappearances in London, Gnomeo & Juliet look to legendary detective Sherlock Gnomes to solve the case of their missing friends and family.

4:30 PM – Young Sherlock Holmes  (1985, 109 min) – PG-13

A teenage Sherlock Holmes meets and befriends his future sidekick, the bemused and bespectacled John Watson. During their first semester of boarding school, a series of deaths occur on campus. Intrigued by the crime, Holmes looks into it and soon comes to suspect a poisonous hallucinogen. And then, in the midst of their investigation, Holmes and Watson stumble on a bizarre cult with a penchant for human sacrifice – after which they must struggle to escape.

6:30 PM – Sherlock Holmes  (2009, 128 min) – PG-13

When a string of brutal murders terrorizes London, it doesn’t take long for legendary detective Sherlock Holmes and his crime-solving partner, Dr. Watson, to find the killer, Lord Blackwood. A devotee of the dark arts, Blackwood has a bigger scheme in mind, and his execution plays right into his plans. The game is afoot when Blackwood seems to rise from the grave, plunging Holmes and Watson into the world of the occult and strange technologies.

Call 770-509-4988 for more information.

 

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EDITOR’S NOTE: Happy New Year East Cobb! Thanks for a great 2018!

First of all, Happy New Year East Cobb! I wish all of our readers a happy, healthy, and prosperous new year, and hope that you and your family are enjoying the holiday season with relish.Happy New Year East Cobb!

We’ll be getting back to our usual posting schedule shortly, but I wanted to say a few words before we get on with 2019.

As the first full calendar year of East Cobb News is in the books, my heart is full of gratitude for readers who’ve come to this site during 2018, followed us on social media, subscribed to the newsletter, left comments, offered story tips, asked questions, pointed out corrections or just got in touch to say thanks.

I’ve been hearing that a lot lately from readers—thanks for doing this. It’s been a great pleasure to provide news and information that’s all East Cobb, and only East Cobb.

Over the past few days I’ve been compiling our top stories and photos and readers’ picks from 2018, and I’ll include them again at the bottom of this note. Looking back through them, I was surprised how much we were able to report on, because I’ve often felt I’ve only been scratching the surface.

I’m the kind of person who likes to show, not tell. My main objective for East Cobb News for 2019 will be to continue building on a solid foundation for providing news and information for this community.

I’ve appreciated so many of you making your contributions, with photos, stories, tips and suggestions. You’ve helped make this the kind of community resource I want people to feel that they can’t be without.

Whether it’s regular coverage of local government and schools, transportation and development, local businesses and events, I want East Cobb News to really reflect our vast, diverse and thriving community.

Among my aims for the coming year is to do more in-depth stories about what you care about the most, as well as highlighting more people who serve vital roles in our community.

I’ve got a few ideas and subjects percolating along those lines, and if you have any suggestions, feel free to get in touch. Just e-mail me at: wendy@eastcobbnews.com.

In this new year I also want to connect community-minded readers with small businesses and organizations that help make the community better. I’ve been a member of the East Cobb Business Association this year and have seen this dynamic up-close, and it’s been very inspiring.

If you run a small business or organization and are interested in advertising opportunities, please get in touch. We’re young, but we’re growing, and we can provide you with a variety of ways to reach your ideal, targeted market.

These are lofty aspirations, I know, but as another member of my local independent online news publishers’ group likes to say, “No one else is doing this.”

You have many ways to get community news, from sources that have been around for decades and have plenty of name recognition. East Cobb News is only 18 months old, but I’ve been around here most of my life, and what really drives my passion is that this is the place I call home.

Thanks again for your readership in 2018. I’m excited for what’s in store for 2019!

Top East Cobb stories for 2018

 

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