One-time bonus proposed for Cobb public safety employees

Those pushing for better pay, benefits and retention for Cobb public safety workers haven’t been optimistic their issues will be addressed before the fiscal year 2020 budget takes effect in October.

Cobb budget town hall, Mike Boyce, Cobb public safety bonus
Mike Boyce has proposed a 5-percent pay raise for public safety employees that some think doesn’t go far enough. (ECN file)

They’ve been lobbying Cobb commissioners for weeks to take some immediate steps, and on Tuesday the county chairman’s office announced a proposal for a one-time bonus for police, firefighters and sheriff’s deputies to be voted on next week.

The bonuses come to more than $2.7 million in all, with the money coming from the county’s general fund and fire fund budgets, according to figures provided by Cobb government spokesman Ross Cavitt.

The bonus, which would be a flat amount of $1,475 per person, “is the first of a multi-phase approach” to addressing public safety salary and retention matters, Chairman Mike Boyce said in a statement, adding that commissioners “will be considering other measures in the weeks ahead.”

He didn’t specify what those may be. The next commission meeting is a week from today, on May 28.

The bonus is considered a merit-based payment, and will go to employees in the police, fire and sheriff’s departments who scored satisfactory or higher job performance ratings last year.

Cavitt said the current county budget for police and fire should accommodate the bonuses, but that the sheriff’s department would need an additional $694,964.

The police and sheriff’s departments are funded through the county’s general fund. Cavitt said the raises for police personnel comes to $1,004,844.

The firefighters bonuses would come from a surplus in personnel services funds and would cost $1,048,253, Cavitt said.

Susan Hampton of East Cobb, a citizen leading the effort for better pay, has been handing out flyers (see above and below) detailing what she and other citizens and public safety staffers have been calling a crisis.

Earlier this spring Boyce said he would be asking commissioners for a three-percent merit-based pay raise for all county employees, and another two percent for public safety. 

Hampton has said that’s not enough, saying that a “five-percent pay raise will not make Cobb competitive” with other jurisdictions in metro Atlanta.

She says the money is there to address staffing shortages and pay and retention problems now, due to the growth in the county tax digest.

The Cobb Fraternal Order of Police has asked for a 10-percent pay raise.

The proposed bonuses come shortly after former Cobb Police Chief Mike Register was named the county’s public safety director.

In the county release, Register issued a statement saying that “I’m optimistic there are more options being considered by the Board of Commissioners who I believe are committed to addressing the ongoing problem.”

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Cobb schools 2019 valedictorians and salutatorians announced

William Ellsworth, Walton, Cobb schools 2019 valedictorians and salutatorians
William Ellsworth, Walton High School

The Cobb County School District on Tuesday announced the Class of 2019 valedictorians and salutatorians, and students from East Cobb schools had some of the highest grade-point averages in the county.

Walton’s William Ellsworth topped all seniors with a GPA of 4.875, and he’s headed to Stanford University. Walton’s salutatorian, Daniel Shu, has a GPA of 4.833, and he’s off to Vanderbilt.

All of the East Cobb vals and sals had GPAs in excess of 4.6, and many of those are going to Georgia Tech. The countywide average is 4.66 for the Class of 2019, which numbers more than 8,000 in 16 Cobb high schools.

CCSD said 94 percent of those graduates will be getting their diplomas on time, which is a record, and 75 percent are college-bound.

Annabelle Alejandra Colmenares Mayz, Kell High School
Annabelle Alejandra Colmenares Mayz, Kell High School

Cobb graduates have earned more than $118 million in scholarships, outside of the HOPE and Zell Mill scholarship programs. A total of $12 million in scholarships is going to Pope graduates.

Graduation started Tuesday afternoon for Kell. The other East Cobb schools’ graduation schedules are listed below, along with their valedictorians, salutatorians, GPAs, college choices and intended majors.

Kell (Tuesday, 3:30 p.m., KSU)
Valedictorian —Annabelle Alejandra Colmenares Mayz, 4.6.14, Stanford, material science and engineering
Salutatorian—Thomas Papageorge, 4.6, Georgia Tech, mathematics

Lassiter (Thursday, 2:30 pm., KSU)
Valedictorian—Kevin Barnard Goshay, 4.793, Harvard, applied mathematics
Salutatorian—Dennis Gregory Goldenberg, 4.759, Georgia Tech, mathematics

Kevin Barnard Goshay, Lassiter High School
Kevin Barnard Goshay, Lassiter High School

Pope (Friday, 7 p.m., KSU)
Valedictorians—Nicole Yoojin Kang, 4.783, Georgia Tech, biology; and Edward Charles Kokan, 4.783, Georgia Tech, aerospace engineering
Salutatorian—Karen Sizhe Li, 4.75, Georgia Tech, biomedical engineering

Sprayberry (Saturday, 7 p.m., KSU)
Valedictorians—Yllona Maria Coronado, 4.656, Georgia Tech, biomedical engineering; and Anusha Kayastha, 4.656, Georgia Tech, neuroscience
Salutatorians—Samuel August Knobbe, 4.563, Georgia Tech, chemical engineering; and Matthew Robert Starker, 4.563, University of Georgia, finance

Walton (Friday, 10 a.m., KSU)
Valedictorian—William Ellsworth, 4.839, Stanford
Salutatorian—Daniel Shu, 4.803, Vanderbilt

Wheeler (Wednesday, 6:30 p.m., Wildcat Arena)
Valedictorian—Rucha Gharpure, 4.742, Cornell, computer science
Salutatorian—Keshav Shenoy, 4.727, Georgia Tech

The entire group of East Cobb valedictorians and salutatorians is shown in the slideshow below.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

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Speed Pro Imaging of East Cobb honored by Cobb Chamber of Commerce

Speed Pro Imaging

Submitted information and photo:

The Cobb Chamber of Commerce named SpeedPro Imaging Marietta a 2019 Top 25 Small Business of the Year at the Chamber’s First Monday Breakfast, held on May 6, 2019 for its remarkable innovation, sound approach to organizational challenges and positive impact on the community. Said Speed Pro Imaging president Littie Brown (third from left in photo above):

“We are so humbled to have been selected among the other great companies that make up the Cobb County Business community. We would like to salute our customers, employees and suppliers who make it possible for us to contribute to the Cobb County community.”

SpeedPro Imaging Marietta specializes in large format graphic printing. Their focus is to always provide each customer with exceptional service. For six years, owners Littie Brown and Karen Brown have been providing high quality graphics with a consultative approach, ensuring their customers are happy each time they leave the studio.

“We are so proud of all the small businesses that make up such an integral part of our community,” said Cobb Chamber President and CEO Sharon Mason. “The quality of the businesses, the work they’re doing in the community, the great jobs they’re bringing—it all goes toward making Cobb County a vibrant and successful place to live, work and play.”

To be considered for the Top 25 Small Businesses of Year, each hopeful submits an application to the Cobb Chamber. The applicants must prove an increase in sales or unit volume, provide examples of innovation, discuss adversity and challenges, and thoroughly detail their community involvement. Applications are analyzed and considered by a group of independent community business leaders and affiliates of the Small Business Administration.

The First Monday Breakfast was sponsored by LOUD Security Systems and S.A. White Oil Company.

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IN MEMORIAM: East Cobb civic leader Trish Steiner, 75

Trish Steiner, who died on Saturday at the age of 75, was a longtime community activist, including many years with the East Cobb Civic Association, and was involved with the Walton High School community.

Here’s the remembrance her family is sharing with the community:Trish Steiner

She was born in Pittsburgh, PA to the late Dr. Thomas and Mrs. Faye Hayes. Trish met her husband Maurice “Mo” Steiner at Milligan College in 1962. After being married in 1966, Trish and Mo lived in Maine and Florida before moving to East Cobb in 1984. She was a dedicated mother to her daughters, Audra, Melissa and Brianne.

As a lifelong volunteer, Trish was an activist for her community. She was appointed by Cobb Commissioner Bob Ott the Neighborhood Safety Commission and was a longtime member and board member of East Cobb Civic Association. During her tenure of ECCA, she served various leadership roles involving zoning and variances and Johnson Ferry Corridor Study.

Trish received a proclamation from Cobb Commissioner JoAnn Birrell in 2012 in recognition of her volunteer service to Cobb County. Trish was a 2004 YMCA Woman of Achievement recipient. She was a member of The College of Charleston’s Parent Advisory Council from 2003 -2009, and was a member of The College’s 1770 Society.

Trish was the founder of the Mt. Bethel Elementary School Foundation and was a driving force in the formation of Walton High School’s Foundation and Charter Status. Trish and Mo were both enthusiastically involved in Walton Band and Orchestra Parents for many years.

Trish was dearly loved by Maurice “Mo,” her husband of 53 years, her children, Audra, Melissa and Brianne, and sons-in-law Steven Ritter and Yannick Bennett. Her death is mourned by family and friends, who will miss her enthusiasm, wit and resourcefulness.

The family will receive friends between the hours of 5 pm and 8 pm Monday and Tuesday, May 20th and May 21st at HM Patterson and Son Canton Hill, in Marietta. In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the charity of your choice in her memory.

The Steiner family also put together this tribute video.

 

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Georgia Scholars include 13 students from East Cobb schools

More academic honors for some seniors at East Cobb high schools, 13 of whom are part of the 19-strong Cobb contingent as Georgia Scholars, given by the Georgia Department of Education.Georgia Department of Education, Georgia Scholars East Cobb

The Georgia Scholar program identifies students who:

“. . . Have achieved excellence in school and community life. Students eligible for Georgia Scholar recognition are high school seniors who exhibit excellence in all phases of school life, in community activities, and in the home. 

“Georgia Scholars are students who have carried exemplary course loads during their four years of high school; who performed excellently in all courses; who successfully participated in interscholastic events at their schools and in their communities; and who have assumed active roles in extracurricular activities sponsored by their schools. Each Georgia Scholar receives a seal for his or her diploma.”

The East Cobb students come from four schools:

  • Kell: Anabelle Colmenares;
  • Lassiter: Kevin Goshay;
  • Pope: Megan Anderson, William Kim;
  • Walton: Jacob Alayof, Anjali Padiyar, Anika Park, Elizabeth Sims, Varun Krishnaswamy;
  • Wheeler: Sabrina Hampton, Stephanie Yao, Michelle Nader, Arya Mevada.

The other Cobb recipients hail from Allatoona, Harrison and Kennesaw Mountain.

State School Superintendent Richard Woods:

“The 2019 Georgia Scholars exemplify our mission of educating the whole child. They are well-rounded students who have engaged with a wide array of educational opportunities – from traditional classroom learning to community service. I congratulate each of these students and wish them well as they embark on their next steps after high school.”  

If you’re thinking about next year’s awards, qualifying students can contact their counselor to get an application. Counselors, home school instructors and district coordinators can get on the distribution list by contacting Georgia DOE at askdoe@georgiadoe.org.

 

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Walton boys lacrosse team rallies to win state championship

After being taken to overtime at the very end of regulation, the Walton boys lacrosse team didn’t waste much time putting away the defending state champions.Walton boys lacrosse team

The Raiders got a goal from Tate Harran 18 seconds into sudden-death overtime to defeat Lambert 8-7 Saturday at Kennesaw State University in the Georgia High School Association Class 6A-7A title game.

It’s the first championship since 2011 for Walton (2011), which spoiled Lambert’s bid for a fifth crown.

The win also erased the Longhorns’ comeback in the final minutes. Walton led 7-4 with less than six minutes to play. In the last minute of regulation, Benny O’Rourke scored twice for Lambert, including the tying goal with 0.1 seconds left.

Hannan was one of three Raiders who scored two goals, including Taylor Aston and James Gerr.

Pope baseball in finals

The only other state high school championship left in the 2018-19 school year is baseball, and the Pope Greyhounds will be aiming for their third consecutive state title this coming week.

Pope will meet Heritage of Conyers in a best two-of-three series for the 6A championship that starts Wednesday with a doubleheader at State Mutual Stadium in Rome.

The games begin at 5 and 7:30 p.m. If necessary, a decisive third game would be played at the same venue at 7:30 p.m.

Admission is $13, plus a $2 administration fee.

 

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East Cobb businesses pass alcohol compliance checks

Rosa's Pizza, East Cobb businesses alcohol compliance checks

Cobb Police on Thursday visited nearly a dozen East Cobb businesses to see if they would serve alcohol to anyone under 21. All of them passed their compliance checks, meaning they did not sell to underage volunteers. Those businesses are:

  • Kroger, 2960 Shallowford Road
  • Wing Zone, 3052 Shallowford Road
  • BP Food Mart, 2951 Shallowford Road
  • Food Mart, 3065 Shallowford Road
  • Avenue Spirits and Wine, 4400 Roswell Road
  • Citgo Food Mart, 4360 Roswell Road
  • BN Food Mart, 4267 Roswell Road
  • Publix 4401 Shallowford Road
  • Yeero Village, 4751 Sandy Plains Road
  • Rosa’s Pizza, 3605 Sandy Plains Road
  • Good Times Package Store, 4771 Alabama Road.

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PHOTOS: 29th Marietta Greek Festival continues through Sunday

Marietta Greek Festival

The 29th Marietta Greek Festival continues through Sunday at Holy Transfiguration Greek Orthodox Church (3431 Trickum Road), and we got there not long after it opened on Friday to take in what’s become one of the most popular community festivals in East Cobb.

Grade-school children danced to folk tunes from the Greek islands and mainland, part of the featured entertainment that’s a custom at the festival.

Marietta Greek Festival

Marietta Greek Festival
The festival also includes tours of the church, which are from 10-5:30 & 7:30-9 Saturday & 12-5 Sunday. This year’s theme is “Holy Icons: Windows Into Heaven.” 
Marietta Greek Festival
The history of the Orthodox church, as well as many Greek cultural achievements, are spelled out for visitors in the fellowship hall.
Marietta Greek Festival
A full menu of Greek food items for purchase includes the classic Gyro. Cooking demonstrations will be held at 1, 3, 5 & 7 Saturday and 12:30, 2:30 & 3:30 Sunday.
Marietta Greek Festival
The outdoor marketplace includes more food, children’s activities and crafts.

Marietta Greek Festival

Marietta Greek Festival

Marietta Greek Festival

Marietta Greek Festival

The Marietta Greek Festival continues Saturday from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. and on Sunday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. (East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

Admission is $5, and free shuttle bus service is available at the Church of Latter-Day Saints (3340 Trickum Road, Saturday only), Simpson Middle School (3340 Trickum Road) and Mountain View Elementary School (3151 Sandy Plains Road).

The festival proceeds will benefit the Northwest Metro Atlanta Habitat for Humanity and Philoptochos (Friends of the Poor), a charity of the Greek Orthodox Ladies of the Atlanta Archdiocese.

 

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Cobb Forward transportation survey continues through the end of May

Cobb forward transportation survey

Cobb Forward, the county’s comprehensive transportation update, is seeking public feedback via an online survey that continues through the end of May, and that takes just a few minutes to complete.

(Take the survey here.)

It asks participants to state their priorities for roads, transit, trails, cost efficiencies, safety and technology and innovation upgrades and options.

This is the first Cobb CTP (explainer here) to incorporate a broad base of information, including technology (i.e. autonomous vehicles), land use and other factors besides roads and transit.

A series of town hall meetings was conducted around the county this spring (presentation links here), and the next phase will be a needs assessment, expected later this year.

Recommendations will be made early in 2020 for the plan update, which will become part of the Cobb 2040 Comprehensive Plan.

That’s slated to be adopted by county commissioners in 2021.

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Famed architect I.M. Pei, designer of Wildwood Plaza, dies at 102

I.M. Pei Wildwood Plaza

I.M. Pei, the architect who designed the Wildwood Plaza office park in East Cobb and who was known for many acclaimed buildings around the world, has died at the age of 102.

His most famous building is the Louvre Museum pyramid in Paris, and he’s also known for the John F. Kennedy library in Boston and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland.

He was world-famous by the time he drew up the plans for Wildwood Plaza, which was developed by Tom Cousins and opened off Powers Ferry Road and Windy Ridge Parkway in 1991.

The twin towers are two 15-story granite buildings with a pyramid atrium (inspired by the Louvre building, which opened two years before Wildwood) that form the centerpiece of the 289-acre Wildwood office complex.

The towers, done in Pei’s modernist urban style also were graced by pear trees he explicitly included across the traffic circle from the buildings.

Last year, during a zoning case before Cobb commissioners, some nearby residents asked if the developer of a townhouse complex slated for the area could try to preserve the aging trees (they were not).

Pei, who was born in China in 1917, came to the United States and studied architecture at MIT under Walter Gropius, one of the leaders of the modernist Bauhaus movement.

Pei designed many other commercial and residential buildings during his long career, including the now-razed Gulf Oil Building on Ponce de Leon Avenue in Atlanta that is his first major project.

His awards included the Pritzker Prize, the most prestigious honor in architecture, and the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

 

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New Atlanta VA Health Care clinic opens in East Cobb

East Cobb VA clinic opens
Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce (in uniform) and Cobb Superior Court Judge Reuben Green (with scissors) at the East Cobb VA clinic ribbon-cutting.

Submitted information and photo:

The Atlanta VA Health Care System held a ribbon cutting ceremony May 16 for its Northeast Cobb County VA Clinic, located at 2217 Roswell Road in Marietta. The new VA clinic provides local veterans with primary care, mental health, telehealth and laboratory services. It is open 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Mondays through Fridays.

“We have a county of over 45 thousand veterans and the needs here for medical services and primary care are urgent,” said Chairman Boyce, who spent nearly 30 years in leadership positions in the Marine Corps and was in Operations Desert Shield/Desert Storm in Iraq and Operation Restore Hope in Somalia. “I’m glad to see the VA recognizes that and is going to build that kind of care and begin serving all these warriors that live around here. It’s a long time coming.”

“Opening the VA clinic here will make a huge difference for our veterans in Cobb County both in the Veterans court but also for the veterans in our community that need services,” said Superior Court Chief Judge Reuben Green, a veteran of the Marine Corps.

Veterans previously requesting to receive care at this site will be contacted directly. Enrolled veterans interested in transferring to the new site, please contact the new clinic by calling 404-321-6111, ext. 204403. Veterans not enrolled in the Atlanta VAHCS, please call Eligibility Service at 404-321-6111, ext. 206450.

 

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East Cobb Quilters’ Guild work featured at Georgia Celebrates Quilts show

East Cobb Quilters' Guild, Georgia Celebrates Quilts Show

Submitted information and photo:

The Georgia Celebrates Quilts Show will be held at the Cobb County Civic Center, Thursday, June 6th through Saturday, June 8 from 10am – 5pm. Immerse yourself into the world of quilting as the most talented quilters from around the state compete for cash prizes. More than 344 juried quilts will be on display in the quilt gallery. Handmade pieces range from artful wall hangings to traditional bed coverings, and the show will offer inspiration and pleasure for quilters, artists, and everyone who appreciates the beautiful results of this art form.

The event also includes a Quilted Treasures boutique featuring unique handmade items, a Block Party display of blocks made by K-12 students, several raffles and a marketplace featuring quilt related products.

The Georgia Celebrates Quilts Show is a family friendly event and is being held at the Cobb County Civic Center – 584 South Marietta Parkway SE Marietta, GA 30060. Tickets are $10 at the door, advance tickets for groups of ten or more at $9 per ticket are available for pre-show purchase at https://ecqg.com/advance-ticket-sales/. For additional information visit https://ecqg.com/quilt-show/.

The raffle quilt for this year’s show “Celebration,” shown above, was created by 69 guild members. The show features handcrafted quilts from 26 local East Cobb women.

Featured women of East Cobb: Michele Bautsch, Beth Brady, Rebecca Drumm, Suzanne Gipalo, Carolyn Hofmann, Marie Huston, Heather Kosbab, Alta Miele, Joann C. Moore, Kathy Niemann, Abbi Rabeneck, Natalie Lynn Scott, Betty Gay White, Ginger White, Linda Bailey, Devone Desoto, Jeanne Hayden, Angeline Hixson, Glenda Jones, Adri Herman, Lila Taylor Scott, Michelle Doyle, Carol Littge, Devon Pfeif, Mary Ellen Von Holt and Mary Ann Zambory.

Photo credit: Jerrie Paschal – Used with permission.

More information: East Cobb Quilters’ Guild website

 

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Cobb schools 2020 budget adopted with major pay increases

With little discussion, the Cobb school board adopted a $1.17 billion fiscal year 2020 budget Thursday night.Cobb County School District, Cobb schools 2020 budget

The budget, which takes effect July 1, will include pay raises for most non-temporary employees ranging between 8 and 12.6 percent. They include teachers, administrators, bus drivers, cafeteria workers, counselors and nurses.

(Read the budget details here.)

The only change to the budget, presented at a board work session Thursday afternoon, is spending an additional $340,000 in “academic supplements” for elementary school teachers. The stipends will go to those teachers who will serve in grade-level leadership positions at their respective schools.

The budget adopted by the board maintains the current millage rate of 18.9 mills. The pay raises will total around $74 million, and more than $18 million is being transferred from reserves.

Teacher allotments will increase by 90 across the district, and members of the CCDS’ police department also will get a “competitive salary adjustment.”

A total of $81 million in increased revenues, including $43 million in state Quality Basic Education funding as well as $30 million in additional property taxes due to an estimated 5.5 percent growth in the Cobb tax digest, has been worked into the budget proposal.

Brad Johnson, the district’s chief financial officer, said the final tax digest number will be determined in June.

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Parking changes announced for Marietta Greek Festival

Marietta Greek Festival parking changes
Open Street Map

The Marietta Greek Festival takes place from Friday-Sunday, and organizers said there will be some parking changes in effect this year.

The festival goes from Friday-Sunday afternoon the Holy Transfiguration Greek Orthodox Church (3431 Trickum Road, indicated by red star on map), and off-site parking with shuttle service has been altered from previous years.

Due to construction work at Lassiter High School, a previous satellite parking venue, the festival lots for this year are at the following venues (indicated by blue circles on the map):

  • Simpson Middle School (3340 Trickum Road);
  • Church of Latter-Day Saints (3195 Trickum Road, Friday and Saturday only);
  • Mountain View Elementary School (3151 Sandy Plains Road).

The festival hours are 3-11 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sunday.

There’s free admission Friday from 3-5 p.m.; otherwise admission is $5, and free to children ages 12 and under. Online admission and food ticket purchases can be made here through Sunday.

The parking is free at all lots.

 

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Cobb I-75 repaving work scheduled along Marietta exits this weekend

From the Cobb communications office:Cobb I-75 repaving work, Georgia DOT

Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) contractors will implement overnight lane closures on I-75 this weekend for resurfacing. Expect some traffic delays.

Weather permitting, these are the lane closures scheduled for Friday, May 17 from 9:00 p.m. until 5:00 a.m. Monday, May 20:

  • Two right lanes and right shoulder lane will be closed on I-75 southbound between the Canton Road and Delk Road exits;
  • Three right lanes will be closed on I-75 northbound between the I-75/I-285 interchange and the Canton Road exit.

Overhead signs and message boards in the Marietta area will alert drivers of the closures in advance. These major closures reduce prolonged impacts to the traveling public by condensing the crews and equipment needed and ensuring safety for workers and drivers.

Motorists are advised to plan alternate routes to their destinations and/or allow extra travel time for traffic delays.

As always, motorists traveling in the area are reminded to reduce their speeds in the work zone. Motorists are also encouraged to wear seatbelts, eliminate distractions behind the wheel, and plan their routes before getting on the road by calling 511 for real-time information on work status and traffic conditions.

 

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Two men convicted in 2016 fatal shooting at Windy Hill Road restaurant

Windy Hill Road restaurant shooting
Anthony and Cynthia Welch were shot after celebrating her birthday at dinner at Pappadeaux. (Photo: Cobb District Attorney’s office)

A Cobb Superior Court jury has convicted two men from Florida for killing a man and shooting his wife in 2016 in the parking lot of a Windy Hill Road restaurant.

The Cobb District Attorney’s office said Demarious Kevauh Greene, now 23, and Dylan Marquis Ledbetter, now 25, were found guilty of malice murder, felony murder, aggravated assault, armed robbery, and firearms-possession charges. Ledbetter was also found guilty of aggravated assault on a police officer.

Their victims are Anthony and Cynthia Welch, a Kennesaw couple leaving the Pappadeaux restaurant on Oct. 7, 2016, after celebrating her birthday. Prosecutors said they were attacked as they reached their car, and when Anthony Welch stepped in front of his wife to shield her from the men, he was shot in the heart with a .380-caliber bullet.

Cynthia Welch also was shot, in the arm and the chest, and one of the men took a necklace from her neck before they fled the scene by car, according to the DA’s office.

Anthony Welch died a short time later, and Cynthia Welch survived. They were married nearly 25 years.

During the trial, prosecutors said police linked the Welch shootings with a robbery in the parking lot at a store in Woodstock four days later. On Oct. 15, police spotted a vehicle from the Woodstock incident parked at a Red Roof motel near the Pappadeaux restaurant, and followed it as it left the parking lot.

During a traffic stop, prosecutors said the vehicle pulled into a gas station, trying to get away, and hit a Cobb Police officer, then another car. According to police, Greene and Ledbetter jumped out of the car, with Ledbetter being shot three times by a plainclothes officer.

The DA’s office said a man still in the car surrendered to police, who executed a search warrant for items in the vehicle and discovered a .380 handgun that GBI ballistics experts later matched to the bullets in the Welch shootings.

Prosecutors said other evidence corrobrated the presence of Greene and Ledbetter at the crime scenes.

In his closing arguments, Cobb assistant district attorney Jesse Evans said, “this murder was cold-blooded. Senseless. It didn’t have to happen. Cynthia and Anthony Welch did not deserve this.”

Greene and Ledbetter will be sentenced on May 30, and could be facing life in prison without parole. They’ve been convicted in the Woodstock robbery and received life sentences.

 

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Walton boys lacrosse, Pope baseball teams reach state finals

For the first time since 2011, the Walton boys lacrosse team is playing for a state championship.Walton boys lacrosse team

The Raiders downed centennial 8-3 at Raider Valley on Wednesday to reach the Georgia High School Association Class 7A finals.

Their opponent will be the two-time defending state champions from Lambert, which prevented an all-East Cobb final by downing Lassiter 8-4.

Saturday’s final will take place at 1 p.m. at Fifth Third Bank Stadium near the Kennesaw State University campus (3200 George Busbee Parkway).

Admission is $14 and covers all four state championship games, starting at 10:30 a.m.

Walton is 20-2 on the season, while Lambert is 20-1. The Longhorns, from Forsyth County, have won four state championships since the school opened in 2009.

Walton’s only title came in 2011. The Lassiter boys won state championships in 2006 and in 2017, but on Wednesday never had the lead against a Lambert team that’s become a dynasty in a short amount of time.

No East Cobb girls teams reached the finals this year. Kell won state titles in 2014 and 2015 and Walton won in 2016. The Milton girls, who play in the same region as Walton and Lassiter, will go for their 13th championship in the 7A final Saturday against Mill Creek at 5 p.m.

Pope prevails

The Pope Greyhounds baseball team advanced to the state championship series for the fourth consecutive year by defeating Harrison earlier this week.

The Greyhounds, winners of the last two Class 6A titles, knocked off the Hoyas on the road in the third and decisive game on Wednesday in a 5-0 shutout.

Pope will play Heritage of Conyers in a doubleheader starting at 5 p.m. next Wednesday, May 22, at State Mutual Stadium in Rome. Tickets are $13 plus a $2 facility fee.

If a third game is necessary, it will take place at the same venue on Thursday, starting at 7:30 p.m.

 

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MarketPlace Terrell Mill construction gradually getting underway

MarketPlace Terrell Mill construction

As crews were finishing the grading work for the new MarketPlace Terrell project and construction began on the self-storage facility, a spokesman for the developer updated the community about the mixed-use development.

Brandon Ashkouti of Eden Rock Real Estate Partners told members of the Powers Ferry Corridor Alliance last week that the overall timetable for the $120 million project, located at the northwest intersection of Powers Ferry Road and Terrell Mill Road, is expected to be about 24 months.

That depends in part on a case to be decided soon by the Georgia Supreme Court. Kroger, which is planning a 95,000-square-foot superstore as the center’s anchor, is appealing a Cobb judge’s ruling against tax abatements it sought from the Development Authority of Cobb County.

MarketPlace Terrell Mill site

Ashkouti said in response to a question from the audience that Kroger is committed to building there (and moving from a nearby location at Powers Ferry and Delk roads).

“Until they are approved,” he said, referring to the abatements, “we do not have a timeline for that store. We anticipate a favorable outcome.”

The Kroger store would be located where the former Brumby Elementary School campus once stood.

In the meantime, a self-storage facility located at the back of the 23.9-acre tract, and near Terrell Mill Road (in photo above) is the first building to get underway.

Ashkouti said that building should be done within 9 to 12 months, and an adjacent apartment building with 298 units is expected to be completed in 24 months.

Building out shops and restaurants could take between 12-15 months, he said, and discussions are underway with possible tenants he wouldn’t identify.

Construction on the latter could get underway this fall, he said, and two planned restaurants would have 4,200 and 3,500 square feet.

“We’re talking to some great local restaurants,” Ashkouti said.

Brandon Ashkouti, Eden Rock Real Estate Partners
Brandon Ashkouti

The buildings will be in Colonial Williamsburg style architecture.

A dentist’s office on the intersection that has already opened is not part of the MarketPlace Terrell Mill project.

The plans also call for traffic lights on Powers Ferry right across from Micro Center shopping center and on Terrell Mill, to be sequenced at the L.A. Fitness entrance.

Rezoning was approved last year by Cobb commissioners in a project that has been dubbed “transformative” for a corridor that is being revitalized elsewhere.

The so-called Restaurant Row cluster on Powers Ferry near Windy Hill Road will make away for another mixed-use project.

Craig Gearheart of Greystar, a multi-family developer, told the PFCA audience that groundbreaking will begin in July for Overture at Powers Ferry, a 171-unit building for residents 55 and older, and should take around 24 months to complete.

A 276-unit apartment building, Elan at Powers Ferry, also is planned for the property, as is a 10,000-square foot building with shops and restaurants, including Rose and Crown.

It’s the only active restaurant still remaining at Restaurant Row, and will relocate to the new facility, taking up 6,000 square feet.

Related story

 

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MUST Ministries summer lunch program seeks cash donations for sandwiches

For more than 20 years service organizations, churches and others have helped Marietta-based MUST Ministries with its summer lunch program by providing homemade sandwiches to be delivered to needy children in seven counties in metro Atlanta.MUST Ministries summer lunch program

Last Friday, MUST was notified by state health officials that for food safety reasons, only sandwiches made in certified, licensed kitchens under supervision can be distributed in the sack lunches.

Volunteers and organizations have been preparing sandwiches at their own venues, and at MUST kitchen off Cobb Parkway near Bells Ferry Road in “lunch building” sessions.

With only a couple weeks to go before the summer lunch program begins, MUST is asking anyone who wants to help to make a cash donation so it can purchase sandwiches for the summer lunch program, which starts May 28 and continues until the end of July.

It’s called “SOS”—for “Save Our Sandwiches”—and MUST says the cost will cover only the purchase of sandwiches, about 75 cents each. Other items for the lunches, including juice boxes, crackers, fruit cups and other prepacked foods and snacks, are still accepted.

Last summer MUST distributed between 6,000 to 7,000 sandwiches a week, or around 260,000 for the summer, to kids who qualify for free or reduced school lunches.

MUST has pointed out that in 23 years of the summer lunch program, it’s never heard of an instance of a food safety issue. MUST has distributed for years a lengthy list of requirements for those who’ve made sandwiches.

MUST looked at partnering with church and other certified kitchens, but that was unfeasible since the summer lunch program is less than two weeks away.

Thus far, more than $17,000 has been raised for MUST to buy sandwiches from a certified food vendor, about enough to get through three weeks of the seven-week summer lunch program.

If you’re interested in helping out, you can text “MUSTSOS” to the number 52182, or e-mail SummerLunch@MUSTMinistries.org.

 

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Lower Roswell Road bridge over Sope Creek to undergo repairs

Cobb commissioners on Tuesday approved a project to repair the bridge over Sope Creek on Lower Roswell Road.Cobb 2016 SPLOST, Lower Roswell Sope Creek bridge

Georgia Bridge and Concrete, LLC submitted a low bid (out of four received) of $356,440 and was awarded the contract. The funding comes from the 2016 Cobb SPLOST.

The project will consist of resealing bridge joints, replacing, drainage structures, patching  existing concrete, stabilizing an approach slab, and installing polymer overlay.

Work will begin 60 days after the contractor gets permission to proceed.

 

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