In a strict party-line vote, U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath of the 6th Congressional District of Georgia sided with fellow Democrats Friday as the House Judiciary Committee voted in favor of two articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump.
The vote was 23-17, and the full House, which is controlled by Democrats, is expected to vote next week, before breaking for the Christmas and New Year’s holidays.
The impeachment proceedings center around allegations that Trump threatened to withhold foreign aid to Ukraine if it didn’t investigate former Vice President Joe Biden, a Democratic presidential candidate.
The first article of impeachment defined that as an abuse of power, and the other article accuses the president of obstructing Congress by trying to impede a House investigation into the Ukraine claims.
Trump is the fourth U.S. president to have articles of impeachment returned against him. Andrew Johnson in 1867 and Bill Clinton in 1997 were impeached by the House, but were acquitted in subsequent Senate trials.
In 1974, the House Judiciary Committee returned articles of impeachment against Richard Nixon, but he resigned before a full House vote.
If Trump is impeached by the House, a trial in the Republican-held Senate could come early next year.
McBath, a first-term Democrat from Marietta, made remarks on Wednesday referencing her teenage son, shot dead at a Jacksonville, Fla., gas station, which prompted her run for Congress on gun-control issues, and also cited legislation she’s supported to protect veterans that was signed by Trump:
But, I am not proud of the President’s actions that bring us here tonight.
For months, we have carefully and methodically explored the facts.
I have listened to our witnesses. I have examined the evidence from our intelligence community. I have heard from the brave men and women who have dedicated their lives in service to our country, both at home and abroad.
I am greatly saddened by what we have learned, and I am forced to face a solemn conclusion.
I believe the President abused the power of his office, putting his own interests above the needs of our nation—above the needs of the people I love and serve.
For that, I must vote my conscience.
I do so with a heavy heart and a grieving soul.
This is not why I came to Washington.
Her full statement can be seen and heard in the video below:
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The following East Cobb food scores from Dec. 9-13 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing to view details of the inspection:
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State Rep. Matt Dollar, who filed the East Cobb cityhood bill in the Georgia legislature earlier this year, has at least one announced opponent in 2020.
She’s Sara Tindall Ghazal, an attorney who has headed a voter access project for the Georgia Democratic Party since last year.
On her campaign website, Ghazal said she’s running for several reasons, including improving voter access, health care and education.
Ghazal and her husband Patrick are raising two daughters who attend public school in East Cobb. She opposes cityhood and says that “Georgians deserve better policy when it comes to common sense gun safety.”
The move was made as Georgia Democrats challenged voter access when current Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp was Secretary of State.
She’s been an elections monitor for the Carter Center in Jamaica, Liberia, Nigeria, Zimbabwe, and the Cherokee Nation. Ghazal is a graduate of the University of the South and earned a law degree from the Emory University School of Law.
According to Dollar’s latest financial report, filed on June 30 with the Georgia Government Transparency and Campaign Finance Commission, he has nearly $50,000 in cash on hand.
The same agency indicates that Ghazal registered her campaign committee, Friends of Sara Tindall Ghazal, on Nov. 27, and that her campaign chair is Charisse Davis, who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters on the Cobb Board of Education.
East Cobb News has reached out to Ghazal seeking more information about her candidacy.
She’s the latest Democratic political novice to seek elected office in Republican-heavy East Cobb.
Dollar, who’s represented District 45 since 2003, has had little opposition from opponents in either party. Last year, he defeated Democrat Essence Johnson with 60 percent of the vote.
Democrats fielded candidates in every federal, state and local race involving East Cobb constituencies last year, and they won in the 6th Congressional District (Lucy McBath), Cobb Board of Education Post 6 (Charisse Davis) and Georgia State House 37 (Mary Frances Williams).
Democrats also ran close in Cobb Commission District 3 and State House 43. Those candidates seeking office again in 2020. Caroline Holko, who ran against commissioner JoAnn Birrell, is running for State House District 46, where Republican John Carson is the incumbent.
In State House 43, Republican incumbent Sharon Cooper, the chairwoman of the House Health and Human Services Committee, is being challenged again by Democrat Luisa Wakeman, who got 48 percent of the vote against Cooper in 2018.
In addition to the area of East Cobb shown below, District 45 also includes a small portion of Sandy Springs.
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Cobb County Police said shortly after noon today that Mabry Road is closed for the time being between Georgia Highway 92 (Woodstock Road) and Mystique Landing and Durwent Drive due to a gas leak.
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An East Cobb attorney who has been critical of the Cobb County School District on bullying issues is running for Post 5 on the Cobb Board of Education in 2020.
Robert Madayag is seeking the seat currently held by David Banks, whose third term ends next year. Post 5 includes most of the Pope and Lassiter high school attendance zones, as well as part of the Sprayberry cluster (see map at the bottom).
Madayag is the father of students at Sprayberry, Simpson Middle School and Kincaid Elementary School.
Earlier this year, Madayag assisted parents, including some at Walton High School, who complained about how the district responded to their claims about their children being bullied. He thinks the district underreports data on the number of students who report bullying.
Madayag said in his announcement that “there is no doubt that the CCSD has done a great job of helping those students at the top,” but said he’s heard from “countless parents about how their kids were bullied, suffered racially charged language, and were forced to fight the school district to have their kids provided basic needs.”
His priorities include doing a countywide assessment about how bullying cases are handled, providing transparency to the public on how much the district spends on legal fees and creating the position of Chief Equity Officer.
Madayag also wants to address what he says are “stories upon stories of parents with special needs kids that have had to fight and fight with the CCSD, at their own great expense, just to get treatment that other school districts provide without fighting.”
East Cobb News has left a message with Madayag seeking more information about his candidacy.
Madayag, who is running as a Republican, is a former chairman of the Modern Whig Party of Georgia, which formed in 2009 with a centrist platform aimed at those disaffected with both Democrats and Republicans.
Currently the seven-member school board has four Republicans and three Democrats. Four seats are up next year, including Post 1 (North Cobb), Post 3 (South Cobb) and Post 7 (West Cobb).
Madayag is a U.S. Navy veteran who earned an engineering degree from Georgia Tech, then earned a law degree from Villanova University. He practices patent and corporate law in the Atlanta office of Lee & Hayes, a national firm.
He and his family have been involved in school and youth sports and music activities in their community. His wife Rebecca has been a member of the PTSA board at Simpson, and he has coached and served as an emcee for his sons’ football teams and at Sprayberry freshman and JV football games.
Banks, a Republican, has not indicated whether he’s running again. Matt Harper, an IT project manager, has announced his candidacy in the GOP primary (campaign website).
Harper taught science for three years at Murdock Elementary School and he and his wife Sharon have two daughters who attend Cobb schools. He also has served on the Murdock School Council.
Post 5 includes all or part of the following school zones:
High Schools: Pope, Lassiter, Sprayberry
Middle Schools: Hightower Trail, Mabry, Simpson
Elementary Schools: Davis, East Side, Eastvalley, Garrison Mill, Mountain View, Murdock, Powers Ferry, Sedalia Park, Shallowford Falls, Tritt
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Cobb County government sent out word Wednesday that there’s an item on next Monday’s Cobb Board of Commissioners agenda to rename the East Cobb Senior Center the Tim D. Lee Center.
The former Cobb Commission chairman died in September from cancer, and he represented District 3 in Northeast Cobb, where the East Cobb Senior Center is located. Current commissioner JoAnn Birrell said this about the proposed change:
“Tim was a passionate advocate for seniors throughout his tenure at the County. He enjoyed the activities at the East Cobb Senior Center and, as their caregiver, would often accompany his parents. Prior to serving as the Chairman, Tim was the District 3 Commissioner. It is only fitting to rename the East Cobb Senior Center to the Tim D. Lee Senior Center in his honor.”
Lee was a former president of the Northeast Cobb Homeowners Group, a director for the East Cobb Civic Association and a board member of the Cobb County Civic Coalition before winning his first campaign as commissioner in 2002.
He resigned that post in 2010 to run for chairman when Sam Olens left to campaign for Georgia Attorney General.
Lee earned a full term in 2012 but was defeated by Mike Boyce in the 2016 Republican primary following criticism for his handling of the Atlanta Braves stadium deal.
In 2017, Lee was named executive director of economic development for Habersham County in the North Georgia mountains.
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One of East Cobb’s more popular breakfast and lunch spots is closing, and soon.
Egg Harbor Cafe, which opened at the Stonewood Village Shopping Center on Lower Roswell Road at Woodlawn Drive in 2017, will be closing at the end of business on Sunday, according to Elliot Cash, a company spokesman.
He issued the following statement to East Cobb News about the reasons why:
“We are sad to announce that our lease here in East Cobb is coming to an end, and we have been unable to come to economic terms with our landlord to extend our lease, as years of roof leaks and extensive water damage to the building has rendered it an unacceptable situation for our business standards.”
The vacancy has been posted by Riverwood Properties, which manages the 32,295-square-foot shopping center for South Coast Management, LLC, the retail center’s owner.
Allie Hodge, a leasing manager at Riverwood, said she got word Monday from South Coast that Egg Harbor is intending to vacate the premises by Jan. 1.
Egg Harbor Cafe operates 20 restaurants in the Chicago area, Lake Geneva, Wis., and Johns Creek, Alpharetta, Buckhead and Sandy Springs.
The Egg Harbor Cafe space in East Cobb has been home to several restaurants, including the short-lived Tavola Italian Kitchen & Bar. Before that, it was Ritter’s, owned by Ritter Jones, who shuttered that and the Paper Mill Grill in late 2014 due to financial pressures.
The Flying Biscuit Cafe is returning to East Cobb, at Parkaire Landing, but a specific opening date has not been announced. The Atlanta-based breakfast and lunch chain is saying only that a tentative opening will be in the spring of 2020.
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The following information comes from Lourdes Gonzalez, a sophomore at Lassiter High School, where she’s in the band program, as well as the Lassiter-Pope-Kell Navy Junior ROTC program.
She’s also involved with the McCleskey-East Cobb Family YMCA, where she’s involved in its Leaders Club, and she’s been accepted by the YMCA of Metro Atlanta’s Global Service program for a trip to the Republic of Georgia trip next summer.
She’s asking for assistance to raise $3,000 by May 1, 2020, and has more details here about her background, the trip and the Leaders Club, which she says “has changed the way I go through life. It has taught me essential skills and techniques I need in order to look at challenges from a different perspective. I am now more confident and able to understand, compromise and give my input to any type of situation.”
Whether you’re young, old, or in-between, feel free to let us know about about activities and events near and dear to you. E-mail your news, photos and other materials to: editor@eastcobbnews.com and we’ll share it with the East Cobb community.
For more information on submitting news tips, announcements, calendar items and more, please click here.
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The Cobb County School District is nearing the end of the first year of a new SPLOST collection period, and the school board on Thursday will be asked to consider taking out $100 million in short-term construction notes for the calendar year 2020.
The request is scheduled to be discussed at the board’s work session that begins at 4 p.m., and to formalize a resolution at its 7 p.m. business meeting. Both meetings will be held in board meeting room at the CCSD’s Central Office, 514 Glover St., Marietta.
The loans are taken out as advances against SPLOST collections during the year, and have become an annual action by the Cobb school board.
The district borrowed $90 million for 2019 and a similar amount in 2018. The loans are repaid by the end of each year, as sales-tax revenues are collected.
This year, the loans were being paid back at an interest rate of 1.72 percent. District officials say the borrowing helps them issue bids and start projects earlier in the calendar year and to get savings against interest rates that are around 4-5 percent a year.
If the resolution is adopted Thursday night, a formal proposal with a details about the sale of the loans would be presented to the board for final approval in January.
The Cobb Ed-SPLOST V is expected to collect around $797 million in sales tax revenues through the end of 2023.
Among the primary projects on the SPLOST V list (here’s the full notebook) is rebuilding and relocating Eastvalley Elementary School to the former site of East Cobb Middle School on Holt Road.
A timetable for that project has not been indicated by the district. Earlier this fall, Eastvalley parents demanded that the school board provide newer trailers to replace aging portable classrooms while a new school is built, but no action has been taken.
Among the other major projects at East Cobb schools in SPLOST V are planned for Lassiter HS (theater renovation), Sprayberry HS (CTAE building renovation), Walton HS (new tennis courts and softball field) and Wheeler HS (Magnet School renovation).
Dickerson and Dodgen middle schools also are slated for major classroom additions.
SPLOST funds also are used for technology upgrades at every school, including for security measures, and for general maintenance of facilities and equipment.
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Story and photo submitted by Cobb County School District:
Those who drive by Rocky Mount Elementary see Alice Medlin every day, sometimes twice a day. They may even spot her out front of Simpson Middle School or near Lassiter High School. Parents wave. Students smile at the friendly crossing guard that greets them as they walk to school. Some parents stop to chat and laugh with her after walking their students to school.
What they do not always see are the times when “Ms. Alice” steps in front of a whizzing car to pull a student to safety. They may not see her step off the curb into the path of a speeding car, all to protect a Cobb County student in harm’s way.
They may not know that some drivers are quite disrespectful as they pass the almost-84 years-young crossing guard. They just see her smile because that’s what she does. She waves to the ill-mannered drivers and returns her attention to the children.
“I love these children. They are like mine,” gushed the beloved crossing guard.
For her dedication to student safety, commitment to serving the Cobb Schools community, and consistently doing it all with a positive attitude and a warm smile, “Ms. Alice” was recently named the North Georgia Outstanding Crossing Guard of the Year by the Georgia Safe Routes to School.
She is one of only four in the entire state of Georgia to receive the title of Crossing Guard of the Year and is the only one in the 39-county area of North Georgia.
“Ms. Alice” was standing in the crosswalk in front of Rocky Mount Elementary when she learned that she had been named Crossing Guard of the Year, a moment that brought tears to her eyes. Rocky Mount Principal Peggy Fleming, Assistant Principal Dr. Sage Doolittle, and Georgia Safe Routes representative Patti Pittman surprised her during Crossing Guard Appreciation Week.
Rocky Mount, Simpson, and Lassiter parents pushed for her to win the recognition.
Here’s what some of them said:
“Miss Alice makes sure you always a walk away with a smile. She adores all of her students and their families, and their safety is her top priority always.”
“She is out there in the rain, wind, snow, and heat at all times to help the walkers cross safely during the busiest times of the day.”
“We trust her with our kids’ lives.”
“Ms. Alice is amazing! She knows the kids by name. She loves and treats them like they are her grandkids.”
After giving birth to 9 children and loving 11 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren of her own, “Ms. Alice” has a lifetime of experience with children, and it shows.
“Ms. Alice loves giving out special treats for the kids before long weekends and vacations,” one parent wrote in their nomination. “She greets every walker with love and even shares personal stories with us! She has such a big heart for all of the children and sees them as her own grandchildren!”
Her oldest child, who attended Cobb Schools, is 65. One of her great-grandchildren has already graduated high school.
I don’t look it and don’t act it, she said as she did a little dance outside Rocky Mount.
“Ms. Alice” first pulled on the yellow vest of a Cobb Schools crossing guard about 5 years ago when she was a mere 79. She doesn’t plan to retire until she reaches 90.
Some of the adored crossing guard’s friends ask her why she chooses to wake up early every morning and stand in the bitter cold and show up each afternoon to watch over students in the intense Georgia heat.
“It makes it worth living to get up and come here every day,” she tells them.
She stands in the rain, cold, and heat because her job gives her the potential to positively impact someone else’s future. That’s an opportunity she cannot turn down.
When she’s not on the job at a crosswalk near you, she’s kicking up her heels on a dance floor. She goes dancing every Saturday.
Because so many parents, students and members of the community see her every day, she is a bit famous. People stop her at the grocery store because they recognize her. She has so many fans—parents and students alike—that they often want to continue their crosswalk talks.
“Ms. Alice is a joy!!! She greets us every day, no matter what the weather, with a smile,” another parent said. “She loves our kids and always makes sure they are safe. My kids love seeing her every morning and afternoon.”
This parent’s comment may best represent why so many parents nominated her and why she ultimately won Crossing Guard of the Year.
“She would literally give her life for any of these kids,” one parent declared.
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A half-hour after the worship service ended, the sanctuary at Powers Ferry United Methodist Church was packed.
On a typical Sunday, the average number of attendees at the church, located on Powers Ferry Road at the South Marietta Parkway, is only around 50 people.
On this sunny early December Sunday, more than 200 mingled, hugged and recalled their memories of a church home that for many of them extends a half-century or more.
“The energy in this place is enormous!” said the church’s senior pastor, Dr. Larisa Parker.
The worshippers included current congregation members and those who have gone elsewhere, but came back for a special occasion.
All of them were there to say goodbye.
After 65 years as a congregation, Powers Ferry United Methodist Church will be closing its doors at the end of the year.
Declining membership and financial struggles prompted the decision, as members voted 28-14 in October to shutter the church and turn the property over to the North Georgia Conference of the United Methodist Church.
The final worship service will be on Dec. 29, but on Sunday, a special “homecoming” celebration was arranged that included an open house and an early afternoon luncheon.
Many just wanted to linger among the pews as long as they could.
“Today was a testimony of what this church has meant to this community,” said member Angela Schneider Wilson, who’s belonged to Powers Ferry UMC most of her life.
“But society has changed,” she said. “We are a very loving congregation and we’re all going to miss this place very much.”
Powers Ferry UMC opened in 1954 on the eastern outskirts of Marietta, when what is now East Cobb was mostly farmland.
Now, the community around the church, made up mostly of small homes and nearby apartment and condominium complexes, has transitioned from mostly white middle-class to to include many working-class minorities.
The East Cobb area also has grown rapidly, and there are at least a dozen UMC churches within a 10-mile radius of Powers Ferry UMC.
In recent years the church began a mission to minister to nearby Brazilian, Latino and Dominican communities, including the establishment of scout troops and a revamped youth ministry.
But the Atlanta-based North Georgia Conference—the governing body for more than 800 churches—created a study group last year to examine the viability of the congregation.
Among its conclusions, which were released in March, were that too few members were carrying a heavy burden of the giving load, and that the church could not meet its financial obligations.
That included difficulty in paying the pastor’s salary, making repairs and renovations to older buildings and submitting apportionment payments to the conference.
More than 75 percent of Powers Ferry UMC members are age 40 or older, according to the report, and 51 percent are over the age of 60.
The report also concluded that between 24 and 40 “active households” are supporting most church ministries and operations, and that the top 10 givers in the congregation range in age from the 50s to the 80s.
The closure of Powers Ferry UMC comes as new research about church attendance in America shows a decline in those considering themselves religious.
“This is a sad reality for a lot of churches, and not just in the Methodist church,” said Rev. Brian Tillman, associate pastor of Ben Hill UMC in Atlanta, and a former youth pastor at Powers Ferry UMC.
“It’s like losing a member of the family.”
Tillman’s children were baptized at Powers Ferry UMC, and his time as youth pastor inspired him to get into the ministry full-time. He brought his daughters to the homecoming, and gave hugs to just about anyone (including a reporter) who got within arm’s reach.
“This is the most loving church I have ever been a part of,” said Tillman, whose other church posts have included McEachern UMC in Powder Springs. “People here have different opinions about things, but they love each other. They get along.
“This is a small church, and you’re able to have a family feel and connections. You literally know everybody.”
Dr. Henry Bohn, a retired veterinarian, is one of those longtime Powers Ferry UMC members who knows just about everybody.
He joined the church in 1969, before the community was bisected by the Loop, and recalls former pastor Fred Emery saying “that road is going to destroy this church.”
But it wasn’t until East Cobb became heavily suburbanized, several decades later, that his premonition came to pass.
“I’m very sorry to see it happen, but it’s sort of inevitable in a number of ways,” said Bohn, who’s active with the East Cobb Lions Club that has met at the church for more than three decades to prepare and deliver Meals on Wheels on Christmas.
(The church also hosted the Lions’ annual holiday pancake breakfast, which has been moved to nearby East Cobb United Methodist Church and will take place this Saturday.)
Bohn abstained on the vote to close Powers Ferry UMC, and said he’s transferring his membership to Mt. Bethel UMC, where he’s been an associate member for many years.
“There are four certainties in life,” Bohn said. “Life, death, taxes and change.”
Other Powers Ferry UMC members haven’t decided where they might be attending church in the future.
“I’ve never had to church-shop,” said Wilson. “I’m enjoying everything until we close. It will be hard to find another place like this.”
The same goes for her childhood friend, Michelle McRee, who like Wilson met her husband at Powers Ferry UMC.
A volunteer at nearby Sedalia Park Elementary School, she said the church’s current mission work has been vital “because we’re in a community that really needs it.”
That’s what makes the decision to close especially hard for her, in addition to the personal memories she holds.
During Sunday’s service, she said, “my heart was filled, and at the same time, there were tears in my eyes.”
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Submitted graphic and information below includes details on East Cobb dropoff spots—at WellStar East Cobb Health Park Tuesday and the WellStar Administration building on Sandy Plains Road and Three 13 Salon on Canton Road on Thursday:
Cobb Christmas partners with Cobb County Department of Transportation and CobbLinc to create the county’s most unique and memorable holiday program, Stuff-A-Bus. Think of Stuff-A-Bus as the opposite of Santa’s sleigh, Santa uses his sleigh to deliver gifts and Cobb Christmas makes a CobbLinc bus our sleigh for collecting gifts.
The week prior to Cobb Christmas’ Annual Distribution, a CobbLinc bus travels through the county to Stuff-A-Bus host sites gathering donations of food and toys. Host sites can be businesses, schools and other entities that have organized toy and food drives.
This program would not be successful without the help of local businesses, schools, and other organizations that serve as host sites for Stuff-A-Bus. Volunteers at these locations organize food and toy drives and begin promoting and collecting in November. A Cobb Christmas representative schedules a date and time for the bus to make a stop at their location to collect the items which have been donated. All donations are stored and transported to IAM Local Lodge 709 —the Cobb Christmas Distribution Site-during distribution week.
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The various bands, orchestras, coral music groups and other fine arts groups at Wheeler High School performed two shows Saturday in the Holiday Showcase at the school’s performing arts center.
The event was the culmination of many weeks of rehearsals and involved dozens of students in the Chorale Chorus, the Beginning Orchestra, the Philharmonia Orchestra, the Sinfonia Orchestra, the Concert Band, the Symphonic Band and the Full Orchestra.
In the second show, the Bel Voce Chorus, the Wind Ensemble Band, the Chamber Orchestra and the Theater took the stage.
The music teachers include Mark Hoskins and Anthony Higdon (band), Ebony Collier (chorus), Dwayne Wasson and April O’Keefe (orchestra), Dayna Strickland (theater) and Lisa Casey and William Rembert (visual art).
The photos and videos are from the opening concert.
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The opening of East Cobb Park in 2003 was the culmination of five years of planning, persistence, community involvement and commitment.
What began as a dream for a passive park in the heart of a bustling suburban community turned into a full-throttle campaign that made its reality even more gratifying for those behind it.
Several founding members of the Friends for the East Cobb Park discussed that history this week before the East Cobb Area Council of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce, where the park idea was incubated.
“It was a big idea, and it was Sunny’s idea,” said Mary Karras, the first president of the Friends for the East Cobb Park, referring to Sunny Walker.
She was a co-owner of the Frameworks Gallery in East Cobb and a leading arts and community advocate who was the guiding force behind the creation of the park.
“She said, ‘I think we need a passive park in East Cobb,’ ” Karras recalls. “I said, ‘What’s a passive park?’ ”
Walker had a vision, but that’s all the Friends group, formed as a non-profit in 1998, had to go on.
Identifying a possible location, purchasing it and then turning it over to Cobb County for development as a park were all formidable tasks.
Finding land that was close to the Merchants Walk area, that was affordable and suitable for passive park was a tall order.
When a member of the Bowles family came to the bank where Karras worked and offered to sell 13 acres of what had been farmland on Roswell Road, he told her he also had done an environmental study.
That’s when Karras turned to Tom Bills, a resident of the adjacent Mitsy Forest subdivision, and an engineer by training.
“The land was clean and good and ready for us to purchase,” said Bills, a former Friends treasurer and president.
Fundraising was the next step, and it was a comprehensive approach. Cobb County offered a match, but Karras and other Friends advocates had to hustle to get the interest of businesses, foundations and everyday citizens.
Then-U.S. Rep. Johnny Isakson helped the Friends gain access to foundation and business leaders in Atlanta, and the group held events and meetings and wrote letters seeking financial support.
“We were scrambling for every hundred dollars we could find,” Karras said. “We did it because we saw it was an opportunity to create a legacy in this community.”
Without the larger community of everyday citizens contributing their share, the vision of East Cobb Park may not have gone much further.
Scout troops, school groups, families, civic organizations and others chipped in as they could. They included kids turned over big bags of change they solicited from golfers on the Indian Hills driving range.
“That meant as much to us” as the bigger checks, Bills said, “because it showed the support of the community.”
Citizens also could purchase park cobblestones and pickets for the fence around the children’s playground bearing their names. Other contributors had their names, or the names of loved ones, inscribed on park benches.
With all of that support, and most of the money, the Friends group found itself $100,000 short at closing. That’s when Riverside Bank, which had been vital in securing financing during the fundraising drive, agreed to make a loan.
When asked if she or the Friends group ever had any doubts, Karras said no, but understood how their task may come across to some: “Raising $1 million to buy land that we were going to give to the county?”
Yet the laborious fundraising campaign contained the seeds of what the Friends group also had envisioned.
“We started off slow and then we gained momentum,” Karras said. “That gave everybody ownership.”
“There was no giving up,” said Kim Paris, another former Friends president.
“Sunny dreamed big,” Karras said, “and we bought into it.”
Johnny Johnson is the owner of Edward Johns Jewelers and a longtime civic leader who serves as Santa Claus at park’s Holiday Lights festivities: “East Cobb Park became the center of our community.”
East Cobb Area Council president Dan Byers said “East Cobb Park was the crown jewel of this community before we ever moved here.”
More community support followed after the park was built and opened. A second “all-abilities” playground was built with a $75,000 grant from the Resurgens Foundation.
The Friends group continues as an active partner with the county, staging year-round events including concerts and the Holiday Lights tree lighting, which starts at 5 p.m. Sunday.
Last year, a secondary vision of expanding the park became a reality when Cobb County purchased 22 acres of adjacent property belonging to Wylene Tritt, who donated 7.7 acres of what had been the 54-acre Tritt farm.
The Friends group helped the county round out the costs at closing with a $102,000 contribution from its endowment, most of which has been paid back.
For now, the new land will remain as greenspace, but there are longer-term visions of purchasing what’s left of the Tritt land for park purposes.
“History is important, because there is a future for the park,” said Lee O’Neal, the current Friends president. “There are plenty of opportunities to develop that property and purchase more to extend East Cobb Park.”
The Cobb Board of Commissioners voted this fall to name the first bridge connecting the current park to its newer space after Walker, who died in September. A piano was donated in her name in 2017 and sits in the park gazebo.
Karras, now the manager of investor relations for the Cobb Chamber, said Walker also talked about the park one day having an arts center, and would like to see that come to fruition.
For Paris, who’s going to be a grandmother in the spring, her thoughts about the park’s future are more immediate.
“That’s why we did this,” she said, referencing the legacy mission of the park founders, “as the park continues to grow and that our community continues to support.”
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The Cobb Planning Commission is recommending approval of a senior living project on Ebenezer Road that’s drawn opposition from nearby residents as too dense and traffic-intense.
At a hearing on Tuesday, the board voted 4-0 in favor of a rezoning request by Traton Homes to build 31 detached homes on less than 10 acres on Ebenezer Road, just north of the Sandy Plains Road intersection.
The developer submitted revised plans (read it here) to reduce the development to 31 units, a new site plan, as well as a left-hand turn lane at the proposed entrance on Ebenezer and numerous other stipulations, including a landscape buffer.
Cobb DOT said it prefers left-hand turn lane access from Sandy Plains Road.
Some living in the adjacent Kerry Creek subdivision said the proposed lots are too small, and that the wooded areas they enjoy now in their backyards would be wiped out by multiple new homes.
The Cobb County School District expressed concerns over the development, since those buying homes would qualify for the Cobb senior exemption from school taxes.
After a citizen suggested that the spirit of the tax exemption wasn’t meant to apply to new developments like this one, Kevin Moore, Traton’s attorney, said “tax status should not be a zoning issue.”
Walter Stevens of the nearby Sandy Plains Baptist Church said he supports the request after seeing some of the changes.
Planning Commission chairwoman Judy Williams of Northeast Cobb recused herself “because of relatives.” She did not preside over the case and abstained from voting.
The Planning Commission also voted 3-1 to recommend approval of a single-family home proposal on Canton Road after originally proposing townhomes.
Smith Douglas Homes is now requesting RA-6 zoning for 39 detached residences, instead of 61 townhomes, on 6.6 acres on Canton Road at Kensington Drive, in the RA-12 category. (here’s a recent stipulation letter and revised site plan).
The revised request has the support of Canton Road Neighbors, a civic association. Surrounding housing is single-family detached.
Garvis Sams, attorney for the developer, said the land has been designated for office and industrial use but that “there’s just not a market” to develop it along those lines.
The only vote against was Galt Porter of South Cobb, who said the revised proposal is still too dense for him to support. Abstaining was Fred Beloin of North Cobb.
The Cobb Board of Commissioners will make final zoning decisions on Dec. 17.
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Thanks to reader Julie Alvoid for alerting us to this story about Walton graduates Rachel Luckuck and Francis Yang. They knew each other a little in high school, then had an unexpected reunion recently when they were named Mr. and Ms. Georgia Tech.
The photo, video and text come from Tech’s communications office:
“We sort of knew of each other, just not very well,” explains Rachel Luckcuck, newly named Ms. Georgia Tech 2019.
“I think we had Calc together, right?” Mr. Georgia Tech Francis Yang asks Luckcuck.
“I used to think that Francis was just so cool. I can’t believe looking back that now we’re Mr. and Ms. Georgia Tech,” Luckcuck says.
“I remember when you got into Georgia Tech and how excited you were!” Yang recalls happily.
Luckcuck had taken extra online classes to boost her high school resume in hopes of being accepted to Georgia Tech. She also played the Georgia Tech fight song for inspiration — while studying. Both tactics paid off.
“That was a great day. January 8,” she remembers.
“That’s my birthday!” Yang exclaims.
Both Luckcuck and Yang attended Walton High School in Marietta, Georgia, and both are now business administration majors at Tech. Their election as Mr. and Ms. Georgia Tech was purely coincidental; they ran separately on their own merits and service. The winners were selected from a pool of 20 semifinalists who were required to write essays about their personal experiences and interviewed about their service to campus. Luckuck and Yang won the 2019 title from among a narrowed pool of ten finalists after a popular vote by their peers.
The photographs from Bobby Dodd Stadium were the talk of their hometown. “I was getting tons of messages on Facebook and Instagram from my former high school teachers,’ Luckcuck says. “They were just so proud to see us there together.”
Yang has found this whole experience surreal. “I couldn’t have asked for a better experience at Georgia Tech. Previous Mr. and Ms. Georgia Techs are the people I looked up to when I first got here. Now that’s me.”
He has helped incoming students make the transition to college through his work as a FASET Orientation leader. “One of the best parts of all of this is having some of those students come congratulate me,” he says.
Luckuck says she has found joy working with the Excel Program, a Georgia Tech initiative that provides a post-secondary education for students with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
“There are thousands of colleges but only about 200 options nationwide for these students. Georgia Tech being one of them is incredible, and being part of the program has been life-changing,” she says.
One of Yang’s favorite moments of the entire process was seeing his mom on the field. “It was her first game day,” he says. “She was so excited. To share that moment with her was so special.” And he was so excited that he almost forgot it was his first time on the field too.
For Luckcuck, self-admittedly a bit shy and reserved, her Tech experience has taught her more about herself and how she can best serve others. “It’s living our motto of progress and service. Now as Ms. Georgia Tech I can find a way to give back because Georgia Tech gave so much to me.”
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The sponsor of the East Cobb cityhood bill says changes to the proposed city map are still ongoing, and he doesn’t think anything will be finalized until the Georgia legislature returns in January.
State Rep. Matt Dollar (R-East Cobb) said he hasn’t seen a proposed revision of the map that was presented at a town hall meeting on Nov. 11 by the group pushing for cityhood.
The Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb wants the map to include the areas around Pope and Lassiter high schools. The initial map included most of unincorporated East Cobb in Cobb Commission District 2.
During the town hall meeting at Wheeler High School, David Birdwell of the cityhood committee flashed a revised map for the audience, which he said he received only that day.
A more detailed map, he said at the time, would not be immediately available from the state apportionment office.
Nearly a month later, there still isn’t a revised map proposal for the public to view. The cityhood committee’s website includes an interactive map for citizens to see whether or not they live in the proposed city, but it’s the original map.
When contacted by East Cobb News, Dollar said he was out of town and unable to attend that meeting and “I’m not sure what they were showing.”
“We’re still taking feedback,” Dollar said about the process for drawing a revised map. “We’ll have a better idea what the map will look like once the legislative session begins.
“We’re all working together to see what the map’s going to look like.”
Dollar filed HB 718 (you can read it here) on the next-to-last day of the 2019 legislature and the day after the cityhood group’s first public meeting.
Under state law, cityhood bills have to go through a two-year process. The full legislature must pass the bill in the 2020 session before a referendum would go to voters—most likely in November—living in the proposed City of East Cobb.
The original city map would have a population of nearly 90,000, and if it expands as Birdwell has suggested, it would top more than 110,000.
That would make a City of East Cobb the second-largest municipality in the metro Atlanta area. But a more accurate estimate, along with detailed boundaries of the proposed new map, remain unclear.
East Cobb News has left a message with Birdwell seeking comment.
State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick (R-East Cobb) told East Cobb News earlier this week she hasn’t seen a new map. Cityhood bills must have a local Senate sponsor, but she hasn’t taken a position and may be doing some polling.
Dollar said reaction from his constituents in East Cobb’s District 45 has been mixed. He acknowledges there’s opposition, including the group East Cobb Alliance, but said he’s gotten “a lot of e-mails from people who do like” the cityhood proposal.
He said the objective is to have a formalized map for the proposed City of East Cobb by the time the bill would be considered by the House Governmental Affairs Committee, the first step in the legislative process.
He said he doesn’t anticipate, at least for now, any other significant changes to the rest of the cityhood bill and proposed City of East Cobb charter.
Ultimately, the legislature would draw up a final city map and make other changes if it passes the cityhood bill.
“We’ll have a lot more clarity soon,” Dollar said about the map. “Right now, it’s just not there.”
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A political action committee that supports Democratic women running for the Georgia General Assembly has endorsed to two candidates in East Cobb.
The Georgia WIN List announced that it has placed first-term State. Rep. Mary Frances Williams on its “protect” list of incumbents for the 2020 election and is supporting Luisa Wakeman, who is running again for the District 43 seat held by longtime Republican State Rep. Sharon Cooper.
Last year, Wakeman lost by less than 792 votes in a mostly-East Cobb district that Cooper, the House Health and Human Services Committee chairwoman, has represented since 1997.
Williams, who lives in Marietta, upset GOP incumbent Sam Teasley in 2018 in District 37, which includes some of Northeast Cobb. She was declared the winner in a recount, with a 137-vote margin.
Georgia WIN held an endorsement event Thursday at the Georgia state capitol, focusing on 12 candidates who either won seats from Republican incumbents in 2018 or who came close.
Qualifying for 2020 legislative campaigns will take place in early March.
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High Meadows School, an independent, International Baccalaureate (IB) school focused on child-centered education for students in preschool through eighth grade, is thrilled to announce the appointment of Lisa Baker as Head of School and Camp effective July 1, 2020. She will lead planning and programming, community building, financial management, attracting and developing faculty and staff, stewardship of the 42-acre campus, and ultimately carrying out the High Meadows mission.
A specially formed search committee and the High Meadows Board of Trustees selected Baker unanimously because of her commitment to progressive education, student voice and choice, and a strong understanding of the school’s mission and educational philosophy. She has more than 30 years of experience in schools including leadership experience in several independent schools.
“It is an honor to be asked to serve as the next Head of School for High Meadows School and Camp. High Meadows has a rich, nearly 50-year history and remarkable commitment to creating an environment where students thrive and where their natural sense of wonder and curiosity is fueled. Joining this school family of passionate learners and inquisitive minds is a remarkable opportunity for which I am deeply grateful.”
Baker currently serves as Head of Upper School at Bancroft School in Worchester, Mass. She is a visionary and charismatic leader. Recently she co-chaired on the Strategic Planning Team and launched the Social Justice and Equity Task Force. Additionally, she has collaborated closely with the Board. Baker began her career in education as a middle school teacher and coach and did the practicum for her counseling degree in a middle school setting. She began her path to educational leadership as the Camp Director at Camp Greenway at The Madeira School in McLean, Va.
“When we embarked on the journey to find a new head of school and camp, we asked the High Meadows community for input about the kind of leader we were looking for, and the feedback we received was very thoughtful and consistent,” says Javier Estrella, chair of the head of school search committee and vice-chair of the High Meadows Board of Trustees. “Lisa Baker is an experienced independent school leader who identifies as an educator and celebrates childhood and child-centered learning, both highly-regarded values of High Meadows. We believe she embodies our values and are confident she will lead our faculty, staff, and the entire school and camp community to a bright future.”
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The Cobb Fire Department said a man and a dog were found dead in a Northeast Cobb home after a fire broke out there on Tuesday morning.
The 46-year-old man has not been identified and the cause of the fire has not been announced. Capt. Joseph Bryant of the Cobb Fire Department said fire and EMS units were called to the home at 2235 Snug Harbor, off Sandy Plains Road, at 8:08 a.m. Tuesday.
That’s in the St. Charles Square subdivision, off Sandy Plains and near Scufflegrit Road.
The man and the dog were found in the master bedroom on the main level of the two-story, home, Bryant said.
He said the cause remains under investigation and foul play is not suspected.
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