East Cobb senior salute: Josh Cook, Walton High School

Josh Cook, Walton High School Senior

Josh Cook said he exhaled a little after finishing up the last of his exams a week before what would have been his graduation from Walton High School.

Like others in the Class of 2020, he won’t be going through traditional commencement exercises due to public gathering restrictions because of COVID-19.

While he misses seeing his school friends, Cook admitted that a different learning and social environment he’s experienced the last couple months has had some benefits.

“I’m sort of an introvert,” Cook said. “It hasn’t affected me all that badly. I know I will miss going through graduation and special events that come with being a senior.

“But this feels kind of relaxed for me.”

Cook said since schools were closed for in-person instruction in mid-March, “I have more free time than when I was at school.”

That’s enabled him to pace himself better for the stretch run of his senior year.Josh Cook Walton High School Senior

During his four years at Walton, Cook spent a lot of time helping other students get accustomed to being at a big, high-achieving school.

When he arrived as a freshman, he admitted he couldn’t find his way around the sprawling original Walton classroom building. 

By the time Walton students moved into their new building in the fall of 2017, Cook was serving as a member of the Walton Ambassadors. 

They’re students who help freshmen get around, giving tours and helping make them comfortable. 

He also was worked in the Walton Counseling Office, earning a first-hour credit for his role assisting other students. 

A counselor wrote that Cook would often come in early to help students and families before the start of the school day, and during the second semester, he rearranged his scheduled to do the same thing.

“He has proven to be an asset to the counseling department,” the counselor wrote. “He is professional, fun, trustworthy and compassionate.”

Cook suffered a stroke at birth and he has impaired vision as a result that prevents him from driving. He said being a part of the Walton Drama Club and the Walton Chorus has helped “bring me out a bit.” 

The COVID-19 crisis also has kept him from a dining room host job he truly enjoys at the Chick-fil-A at East Lake. “I really love working there,” he said, hopeful he’ll be able to get back when the dining room reopens.

In the meantime, he’s been enjoying walking and hiking near his home off Paper Mill Road that’s close to the Chattahoochee National Recreation Area, something he’s been doing for a number of years. 

And he’s staying in touch with former school friends at Sope Creek Elementary School and in Zoom meeting with other teens at the Buckhead Church, where he attends.

Cook has been accepted to Georgia Southern University, where he plans to major in hospitality management. A self-described “world’s biggest Disney World fan,” Cook said he isn’t sure how and when his college career will get underway, but he’s learning to take the virus-related disruptions in stride. 

“It’s disappointing, of course,” he said of the high school graduation postponement, which Cobb school district officials are hoping to have at a later time if possible.

“Some students are very upset that they didn’t get to have their prom and a normal graduation. 

“I’ll admit, in 50 years from now, when you talk with your grandchildren about your graduation, it’s going to be really strange to try to explain it.”

Related content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Cobb school board to delay June meeting for budget reasons

Cobb school board June meeting delayed
Cobb school board members and district officials met via Zoom on Thursday.

At the urging of Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale, the Cobb Board of Education voted Thursday to delay its June meeting by two weeks as the Georgia legislature resumes its session, including finalizing the state budget.

The school board work session and voting meeting that had been scheduled to take place June 11—the day the legislative session is expected to resume—have been rescheduled for June 25.

The Cobb school board typically adopts a new budget in May, since the fiscal year in the Cobb County School District begins on July 1. But the legislature hasn’t finished funding state operations.

The legislature had 10 working days remaining on its 40-day calendar when the session was suspended in mid-March due to COVID-19.

Nearly half of the current Cobb fiscal year 2020 budget of $1.2 billion is funded by the state, but district officials haven’t been able to formulate a proposal because they don’t know how much they’ll be getting.

By then, Ragsdale said during a board work session Thursday morning, it’s possible the district might get a better picture of what it can anticipate in funding, but there’s a good chance it won’t.

School board member Jaha Howard proposed keeping the June 11 meeting for non-budget topics and scheduling a special June 25 meeting for the latter, but his motion failed by a vote of 5-2.

Gov. Brian Kemp has been suggesting possible departmental budget cuts of 14 percent across the board to deal with steep revenue shortfalls due to the economic damage from government-mandated shutdowns.

Ragsdale said that if that number is applied to the Cobb school district, that would be a drop of $80 million, a devastating figure.

In the meantime, school district officials are preparing for the possibility of funding operations on a month-to-month basis. Ragsdale said that if that becomes necessary, he hopes it will be only one month.

The 2020-21 Cobb school academic year is scheduled to begin Aug. 3. At the work session, Ragsdale said it’s still “up in the air” when it might begin, and whether there will be in-person instruction or “distance learning” that’s been in place since March 16.

He said the guidance he’s been getting from state education officials and others continues to change.

Also at the work session, Ragsdale also said he’s hopeful that there can be in-person graduation ceremonies for the Class of 2020. The district postponed commencement exercises that were to take place May 19-23.

“We are hopeful regarding plans for the fall, but final plans will be based on the guidance from the Department of Education, Georgia Department of Public Health, and CDC,” he said. “We are also still keeping our hopes alive for in-person graduation ceremonies, but those decisions will also depend on the guidance we receive.”

At their voting meeting—like the work session, it was conducted online, via Zoom—school board members approved demolition of the current Cobb Horizon School campus near Smyrna. That non-traditional school is relocating to land at Cobb Parkway and Terrell Mill Road.

The board also voted to approve plans to construct Pearson Middle School on the Cobb Horizon property. To be built at a cost of $37 million, it will relieve overcrowding at Griffin Middle School and Campbell Middle School and is slated to open in July 2021.

In another action, the board voted to spend $1 million on HVAC renovations at Addison Elementary School in East Cobb.

The board also extended the contracts of top Cobb County School District officials serving in Ragsdale’s cabinet. Their new contracts will start July 1 and end on June 30, 2021.

They include Kevin Daniel, Chief of Staff; John Floresta, Chief Strategy and Accountability Officer; Sherri Hill, Chief School Leadership Officer; Brad Johnson, Chief Financial Officer; Jennifer Lawson, Chief Academic Officer; Marc Smith, Chief Technology and Operations Officer; and several assistant superintendent positions.

Related content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Cobb commission candidate spotlight: Kevin Nicholas, District 2

Kevin Nicholas, Cobb commission candidate

Preserving and enhancing the quality of life in Cobb County is the primary reason Kevin Nicholas said he’s seeking a seat on the Cobb Board of Commissioners.

That task figures to be more formidable in the wake of vast economic damage that’s been done due to business shutdowns stemming from the COVID-19 crisis.

Nicholas, an East Cobb resident of more than 20 years, said he’s running because the retirement of Bob Ott, the District 2 commissioner since 2009, has “created a void where we have to provide good leadership. We need to have good solutions, and I have good credentials.”

Nicholas is a business and technology executive who is Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce’s appointee to the Development Authority of Cobb County.

On the June 9 primary ballot, Nicholas will be one of three Republican candidates, along with retired business executive T. Fitz Johnson (profile here) and former Cobb Planning Commission member Andy Smith (profile here).

(Nicholas’ campaign website is here.)

This is Nicholas’ second attempt at seeking public office. In 2014, he ran for the Cobb Board of Education, but was defeated in the GOP primary by then-incumbent Scott Sweeney.

Nicholas has been touting his business experience in his campaign, which like others has had to change course due to the virus. He said he made 2,000 visits campaigning door-to-door and now with online and phone contacts, he said he’s reached about 10,000 potential voters.

One of the biggest issues he’s heard about from citizens in the East Cobb part of District 2 is cityhood.

Nicholas said he’s flatly against East Cobb Cityhood. An incorporation bill introduced in 2019 was put on hold in the legislature for this year.

“This was my view before the campaign,” he said. “I do not support an extra layer of government. The services we get in East Cobb are very good.”

New police and fire departments, he said, would not be any better than what’s provided now by Cobb County.

Providing better support and pay for public safety employees is a high priority for Nicholas. The county has taken initial steps toward implementing a step-and-grade salary structure, and he suggests that for more tenured officers and personnel, there could be an additional bonus structure for retention purposes.

“We’re paying more right now when we lose officers” than in additional salary increases might be in step-and-grade, he said.

Those additional costs figure to be a factor in the coming budget crunch due to declining tax revenue from the COVID-19 shutdowns. Nicholas said it’s hard to predict now how much of a downturn the county will be facing.

“This is why we need someone with a good business mind,” said Nicholas, who is adamantly against raising the property tax millage rate. “We really have to be careful here. We need to focus on our expenses first. You don’t have an unlimited budget.”

SPLOST receipts will be down, and Nicholas said he advocates for SPLOST reform, and in particular how to fund road maintenance.

Ott has warned repeatedly about Cobb’s heavy reliance on SPLOST to provide most of the funds for road projects.

Nicholas said a HOST (Homestead Option Sales Tax) in lieu of SPLOST would offer more flexibility to fund capital improvements, and that he would advocate it as an idea, an option to consider.

In zoning and development matters, Nicholas said it’s imperative “to keep high-density development in check. I hear that all over.

“I have concerns about it, and the way to manage it is to uphold the land-use plan. It’s there for a reason.”

As a member of Cobb development authority, Nicholas voted down tax incentives for redevelopment projects, including the Kroger at the MarketPlace Terrell Mill and a proposed hotel near the Cobb Energy Center, saying they would set a bad precedent.

“They need to be for companies that are bringing high-quality jobs” and not primarily service-industry jobs.

Nicholas is a member of and Stephen Minister at Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church and also has served as Ott’s appointment on the Cobb Neighborhood Safety Commission. He also was a board member of the Powers Ferry Corridor Alliance, a civic group.

“We need a commissioner where you know what they stand for,” he said. “I believe I have the credentials and background, and you have to have a good relationship with the community.

“As a commissioner, I’ll continue to do that,” Nicholas said.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

East Cobb restaurant reopenings: Taqueria Tsunami, Ted’s, more

East Cobb Taqueria Tsunami restaurant

We’re keeping track of a flurry of announcements by East Cobb businesses in recent days about their reopening plans, and in the case of restaurants, the return of dining-room service.

Among those restaurants allowing you to dine in now is Taqueria Tsunami on Johnson Ferry Road, where the patio also is open, as of today (Thursday).

Like many restaurants that are allowing customers to eat-in, management posted the following safety/sanitation measures it is undertaking, noting it’s also trained staff on the new procedures:

  • Continuous and routine hourly sanitizing/cleaning of all highly trafficked and touched areas of the restaurant (from bar tops down to all door handles)
  • Provide masks and gloves for team members
  • Team member wellness screen every shift
  • Encourage guests to wear masks and practice social distancing while in the restaurant
  • Limited our seating capacity, as required by state regulation, to ensure social distancing and capacity limits are met
  • Use of disposable, one-time use menus
  • Removal of salt and pepper shakers and condiments from the tables (available upon request, and sanitized after use)
  • Added antibacterial stations for our team and guests
  • Focus on sanitation and cleanliness during our shift staff meetings to promote the importance of rigorous hand washing procedures
  • Encouraging customers, vendors and team members to remain home if showing any sign of illness or being in contact with someone who has the virus.

Taqueria Tsunami’s dining room reopening comes two days after Gov. Brian Kemp relaxed some restrictions for restaurants, which can now seat 10 patrons per 300 square feet and seat as many as 10 people in one dining party. 

The Tin Lizzy’s restaurant at The Avenue East Cobb reopened on Wednesday, with dining room service available daily from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.

Tonight Aspen’s Signature Steaks is starting what it calls “distanced dine-in service” from 5-8 p.m.

Reservations are required, and you can make one online.  Curbside service continues from 4-8 p.m. daily and you can order here.

Ted’s Montana Grill at Parkaire Landing Shopping Center also has opened up its dining room, starting at 11:30 a.m. daily.

A few other restaurants of note are taking additional steps before fully reopening.

Paradise South of the Border (Highland Plaza Shopping Center) will be opening its dining room and the patio for limited dine-in starting Monday, May 18 but for now the Paradise Grille dining room is remaining closed, and is being used for curbside pick up only

The Lemon Grass Thai Restaurant at East Lake is expanding its hours, but only for takeout and curbside: Monday-Friday 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.; Monday-Friday 5-10 p.m.; Friday-Saturday 5-10:30 p.m.; Sunday 4-10 p.m.; plans are to reopen the dining room in a couple of weeks.

Send Us Your News!

If you have Coronavirus-related event changes, business openings or closings to share with the public, e-mail us: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

Contact us at the same e-mail address for news about efforts to assist those in need, health care workers, first responders and others on the frontlines of combatting Coronavirus in East Cobb.

Related content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Cobb Senior Citizen Council distributing Coronavirus survey

Submitted information:

The Senior Citizen Council of Cobb County is participating in #MayisOlderAmericans Month #MakeYourMark and continuing their 47 year history of advancing and promoting the health and welfare of Cobb’s senior citizens. There are over 100,000 senior citizens living in Cobb County and some are in difficult circumstances due to the COVID-19 pandemic.Cobb Senior Citizen Council Coronavirus survey, Older Americans Month logo

The Senior Citizen Council is seeking financial contributions from the community to address coronavirus related issues of older residents. Contributions will be used to fulfill pressing living condition needs of afflicted seniors and also to provide funding for a planned Senior Job Fair which will assist individuals who are unemployed or underemployed because of COVID-19.

The Senior Citizen Council developed a Coronavirus Care survey that it is distributing to the Cobb senior community which will be used as a guide in their advocacy efforts. All persons age 55 and older are invited to complete the very brief survey and add their voice to the more than 200 Cobb seniors who have already expressed their concerns and needs in this survey.

Please click here to complete the Coronavirus Care Survey https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/B3HZC7T     

All donations are greatly appreciated and will be used solely for the benefit of Cobb senior citizens in this difficult time.

Please click here to donate https://seniorcitizencouncilofcobb.org/donate/ 

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

‘Take Out the Virus’ campaign to support Cobb restaurants

Take Out the Virus Atlanta

Submitted information:

A new Cobb-based campaign has launched to help restaurants struggling with business loss because of COVID-19. Sterling Seacrest Partners, a Cobb risk management and insurance brokerage firm, is working with Atlanta businesses to “Take Out the Virus” (www.takeoutthevirusATL.com). Area businesses are pledging to support local restaurants, helping restaurant employees and their families.

Here is how it works, Sterling Seacrest Partners has pledged to pay for take-out orders purchased at area restaurants. The firm will give each of its 150 employees $50 for ordering take-out from a local restaurant. They will give employees $100 if the employee orders from a restaurant that is also a Sterling Seacrest client. 

“We thought this was a great concept because it aligned so closely with our core values to support our team members, our clients and our community,” says Garry Hill of Sterling Seacrest Partners. “We are fortunate to live in such an incredible city for food.  These restaurants are an integral part of the fabric of our community. As a firm, we felt like we needed to do something and not just at home and watch.”

Sterling Seacrest is challenging other Atlanta area businesses to support area restaurants by sponsoring a night of ordering in to help Take Out the Virus. 

Several businesses have already signed up, including Benedetti Gucer & Associates, a wealth management firm, Piedmont Pediatrics, and Leff & Associates Public Relations.

For Piedmont Pediatrics, the doctors wanted to support their people who have been working straight through the pandemic crisis and to support the restaurant community around the hospital.

Related Content

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Fred Tokars dies in prison; convicted of plotting wife’s 1992 murder

The convicted mastermind of a notorious murder case in East Cobb nearly three decades ago has died in prison, according to a published report.Fred Tokars dies

Fred Tokars, an attorney convicted of conspiring to kill his wife, Sara Tokars in 1992, died in a federal prison in Pennsylvania last week, according to a story published Wednesday at Law.com.

The report said the cause of death was not specified, and said Tokars’ attorney had been told his client had developed a fever and had been hospitalized.

In 1997, Tokars was convicted of plotting to kill his wife and was sentenced to life without parole for that and other crimes. According to trial testimony, Tokars planned the murder because she had become aware of her husband’s business dealings that involved laundering drug money and racketeering.

Sara Tokars was 39 years old on Nov. 29, 1992, when she and her sons, then ages 4 and 6, returned to their home in the Kings Cove neighborhood after visiting her relatives in Florida.

Before they could enter the house, a gunman forced his way into their vehicle and kidnapped the Tokars family, ordering Sara Tokars to drive out onto a residential street. After she pulled over, she was shot in the head, her boys witnessing in the back seat.

The killing was initially investigated a possible robbery gone wrong.

Curtis Rower, the gunman, and Eddie Lawrence, a real estate developer who had done some business with Tokars, later were indicted for the murder and identified Tokars as orchestrating the scheme to have her killed.

Because of pretrial publicity, Tokars’ murder trial was moved to LaFayette, Ga. A former prosector, he was an acclaimed defense attorney in the metro Atlanta area, and frequently appeared in television commercials advertising his services.

The murder gained nationwide attention and tabloid fare, and was the subject of an episode of the cable program “City Confidential” entitled “Devil Down in Georgia,” which aired in 2002 and was narrated by the late actor Paul Winfield.

During the trial, testimony was revealed that Sara Tokars was seeking a divorce and had information that would have incriminated him on money-laundering activities. In 1994, Tokars was sentenced to life without parole after being convicted on federal racketeering charges.

Rower was later convicted and got life without parole, and after a mistrial, Lawrence pleaded guilty to his role in the killing and served 12 years for testifying against Rower and Tokars.

In more recent years, Tokars had been placed in witness-protection inside the federal prison system and had been diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.

R. Robin McDonald, who wrote the story of Tokars’ death for Law.com, covered his murder trial for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and wrote a book about the case, “Secrets Never Lie,” that was published in 1998.

In her story Wednesday, McDonald said Sara Tokars’ sisters issued a statement saying Fred Tokars “should have died in the electric chair 28 years ago.”

While in prison, Tokars helped federal authorities solve six murders, according to his attorney.

The Tokars sons were raised by Sara Tokars’ family in Florida. Last month, Michael Tokars, an aspiring writer who had gone through health and other issues, died of a pulmonary embolism at the age of 31. He was four years old when his mother was killed.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Cobb school board candidate spotlight: Tammy Andress, Post 5

Tammy Andress, Cobb school board candidate

Tammy Andress, a longtime PTA leader in the Lassiter High School cluster, said she has thought about running for public office for a long time.

The current co-chair of the Lassiter PTSA also has held leadership positions at her daughters’ previous schools—including Davis Elementary School and Mabry Middle School.

Andress is one of two Democrats vying for the Post 5 seat on the Cobb Board of Education in the June 9 primary. Three Republicans are running, including incumbent David Banks.

She said she’s running now to address what she sees as one of the biggest challenges facing the Cobb County School District—meeting the individual needs of each student.

“There are many disparities in how those resources are distributed,” said Andress, a marketing specialist for the Zaxby’s Sandy Plains location who has two daughters who attend Lassiter.

Her oldest daughter, a Lassiter graduate, currently attends American University in Washington, D.C.

Andress also serves on the executive board of the East Cobb County Council for PTAs.

(Here’s Andress’ campaign website.)

Another major challenge, one that’s arisen since she announced her campaign, is how to address the loss of learning in the Cobb school district, which has been closed since mid-March due to COVID-19.

Since then, district officials have issued academic guidance regarding “distance learning” that calls for pass/fail grades being reported in grades K-8, and allows students to accept grades as of March 13 as final.

Andress doesn’t think much of those measures.

“The learning stopped,” she said. “Now you’re going to have some foundational learning that’s going to have to be done again next year.

“A lot of kids just stopped. There’s no incentive to learn from pass/fail.”

Those concerns dovetail into what Andress sees even in an area with plenty of wealth.

“We are very fortunate to be in Post 5,” Andress said of the district that includes the Lassiter and Pope clusters and has been represented for three terms by Banks.

“People come here for the schools, but some right next to us are struggling.”

Cobb BOE Post 5

The equity she’s referring to is resources for students with unique learning needs, especially in special education and those from different cultural and language backgrounds.

“We as a country need to do better for those students who are not in general education,” she said.

That’s part of her larger platform of increasing transparency in the district and empowering stakeholders, especially parents of children with those learning challenges.

One of her priorities would be to push for a Chief Resource Officer to provide more equitable distribution of funds across the district, which has an enrollment of 112,000 students.

It’s similar to what two current Democrats on the board—including Charisse Davis of the Walton and Wheeler clusters—have proposed, in calling for an equity officer.

Andress’ other priorities include providing dedicated teacher planning time and creating a College and Career Academy in East Cobb. She also would like to see more “social-emotional” counselors for students, especially below the high school level.

Although she’s a Democrat—she calls herself a moderate—Andress said she’s been disappointed with some of the partisan wrangling on the board in the last couple years. She said it’s caused “tension that has created a barrier to improving education. The bickering is getting in the way of the work that needs to be done.”

Andress said she would take a non-partisan approach, and thinks the board’s Republican majority did a disservice by eliminating board member comments during public meetings last year.

Another issue that has flared up on the board is over the Cobb schools’ senior tax exemption. Davis had called for a study to examine possible ways to close loopholes, but that request was rejected by the four Republicans on the school board.

Andress said she was shocked that was voted down.

“These are issues that should be explored and that information should be put out to the public,” she said. “What’s wrong with more information?”

Andess said she doesn’t favor completely eliminating the exemption—that would require action from the legislature. But she says it’s not right that seniors 65 and older can move into the county now, even in very expensive homes, lured by the exemption.

“There should be something that you should have to pay,” she said.

The bigger concern, she said, is that she thinks Cobb schools don’t get equitable state funding under the current Quality Basic Education formula.

Andress said it’s hard to tell how exactly how much of a financial hit the Cobb school district will take because of the Coronavirus, both in terms of the operating budget that gets half of its funding from the state and SPLOST projects funded by a county sales tax.

She has advocated for more teachers and smaller class sizes and the need for the Cobb school district to better accommodate what she calls “the invisible child.”

But “we’re going to have a new normal now,” she said.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Cobb school board continuing with virtual meetings Thursday

Cobb school board virtual meetings
The Cobb school board began online meetings in March, shortly after schools were closed.

For the third month in a row the Cobb Board of Education will be meeting virtually on Thursday, holding its work session and regular voting meeting online.

In between is an executive session that won’t be available to the public. The meetings begin with the work session at 10 a.m.

Unlike previous meetings that were conducted in person at the Cobb County School District offices, there isn’t a set time for the business meeting to begin. It will start immediately following the executive session, so viewers will have to stay tuned.

The public meetings can be seen on the district’s website or its YouTube page.

An agenda for the meetings can be seen here.

Also unlike in-person meetings, there is not a public comment period that’s typical at the start of school board meetings.

The Cobb Board of Commissioners has switched to online meetings and retaining its practice of allowing public comment. Callers phone in a half-hour before the meetings starts, and there have been some technical issues.

The Cobb school board began meeting online shortly after CCSD schools were closed in mid-March due to the COVID-19 outbreak. Also appearing on the call are district officials, including Superintendent Chris Ragsdale, and school board attorney Clem Doyle.

At Thursday’s work session, the board will hear a presentation by the Development Authority of Cobb County and Home Depot, which is seeking a tax abatement.

School board member David Morgan is proposing changes to the board’s current chair and vice chair policy. It’s an issue that came up at the start of the year, when Morgan’s fellow Democrats protested how officers were selected by the board’s four-Republican majority.

Also up for discussion are construction projects that are subject to action at the voting meeting. One of them is the closure of existing buildings and their demolition at the Cobb Horizon School near Smyrna. That campus is moving to a location at Cobb Parkway and Terrell Mill Road.

The other is related, the construction of a new school, Pearson Middle School, on the current Cobb Horizon site. That school will help alleviate overcrowding at Campbell Middle School.

Also on the board’s voting agenda is a resolution to award a contract to perform HVAC upgrades at Addison Elementary School in East Cobb.

May is also the month the school board typically adopts the next fiscal year budget, which starts on July 1. But it can’t do that until the legislature finishes its current session that was suspended in March.

The General Assembly is tentatively scheduled to resume June 11. The Cobb school district gets nearly half of its $1.1 billion budget from state funding, which has not been finalized.

Related content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

4 more East Cobb students earn National Merit Scholarships

Last month the National Merit Scholarship Corporation began announcing scholarship winners for the spring, with four East Cobb students named recipients. East Cobb National Merit Scholarship Program

On Wednesday, four more high school seniors from East Cobb were named recipients of $2.500 scholarships as Merit Scholar designees, scholarships that are financed by the NMSC.

The students are:

  • Morris I. Wan, Wheeler: Probable career field: Computer Science;
  • Ann-Marie A. Abunyewa, Wheeler: Probable career field: Classics and Biochemistry
  • Viviana Elizabeth Lu, Walton: Probable career field: Classics
  • Joseph P. Kramer, Lassiter: Probable career field: Biochemistry

They were, according to a release from the NMSC, among “the Finalists in each state judged to have the strongest combination of accomplishments, skills, and potential for success in rigorous college studies. The number of winners named in each state is proportional to the state’s percentage of the nation’s graduating high school seniors,” according to the NMSC.

“They were selected by a committee of college admissions officers and high school counselors, who appraised a substantial amount of information submitted by both the Finalists and their high schools: the academic record, including difficulty level of subjects studied and grades earned; scores from the Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test (PSAT/NMSQT®); contributions and leadership in school and community activities; an essay written by the Finalist; and a recommendation written by a high school official.”

The National Merit Scholarship Corporation will announce more winners in May and June and expects to award 7,600 students an estimated $30 million in scholarships.

Related content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

 

 

 

Kemp lifts more business restrictions, allows summer day camps

Kemp lifts more business restrictions

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp on Tuesday issued a revised executive order that lifts restrictions on some businesses, keeps others closed and allowed still others to open, including summer day camps.

In a press conference at the state capitol, Kemp said that bars and nightclubs and live music venues, which have been shuttered since he declared a public health emergency in mid-March, will stay closed through May 31.

(You can read his executive order here.)

That’s because there’s still a ban on public gatherings with 10 or more people anywhere in Georgia. Kemp acknowledged that the continued shutdowns for some businesses is posing a greater hardship, and the state is making progress in limiting the spread of COVID-19.

But there’s still a long way to go.

“We believe waiting a little bit longer will enhance help outcomes while helping businesses prepare for safe reopening in the near future,” Kemp said in prepared remarks.

As of 7 p.m. Tuesday, the Georgia Department of Public Health is reporting 34,848 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Georgia, with 1,494 deaths, 6,227 hospitalizations and 1,479 intensive-care admissions.

Cobb County has 2,253 confirmed cases, 124 deaths, and 542 hospitalizations.

A statewide shelter-in-place order for medically fragile people and those over the age of 65 also remains in effect through June 12, when the state public health emergency is set to expire.

Restaurants, whose dining rooms have been allowed to reopen over the last two weeks, will be allowed to seat 10 patrons per 300 square feet, and the limit on the size of a dining party has been raised from six to 10.

Child care centers also can accommodate more youths as the summer months approach. Kemp’s order raises the limit on the number of children in a child care classroom from 10 to 20.

And while summer day camps will be allowed to operate, no overnight summer camps will be permitted.

Those summer day camps will have to meet a list of 32 requirements before they can open (those begin on page 23 of the executive order).

Kemp said that the state on Tuesday got from the federal government its first shipment of remdevisir, a potential COVID-19 drug that’s been used in some clinical trials.

He said Georgia DPH is developing a protocol on how to distribute the total of 30 cases of remdevisir (with 40 vials per case). Dr. Kathleen Toomey, the director of Georgia DPH, said she’s putting together a team, and that the top priority will be hospitals that have been hardest hit by the virus.

Georgia has ramped up testing for the virus, with 262,179 tested thus far. Kemp said that’s 2.74 percent of Georgia’s population. Testing is now available to all Georgians, who should contact their local public health department to make an appointment.

In Cobb County, citizens can get tested through Cobb and Douglas Public Health or go to Kennesaw State University, where the Georgia National Guard is contucting tests.

“We still have to continue to move the needle on tests,” he said in response to a question from a reporter.

One of the testing focuses is on residents of nursing, senior and long-term care homes, where 49 percent of Georgia’s COVID-19 deaths have taken place.

The Georgia National Guard has conducted testing in those facilities, with 46 percent of residents there having been tested, and 24 percent of staff.

Georgia DPH has hired 250 out of an anticipated 1,000 people to conduct contact tracing of those exposed to the virus, another key measure to stop the spread of the virus.

Toomey said contact tracing is taking place for every new case, something that has been happening.

What is new, she said, is tracking with an app prepared by Augusta Health that individuals can update themselves, and enables anyone to get a virtual screening for free at any time.

She also urged Georgians to continue to practice social distancing and to wear masks in public when they cannot keep six feet apart from others.

“This isn’t over,” Toomey said. “We’ve got to continue to follow the guidelines.”

Related Content

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Cobb non-profits to get $1M in funding for food distribution

Cobb non-profits food funding

The Cobb Board of Commissioners will be using some of its federal stimulus funding to reimburse county non-profits that have been providing emergency food to those in need.

By a 4-1 vote, the board on Tuesday approved a request made by the Cobb Community Foundation, which represents a number of agencies that have been distributing food in the wake of the COVID-19 crisis.

The request was delayed last month after community leaders, including pastors and business organizations, said food shortages were severe since the outbreak in mid-March.

On Tuesday, Commissioners met and voted in a teleconference meeting with a public comment period that included speakers both for and against the measure, which would reimburse organizations that have been providing food back to April 1.

Mitch Rhoden, a former Cobb Chamber of Commerce president, supported the request, saying this was an extraordinary time.

Lance Lamberton of the Cobb Taxpayers Association was among those who disagreed, saying it’s not the purpose of government, and that elected officials shouldn’t be deciding which non-profits get funded and which don’t.

Commissioner Keli Gambrill, who expressed concerns about how to determine those needing food, voted against the memorandum of understanding, which will be administered by W. Frank Newton Inc., a consulting firm hired by the county to oversee how it spends the $132 million in CARES Act stimulus funding.

“We keep hearing a lot about non-profits,” East Cobb commissioner Bob Ott said. “This is about food and there are things in the memorandum of understanding that dictate it has to be about food.”

Commissioner Lisa Cupid had asked for the reimbursement period to go back to mid-March, but she couldn’t get a colleague to support her.

Commissioner JoAnn Birrell of Northeast Cobb said that “we’ve seen the community step up . . .. the need for food has probably tripled. I am in support of this.”

A measure that would have authorized temporary hazard pay for some county employees during the COVID-19 crisis was pulled from Tuesday’s meeting agenda.

Randy Crider, Cobb public safety director
Randy Crider

Some “essential” workers would have been eligible for an extra $500 a month between April 6 through June 12, when the current Georgia public health emergency is due to expire.

But the amount of money being sought has not been specified.

Also on Tuesday, commissioners voted 5-0 to confirm the appointment of Randy Crider as Cobb Public Safety Director.

Crider has been the interim director since August 2019 after Mike Register suddenly retired after six months on the job, citing family reasons.

Crider, who has 38 years as a firefighter and administrator, has been Cobb’s fire chief since 2014. His appointment is effective immediately.

Related Content

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

East Cobb, Northeast Cobb YMCA branches scheduled to reopen

East Cobb YMCA

Submitted information:

The YMCA of Metro Atlanta today announced seven locations will reopen with limited amenities on May 15 as the organization begins a phased approach to opening Atlanta-area locations. Additional Y branches will open May 25 and June 1, respectively.

Phase one will closely follow protocols set forth by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and Georgia Department of Public Health, including regular temperature checks, designating entry and exit points, cleaning and disinfecting of surfaces and shared spaces, social and physical distancing, spacing of fitness equipment, wearing of masks and controlling traffic patterns inside the facility. Additionally, all activities will be limited to individual workouts with trained staff positioned to monitor and enforce social distancing.

For Y branches opening May 15, only the wellness space will be available. Starting May 18, lap swim, group exercise and select tennis facilities will be available by online reservation.

“The health and safety or our Y members, staff and community remains our top priority,” said Lauren Koontz, YMCA of Metro Atlanta president and CEO. “The way we will interact with each other will be different, but what will not change is our members’ ability to connect with others while improving their wellness.”

As operations normalize, the Y will pivot to phase two in mid-June, which includes re-opening additional areas within Y facilities for broader use. Further progression will continue through additional phases in July and August which will reflect services and activities similar to YMCA operations pre-COVID-19.

A full list of locations and opening dates can be found below. In a few instances, some Y branches may open for youth programming prior to a branch opening for member services.

May 15

  • Carl E. Sanders YMCA – 1160 Moores Mill Rd NW, Atlanta, GA 30327
  • Northwest Family YMCA – 1700 Dennis Kemp Lane, Kennesaw, Georgia 30152
  • East Lake Family YMCA – 275 E Lake Blvd SE, Atlanta, GA 30317
  • Northeast Cobb Family YMCA – 3010 Johnson Ferry Rd, Marietta, GA 30062
  • Robert D. Fowler Family YMCA – 5600 W Jones Bridge Rd, Peachtree Corners, GA 30092
  • Summit Family\Fayette Outdoor YMCA – 1765 GA-34, Newnan, GA 30265
  • Covington Family YMCA – 2140 Newton Dr NE, Covington, GA 30014

May 25

  • Cowart Family YMCA  – 3692 Ashford Dunwoody Rd, Atlanta, GA 30319
  • Ed Isakson/ Alpharetta Family YMCA – 3655 Preston Ridge Rd, Alpharetta, GA 30005
  • The Villages at Carver Family YMCA – 1600 Pryor Rd SW, Atlanta, GA 30315
  • J.M. Tull-Gwinnett Family YMCA – 2985 Sugarloaf Pkwy, Lawrenceville, GA 30045
  • McCleskey-East Cobb Family YMCA – 1055 E Piedmont Rd, Marietta, GA 30062
  • Arthur M. Blank Youth YMCA – 555 Luckie St NW, Atlanta, GA 30313

June 1

  • Forsyth County Family YMCA – 6050 Y St, Cumming, GA 30040
  • Andrew & Walter Young Family YMCA – 2220 Campbellton Rd SW, Atlanta, GA 30311
  • South DeKalb Family YMCA – 2565 Snapfinger Rd, Decatur, GA 30034
  • Wade Walker Park Family YMCA – 5605 Rockbridge Rd SW, Stone Mountain, GA 30088
  • G. Cecil Pruett Community Center Family YMCA/ Cherokee Outdoor YMCA – 151 Waleska St, Canton, GA 30114
  • Decatur Family YMCA – 1100 Clairemont Ave, Decatur, GA 30030

For more information, please visit https://ymcaatlanta.org/.

Related Content

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Kincaid ES student granted Make-A-Wish to stay connected

Kincaid student Make-A-Wish

From Make-A-Wish Georgia comes word that a student at Kincaid Elementary School in East Cobb has been granted his special wish during these days of social distancing.

Brandon Long is 11 years old and since he was three has been living with chronic pancreatitis, an inflammation of the pancreas that gets worse over time.

According to Amy Alvarez, vice president of marketing and communications at Make-A-Wish Georgia and who provided the information and photos, Brandon has already missed a lot of school due to his illness.Kincaid student Make-A-Wish

Classroom instruction was closed in March due to COVID-19, and Brandon’s wish was for virtual communications tools that kids and adults alike are turning to these days.

Last week Make-A-Wish Georgia wish granters presented Brandon with an iPhone 11 and iPad, a wish he says “will help him stay connected to community and feel less lonely while he works hard to stay healthy.”

He also received a special visit from his grandparents and an uncle whom he had not seen since the pandemic began (photo below).

“While the world has been disrupted, this new normal of isolation is something that Brandon is sadly all too familiar with,” said Jennifer, Brandon’s mom. “But then Make-A-Wish Georgia reminded us that isolation doesn’t mean that we can’t still have connection.”

“These unprecedented times have given Make-A-Wish Georgia an opportunity to reimagine the way we bring wishes to life for local wish kids,” Alvarez said. “In times of fear and isolation, we are here to bring hope and joy.”

Kincaid student Make-A-Wish

Send Us Your News!

If you have Coronavirus-related event changes, business openings or closings to share with the public, e-mail us: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

Contact us at the same e-mail address for news about efforts to assist those in need, health care workers, first responders and others on the frontlines of combatting Coronavirus in East Cobb.

Related Content

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Chick-fil-A Sprayberry supports public safety officers

Chick-fil-A Sprayberry supports public safety officers

Information and photos from Krista Scott of the Chick-fil-A Sprayberry:

“Our restaurant recently provided nearly 50 boxed lunches to first responders in our local police precinct and firefighter stations. To date, we have donated hundreds of meals collectively to Wellstar Urgent Care Center staff, local Publix stores, and the Heritage Hospice center. This week we plan to take meals to the Marietta 911 Call Center.

“It is truly our pleasure serving our community during this time.”

Send Us Your News!

If you have Coronavirus-related event changes, business openings or closings to share with the public, e-mail us: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

Contact us at the same e-mail address for news about efforts to assist those in need, health care workers, first responders and others on the frontlines of combatting Coronavirus in East Cobb.

Related Content

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

East Cobb Park reopens on a beautiful spring day

East Cobb Park reopens
After being closed for seven weeks, East Cobb Park reopened Monday to gorgeous weather.

At mid-afternoon there were a handful of people walking—and running with—their dogs, riding bicycles, tossing frisbees and just enjoying some elbow room.

While Cobb County opened outdoor parks (including Mabry Park), playgrounds and restrooms remain closed for the time being, no organized athletic activities are allowed and events and group gatherings, including picnics, have been called off.

Aquatic centers and arts centers, including The Art Place-Mountain View, also remain closed.

The weather will be nice the rest of this week, with partly sunny skies and temperatures reaching the 70s Tuesday and Wednesday and the 80s by the end of the week.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Cobb DA appointed to prosecute Brunswick murder case

Cobb District Attorney Joyette Holmes has accepted an appointment by Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr to take over the prosecution of a father and son charged with the murder of a Brunswick man in February.

Cobb District Attorney Joyette Holmes

The shooting death of Ahmaud Arbery, a black man jogging in a neighborhood near Brunswick, has galvanized nationwide attention since video of the incident was made public.

In a release issued by the DA’s office Monday, Holmes said that “the call to serve will not be taken lightly.”

Last week the Georgia Bureau of Investigation charged Gregory McMichael and his son, Travis McMichael with aggravated assault and murder.

The GBI, headed by former Cobb DA Vic Reynolds, took over the investigation after the Glynn County prosecutor recused herself because Gregory McMichael worked as an investigator in that office.

“Our office will immediately gather all materials related to the investigation thus far and continue to seek additional information to move this case forward,” Holmes said in a statement issued by her office. “We appreciate the confidence that Attorney General Carr has in our office’s ability to bring to light the justice that this case deserves.”

The release said her office has been given investigative files by the GBI, as well as “all facts and circumstances” stemming from the Feb. 23 shooting. All of that information “will be reviewed and all appropriate charges under Georgia law will be presented to a Glynn County Grand Jury for indictment,” the Cobb DA’s office statement said.

According to the video of the incident, Arbery, 25, was jogging in a neighborhood in Satilla Shores, outside of Brunswick, when two white men confronted and blocked him on the street. The video—taken by another man, a neighbor of the McMichaels who was trailing Arbery in a vehicle—then shows Arbery being shot.

No charges were brought by local law enforcement and no arrests were made, even after the video surfaced in late April. The GBI was asked to get involved last week, and on Thursday the McMichaels were arrested.

A Glynn County commissioner is alleging that Glynn DA Jackie Johnson stopped police from arresting the McMichaels, but the prosecutor denies those claims.

Holmes, a former Cobb Chief Magistrate judge, was appointed Cobb District Attorney by Gov. Brian Kemp in July 2019, after Reynolds resigned to become GBI director.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

First-ever Taste of Takeout East Cobb designated for May 23

Since the Taste of East Cobb was cancelled this month due to COVID-19, organizers of the food festival have been busy with an alternative they announced on Monday.

They’re calling it the Taste of Takeout East Cobb, and on Saturday, May 23, during the Memorial Day weekend, they want you to order takeout from local restaurants to help them get back on their feet. From the announcement:

“This effort is our way of showing our love for the many local restaurants and businesses who have supported #TOEC over the years…and long into the future.

Here’s David Wilson, the Taste of East Cobb 2020 co-chair:

We know that our East Cobb restaurants and businesses are hurting as a result of the COVID19 pandemic. Ordering a takeout meal for the Saturday of Memorial Day weekend is an easy way to help your neighbor and show how much you appreciate the businesses that have helped make East Cobb what it is today.” 

The other co-chair, Amy Davies, says the new name is a temporary one, in light of the special circumstances of the time.

Dealing with the pandemic doesnt have to mean eating the same boring homecooked meals over and over again. This is a great time to order something new and try an East Cobb restaurant or shop you may not have visited before.” 

Any restaurant or business seeking a mention from the Taste of East Cobb can contact either Wilson or Davies at tasteofeastcobb@gmail.com

The organizers have started doing those promos on their social media feeds already, including sponsors of the cancelled festival.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

East Cobb business update: GreenWise Market opening June 17

GreenWise Market Sandy Plains MarketPlace

Over the weekend the owners of Sandy Plains Marketplace announced that the Publix GreenWise Market does now have an opening date:

It’s June 17, and Orkin and Associates also noted in a social media posting that other shops and restaurants will soon be “filling the few vacant spaces that are left.” The message didn’t indicate any specifics.

The GreenWise organic foods and products store will be the first for Publix in Georgia, and it was to have opened in April.

But those plans were put on hold in the wake of COVID-19, and those businesses that had been open went into limited operations.

Among those is a newly opened Clean Juice store, which announced last week it’s fully opening on May 19.

We’re working to get more details on some of those businesses that had been planning March openings, including the First Watch breakfast-lunch eatery. It’s part of a national chain and most of its outlets were temporarily closed on April 13.

Related content

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Police shoot man who allegedly attacked East Cobb Publix employee, officer

East Cobb Publix, Alabama Road Publix

UPDATED 5:20 P.M., SUNDAY

The GBI identified the suspect as Jeffery Thomas Moore, 22, of Woodstock.

According to a release the agency issued late Sunday afternoon, after the attack on a Publix employee, Moore was found by Cobb Police officers hiding in a yard at a residence on Bedell Road, near the supermarket shopping center.

Officers attempted to take him into custody using a taser after he resisted arrest, according to the GBI, which said that Moore was then shot by an officer.

The GBI said Moore got away from police and was apprehended in a heavily wooded area. The officer who was attacked has been released from the hospital.

Morris was previously taken to Wellstar Kennestone and later was booked into the Cobb County Adult Detention Center on a felony charge of willful obstruction of a police officer and two misdemeanor charges each of simple assault and simple battery.

He was being detained on $5,000 bail.

The GBI said once its investigation is complete it will turn over its findings to the Cobb County District Attorney’s Office.

ORIGINAL REPORT

Cobb Police said an officer shot a man they said was physically attacking employees of an East Cobb Publix store as they arrived for work Sunday morning.

In a release issued by Sgt. Wayne Delk, Cobb Police Public Information Officer, police were called to the scene at the Publix at 4750 Alabama Road around 7 a.m. Sunday. By the time officers arrived, according to Delk, the man had left the scene, but additional calls came from around the area of someone attacking people in nearby parking lots.

Police said officers located the suspect and he attacked them, injuring an officer. The man then fled on foot as they pursued him into a residential neighborhood, according to police.

Delk said there was a second confrontation between officers and the man in the neighbornood, during which an officer shot the man. However, according to police, the man was able to get away.

Delk said that following a search between officers from Cobb Police Precincts 4 and 1, Roswell Police, the Georgia State Patrol and the Cherokee Sheriff’s Office, the suspect was taken into custody and sent to Wellstar Kennestone Hospital, where he was treated with a non-life-threatening gunshot wound below the waist.

Delk also said the officer who was attacked also was taken to Kennestone for a leg injury.

The suspect was not identified.

The area is near the Cobb-Fulton line, and close to the City of Roswell and the Sandy Plains Village shopping center, between Sandy Plains Road and Mabry Road in Northeast Cobb.

Because this is a officer-involved shooting, Cobb Police are not releasing further details. The case will be investigated by the Georgia Department of Investigation, according to Delk.

The GBI has not yet sent out any further information.

This story will be updated.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!