Cobb fiscal year 2021 budget proposal to be presented July 13

The Cobb Board of Commissioners will hold three required public hearings in July on the proposed fiscal year 2021 budget and millage rate.

Mike Boyce

The board will be presented the proposed budget at a work session on July 13, to be followed by the first public hearing the following day at a regular meeting.

Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce has said he will not be seeking a property tax rate increase from the current fiscal year 2020 general fund levy of 8.46 mills.

He’s advocating additional funding to continue implementing a step-and-grade salary structure for police officers, firefighters and other public safety personnel that got underway earlier this year.

That was before COVID-19 and expected drop in tax revenues due to a battered economy from business closures and job losses.

Boyce has said in the wake of those developments he would not be seeking merit increases for county employees, who got an across-the-board four-percent raise in the adopted FY 2020 budget of $475 million.

Here’s the full budget and millage rate public hearing schedule, and keep in mind there are three separate hearings each for the budget and millage rate:

  • Monday, July 13, 1:30 p.m.—Recommended FY 2021 budget presented to commissioners at work session
  • Tuesday, July 14, 9 a.m.—First public hearing
  • Tuesday, July 21, 6:30 p.m.—Second public hearing
  • Tuesday, July 28, 7 p.m.—Third public hearing and board adoption.

More Cobb budget information can be found here.

 

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Cobb small business relief grant application deadline is June 26

Time’s running out for small businesses impacted by COVID-19 to apply for federal relief grants administered by SelectCobb, the economic development arm of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce.Cobb small business grants

The deadline is this Friday, June 26, at 5 p.m., and you’re eligible if you are a Cobb-based business with 100 employees or less. Home-based businesses also are eligible.

A total of $50 million in grant funding comes through the federal CARES Act and was approved by the Cobb Board of Commissioners. Money can be used for payroll and other business expenses. A short video on the program can be seen here.

Here’s more from the county on how the grant program breaks down:

  • One to ten employees: up to $20,000
  • 11 to 50 employees: up to $30,000
  • 51 to 100 employees: up to $40,000

For information on this grant, qualifications, how to apply, documents needed and more, visit selectcobb.com/grants.

An independent panel appointed by Select Cobb will review all applications, and priority will not be given to Cobb Chamber members.

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Lassiter PTSA, Sprayberry Community Group holding food drives

A couple of organizations in Northeast Cobb communities are continuing efforts to help feed families in need during the summer.

The Lassiter PTSA food pantry is holding its next food distribution day next Friday, June 26, and organizers are saying you can provide a monetary donation as well as food items.

Organizers say around 60 families in the Lassiter community (including its feeder schools, Davis ES, Garrison Mill ES, Rocky Mount ES, Mabry MS, and our neighbors Tritt ES, Shallowford Falls ES and Pope HS) rely on the pantry to meet family food needs every week.

More information is available by e-mailing lassiterptsa@gmail.com. You can also use this link while out shopping if you want to contribute items.

The Sprayberry Community Group is collecting and distributing food every week to anyone who needs it, and details are at the flyer below.

If you want to drop off food, come by the Piedmont Church (570 Piedmont Road) Tuesdays between 3-7 p.m. If you need food, come to the same location Wednesdays from 4-6 p.m.

The group provides regular updates on its needs and activities on its Facebook page.

Sprayberry Community Group Summer Food Drive

 

 

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Tommy Nobis Center accepting bids for July silent auction

From Angela Christian, Project Manager and Board Coordinator of the Tommy Nobis Center, comes the information below about the non-profit’s annual silent auction, which is coming up July 10-17.

The event will raise money for the Northeast Cobb-based center’s work providing job training and other services for people with disabilities.

You can place your bids for the auction now and get related information at TommyNobisCenter.org.

Tommy Nobis Center silent auction

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Cobb Commission District 2 Republican primary goes to runoff

Fitz Johnson, Cobb Commission candidate
Fitz Johnson

More than a week after the primary elections, the two candidates who’ll be moving on in the Aug. 11 Republican runoff for District 2 on the Cobb Board of Commissioners have been certified.

The Cobb Board of Registration and Elections on Friday certified that Fitz Johnson of Vinings and Andy Smith of East Cobb emerged as the top two finishers in a three-candidate race that was separated by fewer than 1,000 votes.

The board certified all of Cobb’s primary results on Friday, after a delayed process that included counting a record 107,000 absentee ballots.

According to the certified tabulations, Johnson received 6,656 votes, or 36.2 percent of the ballots cast.

Smith got 5,946 votes, or 32.2 percent. Kevin Nicholas, also of East Cobb, received 5,770 votes, or 31.4 percent. They were running to succeed retiring commissioner Bob Ott, with the GOP winner facing Jerica Richardson, the only Democratic candidate, in November.

Voting figures reported on the June 9 primary election day were very close, and remained that way as the absentee voting updates were added.

Andy Smith, Cobb commission candidate
Andy Smith

“Yes, it was very close, and maybe that’s the way it should be,” said Smith, a former member of the Cobb Planning Commission. “There were three very good candidates and I think District 2 would be well represented by any of them.”

Johnson, a first-time candidate for county office who previously ran for state school superintendent, won 24 of the 39 precincts in District 2, which includes most of East Cobb and some of the Smyrna-Vinings-Cumberland area.

He won 11 precincts in East Cobb, mostly by very slender margins (click here for a hover map with precinct totals).

“I’m not from East Cobb, and so we had to make sure we really got out in East Cobb a lot,” Johnson said.

Cobb BOC District 2 GOP primary precinct map
To view individual precinct results click here. Johnson won precincts in blue, Smith in light green and Nicholas in turquoise. There was a tie in the Dickerson 1 precinct, shaded in beige.

Nicholas, a member of the Development Authority of Cobb County and a candidate for the Cobb County Board of Education in 2014, also was running for the commission for the first time.

After East Cobb News requested comment from Nicholas, he e-mailed a statement saying that “I am proud of the grass roots campaign we ran, representing our neighbors—not special interests, and a huge thank you to the thousands of voters who supported me.”

Johnson and Smith said they will keep stressing issues they heard a lot from voters, especially public safety, during the runoff campaign.

They both said they’re eager to do more in-person campaigning, as more restrictions on public gatherings in Georgia have been lifted.

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The Art Place, most Cobb government offices reopen

The Art Place

The Art Place-Mountain View is among the Cobb government facilities have have reopened to the public.

Opening hours are 9 a.m. 6 p.m. Monday-Friday, and has an FAQ at Artplacemarietta.org with more details about classes and other activities:

“All the art centers in Cobb County are working to quickly produce a hybrid of virtual and in person classes. Additionally, we are working hard to create new digital content to keep the public informed and educated about the arts.

“Please note—facilities will operate with limited public access which is dependent upon occupancy, based on recommendations from the CDC. Screening processes are in place to enter the facilities.”

Cobb government has been working under “Limited Operational Services” since March and last weekend that status changed, as county employees who had been teleworking returned to their offices.

Among the exceptions are libraries (seven branches will be reopening on a limited basis July 6) and senior centers.

County courthouses are open with some court business being conducted, but restrictions are in place due to a statewide judicial state of emergency  and open and some court business is underway. However, the statewide Judicial State of Emergency order in effect through July 12 keeps many restrictions in place.

Also, starting Monday, you can reserve pavilions at selected park facilities that will be available starting July 1. All parties must follow social distancing practices and may have no more than 50 people.

The online form to apply can be found here; large event venues, including the Jim Miller Event Center, the Mable House Barnes Amphitheatre and Cobb Civic Center are still closed until further notice.

More details at the Cobb COVID-19 page.

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Cobb libraries reopening July 6 include 3 East Cobb branches

Sewell Mill Library opens
Cobb library patrons won’t be able to sit down or stay for long when seven branches reopen July 6. (ECN file)

The seven library branches that began curbside service earlier this month will be reopening their doors in early July, but you won’t be able to spend much time inside.

The East Cobb, Mountain View and Sewell Mill branches are among those reopening to patrons on July 6, the Cobb County Public Library System announced Thursday.

The other branches are North Cobb, West Cobb, South Cobb and Vinings. The main Switzer branch in Marietta has been closed for renovations.

The hours will be limited and so will the things you’ll be able to do.

The branches that are reopening will be open only during weekdays for now: Mondays 10-8 p.m., and Tuesdays-Fridays 10-6 p.m.:

“Under this reopening phase, library patrons are asked to limit visits to browsing, completing library account transactions like checking out items, picking up available reserved materials, and renewing or signing up for a Cobb library card. A limited number of public computers will be available for reservation.

“Casual visits of more than a few minutes to the libraries and sitting down will not be possible under the health and safety guidelines for maintaining social distancing for reducing the community spread of COVID-19. Study and community meeting rooms will remain closed to the public.”

Library staff will be wearing masks and patrons will be “encouraged” to do the same at the libraries, as well as practice social distancing and hygiene.

No tentative plans have been announced for reopening other branches or expanding hours or services.

For information on the library system visit www.cobbcat.org or call 770-528-2320.

 

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Updated 6.18.20: Mapping Cobb COVID-19 cases by ZIP Code

Cobb COVID ZIP Code Map

Last Saturday, we posted with an update showing 650 positive tests (cumulative) in the five ZIP codes in East Cobb.

As of Wednesday afternoon, that number had grown to 696, according to figures posted by Cobb and Douglas Public Health.

Here’s a link to a hover map (screenshot above) that tracks the number of cases by each ZIP Code and contains related data.

Two ZIP Codes in East Cobb have more than 200 positive cases each. The biggest number of cases continue to be in ZIP Codes in Marietta and South Cobb. The figures do not break down the number of hospitalizations or deaths by ZIP Code.

The figures below show the number of cases in East Cobb, with Wednesday’s figures next to the ZIP Code, and last Friday’s totals in parenthesis:

  • 30067: 205 (192)
  • 30062: 203 (180)
  • 30066: 156 (150)
  • 30068: 116 (113)
  • 30075: 16 (15)

The totals are compiled by the Georgia Department of Public Health, State Electronic Notifiable Disease Surveillance System (SENDSS) but do not include the number of deaths by ZIP Code.

As of Thursday afternoon, Cobb County has 3,751 confirmed cases of COVID-19 overall, 224 total deaths and 790 hospitalizations.

Only Fulton County (301) has more deaths than Cobb. Gwinnett has the most cases in the state, with 5,753, followed by Fulton (5,325) and DeKalb (4,541), then Cobb.

Those figures are according to the Georgia Department of Public Health, which updates figures daily at 3 p.m.

The number of positive viral tests in Georgia now stands at 60,912 for an infection rate of 8.4 percent for viral tests. A total of 2,605 Georgians have died due to COVID-19. The Cobb infection rate is 5.3 percent.

Cobb Confirmed cases over time 6.18.20

The state data also breaks down cases and deaths by race, sex and ethnicity, and indicates whether those who’ve died also had comorbidities (other health issues).

The vast majority of COVID-19 deaths in Georgia have been people who are 60 and older:  1,050 are 80 and older, 696 are from ages 70-79 and 490 deaths have been between ages 60-69.

A total of 178 of Cobb’s 224 deaths have been people ages 70 and older: 31 for ages 90 and older, 72 for ages 80-89 and 74 for ages 70-79. Another 22 people in Cobb have died between the ages of 60-69.

The highest number of cases is taking place among younger populations, especially as the rate of testing has increased. A total of 10,702 cases in Georgia are between the ages of 18-29, 10,359 between 50-59, 10,170 between 40-49 and 9,746 between 40-49.

The respective number of deaths in those groups are 11, 217, 96 and 44.

In Cobb County, the age group with the most cases is ages 50-59, with 608 cases. There have been 593 cases for ages 40-49, 581 cases for ages 30-39 and 512 cases for ages 20-29.

Cobb Cases by Age 6.18.20

For more data from Cobb and Douglas Public Health, click here.

Cobb government has a COVID-19 dashboard using data from the Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering.

There’s also a new independent tracker of Georgia DPH virus data that’s collected at covid-georgia.com and contains analysis, including the trends noted above with newer cases occurring among younger populations, and noting more asymptomatic cases.

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Pope hires volleyball coach with 3 state championships

Pope High School has has hired Dr. Jeff White, who won three state championships at Northview High School in North Fulton, as its new head volleyball coach.Dr. Jeff White, Pope volleyball coach

White had been head coach at Jackson County High School in Jefferson, Ga., for the last two seasons, after leaving the high school ranks for college coaching jobs.

His Northview teams won Georgia High School Association state championships in 2005, 2007 and 2008. He also coached Chattahoochee to a Final Four and state runner-up appearance before that.

White’s wife Stephanie is a Pope High School graduate and he will also be teaching mathematics.

He succeeds Shawn Darling, who resigned after three seasons that included the 2018 state championship, the fourth in Pope history.

In 2019 the Greyhounds reached the Class 6A state semifinals.

More on White can be found by clicking here.

 

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Lassiter graduate honored for thesis at Naval Postgraduate School

Lauren O'Malley, Lassiter graduate

Submitted information and photo:

The Naval Postgraduate School’s (NPS) Operations Research (OR) Department offers M.S. and Ph.D. degrees. Located in Monterey, California, it is one of the oldest, largest, and highest ranking OR departments in the world. It is without peer in terms of the extent to which graduate education is integrated with a commitment to solving real military problems. The NPS Military Operations Research Society selected four graduate students as finalists for the top thesis award. The students presented theses examining a variety of research topics, including machine learning, surface ship maintenance and active shooter scenarios, to a panel of judges for the Military Operations Research Society (MORS) Stephen A. Tisdale Thesis Award, held May 21, 2020. 

Following the detailed presentations and deliberations, the judges awarded Ensign Lauren O’Malley (parents Brian and Shelley O’Malley and graduate of Lassiter High School (2015), Marietta, GA and United States Naval Academy (2019), Annapolis, MD) with the MORS/Tisdale Award and asserted that her research represented the most immediate or near-term value to the defense of the United States and its allies. In her thesis entitled, “Level Loading Surface Ship Maintenance Availabilities,” Ensign O’Malley developed a mixed integer linear programming model to produce an optimal surface ship maintenance schedule to provide private shipyards with a more sustainable and predictable workload, which in turn reduces the risk of maintenance backlogs for the Navy. Ensign O’Malley’s timely research promises to be applied immediately to real-world applications in order to improve current maintenance planning. Her research strives to advance the state-of-the-art surface ship maintenance, extending previous research conducted by NPS graduates Lieutenant Commander Adam Hilliard (2019) and Vice Admiral Richard Brown (1992).

“We’re all very proud of Lauren and the work she has done while at NPS; winning the MORS/Tisdale Award is always a great accomplishment, and she was in very strong company,” stated Dr. Matt Carlyle, Operations Research Department Chair. O’Malley joins a lengthy roster of students earning the esteemed award dating back to the 1970s. “The MORS Tisdale competition is a time where we, as a department, get to celebrate the excellent work that our students do,” said Carlyle. “Anytime anyone asks me about examples of the work we do here, I have a long list of examples that I can show to anyone who’s interested about the fantastic, relevant work that we do in this department.”

O’Malley presented her Award Winning Thesis to Vice Admiral Richard A. Brown, Commander, Naval Surface Forces/Commander, Naval Surface Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet. O’Malley next reports to her ship home ported in San Diego, the Destroyer USS John Finn, where she will receive her designation as a Naval Surface Warfare Officer. From there, Lauren will attend the Navy’s Nuclear Power School in Charleston, SC, studying Nuclear Engineering which will ultimately lead her to being responsible for the operations of the nuclear propulsion system on an U.S. Navy Aircraft Carrier.

The MORS/Tisdale Award is named in honor of Lieutenant Commander Stephen A. Tisdale, who graduated from the Naval Post Graduate school in 1989 with two master’s degrees: an M.S. in Operations Research and an M.S. in Space Systems Operations. His outstanding and influential thesis, “Assessing Optimal Utilization of Potential Anti-Satellite Architectures,” won the MORS prize. The MORS prize was renamed in honor of this outstanding officer-scholar after his tragic death in the collision of two P-3 Orions conducting a submarine tracking exercise at low altitude off the California coast on 21 March 1991. 

 

 

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East Cobb Rotary partners with YMCA in hunger relief effort

East Cobb Rotary YMCA hunger relief

Submitted information and photo:

The East Cobb Rotary and The YMCAs of East Cobb both stand out as leaders in the hunger relief efforts of our community. The Cobb YMCA facilities have always been about growing a stronger community through feeding programs year round, but with the help of the prompt, proactive East Cobb Rotary’s partnership, The Y began distributing much-needed meals to food-insecure households from school age children to seniors. Since the beginning of the health crisis, the East Cobb Ys have been responding in new and unique ways because of the unwavering support of the East Cobb Rotary.

This impactful donation of $15,000 has been vital to sustaining The Ys operations to deliver hunger relief programs serving over 1150 families each week. Before the official start of the school’s out summer break, The East Cobb Ys had already served more meals than we served all of last year. Unprecedented needs in our community, were met with unprecedented generosity from the East Cobb Rotary members. The ability to expand our already robust summer feeding program throughout Cobb County at this urgent time allows us to provide emergency relief, and the ability to provide ongoing help through one of the busiest time – the summer months.

 

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Petitions demand name changes for Walton, Wheeler high schools

East Cobb school lockdowns

Online petitions have been circulating in recent days demanding that the Cobb County School District change the names of Walton High School and Wheeler High School in East Cobb because of their namesakes.

The petitions, created at change.org, say that the names should be changed because of the racism of George Walton and Joseph Wheeler.

Walton was one of Georgia’s signatories to the Declaration of Independence and Wheeler was a Confederate general in the Civil War.

The Walton petition was created Monday by Joseph Fisher, who identified himself as a Walton student, and is titled “Rename Walton High School, Break the Cycle of White Supremacy.”

Despite George Walton’s historical significance, the petition states that:

“No one ever talks about how George Walton was a white supremacist, belonged to a slave owning family, and spent his political career championing white supremacy in Georgia by stripping Native Americans time and time again of their land. For a school well known on the national stage, it is sickening that they choose to carry themselves using a man who represents one thing: continuing white supremacy in the American South.”

Fisher said as a Walton student:

“Every day that I am on campus I feel hate and oppression from the student body and the administration. I am constantly gaslighted and singled out for my experiences as a person of color, made fun of or the subject of jokes based on the color of my skin. This year, Walton made the news when a white student followed a black student around the school making whipping noises on their cell phone. I couldn’t even say I was surprised, just because that behavior is so normalized at Walton. I wouldn’t wish that mistreatment on anyone, and I certainly won’t stand for it in my community.”

His petition had 500 signatures as of Tuesday evening.

Georgia Department of Education data last updated on March 5 indicated that Walton, which opened in 1974, had 155 black students out of an enrollment of 2,616.

Wheeler graduation rate, East Cobb graduation rates

The Wheeler petition was created over the weekend by “Wildcats for Change,” and those individuals also have started a private Facebook group.

They identify themselves as “lifelong members of Wildcat Nation” but contend it’s “past time” to remove Wheeler’s name from the school:

“Students do not deserve to attend a school whose namesake celebrates a Confederate history and one that was named for a hateful purpose: to hurt and shame Black youth that were, by court order, integrated into our county’s white school system. It does not go unnoticed that the school was named after the passing of Brown v Board of Education, in which the Supreme Court of the United States unanimously ruled that racial segregation of children in public schools was unconstitutional. It does not go unnoticed that the school was named after the state of Georgia finally began to adhere to the ruling, seven years after it passed. It does not go unnoticed that the Cobb County School Board finally voted to desegregate in 1965—the same year they named Joseph Wheeler High School.”

The Wheeler petition—which referenced the deaths of black citizens George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery in recent weeks, sparking nationwide protests—has more than 2,100 signatures.

Wheeler, which opened in 1965, has a black student body of 811 out of a total enrollment of 2,159 as of March 5.

Cobb Board of Education member Charisse Davis, who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters, said in an interview with The Marietta Daily Journal that she’s heard from some people who wanted to change Wheeler’s name.

“I think that this is just a start in Cobb as these conversations happen all around the country, including among military leaders, who are calling for bases to be renamed,” she was quoted as saying in the MDJ‘s “Around Town” political fodder column to be published Wednesday.

Davis said in response to a request for comment from East Cobb News that “I support community members feeling empowered enough to organize around an issue.”

When asked if she supported the name changes and if so would she propose resolutions, Davis said: “With everything I know about our board majority and district leadership, I do not see this formally being debated anytime soon.”

UPDATED: After this story was published Davis signed the Wheeler petition.

George Walton, who lived from 1749-1804 and served in the Revolutionary War as a colonel in the Georgia Militia, also was twice a Georgia governor and served as a U.S. Senator.

George Walton Academy, a private school in Monroe, Ga., also is named after him.

Joseph Wheeler lived from 1836-1906, grew up in Georgia and Connecticut and was a graduate of the U.S. Military Academy. He was a cavalry officer for the Confederacy, commanding at campaigns in Shiloh, Chickamauga, Chattanooga and Atlanta and against the Union army’s March to the Sea under Gen. William Sherman.

After the war, Wheeler was readmitted to the U.S. Army, represented Alabama in Congress, and served with Theodore Roosevelt’s Rough Riders during the Spanish-American War.

He is one of the few Confederate veterans buried at Arlington National Cemetery. A bronze statue of Wheeler is one of 11 honoring Confederate military leaders at the U.S. Capitol.

It’s recently become a subject of efforts to be removed by Congressional Democrats.

Neither of the petitions offer suggestions for new names for Walton and Wheeler.

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Tokyo Valentino sign goes up at vacant East Cobb store

Tokyo Valentino East Cobb

A Tokyo Valentino sign has gone up over the doors of what had been a Mattress Firm store at 1290 Johnson Ferry Road in East Cobb.

But there’s nothing in public documents that indicates a change of business from what had been applied for and is listed in Cobb County new business filings and state business formation documents as a clothing store.

East Cobb News first reported on May 25 that Michael S. Morrison, owner of the Atlanta-based Tokyo Valentino adult store chain, was named in Georgia Secretary of State’s records as the organizer and authorizer of a new business at that address to be called 1290 Clothing Co., LLC.

That’s the same name of a general retail store that was granted a new business license by the Cobb Community Development Agency on March 13.

Initially Morrison denied he knew anything about 1290 Clothing Co., saying he had a Tokyo Valentino store in Marietta.

But he later said he wasn’t sure what was going to go in the Johnson Ferry space, which would be his first venture in East Cobb.

East Cobb News has left a message with Morrison seeking comment about the Tokyo Valentino sign in East Cobb.

The five Tokyo Valentino stores and another store owned by Morrison called Stardust in Brookhaven sell a variety of adult books, DVDs, sex toys, adult lingerie and “smoking accessories.”

The Sandy Springs Tokyo Valentino store opened last December, also in a former Mattress Firm store. Initial filings indicated it would be for dancers’ clothes, but it opened as Tokyo Valentino. After a dispute with the city, he added non-adult items to meet code requirements.

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A permit was also required for renovation from what had been the Mattress Firm in East Cobb. County building records showed an application was filed on May 14 by Pembroke Real Estate Partners, LLC, in Miami.

That’s the new owner of the building at 1290 Johnson Ferry Road. Pembroke’s principal is Frank Koretsky, a Miami-based entrepreneur who has holdings in adult lingerie and sex toy businesses.

According to Cobb tax records and previously reported by East Cobb News, Pembroke purchased the 0.53 acres and building at 1290 Johnson Ferry Road on Feb. 4 for $1.5 million.

Cobb building permit records show an inspection was completed on May 29 at 1290 Johnson Ferry Road, and that a certificate of occupancy was issued last Thursday, June 11.

There’s no mention in those records of a business named Tokyo Valentino, only 1290 Clothing Co.

There’s also no indication of a name change with the Georgia Secretary of State’s Office, where business incorporation papers are filed.

Businesses that have previously received licenses in Cobb County and want to change their names can do so for a $10 fee.

As of Friday, the last day new business licenses and business name changes were publicly listed, there was nothing to indicate a change at 1290 Johnson Ferry Road.

Commissioner Bob Ott has said that because of a general commercial zoning classification that goes back to the 1970s, there’s nothing the county can do about an adult store moving in at that location—as long as there are no code violations.

Ott told East Cobb News Tuesday evening that’s still the case, but that “I have staff looking into what options the county may have moving forward.”

Nearby citizens have spoken out at a commissioners’ meeting and organized an online petition against an adult store in East Cobb.

One of those citizens, Lisa Sims, said she had  seen the Tokyo Valentino sign and wasn’t surprised but was “very disappointed.”

Morrison has battled local governments for years over his stores, going back to the late 1990s, especially his original store on Cheshire Bridge Road in Atlanta.

Last year the City of Atlanta sought to shut down that store, which has video booths and private rooms. Morrison is legally challenging the city’s adult entertainment ordinance.

Last month, a DeKalb County judge ordered him jailed on contempt of court charges stemming from disputes with the City of Brookhaven over delinquent fees for the Stardust store.

 

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Cobb Commission District 2 Republican race still razor-thin

Cobb Commission District 2 race
From left, Fitz Johnson, Andy Smith, Kevin Nicholas

According to Cobb Elections on Tuesday morning, 9,500 absentee ballots still have to be counted from last week’s primary elections.

The process may have to be fully completed before it’s known who will be moving on to an Aug. 11 Republican runoff in the District 2 race for the Cobb Board of Commissioners.

The three GOP primary candidates are currently separated by 636 votes, and the top two finishers will continue to campaign.

As of 10 a.m. Tuesday, Vinings resident Fitz Johnson leads with 6,468 votes, or 36 percent. Former Cobb Planning Commission member Andy Smith has received 5,832 votes, or 32.5 percent, and Cobb Development Authority member Kevin Nicholas has 5,640 votes, or 31.4 percent.

They are vying to succeed Bob Ott, a Republican who is retiring after three terms.

(Track real-time updates here.)

Since we last tracked the results on Friday, Johnson had opened up a slightly bigger lead, and Smith separated himself a little bit more from Nicholas.

Cobb Elections staff worked into the weekend counting absentee ballots, and after Saturday still had 16,000 ballots to go. It’s not known how many of the uncounted ballots are Republican ballots cast by voters in District 2.

More than 106,000 absentee ballots were cast in the primary, a record in Cobb, and Democratic turnout has been higher overall.

Despite the close race in District 2, which is heavily Republican and includes most of East Cobb, a total of 17,940 votes have been cast for the three GOP candidates combined.

By contrast, Jerica Richardson, the only Democrat who qualified in the District 2 race, has 23,173 votes. She will face the Republican runoff winner in November.

Commissioner Lisa Cupid, the only Democrat running for Cobb Commission Chairman, got 87,555 votes. She will meet Republican incumbent Mike Boyce, who won the GOP primary wit 68 percent of the vote but received only 44,443 votes.

A total of 65,419 votes have been cast for the three GOP chairman candidates.

In Cobb Board of Education Post 5 results, Republican incumbent David Banks won a three-way primary with 6,943 votes. But his November Democratic opponent, first-time candidate Julia Hurtado, prevailed against one other foe and got 6,391 votes in a post that has been heavily GOP for years.

The Cobb Board of Elections and Registration, which certifies elections results, has postponed its scheduled meeting from Wednesday to Friday at 12 p.m. That meeting will be held online, and the public can watch by signing up here.

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Cobb school superintendent responds to anti-racism concerns

Cobb school superintendent honored

Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale has sent a note to Cobb County School District employees in response to requests by two school board members for anti-racism measures.

Last week board members Charisse Davis and Jaha Howard wrote to Ragsdale, urging him to undertake steps to address racial inequities in the district, including bias training for employees and “nontraditional solutions” to increase teacher diversity.

Ragsdale didn’t address those matters in his e-mailed note, but said that board member Randy Scamihorn is proposing an anti-racism resolution at the board’s June 25 meeting.

“Board member [David] Morgan has also placed an item on the agenda regarding ‘Moving Forward.’ I will be making a statement during the meeting as well,” Ragsdale said.

Davis and Howard have been pressing the district on equity issues for several months, but protests and other events in the aftermath of the death of George Floyd, a black man in Minneapolis in police custody, have triggered a new wave of efforts to prompt action by Cobb schools.

Cobb is Georgia’s second-largest school district, with nearly 114,000 students, a majority of them from minority groups. According to district data, 30 percent of all students are black, 22 percent are while and six percent are Asian.

“To say that we are hurting is very much an understatement,” Ragsdale wrote, “but it does convey that we all have a part to play in moving forward. Philonise Floyd, George Floyd’s brother, made a statement that said ‘You can do your job and still maintain respect for others.’

“We should all take that statement and live by it. As we all work together to move forward, we will continue to maintain and improve upon an environment free from hate of any type. We are very successful as a school district, because we work together as One Team. Let us be the example to others of how to come together and work together for a common goal.”

Some Cobb school parents have wanted Cobb schools to respond in a fashion similar to Marietta City Schools, which in late May issued a lengthy statement from Superintendent Grant Rivera. His “call to action” highlighted steps that district is taking to address diversity issues, including a cultural fluency project at Marietta High School.

A school board candidate from East Cobb has also weighed in on the matter.

Julia Hurtado, who won last week’s Democratic primary for Post 5, wrote to Ragsdale saying “this delayed response sends a message of apathy and indifference to those who have been demanding progress for some time.

“Why did our families have to wait over a month [since Floyd’s death] for CCSD leadership to commit to a mere conversation, let alone solutions?”

She urged that Ragsdale “take steps to address systemic racism that can be found in every school system, including ours.”

In November, Hurtado will be facing Republican incumbent David Banks, who has said the district has adequately handed racial concerns in the schools.

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Cobb to hold virtual open houses on 2022 SPLOST projects

Cobb 2022 SPLOST open houses
 
Following up the passage a couple weeks ago of the 2022 Cobb SPLOST project list that will be on the November ballot, the county is sending out word of two “virtual” open houses this week soliciting your feedback: 
 
“Learn more about what is included in the lists, the impact on the county’s budget if these projects are funded with SPLOST proceeds and ask your questions during two online open houses this week. 

To view more information on SPLOST Renewal projects, visit cobbcounty.org/communications/news/cobb-boc-approves-list-splost-projects.
 
6-8 p.m., Wednesday, June 17
Join us on the CobbTV networks for a SPLOST overview featuring Chairman Mike Boyce, Cobb commissioners and county department heads as they present items on the project list.

6-8 p.m., Thursday, June 18
Representatives from Cobb’s six cities will join us to discuss their needed infrastructure improvement plans and the impact on their budgets if their projects are funded with SPLOST proceeds. You will have a chance to have your questions answered by commenting online or sending your email questions to SPLOSTcomments@cobbcounty.org. You can watch live and join the discussion at cobbcounty.org/CobbTVfacebook.com/cobbcountygovernment or youtube.com/cobbcountygovt.
 
The county had scheduled town halls about the SPLOST this spring but they were cancelled due to COVID19. You can read through the full project list here.
 
 

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Georgia House passes MUST Ministries-inspired sandwich bill

State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick

Both houses of the Georgia legislature have easily approved a bill by an East Cobb lawmaker that would allow non-profit organizations to make sandwiches in church and similar kitchens as part of their efforts to feed those in need.

The House on Monday passed SB 345, the so-called “Save Our Sandwich Bill” by a 150-12 vote, after passing the Senate 53-0 in March, before the legislative session was shut down due to COVID-19.

The bill, sponsored by Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick, an East Cobb Republican, changed a provision in state law that allowed only sandwiches that had been prepared in certified, licensed kitchens.

Sponsored in the House by Rep. Bart Reeves of Marietta, the bill still prohibits the distribution of sandwiches made in private homes.

(You can read the bill here.)

The bill will be sent to Gov. Brian Kemp for his signature. The legislature, which returned to action Monday, still has to pass a state budget.

Last summer, right before its summer lunch program began, Cobb-based MUST Ministries was told by the Georgia Department of Public Health it could not distribute homemade sandwiches, even those that had been made for years in church kitchens, and by other civic organizations.

MUST scrambled to raise money to purchase sandwiches made in approved kitchens, and is doing the same this summer.

Since COVID-19 shut down schools in March, MUST has teamed up with the Cobb County School District to provide meals for students, and is continuing that program through the end of June.

MUST also is providing summer meal kits through July in East Cobb at Blackwell Elementary School (Mondays, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.) and Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church (Fridays, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.).

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Cobb DA’s Office marks World Elder Abuse Awareness Day

Cobb DA World Elder Abuse Awareness Day

Submitted information and photos:

Cobb District Attorney Joyette M. Holmes recognizes today as World Elder Abuse Awareness Day.

“Nearly 100,000 people over the age of 65 call Cobb home, according to Census estimates,” DA Holmes said. “Abuse, neglect and exploitation against this vibrant but vulnerable group cannot be tolerated.”

Holmes’ office partnered with liveSAFE Resources on “yarn storm” art installations in Marietta and Acworth to mark the day. Community members donated hundreds of crocheted and knitted squares for the project. The yarn storms are located at First United Methodist Church near the Marietta Square; around the Acworth Community Center in Logan Farm Park; and at Zion Hill Baptist Church in Acworth. Two photos are attached; see more on Facebook @cobbda. Please visit in person to see the installations and learn more about elder abuse. The Marietta installation will remain up all week.

Senior ADA Jason Marbutt chairs the Cobb Elder Abuse Task Force and regularly speaks to citizen groups on how to avoid falling prey to relentless scammers and others who seek to exploit elders. (See attached ‘Tips from the Chairman.’) Marbutt also specializes in prosecuting those who harm the elderly or disabled. Often, perpetrators are ‘friends’ of the victim, or even relatives.

Abuse, neglect and exploitation against people age 65 or older are felony crimes under Georgia law punishable by up to 20 years in prison.

“We hear lots of excuses or rationalizations as to why someone abuses, neglects or exploits an elderly person,” Marbutt said. “This is by no means an exhaustive list, but here are some common situations:

  • Using undue influence or coercing an elder person to give money or resources to another person IS ELDER EXPLOITATION.
  • Using a Power of Attorney to help yourself to an elder person’s money or assets without benefit to the elder IS ELDER EXPLOITATION.
  • Failing to provide health care as needed for an elder person IS ELDER NEGLECT.
  • Striking, pushing, and yelling at a senior citizen are all ELDER ABUSE.”

If someone you know is in immediate danger, call 911. Non-emergency reports can be made to Adult Protective Services at 866-552-4464 or online at aging.georgia.gov.

Additional resources:

liveSAFE Resources is a 501(c)3 that provides safety and healing to those impacted by domestic violence, sexual assault and elder abuse by offering services, creating awareness and fostering support within our community. Its 24-Hour Crisis Line is available to anyone needing help: 770-427-3390.  For more information, go to: www.livesaferesources.org

National Institute on Aging, www.nia.nih.gov.

Cobb DA World Elder Abuse Awareness Day

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Updated 6.13.20: Mapping Cobb COVID-19 cases by ZIP Code

Cobb COVID ZIP code map

Since there’s been a bit of a bump in COVID-19 cases in Georgia, we’re taking a second look this week at how that breaks down in Cobb County and East Cobb in particular.

On Monday, we posted with an update showing 608 positive tests (cumulative) in the five ZIP codes in East Cobb.

As of Friday afternoon, that number had grown to 650, according to figures posted by Cobb and Douglas Public Health.

Here’s a link to a hover map (screenshot above) that tracks the number of cases by each ZIP Code and contains related data.

The biggest jump in East Cobb took place in 30067, which had 174 cases at the start of the week, and now has a reported 192 cases. The biggest number in the county remains 30060, which has 430 positive cases, followed by 30127 (337) and 30008 (309).

The figures below show the number of cases in East Cobb, with Friday’s figures next to the ZIP Code, and Monday’s totals in parenthesis:

  • 30067: 192 (174)
  • 30062: 180 (172)
  • 30066: 150 (140)
  • 30068: 113 (109)
  • 30075: 15 (13)

The totals are compiled by the Georgia Department of Public Health, State Electronic Notifiable Disease Surveillance System (SENDSS) but do not include the number of deaths by ZIP Code.

Across Cobb County there have been 3,522 confirmed cases of COVID-19 overall, 215 total deaths and 752 hospitalizations.

Those are among the highest figures in the state for any county, according to the Georgia Department of Public Health, which updates figures daily at 3 p.m.

The rate of testing also has gone up significantly in Georgia, with 586,426 viral tests (to determine whether someone’s infected) and 110,825 antibody tests.

Georgia DPH had been combining them but now lists them separately.

The number of positive viral tests now stands at 50,251 for an infection rate of 8.6 percent. A total of 2,418 Georgians have died due to COVID-19. In Cobb County, the test positivity rate is 5.26 percent.

The state data also breaks down cases and deaths by race, sex and ethnicity.

For more data from Cobb and Douglas Public Health, click here.

Cobb government has a COVID-19 dashboard using data from the Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering.

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East Cobb Election Update: 2020 primary results breakdown

Georgia runoff elections

While all results from Tuesday’s primary elections remain unofficial—and a few, like the District 2 Cobb Board of Commissioners Republican race—are still too close to call—we’re serving up here a breakdown how voters in the county, and in particular East Cobb, voted the way they did in a variety of local, state and federal elections.

Absentee ballot-counting is going on this weekend, and a controversy that’s sure to linger into the November general election centers on who’s to blame for the problems many voters had on Tuesday.

If you want to look through Cobb-specific results on one link, click here. Otherwise, what follows are the latest vote tallies, as of late Saturday morning, listing the top finishers in selected contested primaries.

Keep in mind that results won’t be certified until next Friday, and that runoffs will take place on Aug. 11 in races in which the leading vote-getter did not receive 50 percent plus one vote in the primary.

You can track updates in real-time by clicking the link for each race that includes precinct-by-precinct totals:

Cobb Commission Chairman (GOP)

  • Mike Boyce (incumbent): 40,671 (68.4%)

    Mike Boyce, Cobb Commission Chairman
    Mike Boyce
  • Larry Savage: 14,274 (24%)
  • Ricci Mason 4,515 (7.6%)
  • View full results

Cobb Commission District 2 (GOP)

  • Fitz Johnson: 5,715 (35.6%)
  • Andy Smith: 5,238 (32.6%)
  • Kevin Nicholas: 5,074 (3.166)
  • View full results

Cobb Board of Education Post 5 (GOP)

  • David Banks (incumbent): 6,383 (55%)
  • Shelley O’Malley: 2,802 (24%)
  • Matt Harper: 2,405 (20%)
  • View full results

Cobb Board of Education Post 5 (Democrat)

  • Julia Hurtado: 5,581 (58%)

    Julia Hurtado, Cobb school board candidate
    Julia Hurtado
  • Tammy Andress: 4,043 (42%)
  • View full results

U.S. Senate (Democrat)

6th District U.S. House (GOP)

Cobb Superior Court Judge (non-partisan)

  • Jason Marbutt: 51,682 (38.8%)
  • Greg Shenton: 43,696 (32.8%)
  • John Robert Greco: 37,856 (28.4%)
  • View full results

Cobb Superior Court Judge (non-partisan)

  • Kellie Hill: 87,246 (63%)

    Kellie Hill
    Kellie Hill
  • Daniele Johnson: 50.281 (36.8%)
  • View full results

Cobb Superior Court Judge (non-partisan)

  • Angela Brown: 83,335 (57%)
  • Reuben Green (incumbent): 62,396 (42.8%)

46th District Georgia House (Democrat)

Cobb Sheriff (Democrat)

  • Craig Owens: 41,350 (49%)
  • Greg Gilstrap: 22,554 (26.8%)
  • Jimmy Herndon: 20,185 (24%)
  • View full results

Cobb State Court Judge Post 6 (non-partisan)

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