East Cobb neighborhood vandalized with ‘multiple swastikas’

East Cobb swastika
Photos courtesy of Anti-Defamation League of Atlanta.

UPDATE: Temple Kol Emeth is holding an interfaith gathering Monday to kick off a community anti-bias training initiative.

Local Jewish leaders are planning a response to an act of vandalism over the weekend in an East Cobb neighborhood that included swastikas and other anti-Semitic graffiti being scrawled on fences.

Rabbi Larry Sernovitz of Temple Kol Emeth, one of three synagogues in East Cobb, said in a message to his congregation that several fences were spray-painted with “multiple swastikas.”

“The swastika has come to be known as a symbol of Nazism, white supremacy, and anti-semitism. This act and this symbol is not representative of the Cobb County that we know and love and has no place in our community,” he said.

The neighborhood is along Holly Springs Road in the vicinity of Post Oak Tritt Road. That’s near the former site of the Marcus Jewish Community Center’s Shirley Blumenthal Park, which is now the high school campus of Mt. Bethel Christian Academy.

East Cobb swastika

East Cobb swastika

Sernovitz also thanked Cobb Police “for their timely response to the incident. Additionally, we applaud the actions of the residents of this neighborhood for coming together as a community to take back their space and to clean and refresh their public fencing. Thirty members of this neighborhood, children and adults from many different faith backgrounds, worked together to erase the damage that had been done to their neighborhood on Sunday afternoon.”

Kol Emeth was to have held a community event Monday with the Anti-Defamation League of Atlanta, but scheduling conflicts have put that on hold.

“We look forward to working in concert with our interfaith community to combat hate in all of its forms,” Sernovitz said. “Over the coming days, we will be organizing opportunities for dialogue within our TKE community and in concert with our neighbors. As plans progress, we will keep you updated.”

Allison Padilla-Goodman vice president of the ADL’s Southern office in Atlanta, told East Cobb News “stay tuned for a future event!”

Sernovitz just began his tenure in July at Kol Emeth, succeeding longtime Rabbi Steven Lebow, who retired after 34 years.

East Cobb swastika

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Cobb continues ‘nice mask ask’ campaign in lieu of a mandate

Although Kroger is one of many businesses requiring East Cobb customers to wear masks, there isn’t a county government mandate to do so.

When Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce said last week he was asking county staff to review Gov. Brian Kemp’s latest order allowing local governments to pass mask mandates, he said he would be reluctant to impose one.

Not just because he thought it would be hard for public safety to enforce, he said, but also because he didn’t think he could get his colleagues to go along with it.

Boyce said a mask mandate would require public hearings and commissioners’ approval of a new ordinance.

Both of East Cobb’s commissioners said last week they don’t support that either.

JoAnn Birrell said in a response to a query from East Cobb News that “I concur with the governor’s order and the Chairman.”

Kemp’s order allows local governments to issue broad mandates if a county averaged more than 100 COVID-19 per 100,000 people over a 14-day period.

Cobb’s average as of Sunday for the previous two weeks was 313 cases per 100,000, as that number continues to trend down.

No Cobb mask mandate

That’s a metric that public health officials have said designates “high community spread” and it’s a key indicator Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale has said will guide a return to classroom instruction. He’s targeted getting that number under 200.

The Cobb GIS office has created a new map letting users gauge community spread data in the county and around the state. When you click on a county, it shows the cases per 100,000 over the previous 14 days, and has color coding to indicate the severity of the spread in a particular county.

Even if a local government issued a community mandate, Kemp’s order still requires the consent of property owners.

Commissioner Bob Ott of East Cobb also said of a broader mask requirement that “I don’t think it’s enforceable. It’s better to work with businesses and get them to do it.”

That sentiment is part of what Boyce has called a “nice ask mask” campaign that includes the use of billboards, as seen below, and social media messages, including photoshopped images above that include a mask on the Big Chicken.

Kemp’s order does allow local governments to impose mandates on public property, and Boyce said Cobb County Manager Jackie McMorris can issue a mask order for county buildings.

Birrell said whatever McMorris may come up with, “I support her decisions.”

Shortly after Kemp’s order, the city of Smyrna imposed a mask mandate. Sandy Springs and Roswell orders require masks only in city buildings.

Most Cobb commissioners have been urging public mask use in their public statements and e-mail newsletters, and they often wear them during their public meetings.

Like Boyce, Ott said he has noticed high levels of voluntary mask compliance when he’s out and about.

“We just can’t be thinking up laws that are unenforceable,” Ott said.

No Cobb mask mandate

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Global Zoom outage affects start of 2nd week of Cobb schools

It”s already been a manic Monday for Cobb school students, teachers and parents and many others globally.Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

Zoom, the video teleconferencing platform that’s become heavily relied-upon during the COVID-19 pandemic, has crashed around the world.

We got a text from a Cobb schools parent shortly after 8 a.m. saying the Cobb Teaching and Learning System, the district’s instructional portal, was down.

The district said around 9:30 a.m. that CTLS is operational, but that since 8:10 a.m., “Zoom has been experiencing a worldwide outage. The problem is being worked on, District staff is in direct contact with Zoom executives, and currently, there is no timetable for its return. We will update our community via social media and email as soon as the situation is resolved.”

Zoom is how student attendance is marked and virtual class participation is conducted. The parent who texted us said Microsoft Teams is being utilized as a backup. The district said that alternative had some issues and was down at times last week.

CTLS had some technical issues at times during the first week of all-online classes in Cobb last week.

The district also said to parents Monday morning that “your student’s workload is still accessible. Your teachers will be contacting you with more information shortly.”

Cobb schools has set up a technical support system for parents and teachers:

Parents can e-mail Parent.Support@cobbk12.org or call 770-426-3330 for assistance, while students can e-mail Student.Support@cobbk12.org.

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ARC holding webinar on Chattahoochee RiverLands proposal

Chattahoochee Riverlands Hyde Farm

We got a lot of reader interest about this post from a couple weeks ago about the proposed Chattahoochee RiverLands project, and here’s a follow-up to that:

On Tuesday, the Atlanta Regional Commission is having a webinar for the public to learn more, discuss and ask questions.

The RiverLands project envisions more than 100 connected miles of multi-use trails, from the Buford Dam near Lake Lanier to the Chattahoochee Bend State Park near Newnan.

A bridge connecting Hyde Farm in East Cobb to Morgan Falls Overlook Park in Sandy Springs is one of the additions that’s part of the

The webinar starts at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, is free and you can sign up by clicking here. The ARC’s Paul Donsky has more on the What’s Next Atl blog about the project.

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East Cobb parents frustrated with online start to school year

Cobb parents frustrated online start
The Cobb County School District acknowledged technology issues during the first week of all-online school, but stressed the many positive reports it said it got from teachers, parents and students. 

The technology glitches that came with starting a new school year all-online weren’t unexpected. The Cobb County School District rolled out a massive new platform on Monday’s first day that was difficult for some students, parents and teachers to access.

Many parents reported troubles logging in, or being unable to get audio and live chats and Zoom links, or were having issues with specific browsers and devices.

Others said they had few problems and commended the district, which reported 107,000 first-day logins (enrollment is 112,000) on the Cobb Teaching and Learning System.

Even those with problems praised their children’s teachers and principals, many of whom were pressed into computer troubleshooting duties.

Among them is a mother of two children at East Cobb schools, who reported that her kids’ classroom connections crashed on more than one occasion during the week.

The district acknowledged what it said on Thursday afternoon was “an intermittent, system-wide interruption to the CTLS platform” that lasted for roughly two-and-a-half hours.

That crash, the mother told East Cobb News, was an emotional breaking point for her.

“The teachers are trying so hard, but the technology is in and out,” said the mother, who did not want to be identified, nor where her children attend school.

She wanted to have her children attend schools in person before Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale in July switched to an all-online start, citing COVID-19 concerns.

Now, she’s concerned that the virtual start to the school year might last longer than just a few weeks, and that poses more than technology problems for her kids.

“Mentally, these kids need to connect with their friends, they need to connect with their teachers and with other people” in person, and not just online, she said.

She said her middle school student is not faring well outside of a school environment, and she’s spoken with several other parents, some of whom were breaking down because of what their children are having to navigate.

“They’re struggling to be online all day,” said the mother, who also was choking with emotion.

Another mother of East Cobb students, Amy Henry, has been outspoken and public against the all-virtual start, starting a parents group called “Let Parents Choose,” which held rallies in recent weekends, demanding what she calls a “common-sense plan” to return to classroom instruction.

She and her husband moved last year from DeKalb County, where their children were in private school, and chose East Cobb and the Walton High School district because of the public schools.

Henry and her husband both work and she said they cannot do so at home. When the all-virtual decision was made, they put their kindergartener and fourth-grader in private school. Their two older children are Walton students attending online classes at home and participating in football and volleyball.

Amy Henry, with four children in the Walton district, leads a parents group for in-person school that held a rally on the Marietta Square last weekend.

She said her high schoolers experienced some of the same technology problems but is more concerned about what it’s going to take to get schools open for students.

Ragsdale told the Cobb Board of Education Thursday that one of the key metrics he’s looking at is what public health officials call “high community spread.” Anything more than an average of 100 cases per 100,000 people over 14 days is considered high, and that figure in Cobb County now is in the 300s.

That’s why he’s reluctant to give a date for a phased reopening, although other school districts, such as Gwinnett County, which welcomes K-5 students back to classrooms next week, have been doing that.

Noting the low COVID-19 case rate for children under 20, Henry said other factors need to be considered.

“This virus is not a death sentence, not for everyone,” she said. “What in life is 100 percent safe? The damage we’re doing to kids [by not being in school] is immense. We’re creating a generation that’s fearful of the world.”

Henry and the unidentified mother said they support measures such as mask-wearing at schools, “but at some point we have to ask what kind of damage we’re doing to kids in the long run.”

Henry said she understands the difficult situation Ragsdale and other superintendents are in, and she doesn’t want schools to open and then have to shut down because of a virus outbreak, as has happened in some Cherokee and Paulding schools.

But Henry said the virus isn’t going away and “we cannot settle for virtual.”

In the meantime, she and other Cobb school parents will be getting some additional help. On Thursday, the Cobb school district set up a technical support system for parents and teachers:

Parents can e-mail Parent.Support@cobbk12.org or call 770-426-3330 for assistance, while students can e-mail Student.Support@cobbk12.org.

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Wheeler HS graduate creates petition to keep school name

Wheeler grad video
Once a nearly all-white school, Wheeler has one of the most diverse student bodies in the Cobb County School District, as exemplified by its Class of 2020.

After an online petition was started this summer to change the name of Wheeler High School, a graduate of the East Cobb school has started one of her own to keep the name as it is.

Connie Behensky, who attended Wheeler with her four siblings, recently started what she calls “Don’t let them take the name away of our beloved high school,” and it has generated more than 200 signatures.

“We have great memories of our friends and teachers and just the best years of my personal life. You have let them remove our statues you are not going to take this away from us,” she wrote in her introduction.”

Behensky’s effort comes two months after a group calling itself “Wildcats for Change” started a petition demanding that the Cobb County School District rename Wheeler.

The school on Holt Road is named after Joseph Wheeler, a former Confederate general who was readmitted to the U.S. Army after the Civil War and served in Congress. He is one of the few Confederate officers buried at Arlington National Cemetery.

The Wildcats for Change petition has more than 4,500 signatures, including that of Cobb Board of Education member Charisse Davis, who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters.

The group also has started a private Facebook group.

Those seeking to keep the Wheeler name discussed their memories on the new petition, including Mark M., who said he was part of the school’s first graduating class in 1967:

“Changing the name of the school will do nothing to change history. Leave it alone.”

Cathy M., a 1977 graduate:

“I am from the South. My parents are from the South. This is our heritage, Southern Heritage. Those who are demanding that anything southern (names, statues, locations, etc.) be changed and destroyed are bigots. Instead of standing strong against those that want to destroy the South, the politicians, stores, companies, professional sports organizations, manufactures and many more cave and bow down to these lunatics.”

Todd H.:

“The school was never about a singular person, of whom I never knew existed. It was about the memory of all the people who I went to school with. Don’t sully the memory.”

Leslie G., who graduated in 1969:

“Don’t punish us for what our ancestors did. People we never knew and whose views we don’t share. It was just Wheeler, my alma mater. I never even knew who he was until this ridiculous idea came up a few months ago. Please don’t invalidate the youth of so many of us.”

During a Cobb school board meeting Thursday, Davis said she had received correspondence from a descendant of Joseph Wheeler “who wanted me to know he had turned his life around.”

Her comments came during a discussion about creating a committee to examine school naming and renaming policies.

Board member David Morgan made the proposal after he noticed that there are no schools in the 112-school Cobb district that are named after minorities.

Morgan didn’t refer to Wheeler, or to a similar petition begun to change the name of Walton High School, but said he wanted to craft a policy to reflect the diversity of the Cobb school district.

According to the district’s own data, Cobb’s overall student body of nearly 112,000 students is 37 percent white, 30 percent black, 22 percent Hispanic and six percent Asian.

Wheeler was for many years a nearly all-white school, but is now one of the most diverse in the Cobb school district. Georgia Department of Education figures from March showed that Wheeler had 811 black students out of a total enrollment of 2,159.

Among the notable alumni of Wheeler is Georgia Supreme Court Chief Justice Harold Melton, who is African-American and graduated in 1984.

The school board voted 4-3 to create a 10-member naming/renaming committee, and Davis said she wanted to serve. The panel will have three school board members, and each person on the seven-member school board will appoint a citizen from their posts.

Board member David Chastain, a Wheeler graduate who represents the Kell and Sprayberry clusters, voted against, saying he liked Morgan’s suggestion of a possible policy change but said “I don’t think we need to form a committee. . . . We do need to make this part of our consciousness as we move forward.”

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Sewell Mill Library to reopen Monday after COVID-19 closure

After being closed since Aug. 7 after an employee was exposed to COVID-19, the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center will reopen on Monday beyond curbside service.

The Cobb County Public Library System made the announcement on Friday, and here are the details:

Sewell Mill will be open Mondays, 10 am to 8 pm; and Tuesdays through Fridays, 10 am to 6 pm. Curbside service pickup hours will return to Sewell Mill on Mondays from 11 am to 2 pm and 5 pm to 7 pm; and Tuesdays through Fridays from 11 am to 2 pm.

Cobb Library patrons are asked to schedule curbside appointments at the libraries offering the service at least one hour in advance on the same day of the planned appointment. A form for scheduling the curbside appointments and more details are available at www.cobbcat.org/libraryexpress.

For information on Cobb libraries, including open locations and libraries offering curbside service, visit www.cobbcat.org or call 770-528-2320.

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Cobb school board member blasted for ‘China virus’ reference

Cobb school board member China virus

Cobb Board of Education member David Banks is coming under fire for making a reference to COVID-19 as the “China virus” in his weekly e-mail newsletter.

Banks, a three-term Republican from East Cobb, sent out a newsletter on Tuesday listing recent retirees from the Cobb County School District, and led with this sentence:

“Since the China virus is still of concern, the CCSD Retiree ceremony was canceled this year. “

Not long after that, Julia Hurtado, a Democrat who is running against Banks in the Nov. 3 election, posted a message on a private Cobb schools Facebook page saying that “I am heartbroken for any of the Asian kids this man represents,” and encouraged anyone bothered by what he had written to go to her website.

Other social media messages have expressed similar sentiments, and East Cobb News heard from a constituent of Banks, parent Jonathan Chen, whose children attend school in Post 5, which includes the Lassiter and Pope clusters.

He said he’s lived in Post 5 since 2010 and hadn’t heard of Banks, and thought the reference was xenophobic.

“I feel it is critical that he be held accountable for his words, especially since he has been tasked with the education of our children,” Chen said.

Chen, a pulmonary doctor with the Wellstar Health System, said it’s not wise to name a virus or pathogen after the location where it was discovered because “has the effect of casting blame on the area as the source of disease which can lead to discrimination, isolation, and even violence.”

Chen said if such an outbreak were to have originated in Marietta, “fear now arises that all Marietta residents are infected so consequently, they are viewed with suspicion, fear, and even hatred by residents of surrounding communities.”

He added that “calling the SARS-coV2 virus the China virus blames China and Chinese people for the virus,” and that he refers to it as the Coronavirus.

East Cobb News has left a message with Banks seeking comment.

UPDATED:

At 9:15 a.m. Sunday, Banks e-mailed this reply to East Cobb News:

“I read your article.

“I received less than 100 negative emails concerning the ‘China virus’ and all but one came from Democrat voters. This is not a ‘blast.’  Several thousands would be a blast. These people are racists and you carried their water. Don’t be used to divide.”

ORIGINAL STORY CONTINUES:

During a Cobb school board work session Thursday, two of Banks’ colleagues referenced the incident without mentioning him by name.

The board was discussing an anti-racism resolution that ultimately failed in a 3-3 vote, with Banks voting present. He said that resolution was unnecessary and read language from district’s non-discrimination policy.

Board member Jaha Howard made a motion to amend the resolution to include an apology by any board member who had said anything racist or offensive. That amendment failed.

Charisse Davis, who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters, said before the vote that board colleagues have made slurs, and that “if we can’t condemn that as a board I don’t understand why we’re moving forward with this resolution.”

She and Howard were among the three black Democrats who voted against the resolution, saying it didn’t go far enough in condemning racism in the school district. Three votes in favor of the original resolution were the other white Republicans on the board.

It was the third time that the board attempted to come to a consensus on an anti-racism measure, following other local governments, including Cobb County, and metro Atlanta school districts.

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Johnson certified as Cobb commission GOP runoff winner

The Cobb Board of Elections and Registration has certified Fitz Johnson as the winner of the Republican runoff for District 2 of the Cobb Board of Commissioners.Fitz Johnson, Cobb commission candidate

Johnson is a Vinings resident who got 4,925 votes, while former Cobb Planning Commission member Andy Smith of East Cobb had 4,839 votes.

In a note to supporters after the certification, Johnson said he spoke with Smith and Kevin Nicholas, who finished third in the June 9 GOP primary, and “I look forward to working together with them to win in November.”

Johnson will face Democrat Jerica Richardson in the Nov. 3 general election, with the winner succeeding retiring Commissioner Bob Ott.

The November ballot for East Cobb voters is now set. Here’s a quick look ahead at other contested local, state and federal races, most of which were settled before the runoff.

Cobb Commission Chairman

  • Mike Boyce, (R), incumbent, vs. Lisa Cupid (D), current Commissioner from South Cobb

Cobb Board of Education, Post 5

  • David Banks, (R), incumbent, vs. Julia Hurtado (D)

Cobb District Attorney

  • Joyette Holmes (R), appointed incumbent, vs. Flynn Broady Jr. (D), special election

Cobb Sheriff

  • Neil Warren (R), incumbent, vs. Craig Owens (D)

Georgia State Senate, District 32

  • Kay Kirkpatrick (R), incumbent, vs. Christine Triebsch (D), a rematch from 2018

Georgia State House, District 37

  • Mary Frances Williams (D), incumbent, vs. Rose Wing (R)

Georgia State House, District 43

  • Sharon Cooper (R), incumbent, vs. Luisa Wakeman (D), a rematch from 2018

Georgia State House, District 44

  • Don Parsons (R), incumbent, vs. Connie DiCicco (D)

Georgia State House, District 45

  • Matt Dollar (R), incumbent, vs. Sara Tindall Ghazal (D)

Georgia State House, District 45

  • John Carson (R), incumbent, vs. Caroline Holko (D)

U.S. House of Representatives, Georgia 6th District

  • Lucy McBath (D), incumbent, vs. Karen Handel (R), a rematch from 2018

U.S. Senate

  • David Perdue (R), incumbent, vs. Jon Ossoff (D)

U.S. Senate Special Election

Sen. Kelly Loeffler, a Republican appointed in January, will compete in  “jungle” primary will take place with candidates from both major parties. If the leading vote-getter fails to win a majority, the top two finishers will meet in a runoff of Jan. 5, 2021. The winner will fill out the final two years of the term of former Sen. Johnny Isakson.

There are eight Democratic candidates and Loeffler is one of six Republican candidates. The primary field also includes candidates from the Green Party and the Libertarian Party, and four independents.

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Cobb school board buys land near Walton HS; adopts budget

Walton sports complex land

The Cobb Board of Education on Thursday voted to purchase nearly four acres of land close to Walton High School for $2.65 million, adjacent to newly acquired land for a new softball and tennis complex.

After an executive session, the board voted 6-1 in two separate motions by Post 6 member Charisse Davis, who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters.

The properties include 3.5 acres at 1483 Pine Road for $2 million, and 1.2 acres at 3753 Providence Road for $650,000 (indicated by the blue stars on the map above).

At last month’s meeting, district officials announced the board’s intent to acquire the new parcels.

Those parcels are located next to 15.2 acres on Pine Road that the district purchased in November for $3 million (red star), after threatening the property owner, Thelma McClure, with eminent domain.

There’s a sign fronting that property on Bill Murdock Road, and across from the Walton campus, that it’s to be the future home of Walton varsity tennis and softball teams.

Their old facility is where the new Walton classroom is located, and the teams have been playing home competitions since 2014 at Terrell Mill Park.

Walton softball parents had been considering legal options under Title IX, a federal law banning sex discrimination in education.

The board didn’t discuss the additional land purchases at Thursday’s meeting. The only member to vote against was Jaha Howard of the Campbell and Osborne clusters.

Funding for the property acquisition comes from Cobb Education SPLOST V revenues. So will construction costs, but those have not been determined and there isn’t a timetable for that project.

The school board also voted 7-0 for a fiscal year 2021 budget of $1.3 billion. It includes using $31 million in reserves to close a $62 million deficit following state budget cuts in the wake of the COVID-19 crisis.

The budget maintains an existing property tax rate of 18.9 mills, includes step salary increases and there are no pay cuts or furlough days for employees.

The budget was amended to add $15 million in spending for COVID-related expenses.

For full budget details, click here.

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Sprayberry Crossing developer seeks delay in rezoning request

Sprayberry Crossing rendering

The developer of a proposed mixed-use project at the Sprayberry Crossing shopping center is asking for a delay in a rezoning request for another month.

Kevin Moore, an attorney for Atlantic Residential, sent a letter on Wednesday to the Cobb Zoning Office asking for a continuance from the September calendar to October. Moore wrote that the delay “will allow additional time to continue working through concerns and questions expressed by area residents and homeowner representatives and present proposed agreeable stipulations.”

Continuance requests are generally granted by staff as long as they come at least a week before public hearings. The Cobb Planning Commission was scheduled to hear the Sprayberry Crossing case on Sept. 1.

Atlantic Residential wants to build 61,500 square feet of office and retail space (30,000 for a major grocer), 178 apartments, 122 senior-living apartments and 50 townhomes on more than 17 acres.

The developer also wants to build an open-air entertainment and food hall and incorporate walking trails and greenspace around an existing family cemetery.

The proposal is seeking a rezoning category called  redevelopment overlay district (ROD), for the first time since it became a category in 2006.

Earlier this month Cobb Commissioner JoAnn Birrell held a virtual town hall providing information about the zoning process and the Sprayberry Crossing details in particular.

She told East Cobb News on Thursday that “I’m receiving emails both for and against the proposal. Keeping a tally.”

Many residents have pushed for an overhaul of the long-blighted retail center that’s there now—the property has been on the county’s redevelopment list.

But others are concerned about apartments going up in a community of single-family homes and additional traffic in the Sandy Plains and Piedmont Road corridor.

The ROD designation would mean that any development contained within does not set a precedent for the area surrounding a property that may be zoned that way.

At least 10 percent of the housing units in an ROD must be set aside for residents making no more than 80 percent of an area’s average median income.

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Cobb superintendent not giving a date on classroom return

Cobb school superintendent honored

Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale said Thursday he does not have a specific timetable for the return to classroom learning for students in the Cobb County School District.

During a virtual Cobb Board of Education work session, he reiterated previous statements he’s made that public health metrics—and not political considerations—will determine when face-to-face instruction can begin taking place.

He was responding to questions from school board members, and said that while some of those COVID-19 indicators are declining, Cobb County still has too high of a community spread for schools to reopen safely to students and staff.

“I know people are asking for a date, and I am not going to give one,” Ragsdale said during the work session, which was being live-streamed via Zoom.

He said Cobb County’s COVID-19 case statistics and issues relating to contact tracing and efficient testing will be the key factors in a decision to let students return.

Cobb is the second-largest school district in Georgia with 112,000 students, and started in all-virtual format last week.

But he said Cobb is still in the “high community spread” category for the virus, averaging more than 300 confirmed cases per 100,000 people over the last two weeks.

While that figure has come down in recent weeks, public health officials have said that the threshold for high spread is 100 cases per 100,000. Ragsdale said his target for reopening would be in the 200 cases per 100,000 range.

Rasgdale cited figures from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that lists Georgia 5th nationwide among states with the most COVID-19 cases, now with more than 243,000.

That’s a distant fifth behind California, Florida, Texas and New York. Cobb’s cases per 100,000 figure is not among the highest in Georgia, but its total cases have surpassed 15,000 and the county has the second-highest death toll with 352, according to the Georgia Department of Public Health.

Georgia’s cases spiked in July, and 60 percent of Cobb’s cases were reported in that month.

Of Cobb’s confirmed cases, a total of 1,614 have occurred among people ages 20 and under. Those numbers also have gone up dramatically since the summer began. At the start of July, that age group had 282 reported cases. By the start of August, that figure had grown to 1,078 cases.

The number of daily COVID-19 cases in Cobb has declined since early July, but the county still is in the “high community spread” category. Source: Georgia DPH. For more data click here.

Ragsdale said the district is juggling several sets of guidance at the state and local levels, and on Wednesday got new guidance from Georgia DPH that had some good measures and others he said “go down the path of not being able to open schools.”

Chief among them as far as Cobb schools are concerned, he said, is social distancing in the classrooms, something he said isn’t going to be possible.

He didn’t mention the subject of masks, something the district was going to encourage but not require, before Cobb schools switched to an online-only start to the school year.

When asked by board member Randy Scamihorn when the numbers would be good enough, Ragsdale said, “That’s the most difficult part of this situation. Nobody knows.”

He said he doesn’t want Cobb to get in a situation of some other metro Atlanta school districts, which opened in person and then shut down in part or altogether due to a rash of COVID-19 cases.

Ragsdale said that while the district’s protocols “are greatly improved, it’s still not where it needs to be.”

He said there will be “huge question over Labor Day” and the district’s regularly scheduled fall break to see where virus case numbers and trends are heading.

“If we can avoid a spike and keep that trend going down, we’ll be in Phase 1 sooner rather than later,” Ragsdale said.

Once a decision to return is made, K-5 and special education students will be the first to be able to come back, followed two weeks later by middle school students. Another two-week break would take place before high school students would return.

Younger and special ed students would return first, Ragsdale said, to accommodate those parents who need to get back to work.

For the first time in six months, since the COVID-19 outbreak began, the school board heard public comments before the work session.

That public comment session was not shown on the district’s livestream feed, but board chairman Brad Wheeler indicated it was being recorded and would be shown later.

More than a dozen people signed up to speak on the issue of classroom return, and there have been two rallies in recent weeks from parents demanding face-to-face instruction.

“Our situation is not what everyone wants,” Ragsdale said, pledging that Cobb schools would reopen for classroom instruction “as soon as it’s as safe as possible.”

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Cobb fire and emergency crews rescue kitten from sewer drain

Barbara Desmond, a resident of the Horizon condominium community off Powers Ferry Road, was taking a walk last Thursday morning when she heard what she said was an “awful distressed sound” of a crying kitten “way down in a sewer drain!”

While others discovered the kitten and called for help, she said she stayed on the scene near the entrance to the Hudson Ridge apartments on Windy Ridge Parkway and Parkwood Circle.

Cobb Fire and Emergency Services crews from Stations 3 and 4, as well as Cobb Animal Services, arrived to conduct a rescue operation that turned out more than successful.

The small black kitten not only was extracted safely, one of its rescuers adopted “Figaro,” who was obviously terrified but got plenty of comfort from the crews and later from her.

Barbara provided the photos and shot and narrated the videos.

She reports that the crews had to gain access to both points of the drain, around 60 feet apart, and that crew members fitted with oxygen suits and tanks came in either direction, and said “OMG it was so intense.”

She said “Many ANGELS on the scene helped with this very dangerous rescue!”

Here’s more from Barbara: “When I said thank you to the firefighters so much for all that you did to save the kitty, they all looked at me and the Chief said ‘It is our job to rescue all life.’ ”

She later gave Figaro some love before the kitten was adopted, and said she is “so proud to live in Cobb and this amazing team of First Responders! I am forever touched by this kitty rescue and wanted to share!”

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Cobb school board member to discuss naming/renaming policy

A member of the Cobb Board of Education is asking for a discussion on the Cobb County School District’s policy of naming and renaming schools and its other facilities.

David Morgan, Cobb Board of Education
David Morgan

David Morgan, who represents the Pebblebrook and South Cobb clusters, is scheduled to present that matter at the school board’s work session Thursday morning.

The virtual meeting begins at 10 a.m. and you can watch here or on Channel 24 on Comcast Cable.

The agenda for the work session and other meetings on Thursday can be seen here.

Morgan’s agenda item is called “Facility Naming Policy and Renaming of Some Schools” but doesn’t go into any detail. East Cobb News has left messages for Morgan seeking comment.

His agenda item comes a couple months after online petitions were started demanding name changes for Walton and Wheeler high schools in East Cobb.

The Walton and Wheeler renaming petition creators have said the namesakes of the schools were white supremacists. George Walton, one of Georgia’s signatories to the Declaration of Independence, was a Revolutionary War veteran, governor and senator.

Joseph Wheeler, a Confederate general during the Civil War, was later readmitted to the U.S. Army, served in Congress and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery.

East Cobb News contacted Charisse Davis, who represents Post 6, which includes the Walton and Wheeler clusters. She said because of the lack of details in the agenda item, she’s “not sure what Mr. Morgan will bring up.”

She forwarded a link to the school district’s naming policy and said that “members of the community have expressed concerns about the names of schools in Post 6, but also elsewhere in the county.”

She signed the Wheeler petition but has not said if she supports a Walton name change. The Walton petition, started by a student named Joseph Fisher, has more than 3,000 signatures.

Those behind the Wheeler petition (which has nearly 4,500 signatures) noted that the school opened in 1965, just as the Cobb County School District was preparing for integration.

Also during the work session, the school board will discuss an anti-racism resolution for the third time, after previous attempts to reach a consensus have fallen through.

The school board will hold a public forum on the proposed fiscal year 2021 budget at 9:30 a.m. Thursday, and final adoption is scheduled during a voting meeting to follow the work session and an executive session.

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East Cobb Traffic Alert: Paper Mill Road reopens at Sope Creek Bridge

Paper Mill Road closed

This just in from Cobb County government:

Paper Mill Road is closed around the Sope Creek Bridge. A tree has fallen into power lines causing a fire.

AVOID Paper Mill Road between Shadowlawn and Woodland for the next few hours.

UPDATE: Paper Mill Road reopened shortly after 3 p.m.

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Cobb school board scheduled to adopt fiscal year 2021 budget

Cobb schools FY 2021 budget

A final public forum on the proposed $1.13 billion fiscal year 2021 budget and final adoption are on the docket for the Cobb Board of Education on Thursday.

The meetings will be held virtually, as they have been since the COVID-19 crisis began in March.

A virtual budget public forum will begin at 9:30 a.m. Thursday and you can watch by clicking here. There are instructions on that link for anyone who wishes to call in to comment and participate in the budget forum via Zoom.

The school board will hold a voting meeting after its 10 a.m. work session and an executive session. The agenda for the voting meeting includes an item for final budget adoption.

You can view the agendas for both public meetings on Thursday by clicking here. The board in July adopted a tentative budget, which is a formality before final adoption.

Although the Cobb County School District’s fiscal year began on July 1, a budget hasn’t been adopted due to delays in the legislature adopting the state budget. The Georgia General Assembly session was delayed because of COVID-19, and its final budget was passed in June.

Nearly half of Cobb County School District funding comes from the state, which is cutting that amount this year by $62 million.

To help close that gap, the district is proposing $31 million in reserve funds to help offset the state budget cuts. Cobb school funding under Georgia’s Quality Basic Education Act is expected to be $518 million.

The district’s proposed budget includes a step salary increase for all eligible staff members. (You can read through budget overview information here).

(More financials, including line-item details, can be found here in what’s called the budget popular report.)

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Cobb homeowners can apply for mortgage payment assistance

Submitted information from Cobb County government:Cobb County Government logo

“Homeowners who own a home in Cobb County and have been adversely affected by COVID-19, may apply for mortgage payment assistance up to $4,800 and/or homeownership counseling. They must have occupied the home prior to March 1, 2020 and currently occupy the home, and they must currently be delinquent on their mortgage payments.

The Cobb Home Saver program is designed to mitigate home losses and provide optional homeownership counseling. Both independent and government studies have shown that when engaged at the onset of a crisis, homeownership education and counseling reduce the odds of foreclosure by 42%.

The Cobb Board of Commissioners approved $4.8 million in emergency funding for the program. The funding comes from the $132 million allocated to the county in the federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act.For more information, including how to apply, click here: https://cobbhomesaver.org/

For those who are for-profit businesses, don’t forget that Round 2 of the Small Business Relief Grant is still open until August 21st at 5 p.m! See link for eligibility and application requirements: https://selectcobb.com/grants/

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Nine more COVID-19 deaths reported in Cobb; cases top 15,000

Cobb COVID cases deaths
A Cobb GIS map shows darker shades with more cases; the blue icons are school locations. To view details click here.

UPDATE: As of Saturday, Cobb had 15,861 cases and 368 deaths.

Nine more deaths from COVID-19 were reported in Cobb on Tuesday—three of them in East Cobb—as the overall number of confirmed cases of the virus in the county surpassed the 15,000 mark.

As of 3 p.m. Tuesday, the Georgia Department of Public Health daily update noted that Cobb County had 15,106 cases of COVID-19, the fourth-highest of any county in Georgia.

Cobb’s case count grew by 124, and the county now has reported 349 deaths—some of which date back to July—a figure that’s second to 477 fatalities in Fulton County.

Across Georgia, 2,873 more cases were reported, for 241,677 overall. Georgia also added 69 more deaths for 4,794, with the backlog dating back to July.

Cobb and Douglas Public Health has mapped out some of that data by ZIP Code that we’ve been updating in recent weeks, and you can view the latest details here. In East Cobb, those numbers as of Tuesday total 3,288 cases and 69 deaths:

  • 30062: 969 cases, 18 deaths;
  • 30067: 920 cases, 10 deaths;
  • 30066: 881 cases, 17 deaths;
  • 30068: 504 cases, 24 deaths;
  • 30075: 64 cases, 0 deaths.

As we noted in a story posted earlier today, more than 40 percent of those deaths have taken place in long-term care homes. The three new deaths reported from East Cobb today include two in ZIP Code 30066 and one in 30068, but none were in those facilities, according to figures posted by the Georgia Department of Community Health.

A key metric that local school officials are looking at in terms of preparing for a return to classroom learning is community spread. Georgia DPH has been adding some ways to look at that data, including cases per 100,000 people over time and during a rolling 14-day window.

GA Covid Cases 100K 14-day windown 8.18.20
To view county-by-county data on cases per 100,000 population click here.

Anything above 100 cases per 100,000 people is considered “significant community spread.” According to Tuesday’s data, Cobb has been averaging 342 cases per 100,000 over the last two weeks, while the county’s overall figure has been 1,908 cases per 1000,000.

Significantly higher numbers of cases per 100,000 are being reported in recent weeks in more rural counties in south Georgia, as seen on the state map above (click here for more details).

A more recent Georgia DPH calculation provides seven-day moving average figures according to the “date of onset” of a positive case, as shown in the yellow line in the graph below. That phrase refers to the day a case is confirmed as positive, and not the day it was reported.

Something else being looked at closely is the case positivity rate, which means the percentage of confirmed cases compared to the numbers of people tested. Anything more than 5 percent is considered high.

In Cobb County, that figure had caused some concern when it reached 14 percent last month, and stayed in double figures a few weeks.

But since that 14.2 percent peak on July 23, the county’s test positivity rate has fallen to 5.4 percent, and the seven-day moving day overage of 6 is the lowest since early June.

To view details of Cobb’s seven-day moving average COVID case figures, click here.

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East Cobb long-term care homes holding steady on COVID cases

East Cobb longt-term care homes, Manor Care
Four resident deaths have been reported since July at Manor Care on Johnson Ferry Place, including one last week. (ECN photos)

The number of COVID cases has been soaring in Cobb County since the month of July, and new outbreaks have been reported in some long-term care homes in Georgia.

Most of those facilities in East Cobb have reported minimal cases and deaths during that time. An exception is the HCR Manor Care Rehabilitation Center on Johnson Ferry Place.

Some closed voluntarily in March, before Gov. Brian Kemp issued a shelter-in-place order and dispatched the Georgia National Guard to test residents and employees.

While many new cases in Cobb and Georgia are occurring in much younger age groups, elderly people and those living in long-term care homes still make up a sizable percentage of the hospitalizations and fatalities.

According to the Georgia Department of Public Health, 3,961 of Georgia’s 4,727 deaths, or 83 percent, have been people aged 60 and older. The Georgia Department of Community Health reported Monday that 1,995 people have died in long-term care homes, 41 percent of the statewide death toll.

Long-term care homes include nursing homes, assisted living facilities, personal-care homes and memory-care units.

Those trends are reflected at the local level. In Cobb, 143 of the county’s 340 deaths—second in Georgia, only to Fulton—have been in long-term care homes, or 42 percent of the totals.

In East Cobb, 66 people have died from the virus, and 29 of them, or 44 percent, were living in long-term care homes, according to Cobb County government’s Geographic Information System office.

Those figures are from late last week, and a map of the long-term care home deaths is updated here, and is shown in the icons on the map below.

East Cobb COVID LTC map 8.17.20
You can view the zip codes and the long-term care icons seen above for death data by clicking here.

Alto Senior Living on LeCroy Road, near Roswell Road and Robinson Road West, has reported eight deaths, according to the Georgia DCH, which has issued a weekly update on cases, deaths and tests since the crisis began. Those figures come directly from the entities that operate the long-term care homes.

That’s the highest number for any long-term care home in East Cobb, although none of those have been reported since the summer.

(The long-term care report is now issued daily, and you can see the latest report by clicking here.)

Six residents have died at the A.G. Rhodes senior-living home on Wylie Road, and five at Sterling Estates East Cobb, but at both facilities none since the spring.

HCR Manor Care operates more than 500 skilled nursing homes and rehabilitation centers across the country. At the end of June, its East Cobb facility, which currently has 72 residents, had reported nine resident cases and no deaths.

But during July, three residents died there and the number of positive resident cases had grown to 34. That number is now at 53, and a total of 34 positive cases also were reported among Manor Care employees, according to state figures on Monday.

Julie Beckert, a spokeswoman for Manor Care, did not elaborate on the deaths, but said the increase in positive cases is due to a significant boost in testing.

Monday’s Georgia DCH figures show that 184 residents at the Manor Care East Cobb location have been tested, and 186 at the Manor Care facility in Decatur.

Beckert said Manor Care has done “whole-house testing” and that over “the last several weeks,” 63 patients have tested positive and many were asymptomatic. Beckert didn’t indicate how many, and “unfortunately, we lost six patients due in part to COVID-19.”

That includes another death at Manor Care in East Cobb reported last week two deaths at the Manor Care facility in Decatur, according to Georgia DCH figures.

She said 39 employees tested positive in recent weeks, with 24 recoveries and 15 staffers on self-quarantine.

The AJC reported last month about a major outbreak at the Dunwoody Health and Rehabilitation Center, which went from zero to 15 deaths and nearly 100 positive resident cases since the end of June. The Sandy Springs facility has 240 residents.

East Cobb long-term care homes, Alto Senior Living
8 deaths have been reported at Alto Senior Living in East Cobb, most of them earlier in the outbreak.

As of Monday, here are the latest COVID-19 figures for long-term care homes in East Cobb:

  • A.G. Rhodes Home Cobb, 900 Wylie Road (30067): 6 resident deaths, 26 positive resident cases, 19 resident recoveries, 9 positive staff cases;
  • Alto Senior Living Marietta, 840 LeCroy Drive (30068): 8 resident deaths, 23 positive resident cases, 14 resident recoveries, 3 positive staff cases;
  • Arbor Terrace of East Cobb, 886 Johnson Ferry Road (30068): 3 resident deaths, 7 positive resident cases, 1 resident recovery, 15 positive staff cases;
  • Heritage of Sandy Plains, 3039 Sandy Plains Road (30066): 0 resident deaths, 0 positive resident cases, 0 resident recoveries, 3 positive staff cases;
  • Manor Care Rehabilitation Center, 4360 Johnson Ferry Place (30068): 4 resident deaths, 53 positive resident cases, 53 resident recoveries, 34 positive staff cases;
  • The Solana East Cobb, 1032 Johnson Ferry Road (30068): 0 resident deaths, 0 positive resident cases, 0 resident recoveries, 7 positive staff cases;
  • Sterling Estates East Cobb, 4220 Lower Roswell Road (30068): 5 resident deaths, 13 positive resident cases, 6 resident recoveries, 0 positive staff cases;
  • Sunrise of East Cobb, 1551 Johnson Ferry Road (30062): 1 resident death, 4 positive resident cases, 3 resident recoveries, 2 positive staff cases.

Beckert said among the additional measures Manor Care has taken is to conduct regular temperature checks of residents (with a threshold of 99 degrees to address possible changes in condition). It’s also created an “airborne isolation unit” to treat higher-risk patients, with dedicated personal protective equipment and special cleaning, disposal and sanitizing measures.

Additional barriers also have been installed to protect other residents and employees from infection, she said.

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Walton graduate named Television Academy Foundation fellow

Hannah Patterson, a Walton High School graduate, has been selected for the prestigious Television Academy Foundation’s Summer Fellowship Program.Hannah Patterson, Walton graduate

Here’s what that organization—which puts on the Emmy Awards—is sending out about Hannah, a recent graduate of Georgia State University who majored in film and media and is a cinematography fellow:

The Foundation’s annual Internship Program normally provides 50 paid internships at top Hollywood studios and production companies to college students nationwide. However, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Television Academy Foundation has had to reimagine its internship program this year offering the 50 students selected from across the country the chance to either intern remotely or enroll as a summer fellow. 

“Television was a big part of my childhood,” said Patterson. “The way stories can move someone and teach them something in a different way really spoke to me growing up. I wanted to be part of that.”

“It feels good to know that members of the Television Academy see potential in me,” said Patterson. “It fills me with pride and motivation to be better than I am.”

The Summer Fellows Program includes virtual one-on-one visits with professionals in a student’s field of study, online panels with leaders in the television industry, and customized seminars covering personal brand building and navigating the job market ahead. Fellows also become lifelong members of the Foundation’s alumni family giving them access to events and networking opportunities as they build their careers in the industry.

The program includes a series of professional development webinars for students with top industry professionals including writer/director Gina Prince-Bythewood (The Old Guard); Amazon Studios executives Albert Cheng, chief operating officer and co-head of television, and Vernon Sanders, co-head of television; and the executive producer of the Apple TV+ series Little Voice Sara Bareilles and series star Brittany O’Grady.

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