Sprayberry Arts and Crafts Show cancelled due to COVID

Sprayberry Craft Show, East Cobb weekend events

The organizers of the Sprayberry PTSA Arts & Crafts Show were holding out hope of having their 38th event later in November, and had been holding some virtual shopping events for customers and to help out vendors.

But on Friday the Sprayberry PTSA announced the show would not be going on after all, joining most other holiday craft shows in the East Cobb area in sitting out this year. 

Here’s the message sent out on Friday:

Many of our crafters did not feel comfortable participating given COVID-19 concerns and we share their concern as well as the concern we have for our shoppers and volunteers. We realize that while some will support our decision, others will not. Please know it was made with much consideration, discussion, and thought. We appreciate all the support that has been provided to our school through the attendance of the Arts & Crafts Show for 37 years. We have been able to provide thousands of dollars in student scholarships, teacher grants, and support programs throughout our school; benefitting our teachers, students, and families. Our 38th show will take place in November 2021 and we can’t wait to see you there!

Related content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

 

Delta Credit Union delivers care packages to Sedalia Park ES

Delta Credit Union packages Sedalia Park
From left, Delta Community Credit Union Manager Jill Dent, Sedalia Park Elementary School Assistant Principal Kahilah Rachel and Sedalia Park Elementary Support Staff Specialist Aunquize Perkins

Submitted information and photo:

To show gratitude for teachers’ ongoing commitment to quality education during the COVID-19 health crisis, Delta Community Credit Union’s East Cobb location recently delivered care packages to teachers at Sedalia Park Elementary School. 

The manager of the Delta Community branch on Johnson Ferry Road presented gift bags with snacks and personal supplies, such as hand sanitizer and antibacterial wipes, and personalized thank you notes for the school’s teachers and support personnel.

“Thank you for giving so much of your time, and your heart, to children and our community,” said Jill Dent, manager of Delta Community’s Johnson Ferry Road branch. “This year, we are especially grateful for all you are doing, every day, for students in East Cobb.”

Sedalia Park Elementary, located at 2230 Lower Roswell Road, is one of 18 schools that Delta Community serves as a Partner in Education. The credit union, which is the largest in Georgia, has three branches and administrative headquarters in Cobb County.

Send Us Your News!

Let East Cobb News know what your organization is doing, or share news about what people are doing in the community—accomplishments, recognitions, milestones, etc.

Pass along your details to: editor@eastcobbnews.com, and please observe the following guidelines to ensure we get everything properly and can post it promptly.

Send the body of your announcement, calendar item or news release IN TEXT FORM ONLY in the text field of your e-mail template. Reformatting text from PDF, JPG and doc files takes us longer to prepare your message for publication.

We accept PDFs as an accompaniment to your item. Images are fine too, but we prefer those to be JPG files (more than jpeg and png). PLEASE DO NOT send photos inside a PDF or text or any other kind of file. Of course, send us links that are relevant to your message so we can direct people to your website.

Related content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb Animal Shelter closes temporarily for ‘unknown illness’

Cobb animal shelter closes

Cobb County government said Friday afternoon that the county animal shelter has closed temporarily because “an unknown illness has affected dogs and cats in the shelter.”

The county said in the announcement that the University of Georgia is conducting tests with the results coming early next week.

Until then, adoption appointments with the public are being cancelled.

The shelter, located in the Cobb government services complex on County Services Road west of Marietta, closed for two weeks last October due to a strep zoo outbreak.

Two dogs at the shelter died from the contagious virus and the facility was thoroughly cleaned.

The Cobb Department of Animal Services was to have launched an online appointment booking option starting Tuesday.

The shelter has been open to the public for adoption and animal surrender only by appointment since COVID-19 closures in the spring.

Related content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Rocky Mount ES among 11 Cobb schools with new COVID-19 cases

Eleven elementary schools in the Cobb County School District reported confirmed COVID-19 cases this week, including Rocky Mount ES in East Cobb.Campbell High School lockdown

The district updated its COVID-19 case total on Friday, and it showed 25 new cases from last week, the first for elementary schools students who opted to return for in-person learning.

Since July 1, a total of 349 cases among students and staff have been reported in the Cobb school district. Last week, that number was 324.

The schools reporting cases this week are all different from last week, and all of them are reporting 10 or fewer cases. They include:

  • Acworth Intermediate
  • Bullard ES
  • Chalker ES
  • Frey ES
  • Hollydale ES
  • Mableton ES
  • Milford ES
  • Rocky Mount ES
  • Still ES
  • Varner ES

The figures do not distinguish between students, teachers and other staff. Last week, Blackwell, Eastvalley, Nicholson, Powers Ferry and Shallowford Falls in East Cobb reported COVID cases but none this week.

The district explained that in accordance with student and health privacy laws, “the Georgia Department of Public Health recommends refraining from publicly publishing numbers of cases or quarantined students or staff that are less than 10 unless the number is 0.”

Cobb and Douglas Public health will “communicate confirmed cases to affected students/staff/ parents,” according to CCSD protocols.

Those guidelines also state that those who test positive “will isolate until 10 consecutive days have passed from their positive COVID-19 test and they are asymptomatic.”

At a Cobb Board of Education work session Thursday, superintendent Chris Ragsdale said the district has ordered a variety of personal protective equipment, including masks and plexiglass dividers as well as cleaning supplies.

The district details health and safety protocols in this FAQ and encourages parents to follow a daily well-being checklist before sending students to school. More health and safety information can be found here.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb teachers won’t have to use sick leave for quarantine

Cobb school board

Cobb school teachers who have to quarantine for possible exposure to COVID-19 while on the job won’t have to use personal sick time, according to superintendent Chris Ragsdale.

At a Cobb Board of Education work session Thursday, he told the board that “we’re not going to punish our employees for doing their job.”

His remarks came near the end of the first two weeks of in-person learning for elementary school students and with middle school students returning to classrooms on Monday.

Paying reachers for a first quarantine period of 14 days is covered at the federal level. Ragsdale said if a teacher is forced to quarantine a second time under Georgia Department of Public Health guidelines, the Cobb County School District will cover that pay.

That’s as long as teachers or other district employees must quarantine due to exposure that takes place on the job. If not, they’d have to use personal sick leave. 

Ragsdale was making his customary superintendent’s remarks during the work session, which marked the first board meeting in person since February. The board also was holding a voting meeting Thursday night at the CCSD’s central office.

There were no other agenda or board items to discuss school reopening issues at the work session, and when board member Charisse Davis tried to ask other questions along those lines, Ragsdale protested. 

“It’s not fair for us to take questions that we weren’t prepared for,” Ragsdale said. 

Davis, who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters, said she was asking on behalf of district employees who are “stressed, concerned and anxiety-ridden” about returning to school.

Ragsdale said any communications from employees should be sent to him and that he was “concerned about the number of questions” about issues not on the agenda or in response to his remarks.

He said “I want to focus on all the awesome, positive things” district employees and teachers have been doing in reopening schools.

At that point, board member David Banks, who had requested to issue his own comments praising the district’s preparations, tried to chime in, and other colleagues interrupted him.

The board’s Republican majority voted a year ago to forbid board members from making comments at board meetings, setting off partisan bickering that continues.

“Let’s just calm down here,” board chairman Brad Wheeler said. 

After other board members pressed Ragsdale on how the district is communicating reopening plans and health and safety measures, Banks once again asked to be heard.

“You’re out of order,” Wheeler said. 

Said Banks, who represents the Lassiter and Pope clusters: “You just allowed [others] to spout off. No thank you to the teachers? Administration? I object.”

“You’re out of order,” Wheeler repeated.

In other matters, Davis wanted to discuss incorporating the district’s mask mandate into its dress code policy.

But she dropped her request after Ragsdale reiterated that students who return to school and refuse to wear masks will be subject to the student code of conduct.

He said putting a mask requirement into the dress code policy isn’t necessary because “we believe this is going to be a temporary situation. 

“Hopefully that day will come soon so that we can downgrade that requirement.”

While all students, teachers and staff are required to wear masks, three of the six board members who were present were not wearing masks.

Attendance was limited to board members, the superintendent and his executive cabinet due to social-distancing guidelines. The board also did not have staff and student recognitions at its evening meeting. 

Ragsdale explained the mask differences by noting that board members were sitting six feet apart and therefore following health protocols.

Those wearing masks were Davis, Jaha Howard and Randy Scamihorn. Banks, Wheeler and David Chastain did not, nor did the superintendent.

Board member David Morgan was absent from both meetings.

Members of the public could address the board at the start of both meetings. Three spoke at each session, but they were brought in one at a time, and had to leave the building after they made their remarks.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

How to get, complete and return an absentee ballot in Cobb

Cobb absentee ballots

We’ve been getting questions from readers about the absentee ballot process, and given the lines that continue during early voting in Cobb County, we’ve got some updated answers and information.

First of all, before you go to any early voting location in the county, you can check estimated wait times at this interactive map.

More than 168,000 absentee ballots have been sent to Cobb voters (the county has around 518,000 registered voters), and 61,670 absentee ballots have been returned.

The absolute deadline for requesting one is Oct. 30, but Cobb Elections director Janine Eveler said ideally requests should be made no later than Oct. 27.

Absentee ballot applications can be requested from Cobb Elections by clicking here. The Georgia Secretary of State’s office has created an absentee ballot tracker that lets you follow the status of that ballot after you return your application.

Some readers have been asking if they can still vote in-person if they’ve received an absentee ballot, and the answer to that is that they can.

Georgia is among the states that allows voters to do that, but the process of cancelling a ballot at the polls adds to the wait times. You’re asked to bring your absentee ballot with you; you won’t be able to vote in person until your absentee ballot is cancelled.

There are cancellation instructions that can be found here. If you don’t have your ballot with you when you arrive at the poll on the Nov. 3 election day, you’ll have to fill out an affidavit and poll workers will have to call the Cobb Elections office to have the ballot cancelled.

If you’re planning to vote via absentee ballot, the packet of materials you’ll get in the mail from the Georgia Secretary of State’s office (in the photo at top) includes four separate items: the ballot, a sheet with instructions, and two envelopes.

Cobb absentee ballots

You must mark your ballot with blue or black ink only, and fill in the entire oval next to the name of the candidate you wish to vote for. The process is the same for voting for a write-in candidate and for ballot issues.

Don’t make an “X” or use check marks or vote for more than one candidate in a race.

If you make an error or spoil your ballot immediately contact Cobb Elections to get a replacement.

When you’re finished, fold the ballot and place it in the smaller envelope that says “OFFICIAL ABSENTEE BALLOT” on the front and seal it. Then place that envelope in the larger envelope with a yellow stripe on the left and seal that.

Make sure you sign the back of the larger envelope where it says “Oath of Elector” and print out your name below that.

Cobb absentee ballots

If you wish to mail your absentee ballot, include your return address and proper postage. Mail-in ballots must be postmarked by no later than 7 p.m. on election day, Nov. 3.

You can also drop off that ballot at any of the 16 absentee ballot locations in the county (listings here) 24/7 up through 7 p.m. election day, Nov. 3, when the polls close.

In East Cobb those drop boxes are located at the following:

  • East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road)
  • Sewell Mill Library (2051 Lower Roswell Road)
  • Mountain View Regional Library (3320 Sandy Plains Road)
  • Gritters Library (880 Shaw Park Drive)

In-person early voting lines that had been 8 hours or longer in some parts of the county (and 4-5 from what we heard from voters in East Cobb) on Monday have been shorter as the week went on.

As of noon Thursday, the estimates were three hours at the East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road) and an hour, 20 minutes at The Art Place-Mountain View (3330 Sandy Plains Road).

Those estimates fluctuate throughout the day, and there is no regular schedule for them to be updated.

Eveler said those numbers are revised by poll managers “as they see a change in conditions at that location.”

The estimates are provided to guide voters about when and where they may want to vote in advance.

A total of 22,717 people have voted early through the first three days, Monday-Wednesday. That includes 2,733 people at the East Cobb government center and 2,422 at The Art Place.

Eveler said all of the locations are fully staffed but “but it’s a three-week schedule so it is constantly evolving as people’s situations change,” such as illnesses and no-shows.

Early voting continues in Cobb Monday-Friday from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. through Oct. 30 and from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. for the next two Saturdays, Oct. 17 and 24.

Due to social-distancing guidelines each early voting location has between 6-9 voting machines. Here’s how that breaks down:

Cobb early voting equipment

That’s another reason why Cobb Elections officials have been encouraging voters to vote via absentee ballot.

Cobb Elections has more on absentee voting, advance voting and election-day voting.

If you have any other questions e-mail us: editor@eastcobbnews.com and we’ll try to get answers.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb school board member says colleague ‘spews racist trash’

After an East Cobb representative to the Cobb Board of Education accused two of his fellow members of stoking racial antagonisms, one of those colleagues has fired back.Cobb school board member Charisse Davis

Charisse Davis, who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters, issued a lengthy broadside at Post 5 member David Banks on her official board member Facebook page, saying that “while I usually ignore the ignorant remarks made by some of my board colleagues, today I cannot.”

She was referring to comments Banks made in an East Cobb News candidate profile last Thursday about racial and cultural issues in the Cobb County School District.

Among them were criticisms that Davis and Jaha Howard, both black Democratic first-term members, were making race an issue “where it has ‘never been before… I think they feel like they can get votes that way.’ ”

Banks, a retired technology consultant and business owner, has represented the Pope and Lassiter clusters for three terms. He is one of three Republican incumbents running for re-election in November and is facing first-time Democratic candidate Julia Hurtado.

The board’s vice chairman this year, Banks has said the district doesn’t have the racial and cultural issues that Davis and Howard have raised. They’ve called for the district to create the position of chief equity officer and wanted language in a now-failed anti-racism resolution to include the reference to ‘”systemic racism.”

Banks objected to that term, and said later in the East Cobb News candidate profile that he thought the Cobb district’s biggest challenge was avoiding “white flight” that he said has adversely affected the Atlanta, DeKalb and other metro school districts.

Cobb, with nearly 113,000 students, has become a majority-minority district, with roughly 60 percent of its student body being non-white.

In her Facebook message posted a few hours after the East Cobb News story, Davis said that “it seems as if my colleague, although on this Earth much longer than me, has forgotten a bit of the history of our dear Cobb County.”

She linked to a 2011 story in Patch noting that the Cobb school board didn’t vote to integrate until 1965, 11 years after the Brown v. Board of Education U.S. Supreme Court ruling outlawing segregation in schools. It wasn’t until 1970, Davis said, that “the schools were fully integrated. Y’all, that’s 1970! Ten years before I was born. We’re not talking about some ancient time ago.

“Any critical thinker can recognize that this level of racism would have a long-lasting impact.”

(Blackwell Elementary School in East Cobb was the first school in the Cobb district to enroll black students, during the 1966-67 school year.)

Davis also cited the 2011 article about a meeting in 1960 of group called the Cobb County White Citizens for Segregation. They gathered at Sedalia Park Elementary School in East Cobb—currently in Banks’ post and where Hurtado’s daughter is a student—and worked to boycott businesses that didn’t support keeping public schools all-white.

The group took out an ad in The Marietta Daily Journal, which Davis didn’t mention by name but referenced as “the kind of paper that would gladly run that type of ad (you know who!).” 

The newspaper has been occasionally critical of Davis and Howard in its editorial pages. In July, columnist Dick Yarbrough wrote about open turmoil on the school board during discussion of racism in Cobb schools, saying that “if there is anything noteworthy emanating from these squabbles, it is that arrogance is colorblind.”

He referred to Howard, who is a dentist, as Dr. Frick, and Davis as Madame Frack.

As for Banks’ comments in the East Cobb News profile that there are “black-on-black” issues that are more cultural and socioeconomic in Cobb today, Davis wrote that “my colleague goes on to spew racist trash that I won’t include in my post.”

She said that “the diversity of this county is one of its greatest strengths. This is no longer the county you may have fled to because you wanted to get away from black and brown people, and if that’s your thing…you may need to pack up your hate and keep it moving.”

Davis has signed an online petition to change the name of Wheeler High School, which opened in 1965 and is named after a Confederate Civil War general. Another petition has been created to keep the Wheeler name.

When asked by East Cobb News to describe her working relationship with Banks and if she had discussed racial issues with him, Davis said she would have no further comment. The school board will meet in person Thursday for the first time since February.

Many commenters to Davis’ post were in support of her remarks, including Howard, who wrote that “sometimes deep rooted bigotry throws rocks and doesn’t feel like hiding its hand, visible for all to see. Often times really nice people witness bigotry, but won’t be bothered to boldly reject it. Every time, it’s hurtful to its target audience.”

But a reader named John Hubbard said Banks “is 100% correct here. This is a new low. East Cobb schools are the stars of the county. Accusing people of moving to East Cobb to send their kids to a great public school only because they are ‘racist’ and scared of ‘brown people’ is the dumbest thing I’ve ever read. We don’t need you renaming and ruining our schools.

“You should be ashamed of yourself as an elected official for posting something this stupid and incendiary.”

Davis replied, “sounds like you will also be one of the ones packing up!”

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb schools boost ACT scores in 2020; Walton leads county

Despite the challenges of finishing the school year online, the Class of 2020 for the Cobb County School District had higher American College Testing (ACT) scores than the previous year.Campbell High School lockdown

The gain was a slight one—the district’s 23.2 composite score was 0.2 higher than 2019—but the new figure also is higher than the state and national average.

In a release issued by the district, Cobb’s overall score was 2.6 points above the national average and 1.5 points above the Georgia average.

Walton High School in East Cobb had the highest composite score in the 16-school Cobb school district and in every subject category.

Walton’s composite score of 27.4 points is one of the highest in the state. A total of 342 Walton seniors took the ACT, the most for any school in the district.

Lassiter had 319 students take the ACT, and the class composite score is 25.9. That’s the same composite score at Pope, where 278 students took the test. 

A total of 3,276 Cobb high school students took the ACT, with an average composite score of 23.2. This score is a .2 increase over 2019’s average composite of 23.

“Our students continue to show resilience and determination,” Cobb Superintendent Chris Ragsdale said in a statement. “2020 has been a difficult year for many reasons, but Cobb teachers and students have continued to excel. I have the utmost appreciation for how our teachers have gone above and beyond during the pandemic.”

More from the Cobb district here; and the Georgia Department of Education here, including a downloadable spreadsheet of all ACT scores in the state.

Avg Comp Avg Eng Avg Math Avg Read Avg Sci # Taking Test
Kell 21.0 20.5 20.4 21.5 20.9 150
Lassiter 25.9 26.0 25.7 26.5 25.0 319
Pope 25.9 26.6 25.1 26.3 25.3 278
Sprayberry 20.9 20.3 19.9 22.5 20.5 102
Walton 27.4 27.7 26.8 27.9 26.6 342
Wheeler 24.7 24.4 23.9 25.6 24.5 128

 

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb school board returns to in-person meetings on Thursday

Cobb school board in-person meetings
The Cobb Board of Education last met in-person in February at the Cobb County School District central office.

For the first time since February, the Cobb Board of Education is meeting in person on Thursday.

The board has been meeting in virtual sessions via Zoom since March, shortly after the Cobb County School District closed in the wake of COVID-19, and has had an altered meeting schedule.

The board had been holding a work session in the morning, immediately followed by an executive session and its monthly business meeting after that in the virtual setting.

Thursday’s schedule will revert back to staggered times, starting with a work session at 1 p.m., followed by an executive session. The business meeting will start at 7 p.m., which had been its usual starting time in-person.

The meetings take place in the board room of the CCSD’s central office at 514 Glover St. in Marietta. The full agenda packet for both meetings can be found here.

The work session and regular meetings will be live-streamed on the district’s CobbEdTV stream, via BoxCast, Channel 24 on Comcast Cable and Channel 182 on Charter Cable.

Also restored for the in-person meeting are public comments, which were discontinued for five months, then put on tape-delay. The public comments were not recorded for August due to what the district said was an error.

Public comments for the September meeting were taken before the work session but were not shown live on the district’s webstream.

They were eventually added to the end of the meeting stream. The district explained that  comments weren’t being shown live to ensure speakers were verified as Cobb residents, or school district staff, students or parents.

A spokesman for the Georgia First Amendment Foundation objected to the the board’s public comments policy, and urged the Georgia Attorney General’s office to look into the matter.

Here’s what the district has posted on its board meeting page for those wishing to comment:

“Individuals desiring to appear before the Board MUST sign-in and present a valid ID proving residency or property ownership in Cobb County. The sign-in session begins 40 minutes prior to the posted board meeting start time and closes exactly 10 minutes before the meeting starts with NO exceptions.”

School board member Charisse Davis, who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters, has a matter on the work session agenda regarding the public comment process.

She told East Cobb News that “when we were still virtual, I thought the way we were handling public comment could use some improvement.”

Davis said she suggested convening the virtual meeting and going directly to public comment, “especially if the district was adamant about recording the public comment to be added to the website later.

“Now that we are resuming in-person meetings, I expect public comment to look very much like it did before, with the exception of an audience.”

There will be public comments at the start of the work session and the regular meeting on Thursday. A district spokesman said there will be different procedures for those wishing to comment due to social-distancing restrictions.

All attendees will be required to wear masks when distancing isn’t possible, and the spokesman said that “members of the public will be allowed into the building one at a time for public comment.”

The work session agenda will include a financial report for the 2019-20 year that ended on June 30.

Davis also wants to incorporate the mask requirements for students returning classrooms into the district’s dress code policy. Last month by a 4-3 vote the board declined to take up the matter.

Another item being presented by Davis pertains to parliamentary procedure, but she declined to elaborate.

“I will have much more to say at the meeting, but there was a complete breakdown in our last meeting of how we conduct ourselves as a governing body,” she said.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

GBI makes drug-trafficking arrests after NE Cobb home search

GBI drug trafficking arrests NE Cobb home
Photo courtesy GBI

Five people were arrested last week on charges of trafficking methamphetamine drugs after the Georgia Bureau of Investigation’s gang task force and the federal Homeland Security Investigations Unit executed search warrants at locations that included a home in Northeast Cobb.

The GBI said in a release Tuesday afternoon that the five individuals were apprehended in Cobb and Cherokee counties.

A residence on Highland Terrace, off Canton Road and near Shallowford Road, was searched last Friday, where agents seized more than 100 kilograms (around 220 pounds) of suspected crystal methamphetamine, a loaded AR-15 rifle and a handgun, according to the GBI.

Other searches in Cherokee included the seizure of around three kilograms of suspected methamphetamine, according to the GBI.

The bureau said Melissa Picardi, 37, of Atlanta, was charged with trafficking methamphetamine and is the only one of the suspects being detained in Cobb County.

According to Cobb Sheriff’s Office records, Picardi was arrested at the Market Square Shopping Center on Canton Road Friday afternoon and is being held without bond at the Cobb Adult Detention Center.

The four other suspects were taken to the Cherokee County Jail and also were charged with trafficking methamphetamine:

  • Antonio Jamar Laster, 24, of Nashville, Tenn.;
  • Bryan Hernandez, 23, of Atlanta;
  • Miguel Angel Rayon Gonzalez, 20, of Atlanta;
  • Jesus Cruz-Aguirre, 19, of Atlanta.

The GBI said the probe was part of an investigation begun earlier this year by its gang task force into the criminal street gangs Gangster Disciples and Ghostface Gangsters.

The agency said agents were specifically targeting the gangs’ weapons and drug trafficking relationship with local associates of Mexican cartel traffickers.

“Months of investigation led to a large amount of dangerous drugs and weapons taken off the street,” said Ken Howard, the GBI’s special agent in charge of the investigation. “The GBI Gang Task Force works collaboratively with federal, state, and local law enforcement to identify and eliminate gang activity and make communities safer.”

Cobb Police, Woodstock Police, and the Cobb and Cherokee sheriff’s offices also assisted in the investigation, which the GBI said is continuing and anticipates making more arrests.

Related stories

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

 

Commissioner: Cobb ‘should do better’ with early voting lines

Cobb early voting lines
Early voting lines at the East Cobb Government Service Center on Monday were as long as four hours, and even longer at The Art Place. (ECN photo)

The day after citizens waited for hours to start the early voting period, the two Cobb commissioners facing one another in the chairman’s election sounded off on the subject.

At the end of Tuesday’s Cobb Board of Commissioners meeting Lisa Cupid, who represents South Cobb, showed national television news footage of long lines that snaked around one of the county’s 11 early voting locations.

The number of those locations and early voting dates have been expanded ahead of the Nov. 3 general election. But more than 7,000 Cobb voters stood in lines lasting several hours in some places, the result of increased turnout and social-distancing protocols.

Cupid, the lone Democrat on the board, said that “I know we can do better, I know we should do better . . . so people don’t have to wait for eight to 10 hours to vote in Cobb County, in the year 2020.”

She said while the strong voting numbers reflect voter energy and excitement, “it’s another thing to question whether or not our voters should have to experience something like that.”

Cupid was critical of her colleagues for nixing a $200,000 request by the Cobb Board of Elections and Registration in July to mail absentee ballots to all registered voters in the county.

Cobb Elections has set up an expedited process to mail absentee ballots to voters who request them online, but Cupid asked “how much did it cost to have our poll workers to have to stay late” processing the votes of those who stood in line well after closing time.

“This is not a condition that we should ignore,” Cupid said. “When people talk about voter suppression, it’s these types of events that they’re referring to.”

Early voting continues Monday-Friday from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. through Oct. 30 and from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. for the next two Saturdays, Oct. 17 and 24.

The Cobb government GIS office is providing wait-time updates for each of the early voting locations. On Monday the longest estimate at the East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road) was four hours; at The Art Place-Mountain View (3330 Sandy Plains Road), it was as long as five hours.

County spokesman Ross Cavitt said there have been some complaints about how timely the wait-time maps are, and that poll managers are updating that information.

Janine Eveler, the director of Cobb Elections, said in an e-mailed statement that “each poll manager at the voting sites has a login and updates the wait times periodically when they have the opportunity. The wait time is an estimate for that particular moment in time, but voter experiences may vary.”

Commissioner Keli Gambrill said of the 7,062 people who voted early on Monday, 1,386 of them had to cancel absentee ballots, which she said also adds to the waiting time at the polls.

That has to be done before a voter can cast a vote in person.

Mike Boyce, the Republican chairman, spoke last, as is the custom at the end of meetings, and pulled down his mask to respond to Cupid’s comments.

Although not addressing her directly, Boyce said it’s “unfortunate that in this day and age that we’ve politicized the voting process.”

He said the partisan actions of both Democratic and Republican parties are to blame for creating a “narrative” of mistrust, regardless of how someone may vote.

Boyce noted that the commission approved spending $300,000 for security cameras to monitor 16 absentee drop boxes that have been placed around the county, “yet there are people who don’t believe those drop boxes are trustworthy.”

A retired U.S. Marine Corps colonel, Boyce admitted that while lines are inconvenient, “what is it worth to you to stand in line for one of the greatest freedoms we have have, called voting? And for those who fought for you to be able to stand in line today?

“Here’s what standing in line means for me: When you show that photo of lines to people living in China, or North Korea, or Belorussia, that shows that people will stand in line to do what it takes to show that the people are in charge.

“Everyone who stands in line stands for those who went before us and gave us this freedom to do what I believe is the most important thing our government responds to, and that is to hear the will and the voice of the people through the ballot box.”

Regardless of the method of voting, Boyce added, “those who go and do it are the true heroes right now. Those who don’t, you have to ask yourself, what is it about this country that you don’t like? That you don’t go and do your duty and don’t vote?”

The county also said Tuesday that voters concerned about their absentee ballot status can use a tracking website from the Georgia Secretary of State’s office that can be found here.

The absentee ballot drop boxes in Cobb include the East Cobb government center, Sewell Mill Library (2051 Lower Roswell Road), Gritters Library (880 Shaw Park Drive) and Mountain View Regional Library (3320 Sandy Plains Road).

A full list of drop boxes can be found here. They will be open 24/7 until 7 p.m. on election day, Nov. 3.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Davis Direction to hold substance abuse prevention event

The Davis Direction Foundation, a Marietta-based addiction recovery non-profit, is holding a substance abuse prevention event, “Beyond the End Zone,” in East Cobb and virtually on Thursday.Davis Direction substance abuse prevention event

The event is from 5-7 p.m. in the conference center at Piedmont Church (570 Piedmont Road) and will feature two guests from the football world.

They are Heisman Award Winner George Rogers, who will be in person to share his story of recovery (and the trophy will be there too!), as well as Las Vegas Raiders player Darren Waller doing the same via Zoom.

The $25 cost per ticket includes a BBQ dinner and auction and proceeds will benefit the foundation’s programs (more details here, and ticket purchases here).

Related content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Amazing Lash Studio set to open at The Avenue East Cobb

Amazing Lash Studio The Avenue East Cobb

A new location of the Amazing Lash Studio is coming into The Avenue East Cobb and is holding a grand opening Saturday and Sunday.

The specific hours are 8 a.m. to  9 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday. Both days will having drawings for free full sets of eyelash extensions, and you can enter by texting LASH378 to 89000.

Those who enter also will get $20 off a first full set of  extensions.

Amazing Lash has 250 locations in 28 states, including six others in metro Atlanta. Amanda Vann Austin is the East Cobb franchisee, the first female to operate a store in Georgia.

Safety procedures follow CDC guidelines for COVID-19 and include curbside check-in, services performed in sanitized suites and health screenings for employees and customers.

(4475 Roswell Road, Suite 1405; 470-531-7575)

Send Us Your News!

Let East Cobb News know what your organization is doing, or share news about what people are doing in the community—accomplishments, recognitions, milestones, etc.

We also run items about new businesses coming to the community.

Pass along your details to: editor@eastcobbnews.com, and please observe the following guidelines to ensure we get everything properly and can post it promptly.

Send the body of your announcement, calendar item or news release IN TEXT FORM ONLY in the text field of your e-mail template. Reformatting text from PDF, JPG and doc files takes us longer to prepare your message for publication.

We accept PDFs as an accompaniment to your item. Images are fine too, but we prefer those to be JPG files (more than jpeg and png). PLEASE DO NOT send photos inside a PDF or text or any other kind of file. Of course, send us links that are relevant to your message so we can direct people to your website.

Related stories

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Motorist dies, another injured in Terrell Mill Road crash

Terrell Mill Road crash motorist dies

One motorist died and another suffered injuries after a two-car crash on Terrell Mill Road Sunday afternoon, according to Cobb Police.

Police said Youe Oh Yu, 79, of Marietta, was pronounced dead after being rushed to Wellstar Kennestone Hospital.

The other motorist, Joseph H. Stewart, 52, also of Marietta, also was taken to Kennestone with non-life-threatening injuries, police said.

Police said Yu was driving a grey 2007 Honda Accord and was turning left from a stop sign on Redwing Drive onto eastbound Terrell Mill Road at 4:44 p.m. Sunday, while Stewart was behind the wheel of a black 2017 Honda Pilot heading southbound on Terrell Mill.

Police said the Accord turned in front of the Pilot, and the two vehicles crashed, striking each of the driver’s sides.

Police said the crash is still under investigation and that anyone with additional information regarding this collision should contact investigators at 770-499-3987.

Related stories

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb early voting interactive map shows wait-time estimates

EC Govt Center early voting

UPDATED FOR RUNOFFS, DEC. 14:

Here’s more information about early voting for the U.S. Senate runoffs, which continues through Dec. 31 at several locations in Cobb County, including the East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road).

And here’s the link to the interactive map from Cobb GIS, which is updated periodically during the day by poll managers at the early voting locations:

From Dec. 28-31, voters can also vote in advance at The Art Place-Mountain View (3330 Sandy Plains Road).

Cobb Elections provides the links below for early and absentee voting:

Dropboxes for absentee ballots are open 24/7 through 7 p.m. on election day, Nov. 3, and include the East Cobb government center, the Sewell Mill Library (2051 Lower Roswell Road), Gritters Library (880 Shaw Park Drive) and the Mountain View Regional Library (3320 Sandy Plains Road).

Related content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Wreaths Across America effort includes Ga. National Cemetery

Georgia National Cemetery wreaths

From former State Rep. Tom Wilder of East Cobb, who’s involved in the Wreaths Across America fundraising effort to honor departed military veterans during the holidays:


The Georgia National Cemetery Advisory Council participates with national cemeteries across America by recognizing those who have fought bravely in serving America. This national program provides a wreath placed on each grave in December. This program has been supported by family, friends, and community leaders in Georgia since 2008.

Over 22,750 military men and women are buried in Georgia’s National Cemetery on a hilltop near Canton Georgia. Approximately 500 volunteers from the Boy Scouts of America, churches, community organizations and families lay wreathes on the gravesite prior to the annual memorial service. This annual event will be held this year on Saturday, December 19, 2020.

Georgia businesses and individual donors have supported this program for over 10 years. Our appreciation to those who continue to support this memorial project. Donations are tax deductible with a receipt provided by the Georgia National Cemetery Advisory Council upon request.

Please support this special program recognizing the lives of those who have protected or given their lives for our freedom. Corporate and individual sponsorships of $1,000 or more are recognized appropriately. Our fundraising goal by November 30th for $200,000 purchasing 17,000 wreaths are to be placed at each gravesite. Checks can be payable to Georgia National Cemetery Advisory Council at GNCAC Post Office Box 5476, Canton, GA 30114-9998.

For more information, contact Tom Wilder, U.S. Navy Vietnam Veteran and Cemetery Council member at 770-973-1422 or tom@wilder-realty.com.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb flooding includes Columns Drive and areas along Chattahoochee

Columns Drive flooding

IF YOU’RE LOOKING FOR NEWS ABOUT RAIN AND FLOODING ON COLUMNS DRIVE ON SEPT. 8, 2021, PLEASE CLICK HERE.

 

ORIGINAL REPORT, OCT. 11, 2020:

Information and photo above of Columns Drive from Cobb County government at 1:32 p.m.:

Heavy rain caused by the remnants of Hurricane Delta has caused flooding in various parts of Cobb County.

Cobb DOT is coordinating with Cobb Police and Fire to close off roadways that are still water-covered and hazardous.

Up to four inches of rain has fallen on parts of the county, with the worst areas around the Chattahoochee River. Roads closed include Cochise Drive, Woodland Brook, and Columns Drive. Other roadways by the river and Cobb creeks could also be hazardous.

Cobb County remains under a Flash Flood Watch and several areas including neighborhoods around the Chattahoochee River and Nickajack Creek remain under a Flash Flood Warning.

Avoid travel in these areas if possible.

Cobb DOT crews responded to 23 calls overnight and into the morning, including five trees blocking roadways.

Cobb Fire rescued several people from cars that had been submerged in floodwaters.

Crews will work with the school district to make sure routes are accessible to buses in the morning.

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Candidate profile: Jerica Richardson, Cobb Commission District 2

Jerica Richardson, Cobb Commission candidate

With the possibility of significant political change abounding in Cobb County, Jerica Richardson wants to be more than a symbol of what she says has been transpiring for some time.

A self-professed policy wonk and technology professional, the 31-year-old aide in several successful local campaigns is making her first stab at political office.

It’s coming at a time when her fellow Democrats have been gaining momentum in recent elections in the county.

“That I’m running is really separate from that,” said Richardson, who is facing Republican Fitz Johnson for District 2 on the Cobb Board of Commissioners in the Nov. 3 general election.

Johnson has received the endorsement of retiring commissioner Bob Ott, while Richardson is being backed by former Gov. Roy Barnes of Cobb County.

She says she’s part of “new flavor” of Democrats that forms just one part of a “wide spectrum of candidates” who’ve been making inroads into what has been a strongly Republican electorate.

Her sizable campaign staff includes quite a number of young people responsible for such duties as Hispanic outreach, sustainability initiatives and social media fundraising.

Richardson’s website can be found here; East Cobb News profiled Johnson earlier this week.

A former state school superintendent candidate, Johnson has been pointing to his military, business and community experience in attempting to win his first election.

Most recently, Richardson directed the campaign of Cobb Board of Education member Jaha Howard and was his appointment to the district’s SPLOST oversight board until she decided to run.

On Sunday, she’s having a get out the vote rally with Howard at the green space at The Battery Atlanta, and has been “tag teaming” with other Democratic candidates in leaving campaign materials with targeted voters.

She was unopposed in the Democratic primary and received more votes (24,126) than the three Republican primary candidates combined (18,371).

She said she’s not taking those numbers for granted and is learning the lay of a very diverse district, which stretches from the Cumberland-Vinings area to northeast Cobb around Mabry Park.

Richardson, who lives in the Delk Road area, is familiar with the heart of East Cobb. Her family moved to the Hampton Chase subdivision as she was finishing up at North Springs High School, and her brothers attended Walton High School.

The family came to metro Atlanta after evacuating New Orleans for Hurricane Katrina. Richardson graduated from Georgia Tech with a biomedical engineering degree.

She said her vision in seeking office is to help better connect Cobb County—its citizens, communities and organizations—across a range of issues.

“The message is timeless,” Richardson said. “There are so many wonderful things that Cobb County has to offer, but we have some divisions. Connecting Cobb is the overarching message for that.”

She raises similar concerns as Commissioner Lisa Cupid, who’s running against Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce.

Whether it’s land use and development, transit and other issues, Richardson thinks county government leaders need to establish stronger working ties with other public officials and bodies and citizens and community groups.

“A lot of relationships are just broken,” she said, citing the process under which the Atlanta Braves stadium deal was brokered in 2013. “A lot of people felt that their concerns weren’t considered at all, and it was a missed opportunity. They didn’t feel like they mattered, and this is still going on in other parts of the county.”

Richardson said she would prioritize community engagement—what she calls her “empowerment” agenda—in numerous capacities, and according to what she calls “responsible transparency.”

Those include land use, zoning and development issues in a District that ranges from high-density commercial districts in Cumberland and traditional suburban neighborhoods in East Cobb.

Richardson advocates more master planning activities that includes community feedback beyond the current zoning process.

She also said the county needs to do a better job of steering citizens toward community resources.

“Only a certain group of people know how to find that kind of information,” she said.

Richardson said that while “the sky is not falling” in Cobb County in terms of political leadership, she thinks the commission has become too fractious, with commissioners acting “too separately” instead of the county has a whole.

“All five board members have equal votes on the issues that matter the most,” she said. “I want to look for solutions that affect everyone.”

Richardson opposes East Cobb Cityhood. A bill proposed last year by State Rep. Matt Dollar, an East Cobb Republican, included a city map with most of District 2 east of I-75. But a cityhood group said a year ago it was delaying its efforts.

After attending several cityhood town halls over the last couple of years, she said “I was very inspired by the community response. Democrats and Republicans were really united about that!”

She said that with cityhood, “you’re going to see higher taxes, you’re going to see a double layer of government.”

More than anything, Richardson said she questions the motives of those behind cityhood. “Whether it’s for political power or for demographic reasons, I don’t know.

“But I heard from a lot of people who were concerned about what would happen to the rest of the county,” she said, adding that she gets a few e-mails a week about the cityhood issue.

Richardson said she’s encouraged by the start of a step-and-grade salary structure for public safety employees.

She worries that “very conservative leadership” in Cobb over many years has the county, now with more than 750,000 people, budgeted at what she estimates is 60-70 percent of what “counties our size have been operating on.

“It’s thin but I don’t support raising taxes,” Richardson said. “I want to raise the tax base.”

She supports creating a potential Cobb sales tax for extending transit in the county in targeted areas, and would advocate a long-term public health response in the wake of the COVID-19 crisis.

Among those initiatives would be coordinating pandemic preparations with local school districts and have a strengthened working relationship with Cobb and Douglas Public Health.

“They’re at the table, but we need to figure out how to move past this in the long run,” she said.

As Cobb continues to grow and become diverse, Richardson said she’s eager to tackle the challenge of striking the right balance for a county that’s at an important crossroads.

“The task is to keep Cobb home for those who have been here, but also for those who are yet to come,” she said.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Early voting starts Monday in Cobb County through Oct. 30

Cobb tag offices reopening

Early voting begins on Monday at multiple locations in Cobb County, including two in East Cobb.

Polls will be open from Oct. 12-30 at the East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road) and The Art Place-Mountain View (3330 Sandy Plains Road).

The specific hours are from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday-Friday and from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 17 and 24.

There will not be any early voting on Monday, Nov. 2, the day before the election.

Another location in the East Cobb area that had been designated for early voting, Noonday Baptist Church on Canton Road, will be unavailable.

Other early voting locations, dates and times can be found here.

Cobb government said this week that it continues to train poll workers, and has thus far prepared 669 such workers. It’s seeking 1,400 total poll workers to handle what’s expected to be heavy turnout at early voting sites and election-day precincts.

Cobb Elections is urging citizens to vote via absentee ballot, which can be mailed in or delivered 24/7 at several secure dropbox locations in the county.

The dropboxes will be open until 7 p.m. on election day, Tuesday, Nov. 3, and all the locations  can be found here.

On election day, voters who aren’t voting absentee must go to the polling precinct indicated on their voter registration card.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Atlanta Press Club debates include Cobb Commission chair

Cobb Commission Chair debate

The Atlanta Press Club will be the host of several television, radio and online candidates debates in selected local, state and federal races starting Monday, including the battle for Cobb Commission Chair.

That debate, between incumbent Republican chairman Mike Boyce and Democratic commissioner Lisa Cupid, is scheduled to air at 12 p.m. Wednesday on the Atlanta Press Club Facebook page and at 8:30 p.m. Thursday on WABE radio (90.1 FM). 

Also included in the debates will be the candidates for the 6th Congressional District, which includes East Cobb. Democratic U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath is being challenged by Republican Karen Handel, who is seeking to regain the seat she lost in 2018.

That debate will be aired on Tuesday at 7 p.m. on the APC website, Georgia Public Broadcasting and gpb.org.

The Atlanta Press Club Loudermilk-Young Debate Series also will host general election debates for the U.S. Senate and other Congressional and local races. The schedule for all the debates can be found here.

All the debates can be seen on demand at the APC website. 

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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