Put your home on our East Cobb News Home Holiday Lights Map!

East Cobb home holiday lights map

This is going to be a different holiday season during a time of pandemic, but that’s no reason we can’t share the same good cheer with family, friends and neighbors in some new and creative ways.

So this year East Cobb News is putting together a map — or maps, given the size of our community — of holiday light displays for your fellow East Cobbers to enjoy as they drive by in the safety of their cars.

We did something like this last year, asking readers to send in their light display photos, and we’d love to have you send them in again if that’s what you prefer.

But we want to expand the idea, given our present circumstances. Let us know what you are doing, where you are and when you expect to light it up—or if it’s a daytime-only display without lights, that’s fine too. We’ll make it clear this is a “drive-by” event only and ask viewers to be considerate on the roads. Ideally, evening displays will be available for viewing between dusk and 9 p.m.

During the holiday season, we will select displays to feature in East Cobb News and on our Instagram page.

The maps will be limited to our coverage area—which is actually quite large—and includes neighborhoods east of I-75 and I-575, in ZIP Codes 30062, 30066, 30067, 30068 and the Cobb portion of 30075.

So that’s why we say “maps”—there’s a lot of ground to cover, and we want to localize these displays as much as possible.

They’ll take some time to construct, and we’ll be adding to it as we hear of more displays, so let us know as soon as possible if you’d like us to map yours.

E-mail us with your information, photos, etc. at editor@eastcobbnews.com by Dec. 7; we’re aiming to post this by mid-December. 

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Lassiter student chosen for AP College Board digital art exhibit

Abigail Cutler, Lassiter student AP digital art exhibit

Reader Lisa Cutler passed along a really cool honor for her daughter Abigail, a senior at Lassiter High School.

She’s been selected as one of 51 students worldwide for the AP College Board Art digital art exhibit.

Lisa says 63,000 students submitted their work for the contest, and Abigail’s work is the only one from a student in Georgia.

Her exhibit is called “Do you see right through me?” and the subject explores anxieties and inner securities when not taking proper medication.

She used acrylic paint, magazine paper, digital images, and a permanent marker. Says Abigail’s Lassiter art teacher, Suzette Spinelli:

“Abigail is a student that can mentally visualize something from real life into a profound work of art. Her experience is not the final art but a trigger for a new idea. This helps her create art that becomes higher-level, incorporating critical thinking skills that she thrives upon.”

 

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The Avenue East Cobb holiday events include tree lighting

The Avenue East Cobb holiday events

UPDATED, TUESDAY DEC. 1, 3:45 P.M.

All events scheduled for this coming Friday, Dec. 4, have been pushed back to next Friday, Dec. 11, due to rain in the forecast. Here’s what The Avenue sent out Tuesday:

Our Christmas Tree Lighting and Santa Arrival Event scheduled for this Friday is being POSTPONED to Friday December 11th at the same time 5-8 PM.
Don’t miss all the fun! Snow machines, Holiday Music Show, Olaf and a Living Xmas Tree photo ops, Hot Chocolate Bar by Smallcakes and more!
Santa photos will take place after his arrival on Dec. 11th and again on Dec. 18th from 4-7pm. Our Carriage Rides are still happening from 4-7 PM on Dec. 11th and Dec. 18th!

ORIGINAL STORY:

The Avenue East Cobb is kicking off its schedule of holiday events with its outdoor Christmas Tree lighting on Friday that includes a visit from Santa Claus.

The event takes place from 5-8 p.m. and includes a holiday music show, gift card giveaway, a hot chocolate bar and more. The event is sponsored by East Cobb Church and will take place weather permitting.

There are no reservations required; guests must adhere to CDC guidelines during the event and maintain a six-feet distance and wear a mask. Guests will sanitize their hands before entering the event area. Folding chairs are permitted.

On Friday Dec. 11 and Friday Dec. 18 The Avenue’s annual carriage sleigh rides and Santa photos will be available from 4-7 p.m.

More details about those here:

Sleigh Carriage Rides are complimentary and first come-first served. The carriage has 2 rows, each row fits 2 adults and 2 children, so bring the grandparents! One family per ride. The starting point and line will begin at the fountain in front of Bravura. Check in with the attendant before boarding.

Santa Photos are complimentary and first come-first served. You must provide your own camera or cell phone to take pictures. Guests will stand in front of the sleigh when instructed by attendant. Line will begin on the sidewalk in front and to the left of the sleigh. Watch for Santa boot footprints!

The same social-distancing, mask and sanitizing requirements will be in effect. There will be a sneeze guard between the carriage driver and guests, and the driver will wear a mask. Both events are also weather permitting.

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New Waldron and Lee Dentistry location to have ribbon-cutting ceremony

Waldron and Lee Dentistry ribbon-cutting

Submitted information:

The staff and doctors at Waldron & Lee Dentistry invite the public to commemorate the completion of their new building with a ribbon cutting ceremony at 2419 Roswell Road. The celebration will take place on December 3, 2020 at 11:00 AM and will include light refreshments and coffee.

Dr. Jon Waldron founded the dental practice over 30 years ago and continues to practice in the new location along with current owners, Dr. Blair Waldron and Dr. Christopher Lee, as well as Dr. Edward Schlissel and Dr. Henry Almquist.

When asked about the new location, Dr. Blair Waldron states, “We worked really hard to create a space that felt both calming and comforting, as well as incorporate the latest technology for infection control and environmentally friendly practices.”

Dr. Waldron further explained how the newly designed space allows the care team to continue to accommodate new patients while delivering a high level of customer service that patients appreciate. Waldron & Lee Dentistry offers sedation, surgical and cosmetic dentistry including a variety of services such as fillings, one visit crowns, digital x-rays and impressions, whitening, veneers and bonding, extractions and implants, Invisalign, Six Month Smiles, and teeth in a day.

For more information, visit www.waldrondentistry.com or call the office at 770- 977-5547.

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GoFundMe started for family of Shallowford Road crash victim

Halloran Family, Shallowford Road crash victim

Friends of an East Cobb man killed in a car crash on Shallowford Road on Wednesday have started a GoFundMe online fundraiser for his family.

The Andy Halloran Memorial Fund has already raised more than $13,000 of a designated $15,000 on behalf of his family.

Jen Halloran, the victim’s wife, said the following on the fundraising message:

“Andy was literally the very best person I’ve ever known, and he made me a better person each day. He was hard-working, kind, generous, loyal, faith-filled, and funny. Andy was also the most amazing dad. Our kids were so lucky to have had him as a faith leader, tennis partner, math tutor, band dad, driving instructor, and friend.”

The Lassiter Bands posted a message Friday saying Halloran was a volunteer in their organization and whose son Will played in the band and is a student at UGA. Daughter Claire was the band drum major last year and is Lassiter’s STAR student.

A three-car crash occurred Wednesday shortly before noon at the intersection of Shallowford Road and Lassiter Road. Eastbound lanes of Shallowford were closed at the intersection for several hours as police and emergency crews worked the scene.

One individual was transported from the scene by ambulance and occupants of another car were able to walk away without injuries.

Cobb Police have not released any information about the crash or the victim; when contacted by East Cobb News on Friday, department spokeswoman Officer Shenise McDonald said a release would be sent to the media “once we return back to the office.”

She didn’t indicate when that would be.

Jen Halloran said in her message she was unsure of funeral arrangements due to COVID-19, but asked for prayers for her family “as we take our next steps on very shaky legs.”

 

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GAgives local non-profit fundraiser designated for Tuesday

Gagives fundraiser

Submitted information on the upcoming GAgives fundraiser that benefits a number of non-profits, including the Good Mews Animal Foundation and the Tommy Nobis Center of East Cobb:

GAgives on GivingTuesday, the record-setting fundraising event for our state’s nonprofits, returns this Tuesday, December 1st, as part of the international generosity movement that culminates each year on the Tuesday after Thanksgiving. 

Just like the communities they serve, Georgia nonprofits are in greater need than ever. Fortunately, Georgians are poised to make a difference: During our COVID-relief event this spring, 7,260 individuals jumped in on short notice to contributing a total of more than $1.2 Million.

Every dollar can make a difference, from providing free food in an economic crunch to caring for seniors in a time of extreme vulnerability to rescuing animals, preserving the arts and the environment, educating our children, and much more. There are thousands of nonprofits taking part in this year’s initiative, including many based in and serving Metro Atlanta communities.

As always, this event is hosted by the Georgia Center for Nonprofits and a range of corporate and media partners (see below). Once again, a range of sponsors have funded prizes for the nonprofits with the most unique donors over the full day and during designated “power hours,” helping nonprofits engage their supporters’ competitive spirit – another way that every dollar makes a difference.

You’ll find more details about this year’s #GAgives campaign here.The full list of participants is available here.

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Cobb Police set up e-commerce ‘safe trade zones’ at precincts

Cobb tag offices reopening

Submitted information from Cobb Police about e-commerce “safe trade zones” it’s set up for the public for holiday shopping:

This holiday season, everyone will be searching for the perfect gift at the perfect price and many will turn to ecommerce sites like Craigslist, Offer-Up and Facebook Market Place to purchase those gifts. Cobb County wants to ensure these purchases are done in a safe manner at a safe location.

Cobb Police Department staff has implemented “ECommerce Zones” at all five precincts and headquarters to provide residents with safe places to conduct trades and sales. The zones are marked with blue signs in well-lit places that are monitored by video surveillance.

  • Precinct One: 2380 N. Cobb Parkway, Kennesaw

  • Precinct Two: 4700 Austell Road, Austell

  • Precinct Three: 1901 Cumberland Parkway, Atlanta

  • Precinct Four: 4400 Lower Roswell Road, Marietta

  • Precinct Five: 4640 Dallas Highway, Powder Springs

  • Headquarters: 140 North Marietta Parkway, Marietta

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East Cobb Church, Sprayberry Crossing rezoning cases delayed

East Cobb Church rezoning case delayed

After we posted details earlier this week about North Point Ministries’ plans for a church campus at Shallowford and Johnson Ferry roads, the Cobb Zoning Office is continuing the case until February.

The Cobb Zoning Office noted the continuance in updating the agenda for Tuesday’s Cobb Planning Commission meeting—which you can read here.

In its staff analysis posted earlier this week, the zoning office recommended denial of North Point’s application for land-use, density, traffic and school capacity reasons.

The Alpharetta-based church wants to build a 4-story building for what it’s calling East Cobb Church with close to 125,000 square feet, including a sanctuary seating capacity of nearly 1,300, along with a parking deck, parking lot and future retail space.

The back of the 33-acre assembly would contain 125 townhomes, which zoning staff contends is far too dense for an area with mostly single-family detached residential communities.

The land is owned by prominent attorney Fred Hanna and his wife’s outreach ministry, and which they tried to assemble for a residential project in 2016 that was withdrawn.

East Cobb Church was formed in January and has been meeting at Eastside Baptist Church on Lower Roswell Road.

We also noted earlier this week that another major rezoning request on Tuesday’s agenda—Sprayberry Crossing—also has been scratched again, until February.

Kevin Moore, an attorney for Atlantic Realty Acquisitions, LLC, which is submitting the mixed-use development request, filed for the continuance on Wednesday, the deadline for removing it from Tuesday’s agenda.

Moore said another continuance would give his client time to incorporate revisions to its site plan “in continued response to community concerns.”

While many nearby residents have pushed for redevelopment of the blighted shopping center for years, some are opposed to apartments that are a major part of Atlantic Realty’s proposal.

Cobb County does not hear zoning cases in January.

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Cobb Elections extends hours to complete presidential recount

Cobb Elections said Thursday that its staffers will be working longer hours next week to complete the presidential recount.Cobb election results certified

According to a message put out by Cobb County Government, those hours will be from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday and Tuesday and from 8 a.m. to as much time is needed on Wednesday to complete the recount.

Wednesday is the deadline given to all Georgia counties to complete the recount. Nearly 400,000 Cobb County ballots are being recounted on eight scanners, according to the county, and nearly 5 million Georgia ballots are being recounted across the state.

No recounting is being done on Friday. The recount, which started on Tuesday, is taking place in Cobb at Jim Miller Park (2245 Calloway Road), and the public is invited to observe.

The recount was requested by the campaign of President Donald Trump after a hand recount slightly reduced Democratic former vice president Joe Biden’s lead in Georgia to less than 13,000 votes.

Biden has 49.51 percent of the vote compared to 49.25 percent for Trump, which falls within the 0.5 percent threshold for a recount in Georgia.

Biden won more than 56 percent of the vote in Cobb County.

Another lawsuit was filed in Georgia on Wednesday by Trump supporters alleging voter fraud, and naming two of the state’s top Republican leaders—Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger.

The lawsuit also seeks to dismiss the Georgia election results. The Cobb County Courier reported Friday that the Cobb County Republican Committee voted to join the lawsuit as a plaintiff, and quoted county GOP chairman Jason Shepherd as saying that party leaders “believe that there are issues in this election which can only be sorted out in a court of law. An issue as important as the integrity of a Presidential election deserves to have evidence heard in a court of law, not a court of public opinion.”

Over the past week, Cobb Elections has been accused by Trump supporters of shredding ballots. Elections director Janine Eveler said last week that documents “not relevant” to the election were shredded after the hand count, but no ballots.

On Monday, a video posted on social media claimed ballots were being shredded at the Cobb Elections headquarters, but the county said the shredding was routine and involved materials from the Cobb Tax Commissioner’s Office.

In both instances the allegations were posted on Twitter by Lin Wood, an Atlanta attorney and Trump supporter who has repeatedly claimed that Trump won the presidential race by a landslide.

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Lassiter Bands Christmas tree sale slated for Highland Plaza

Lassiter Band Christmas tree sale

The Lassiter Bands annual Christmas tree sale is a regular fundraiser for the organization run by the booster club, and it’s set to start on Friday at 10 a.m. in its usual spot in the parking lot of Highland Plaza Shopping Center.

The space is in the lot fronting Sandy Plains Road at Gordy Parkway, as we snapped the shot above on Wednesday, as crews were getting ready for Friday.

Dates, hours and other details are below.

Lassiter Bands Christmas tree sale

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East Cobb Church donates new box truck to Simple Needs GA

Simple Needs GA box truck

Submitted information and photo:

Members of East Cobb Church have responded to the pressing needs of the poor in Cobb County by buying Simple Needs GA a brand-new box truck for picking up and delivering furniture. 

In addition to the donation of the 16-foot GMC Savana box truck, the congregation also made a large financial donation that will cover the cost of insurance and maintenance for the vehicle over the course of its lifetime.  

More than 250 church members also purchased about 3,000 full-sized toiletries and other useful items for distribution by SNGA to shelter check-ins and people experiencing homelessness in Cobb County.  

Taken together, the gifts are by far the largest donation in the history of the Marietta-based nonprofit. 

As a result, SNGA will no longer need to spend large sums of money to rent box trucks for picking up and delivering furniture and household items as part of its Simple Household Needs program, said Brenda Rhodes SNGA Founder and President. 

“The donation of the box truck gives our volunteers much more capacity for picking up and delivering furniture as needed,” she noted. “We’ve already been making pickups and deliveries with the truck and have seen firsthand how being more efficient will allow us to help many more people over time.” 

Located at 2450 Lower Roswell Rd., East Cobb Church was founded in January 2020.  

The donation came as part of its first-ever “Be Rich” campaign, which gets its name from 1 Timothy 6:18 (“Command them to do good, to be rich in good deeds, and to be generous and willing to share.”). 

The goal of the fundraising portion was to help SNGA with its furniture logistics challenges. “Our volunteers often had to scramble to find a way to get much-needed furniture and household items to our clients in Cobb County,” Rhodes noted. 

Initially, though, Pastor Jamey Dickens assumed the campaign would bring in enough money to buy the nonprofit a used pickup truck—not a far-more-expensive, brand-new box truck, he said. Dickens and Katie Peters, a pastoral counselor at East Cobb Church who coordinated the campaign, asked the church’s roughly 800 members to each donate at least $39.95. 

 The outpouring of generosity that resulted was remarkable, Dickens said. “The money just came pouring in,” he said.  

On October 23, East Cobb Church delivered the truck to SNGA’s Marietta warehouse near Cobb Parkway to the applause and tears of SNGA board members, volunteers and other contributors. 

Already deeply involved in community service, members of East Cobb Church were well aware of the disproportionate effects of the pandemic on the poor and were eager to answer the call when the Be Rich campaign was launched, Dickens said.   

“Our people deserve a major shout out and so does Katie, who did a fantastic job leading this effort,” he said. “We’re grateful, too, for how God has led and moved in our church.” 

As Dickens sees it, the successful campaign illustrates the power of people coming together as a community to help others. 

“I loved that it was a very large group effort,” he said. “The ask was just basic, but people stepped up and did what they could—and look at what happened. People give where their heart is engaged.” 

Hearts at Simple Needs GA were touched as well, said Yolanda Kingsberry, a member of SNGA’s board and frequent furniture volunteer. 

“We’re so fortunate to live in a community of generous supporters who value our work and want to help us help others,” she said. “We will make East Cobb Church proud by using this truck to bring comfort to many more deserving families.” 

In a reflection of the generosity of our community at this time, the largest prior donation to SNGA also came during the pandemic when Linked UP Church in Powder Springs donated $14,250 to SNGA this past summer. 

Founded in 2010, SNGA has distributed thousands of duffel bags of full-sized toiletries to shelter check-ins and people experiencing homelessness. Among other activities, the Marietta-based nonprofit last year brought birthday presents and other useful items to more than 270 homeless children; brought furniture and household items to 151 clients; and provided 166 children in 64 families with $100 in requested Christmas gifts. 

For more information about SNGA, email brenda@simpleneedsga.org.

 

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East Cobb traffic update: Shallowford Road reopens after crash

Shallowford Road crash

Related story

UPDATED 2:58 PM: Cobb Police say all lanes are reopened and the crash scene has been cleared.

ORIGINAL STORY:
Shallowford Road at Lassiter Road eastbound is closed after a multi-vehicle crash with what appear to be serious injuries.

Westbound traffic is open but moving slowly in sight of a scene involving at least three cars.

We were in the area and saw an ambulance crew wheel a passenger away who had been sitting on the sidewalk; Cobb Police investigators were just getting to the scene and asking bystanders for initial information. There also are two Cobb Fire/EMS crews standing by.

All three cars had spun near a bank in front of a CVS store at the intersection; one landed near the intersection and another is covered with a blue tarp. An SUV suffered less damage and the passengers provided some eyewitness information.

A woman who was in her car when the crash took place said she didn’t see the collision but said “there were cars flying everywhere.”

We’ll update when we have more information.

 

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Cobb Board of Education adopts legislative priorities for 2021

Submitted information:Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

In the first Board meeting since all Cobb students have had the choice to return to face-to-face learning, the Cobb Schools Board of Education voted to approve the following legislative priorities for the 2020-21 school year: educational access, financial sustainability, and accuracy in accountability.

“With all that has happened to public education since COVID-19, these legislative priorities are even more important than normal. During a pandemic when everything will be more complicated than ever, the needs of our students and teachers are how we came to these priorities and are who we will be supporting going into this legislative session,” said Cobb Schools Board Chair Brad Wheeler.

As demonstrated since March, policies, and funding to support educational access for all students, in both remote or face-to-face classrooms, is more important than it ever has been. Steps to ensure educational access for all students include strengthening the teacher pipeline, sustaining the teachers’ retirement system, and maintaining or increasing Title I allocations. Fully funding classrooms for students and teachers by funding the Quality Basic Education (QBE) formula is the most important part of keeping Cobb Schools financially sustainable. Although due to COVID-19, instruction has looked different this year, the costs for the buildings, utilities, teachers, and staff are called “fixed costs.” To support these fixed costs, the way schools are funded—which is based on Full-Time Equivalent (FTE)—should be based on counts equal to or greater than those taken in March 2020. The school board also determined that financial sustainability, now and in the future, depends on funds not being diverted from public education. As with the other two legislative priorities, the BOE’s final priority has been heavily impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, which has dramatically impacted the way students learn. Accuracy in accountability focuses on reducing the impact of standardized testing, ensuring flexibility around CCRPI, and applying charter waivers to SWSS Systems.

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Walton High School graduate receives Rhodes Scholarship

Sam Patterson, Walton graduate Rhodes Scholarship

Sam Patterson, a 2017 graduate of Walton High School, has received a Rhodes Scholarship.

A senior at the University of Maryland-Baltimore County, he’s one of 32 American students awarded the prestigious scholarship each year, which supports graduate study at the University of Oxford in England.

Here’s more from UMBC about Sam and what he wants to study at Oxford and his plans beyond that:

Patterson will pursue an M.Sc. in the Nature, Society, and Environmental Governance program at Oxford focusing on the economics of transportation. This research area will take full advantage of his three undergraduate degrees from UMBC. This spring, Patterson will earn bachelor of science degrees in mathematics and statistics and a bachelor of arts in economics. 

A Meyerhoff Scholar and member of the Honors College, Patterson has steadily nurtured his interest in transportation economics at UMBC and through intensive summer internships. He conducted research supported by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation at Harvard University with the Harvard Leadership Alliance and at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business. Most recently, at the National Bureau of Economic Research, he evaluated trends in transportation changes in urban centers due to the pandemic.

A strong network of support has been a cornerstone of Patterson’s UMBC experience. “From the Meyerhoff Scholars program to the Honors College to Dr. Householder to Naomi Mburu [UMBC’s first Rhodes Scholar] to my recommenders and mock interviewers and beyond, I’ve never had so many people on my team before, pushing me to achieve something I’m pursuing,” Patterson shares.

A transformative opportunity

Originally from Marietta, Georgia, Patterson’s education and internships have taken him around the U.S. However, he has never traveled abroad, so the Rhodes Scholarship offers a unique opportunity for him to broaden his perspective by studying in the U.K. and visiting other European countries. He hopes to further deepen his understanding of challenges—and potential solutions—related to a range of transportation systems. 

“I’m so excited to go to the U.K.! I think it will do wonders for my research when I experience the European perspective on public transportation and its place in society and sustainability,” Patterson says. “There are so many brilliant academics at Oxford that I’m raring to meet. I just feel so fortunate to be where I am and to be going where I’m going.”

After Oxford, Patterson already has plans to attend Harvard University for a Ph.D. Before he gets there, though, Patterson and his mentors have no doubt the Rhodes experience will be transformative.

“The Rhodes Scholarship is a life-changing opportunity for exceptional young people with the potential to make a difference for good in the world. Sam has that mixture of grit and excellence that is the best of what UMBC represents,” Householder says. “His experience in the U.K. will enrich not only his academic path, but also his personal journey in so many profound ways. I can’t wait to see what he will accomplish.”

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Cobb: Government shredding didn’t include Elections Office

For the second time in a week, Cobb County Government is saying that shredding activities at one of its facilities didn’t involve ballots.Cobb County Government logo

According to a message sent out Tuesday, nothing from the Cobb Elections Office was shredded at all in the latest allegations.

County spokesman Ross Cavitt said in a statement late Tuesday afternoon that a video was being posted on social media that:

“Purportedly shows a shredding company at the building housing the main office for Cobb Elections on Whitlock Avenue in Marietta. This building houses many other Cobb County governmental offices, and the document disposal company was at the building as part of a regularly-scheduled visit to the Cobb Tax Commissioner’s office. No items from Cobb Elections were involved.”

Cavitt didn’t say who posted the video, but it came from Lin Wood, a prominent Atlanta attorney who’s filed a lawsuit for President Donald Trump’s re-election campaign, charging voter fraud.

Democratic former vice president Joe Biden leads in Georgia by less than 13,000 votes as a machine recount of the presidential voting got underway Tuesday.

Cobb Elections workers were conducting that recount at Jim Miller Park, several miles away from the main office, as they did during a hand recount that was completed last week. All elections materials related to the second recount, including ballots, are being stored there.

On Friday, Wood posted on his Twitter account an allegation that election documents were possibly being destroyed in Cobb. County elections director Janine Eveler responded by saying that only documents that were “not relevant” to the election were shredded after the hand recount was done.

Wood posted a few more times Tuesday on his Twitter account, which has more than 592,000 followers. Knox is identified several times as a “Georgia Patriot,” but she responded to Wood to say that the videos were shot by someone else who wished to remain anonymous.

Knox is a business development executive based in East Cobb.

In another Tweet, Wood wrote that “Biden is a crook. Cabala Harris is a Communist Sympathizer. This was NEVER about an election. It is part of an attempt to take over control of our country. I would NEVER incite violence. I urge ALL to pray.”

Biden won more than 56 percent of the vote in Cobb County.

Wood also Tweeted Tuesday that Sidney Powell, an attorney dismissed by the Trump campaign over the weekend, will be filing an election lawsuit in Georgia Wednesday.

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North Point East Cobb church plans: 4 stories, 1,300 seats

North Point East Cobb church plans

A few more details about North Point Ministries’ plans for a church and townhome project at the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford intersection have been posted in the Cobb Zoning Office filings on the application, which is scheduled to be heard next Tuesday by the Cobb Planning Commission.

The 33 acres sits on land owned by prominent attorney Fred Hanna and his wife’s outreach ministry, and which they tried to assemble for a residential project in 2016 that was withdrawn.

North Point is proposing a 4-story building for what it’s calling East Cobb Church with close to 125,000 square feet, including a sanctuary seating capacity of nearly 1,300, according to the revised filing.

(You can read it here.)

East Cobb Church is the seventh congregation overall and the first in Cobb County for North Point Ministries, which is based in Alpharetta and was founded by Andy Stanley. He’s the son of Charles Stanley, the retired longtime pastor at First Baptist Church in Buckhead.

North Point’s campuses in Alpharetta and Buckhead have sanctuary seating capacities of around 3,000.

The new East Cobb congregation was formed in January and has been meeting at Eastside Baptist Church on Lower Roswell Road.

The East Cobb Church building (in the top left corner of the site plan above) would have a parking deck—details still not revealed—fronting Shallowford and a parking lot along Johnson Ferry.

The Cobb Zoning Office has done its analysis, and is recommending a denial, for traffic, density, land-use and other reasons.

For starters, staff analyst Jeannie Peyton concludes the the proposal doesn’t permit a use “that is suitable in the view of use and development of adjacent and nearby properties. The property is in an area with commercial and lower density residential uses.”

The application includes 125 townhomes located in the back of the property assemblage, bisected by Waterfront Drive, which has access from Johnson Ferry and connects to the Johnson Ferry Estates subdivision.

Nearby residential properties are zoned for R-20 single-family use, while the townhomes, proposed for the RM-8 zoning designation, would come in at a density of 11.55 units an acre.

The staff is recommending density of no more than 5 units an acre. The rezoning request calls for townhomes of at least 1,800 square feet, but doesn’t indicate a price range.

North Point has not filed a traffic study, which staff is recommending, and the proposal to close off Waterfront Drive also was noted by Peyton as a concern.

Capacity at nearby schools—Pope HS, Hightower Trail MS and Shallowford Falls ES—also would be negatively affected by the townhomes, according to the staff analysis.

Above all, Peyton wrote, the application doesn’t conform to the county’s comprehensive land-use plan.

“The property is delineated in LDR and NAC future land use categories,” the report concluded. “The requested zoning districts are not consistent with the LDR and NAC future land use designations. Staff has concerns about how this fits with the recently adopted JOSH study.”

That’s the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford Master Plan that was approved in September after a community process of more than two years.

Another major item in East Cobb that was to have been on the December zoning calendar is being delayed again.

The Sprayberry Crossing case, which first was scheduled for September, has been continued ever since then.

The Cobb Zoning Staff has continued the application once more, until February. Zoning cases are not heard in Cobb County in January.

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Official Georgia machine recount begins in presidential race

Cobb presidential hand recount
A hand recount finished last week cut Joe Biden’s lead in Georgia to just under 13,000 votes.

An automatic recount of votes in the presidential race in Georgia began on Tuesday, the third such tabulation in a razor-close battle.

Cobb Elections workers are working from 9-5 Tuesday and Wednesday and the same hours next Monday and Tuesday, and from 9 a.m. until finishing next Wednesday, Dec. 2.

That’s the deadline set by Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to elections offices across the state.

A hand recount finished on Friday had Democratic former vice president Joe Biden with a 12,670-vote lead over Republican President Donald Trump in Georgia.

Biden has 49.51 percent of the vote compared to 49.25 percent for Trump, which falls within the 0.5 percent threshold for a recount in Georgia.

Trump has not conceded, three weeks after the election, as his campaign is filing challenges in other states, including Pennsylvania, where he was trailing Biden by 150,000 votes.

Adding to the drama over the weekend were charged remarks by Sidney Powell, an attorney on Trump’s legal team who said she would “blow up” Georgia with a “biblical” voter fraud lawsuit.

The Trump campaign quickly cut ties with Powell.

The machine recount will be done by machine and the results will become official. Georgia’s elections board certified all election results last Thursday, but the Trump campaign asked for the formal recount after the hand count was finished.

That was the first time Georgia has done a hand recount. Like that process, the machine recount will add up nearly 5 million votes cast by Georgians in the presidential race.

The public is invited to observe the Cobb Elections recount, which like the hand recount is taking place at Jim Miller Park (2245 Calloway Road, Marietta).

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East Cobb UMC drive-up COVID testing site draws long lines

East Cobb rapid COVID-19 testing

This was the scene Monday morning westbound on Roswell Road between East Piedmont Road and Sewell Mill Road: Long lines at a rapid COVID-19 pop-up facility at East Cobb United Methodist Church.

Conducted by Viral Solutions, a private company, the rapid-testing set-up includes a drive-through tent in the parking lot of the church sanctuary.

No appointments are needed, and there are no out-of-pocket costs for the tests, according to Viral Solutions, which says it’s accepting all forms of insurance.

These are the standard “PCR” tests, which detect the presence of the COVID-19 virus, and they’re the most common form of COVID test. The test results are reported in 24-36 hours.

This is one of five pop-up sites in metro Atlanta for Viral Solutions.

The location at East Cobb UMC (2325 Roswell Road) is open from 8 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and from 1-5 p.m. Monday-Friday (with a lunch break from 12:30-1) and from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday.

Cobb and Douglas Public Health is continuing free COVID-19 test this week, including Wednesday from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Life University in Marietta.

Free testing also takes place at Jim Miller Park. For more information click here.

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East Cobb voters stick with Trump but Biden wins precincts

East Cobb voters Trump Biden
Joe Biden won most of the precincts (in green) and 56 percent of the presidential vote in Cobb County against Donald Trump. For more details, click here.

After Georgia certified election results Friday that included a win for Joe Biden in the presidential race, Donald Trump’s campaign has asked for an official recount.

That comes after a hand recount across the state upheld a slender advantage for Biden, of less than 13,000 votes.

Those figures didn’t change much in Cobb County, which for the second presidential election in a row was won by a Democrat.

Joe Biden won 56 percent of the vote in Cobb and most of the precincts, as indicated in green in the Georgia Secretary of State’s map above.

Trump won most of the precincts in East Cobb, but Biden won 13 of those 48 precincts and outperformed Hillary Clinton in some areas as well as countywide.

Biden received 221,846 votes in Cobb to 165,459 for Trump. In 2016, Clinton got 160,121 votes to 152,912 for Trump to become the first Democrat since Jimmy Carter to win the county.

Cobb Democrats have gained more ground since then. They won all countywide races they contested this year, including Cobb Commission Chair, Sheriff, District Attorney and Superior Court Clerk.

In January, an all-female and a Democratic-majority Cobb Board of Commissioners will take office, headed by current commissioner Lisa Cupid, the first Democratic chair since 1984.

Like other metro Atlanta suburban areas, Cobb was coveted political territory for Democrats this year, as illustrated by The New York Times in a precinct shift analysis last week.

East Cobb voters Trump Biden
Despite support from East Cobb voters, Republicans lost in countywide races, and Democratic candidates won in presidential, U.S. Senate and Congressional races. (ECN photo)

East Cobb Republican legislative incumbents were re-elected, but a few of those races were close, as was Cobb Board of Education Post 5, where GOP incumbent David Banks held on for a fourth term.

Last week Cobb Elections issued its “Statement of Votes Cast” report, which is a precinct-by-precinct breakdown of all the election results (you can read through it here). For reference here are the 2016 precinct results.

A table of the presidential vote in East Cobb precincts in 2020 includes an asterisk next to the precinct-winning total; the Bells Ferry 2 precinct ended in a tie (indicated in beige on the map).

Trump Biden Turnout %
Addison 930 990* 80.52
Bells Ferry 2 1127 (tie) 1127 (tie) 74.45
Bells Ferry 3 768 871* 69.62
Blackwell 908 1113* 76.98
Chattahoochee 986 2860* 66.34
Chestnut Ridge 1446* 1215 86.08
Davis 857* 807 81.84
Dickerson 1209* 1149 85.54
Dodgen 921* 810 85.19
East Piedmont 782 1077* 72.33
Eastside 1 1325* 1200 85.33
Eastside 2 1698* 1601 83.48
Elizabeth 2 1022* 864 79.01
Elizabeth 3 1226* 1014 82.80
Elizabeth 4 715 1077* 69.35
Elizabeth 5 1103 1168* 80.48
Fullers Park 1436* 1374 83.40
Garrison Mill 1211* 1105 82.42
Gritters 1578* 1359 75.20
Hightower 1858* 1640 84.47
Kell 853* 690 79.36
Lassiter 1613* 1316 82.84
Mabry 833* 538 85.27
McCleskey 810* 609 84.04
Marietta 6A 374 1184* 59.69
Marietta 6B 970 1283* 79.90
Mt. Bethel 1 1760* 1626 84.56
Mt. Bethel 3 1299 1344* 82.00
Mt. Bethel 4 1305* 1094 82.79
Murdock 1722* 1598 84.11
Nicholson 969* 843 76.05
Pope 1349* 1173 82.33
Post Oak 1680* 1289 82.79
Powers Ferry 1213 1287* 73.698
Rocky Mount 1441* 1234 80.88
Roswell 1 2387* 2141 86.01
Roswell 2 1545* 1518 85.03
Sandy Plains 1117 1192* 81.25
Sewell Mill 1 1334 1481* 82.22
Sewell Mill 3 1249 1859* 67.20
Shallowford Falls 1487* 1294 84.62
Simpson 738* 756 81.85
Sope Creek 1 970* 835 85.76
Sope Creek 2 1632 1963* 78.28
Sope Creek 3 1213* 1089 80.91
Terrell Mill 1030 2477* 61.97
Timber Ridge 1025* 1016 85.42
Willeo 1270* 1079 85.19

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East Cobb Park to hold ‘Virtual Holiday Lights’ celebration

Holiday Lights at East Cobb Park

There won’t be an in-person Holiday Lights event at East Cobb Park this year due to COVID-19, but the Friends for the East Cobb Park organization will be presenting a virtual celebration for the public instead.

That’s slated for Sunday, Dec. 6, starting at 6 p.m., and you can watch all the festivities on the Friends’ Facebook page.

Those festivities will be beamed via a livestream—caroling, a message from Santa Claus, and the tree lighting.

A number of other holiday events in the East Cobb area have gone virtual or have been altered, and most of the area’s holiday craft fairs have been cancelled or have gone online.

Earlier this week, the Mountain View Arts Alliance—which stages the Empty Bowl Brunch at The Art Place—announced an Empty Bowl Gift Bag sale that includes a cookbook with recipes from 20 years of the event.

The park was closed for several weeks in the spring, and in September the Friends group began sponsoring Sunday Funday concerts, typically held in the late afternoon daylight hours and with social-distancing and masking protocols.

The presenting sponsor for those events, as well as Holiday Lights, has been Wellstar.

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