Wright Center Eagle Scout projects celebrated at court of honor 

Wright Center Eagle Scout projects
Eagle Scouts (l-r): Ryan Dean, Austin Jordan, Brooks Hess, Marlowe Elmiger, and Dominic Krueger. Bob Ott, Chartered Org Representative, introduced the Eagle Candidates and helped to present the Eagle Awards, along with Scoutmaster Jim Flowers (not pictured).

Thanks to Janis Hylton of the Cobb Master Gardeners and the Wright Environmental Education Center, for the information and photo:

The Master Gardeners and Volunteers at Wright Environmental Education Center are proud of and grateful to the recently-awarded Eagle Scouts who accomplished their Eagle projects on the property. Ryan Dean, Brooks Hess, and Dominic Krueger received their Eagle Awards at the Boy Scout Troop 1011 Court of Honor at Mt. Bethel UMC on Sunday, January 31, along with Marlowe Elmiger and Austin Jordan. All completed very meaningful projects.

The Eagle projects at Wright Center are:

Ryan Dean expanded the Frog Pond and installed a new liner. His team caught the frogs and tadpoles, drained the pond, excavated a new section and replaced the old liner with a new one. New pond plants were added along with a ton of large rocks laid around the perimeter on which the frogs can sun themselves. The project helps facilitate the growth of the frog population.

Brooks Hess and his team built a Plant Jail – four walls rising above a raised platform floor with bars installed in two of the walls. The structure is an invasive plant exhibit designed as a display area for the “dirty dozen” most prevalent invasive plants at Wright and to teach others about the damage that invasive plants do.

Dominic Krueger made several improvements at Wright. He built and installed rustic benches and a swing to provide convenient seating on the front porch of the education center. He and his team also planted native plants.

Judy Beard, Master Gardener Chair at Wright Center, and MG Janis Hylton attended the ceremony to honor the Scouts and their families.

For more info on Wright Center, go to www.cobbmastergardeners.com

Click on “Where We Dig,” then “Wright Environmental Education Center.”

 

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Marietta Museum of History to hold black women’s history event

Marietta History Museum hours

Submitted information:

The Marietta Museum of History will be hosting its monthly Pop-In event on Saturday, February 20th from 10:30am-3:30pm. Pop-Ins provide children and their families the opportunity to interact with the Museum through themed activities and crafts. Join us in February for crafts and activities geared towards women in black history, currently these will be “Make and Take” so families may enjoy them at home while the Museum adheres to current health guidelines. Our “Black Women’s History” crafts are included with admission! The Museum’s new health policies and procedures are posted on our website. 

When: February 20th, 2021
10:30am-3:30pm

Where: Marietta Museum of History
1 Depot Street, Marietta, GA 30060

Cost: Admission to the Museum during the Pop-In will be $5 per person with a family cap of $20!

The Museum uses ordinary objects to tell the extraordinary stories of Marietta and Cobb County. Current temporary exhibits include: The Man with the Camera: Photographs by Raymond T. Burford, Made by Her Hands: The Beauty, Warmth and Stories of Local Quilting, and Votes for Women: A Portrait of Persistence which is organized by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service in collaboration with the National Portrait Gallery. This project received support from the Smithsonian American Women’s History Initiative.

For more information, call 770-794-5710 or visit www.MariettaHistory.org.

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Cobb County included in flash flood watch through Friday morning

Cobb County flash flood watch

After avoiding icy conditions on Tuesday and drying out with warmer sunshine Wednesday, Cobb County and much of Georgia are in for rain and possible flash flooding through Friday morning.

The National Weather Service in Peachtree City issued a flash flood watch from 7 p.m. Wednesday to 7 a.m. Friday.

Rainfall between one and two inches could take place within the watch area, which extends south of Americus and east of Athens.

The flash flood threat, the NWS said, is due to soil being wet from previous rain this week.

There is a 90 percent chance of rain Wednesday night and that is expected to dissipate into Thursday.

Temperatures reached into the low 50s Wednesday, but highs will drop into the mid 40s Thursday through Saturday.

Lows Wednesday and Thursday are expected to be in the mid 30s as the chance of rain decreases.

There could be some snow showers Friday morning, followed by mostly sunny skies and a low in the mid 20s.

Saturday also will be sunny with highs in the high 40s and lows also in the mid 20s.

Slightly warmer weather moves in on Sunday, with sun and highs in the low 50s and lows in the high 30s, including a 30 percent chance of rain.

Next week starts with rain on Monday and gradually will be sunny with highs forecast to be in the 60s.

 

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Wheeler group advocating name change to hold town hall

Wheeler name change town hall

Wheeler High School students and others who are organizing to change the school name are having a virtual town hall meeting next week.

The Facebook group Joseph Wheeler Name Change said the town hall will take place next Tuesday, Feb. 23, starting at 8 p.m.

Students, parents, staff and the school community are invited to attend, and can register by clicking here.

The group was formed after a petition was created last summer to change the name of Wheeler. The school, which opened in 1965, was named after Joseph Wheeler, a Confederate Civil War general.

Students have been speaking during the public comment period before the Cobb Board of Education in recent months (see video clip below), but said school board leadership has not responded to their requests to meet, or to have the issue placed on meeting agendas for discussion.

School board member Charisse Davis of Post 6, which includes the Wheeler cluster, signed that online petition.

In December, the board’s four-member Republican majority voted along partisan lines to require a majority vote for members other than the chair to add agenda items.

“We fully value the time and work they put into serving the community but that does not mean we aren’t willing to hold them accountable in instances such as this,” the group said in a recent post.

“Not only do we want the board to hear what we have to say, we truly want to hear what they have to say as well. Ignorance is NOT the answer to building a better community nor a better Cobb.”

The group has said having the school named after Wheeler “does not reflect the values of our students today.”

They’ve said their research shows that the Cobb school board named the then-new high school on Holt Road at a time when the school district was beginning racial integration.

During its early years, Wheeler was a nearly all-white school, but as the area began to diversify, it’s become a majority-minority school.

According to the Georgia Department of Education, Wheeler had an enrollment of 2,038 students in October, with 861 black students, 478 Hispanic students and 308 students of Asian descent.

The Joseph Wheeler Name Change group, which said last fall it wanted to spark a “community dialogue” about the issue, said next week’s town hall will be open to anyone regardless of their point of view, and that the event was designed to have a “constructive conversation.”

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Atlanta law firm alters scholarship program for HS seniors

Atlanta law firm scholarship program
2019 Winners (Left to Right: Eric Rogers, Aditi Madhusudan (Second Place), Michael Goldberg, Joe Fried, Sherrod Crum (First Place) and Tanner Freise (Third Place).

Submitted information and photo:

Twelve years ago, the personal injury law firm of Fried Goldberg in Atlanta, Georgia started the Scales of Justice Scholarship to provide scholarships to three high school seniors from the metro Atlanta area to help offset the costs of going to college. “At the time, we had middle school and younger children but could see how hard it was for high school kids to get into college and how stressful it was to pay for it,” said founding partner Joe Fried.

The scholarship is for high school seniors who are attending high school in Fulton, Gwinnett, Cobb, Clayton, or DeKalb county and has traditionally been based on an essay contest addressing a current legal issue with the top three applicants receiving awards ranging from $1,000 to $500. This year, applicants will submit a video entry, and the first-place winner will
receive $2500 and the second and third place winners $1000 each.

“We decided to bring the contest into the 21st century by taking video entries instead of essay contests. I think kids nowadays express themselves through videos and social media more than anything else, and we wanted to tap into that trend. We also increased the amount of the scholarships as the price of everything has definitely gone up over the past 12 years,” explained Fried.

Over the years, the winners have been seniors attending colleges ranging from Harvard to Kennesaw State. “It is always amazing to see the quality of the entries and to see where the winners will be going to college. We have had the first-place winner attend college at a local school and had them go to the biggest and most prestigious colleges in the country. It goes to show you how smart people are from all walks of life,”  commented partner Michael Goldberg.

To apply for the scholarship, applicants should go to www.friedgoldberg.com/scholarship. The deadline for applications is March 19, 2021.

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Leading COVID-19 metrics continue fall in Cobb; deaths lag

Cobb COVID metrics fall
PCR test positivity rates continue to fall in Cobb County; for more visit the Georgia DPH Daily Status Report.

Many of the key COVID-19 metrics that have been on the decline in Cobb County over the last two weeks or so continue falling, although death rates are continuing to lag those figures.

We’ve been noting in particular the steep drop in case rates, generally in the county, and reported by the Cobb County School District (which is on winter break this week).

Other numbers that have been receding including community spread, hospitalizations and test positivity rates.

According to the Georgia Department of Public Health, as of 3 p.m. Tuesday, there were 160 new confirmed COVID-19 cases in Cobb County, according to the “date of report” category. There were also 12 more deaths reported on Tuesday in the same category, continuing a trend of double-figure death reports over the last month.

Since the COVID-19 pandemic began in March 2020, there have been 53,826 cases in Cobb County and 791s death, per Cobb and Douglas Public Health.

On Monday Dr. Janet Memark, director of Cobb and Douglas Public Health, offered a snapshot update of those and other indicators in the two-county region.

The community spread figures continue to move down, with Tuesday’s 14-day moving average of 322 cases per 100,000 people, a drop of more than 100 from the end of last week.

After surging past 1,000 cases per 100,000 in early January, that number is now close to returning to what it was in October, when Cobb school district students were returning to campuses.

A two-week average of 100 cases per 100,000 is considered “high” community spread.

Hospitalization numbers also are doing down, with the Cobb and Douglas region falling to around 92 percent of general inpatient beds in use, after hovering near full capacity.

Also trending in a more positive direction is the COVID-19 test positivity rate. After peaking at around 20 percent in January, that figure in Cobb County is was at 8.9 percent on Tuesday, The seven-day moving average is 6.9, the closest is had been to the ideal 5 percent range since late November.

But vaccine distribution in Cobb remains very limited. Cobb and Douglas Public Health is in th second week of halting new appointments at Jim Miller Park as it honors previously booked appointments and second doses.

On Tuesday, no vaccines were distributed due to the cold weather, but those with appointments were to be notified about rescheduling.

For more Cobb COVID information, click here.

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Golden K Kiwanis Club honors student with Silver Pen Award

Golden K Kiwanis Silver Pen Award

Submitted information and photo:

The Silver Pen Award is presented by the Kiwanis Club of Marietta Golden K to an elementary school student in Cobb County for completing and submitting a creative writing response to a writing prompt. The 2020 Silver Pen winner is Jeremiah Perry from Rocky Mount Elementary School with the Cobb County School District in Marietta, GA. Jeremiah won the award last year when he was a 4th grader, but the pandemic delayed the recognition ceremony until February 2021. 

As explained by Jim Perry, Past President of the Kiwanis Club of Marietta Golden K (no relation to the winner), “The Silver Pen Award is designed to encourage creative writing.”  Students read the beginning of an interesting short story, create an engaging end to the story, then submit it to their 4th grade teacher for review.  Each homeroom teacher selects the top three entries from the class and the Assistant Principal chooses one finalist from each class. The four finalists are given “a numbered score” by former educators who are now members of the Kiwanis Club of Marietta Golden K. All the stories are submitted without names throughout the selection process, so the judges do not know which student wrote the story. 

Jeremiah received the following special gifts: A Kiwanis Club Pen, a Silver Pen, twenty one-dollar coins, and an engraved plaque from the Kiwanis Club of Marietta Golden K recognizing Jeremiah for his writing accomplishment.

Jim Perry spoke for all present (at the socially-distanced, outside awards ceremony on February 10, 2021) when he told Jeremiah, “We hope you will take that writing skill and put it to use throughout your life, because our whole purpose is to encourage good writers to be better writers. You did well.”  Assistant Principal Dr. Sage Doolittle added, “Rocky Mount is so proud of Jeremiah! We are thrilled that he has embraced a love for creative writing and that writing passion will serve him well in the future.”

Pictured above representing the Kiwanis Club of Marietta Golden K are: Jim Perry (Past President), Jim Farley (Past Kiwanis District 15 Lt. Governor), Aimee Mendel (President-elect), Margy Rogers (President), and Gene Schumacher (Committee Co-chair). Also pictured are: Dr. Sage Doolittle (Assistant Principal at Rocky Mount Elementary); Shani Childress (Jeremiah’s Teacher at Rocky Mount Elementary) and Marika Perry (Jeremiah’s mother). Not pictured is John Kone (Club Vice President).

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East Cobb Weather Alert: Black ice advisory issued for Tuesday

Cobb black ice advisory

The National Weather Service has issued an advisory about the chance of black ice into Tuesday morning in much of north Georgia as temperatures are headed below freezing following rain on Monday.

Temperatures in metro Atlanta and Cobb County could dip into the low 20s Monday night, and highs on Tuesday are expected only to be in the mid-30s, according to the NWS in Atlanta.

Cobb County Government issued a statement late Monday afternoon saying all of its offices will open Tuesday on a delayed basis, starting at 10 a.m.

The Cobb Board of Commissioners zoning hearing will start at 10:30 a.m. instead of the usual 9 a.m. time.

The Cobb and Douglas Public Health drive-up vaccine service at Jim Miller Park will be closed Tuesday, as that’s an outdoor set-up.

The statement also said that Cobb DOT road crews will arrive early and inspect the roads, treating any ice areas, and pre-treating bridges.

The Cobb County School District and most private schools in the East Cobb area are on winter break this week. Annual CCSD staffers will be working remotely Tuesday, according to a message the school district issued late Monday afternoon.

The message said that employees whose jobs require them to be on-site will be contacted by their supervisor.

The chance of rain Monday night is 100 percent, with between a quarter and a half inch possible in some areas.

Tuesday’s forecast calls for partly sunny skies, but it will be cold, and low temperatures Tuesday night also will be in the mid-20s.

The weather will get warmer as the week goes on, into the 50s by Thursday, but also with rain and subfreezing temperatures in the forecast Thursday night.

 

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Cobb Commission Chairwoman to issue state of the county addresses

Submitted information:

On Monday, March 8, Chairwoman Lisa Cupid will hold two events to share our 2021 State of the County address:

  • State of the County address at Cobb ChamberDuring the Cobb Chamber’s Marquee Monday luncheon at the Coca-Cola Roxy, Cupid will discuss how Cobb continues to provide outstanding customer service despite the challenges of a global pandemic, address community concerns, support the business community and maintain fiscal stability. She will also highlight the county’s biggest successes and milestones from 2020, as well as our goals for 2021 to continue moving Cobb forward. Registration is open now through March 3 for those attending in person. To attend virtually, register for the event by selecting the virtual attendance option. For more information, or to register, click here.

  • State of the County community eventCupid will also host a State of the County address for the community on the evening of Monday, March 8. This will be an excellent opportunity for residents to learn about progress and goals in our community and to ask questions. Due to socially-distanced protocols, the event will be open to a small number of interested attendees who will be randomly selected. If you would like to attend in person or know someone who would, please email the names to comments@cobbcounty.org. Everyone is also invited to attend the address virtually. More information will be shared soon about this event.

 

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Wellstar honors ‘Vital Valentines’ employees for pandemic care

Wellstar Vital Valentines

Submitted information and photos:

Wellstar Health System, one of Georgia’s largest and most integrated healthcare systems, is celebrating team members as “Vital Valentines” for providing extraordinary and compassionate care during the pandemic. The systemwide appreciation campaign honors all team members with special customized and heartfelt messages of support from Wellstar leaders.

When: From Feb. 10 to Feb. 14, Wellstar will distribute appreciation notes to all team members, including Valentine’s Day cards and candy hearts with customized Wellstar messages. Employees will also have the opportunity to share and acknowledge co-workers with notecards or recognize a team member by making an online donation to the Employee Assistance Fund in the honoree’s name.

Wellstar has launched a systemwide appreciation campaign to honor all team members as “Vital Valentines.”

Community Participation: Wellstar also encourages the public to join in celebrating Wellstar team members by following Wellstar social media channels, including Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, in the days leading up to Valentine’s Day. The community is invited to share photos, words of encouragement, and other appreciation items on social media by using the hashtag #vitalvalentines. Also, we’ve partnered with the Wellstar Foundation for anyone who would like to make a donation honoring a Wellstar physician, caregiver or team member by visiting www.wellstar.org/wccg. 100% of the donation will support the Foundation’s Emergency Assistance Fund, which offers emergency financial support to our healthcare workers and team members who experience unforeseen catastrophic events.

Wellstar Vital Valentines

Wellstar Vital Valentines

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Cobb schools COVID-19 case rates drop to pre-holiday figures

As the COVID-19 case rates have declined dramatically in Cobb County, they also have gone down significantly in the Cobb County School District. Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

The district’s weekly COVID update on Friday reported 232 newly confirmed cases of the virus among students and staff. That’s the lowest single-week tally since there were 106 new cases the week of Nov. 20, right before the Thanksgiving holiday.

For the first time in many weeks, any schools that reporting cases have 10 or fewer, even in high schools, which have had occasional double-digit numbers over the last few months.

The schools in East Cobb with the highest number of cases this week are Addison Elementary School and Walton High School, with 7 each.

Since July 1, there have been 3,731 cumulative COVID cases reported in the Cobb school district, which doesn’t break down numbers among staff and students.

High schools have the most total cases, led by 98 at Walton and North Cobb.

Since students returned for a phased reopening of in-person classes in October, weekly case rates climbed steadily, to 470 the week of Jan. 15, after the start of the spring semester.

The following week, all classes were held online, and two Cobb teachers who had been hospitalized with COVID died, including Cynthia Lindsey, a paraprofessional at Sedalia Park Elementary School.

This week’s figures were a steep drop from the 331 reported last week, which had been the lowest since mid-December.

COVID cases in Cobb have been falling since February. This week there have been 829 cases reported according to date of report, with only Thursday having more than 200 cases.

According to date of symptom figures, there have been 337 cases in Cobb, as some of those daily numbers are falling below triple digits for the first time since late October.

Earlier this week Dr. Janet Memark of Cobb and Douglas Public Health was encouraged by those figures, as well as community spread numbers that show a declining 14-day average of 371 cases per 100,000 people. That number had been above 1,000 per 100,000 last month.

Public health officials said 100 cases per 100,000 is considered “high” community spread.

They also say anything below a 5 percent test positivity rate is ideal. In Cobb that metric also has been falling, to a current 7-day moving average of around 9 percent. That number had been 17.8 percent on Jan. 1.

Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale urged students, parents and staff to take precautions during the winter break week next week to continue to reduce the spread of the virus.

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Cobb NAACP Black History Month events continue

From the Cobb NAACP, information on its Black History Month events, virtual and in-person, including a Profiles in Black and General Membership meeting on Feb. 23 at The Strand Theatre in Marietta:

Cobb NAACP Black History month events

 

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Cobb schools to seek SPLOST extension referendum in November

Eastvalley ES parents
A portable classroom at Eastvalley ES, which is slated for a replacement facility in the current Cobb Ed-SPLOST V collection period.

Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale said Thursday he will be seeking an extension of the Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax with a referendum in November.

What would be Cobb Ed-SPLOST VI would begin in 2024 and for five years would continue to collect a one-percent sales tax for school facility, maintenance and technology expenses.

Local legislation will be required this year to call for a referendum, which would take place in a light election year.

Ragsdale said a project list, called a “notebook,” and details about the process throughout this year will be coming soon.

That process includes public hearings about the project list. A total estimated cost of the five-year collection period, which would also raise funds for similar needs for Marietta City Schools, is to be announced.

At a Cobb school board work session Thursday, Ragsdale said there will be an even higher emphasis on technology, given the expanded remote learning options the Cobb school district has been providing this year due to COVID-19, and that figures to continue on a long-term basis.

“The pandemic has brought a new focus on technology,” he said.

That may include what Ragsdale calls a “one-to-one” initiative for devices, which Cobb students have received since the end of the last school year for remote learning.

The current SPLOST V collection period began in January 2019. The major facility projects include a new campus for Osborne High School and a rebuild of Eastvalley Elementary School in East Cobb.

An architect was hired last February to design the new Eastvalley campus, which will be relocated to the former site of East Cobb Middle School on Holt Road. A construction timeline has not been announced.

The process of developing a SPLOST notebook—with public as well as staff and school board input—will take place throughout the rest of the year, leading up to a referendum.

“No other district creates a notebook like we do,” Ragsdale said. “It’s about prioritizing needs.”

The current $797 million SPLOST V was passed in March 2017. This year, the only elections in Cobb County are in its six municipalities.

“This District could not survive without Ed-SPLOST because that is what allows us to build the school buildings, school improvements, athletic fields, and technology our students and staff need,” a Cobb schools spokeswoman said in a statement to East Cobb News.

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East Cobb Food Scores: Stockyard; Tin Lizzy’s; Capozzi’s; more

Stoclyard Burgers, East Cobb food scores

The following East Cobb food scores from Feb. 8-12 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Capozzi’s Restaurant
4285 Roswell Road
February 11, 2021 Score: 95, Grade: A

Jamaican Dutch Pot Restaurant
2555 Delk Road, Suite A-11
February 9, 2021 Score: 83, Grade: B

McDonald’s
2782 Sandy Plains Road
February 12, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

Stockyard Burgers and Bones
4475 Roswell Road, Suite 1700
February 8, 2021 Score: 95, Grade: A

Smitty’s Lockdown BBQ
2900 Canton Road
February 11, 2021 Score: 88, Grade: B

Tin Lizzy’s Cantina
4475 Roswell Road, Suite 1510
February 8, 2021 Score: 93, Grade: A

Wing Cafe & Tap House
2145 Roswell Road, Suite 170
February 10, 2021 Score: 99, Grade: A

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Lovesac furniture retailer opens at The Avenue East Cobb

Lovesac Opens Avenue East Cobb

Submitted information and photo:

Lovesac, maker of The World’s Most Adaptable Couch and The World’s Most Comfortable Seat  is opening its 2nd Georgia showroom this weekend at The Avenue East Cobb.

Known for high end retail, The Avenue East Cobb is excited to welcome this specialty furniture retailer to their outdoor lifestyle centers and feel Lovesac is the perfect addition to their already diverse tenant mix including Williams Sonoma, Pottery Barn, Lululemon, Sephora and Banana Republic.

About Lovesac – Lovesac is committed to providing comfort and peace of mind that you can’t get with other furniture. We believe a product should be built to last a lifetime and designed to evolve as your needs change. This heightened sense of utility enables a new way of living – where you can continue to invest in, expand, and evolve your furniture instead of adding it to the landfill. This reduced stress frees you to live the life you love.

The Avenue East Cobb showroom opens Friday, February 12 from 10 am – 7 pm with a 25% off President’s Day Sale. Showroom capacity will be limited to ensure safe social distancing or you can schedule an appointment or learn more about their reopening plan at Lovesac.com/showroom-reopen.

 

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Divided Cobb school board extends superintendent’s contract

Cobb school superintendent honored

Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale received a new contract extension Thursday night.

But the vote wasn’t unanimous as it has been in the past.

After an executive session and by a 4-3 party-line vote, the Cobb Board of Education approved the extension for Ragsdale, taking his contract into 2024.

A year ago, Ragsdale got a 7-0 vote to extend his contract and a salary increase to $350,000 a year.

On Thursday, the four votes in support of an extension were from the board’s Republican members—David Banks and David Chastain of East Cobb, Randy Scamihorn of North Cobb and Brad Wheeler of West Cobb.

The three Democratic members of the board—Charisse Davis of East Cobb and Smyrna, Jaha Howard of Smyrna and Tre’ Hutchins of South Cobb—voted against.

Board members didn’t discuss the extension before voting. Since they were elected two years ago, Davis and Howard have taken issue with Ragsdale on several issues, including equity matters and the district’s response to COVID-19.

In December, they opposed his recommendation to spend $12 million for special UV disinfecting lights hand sanitizers and other COVID-related safety equipment, saying that was a lot of money to spend from the district’s reserve funding for measures they said were proven.

Last month, Howard was blocked from asking Ragsdale about the district’s COVID response, which wasn’t on the board’s agenda despite the deaths of three teachers from the virus since Christmas.

Hutchins just began his tenure on the board, being elected in November to succeed three-term Democratic member David Morgan, who did not seek re-election.

Ragsdale, named Cobb superintendent in 2015 after serving as deputy superintendent and in other capacities, initially received a three-year contract, the maximum under state law. Since then he has received extensions without objections.

After the vote Thursday, Ragsdale thanked the board and said he looked forward to continue working “as one team.”

In a release issued by the district, board chairman Randy Scamihorn said that “as a Board, we are grateful to have a Superintendent and staff who provide steady, consistent leadership at the helm of one of the largest districts in the country. The common-sense approach to the challenges we face, along with consistently making decisions that prioritize our students and staff, makes our entire county better.”

The release cited improved test scores, improvements to teacher and staff salaries and technology initiatives to accommodate remote learning and enhance school security.

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Cobb schools to offer virtual learning option for 2021-22

Cobb K-5 reopening plans
A demonstration of a virtual student completing classwork in real-time from home. Source: CCSD

Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale said Thursday a virtual learning option will be offered in the Cobb County School District for the 2021-22 school year.

He made the announcement at the Cobb Board of Education work session Thursday afternoon, and said revisions to the current remote and in-person options are being revised.

“That is emphatic and definite,” Ragsdale said of continuing a virtual option.

He said hopes to have the modifications finalized by the end of the current school year in May.

He did not elaborate on what those changes may entail, except to say that “we are learning from mistakes” and “seeing the impacts” a dual learning system has had on students and teachers.

“We recognize the extreme level of difficulty for all team members this school year,” Ragsdale said.

While students have had a choice of how to learn, teachers have been required to teach from their classrooms, and to teach their in-person and remote students simultaneously.

That has led to complaints from teachers for instructional and health reasons. Following the COVID-related deaths of three Cobb school teachers since Christmas, some have renewed calls to allow teachers with health issues to work from home.

Ragsdale didn’t specify those matters in his remarks at the school board work session.

More than two-thirds of Cobb’s more than 107,000 students opted for in-person learning for the spring semester, a higher figure than slightly more than 50 percent in the fall.

But while Ragsdale said he is hopeful that COVID “will be in the rear view mirror” someday, that time is not now.

“I don’t know if the virtual option is not here to stay,” he said. “Some students excel in that environment.”

Parents of Cobb school district students have until the end of February to change their child’s learning option for the rest of the current school year.

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Cobb traffic update: I-75 NB reopens after multi-vehicle crash

I-75 closed Cobb multi-vehicle crash

UPDATED:

The interstate reopened Thursday shortly before 7 p.m.

ORIGINAL REPORT:

Cobb Police said Thursday afternoon that Interstate 75 northbound in Cobb County will be closed below Chastain Road for several more hours after a fatal multi-vehicle crash.

Police sent out a social media message around 1:30 p.m. Thursday that the northbound lanes of the interstate will be “likely shut down for another 6+ hours” as they continue to investigate the crash and clear the scene.

The northbound express lanes also are closed.

There’s been at least one fatality and more than a dozen vehicles were involved in the crash, which took place late Thursday morning on the interstate between Barrett Parkway and Chastain Road, including a tractor-trailer that caught fire.

Traffic backups on I-75 north are already below Roswell Road. The photo above is a Georgia DOT screengrab of northbound traffic at the South Marietta Parkway shortly after 2 p.m.

Alternative routes include Cobb Parkway and I-575.

This post will be updated.

 

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Cobb COVID case rates, community spread continue to fall

Cobb COVID cases continue fall
Source: Georgia DPH. You can view more data its its daily COVID status report by clicking here.

For the third day in a row, newly reported cases of COVID-19 in Cobb County numbered less than 200, as case rates and the county’s rate of community spread of the virus continue to fall.

The Georgia Department of Public Health reported Tuesday that there were 114 new cases in Cobb, according to the “date of report” category, following 142 and 143 on Monday and Tuesday, respectively.

Wednesday’s total was the lowest date of report figure in Cobb since late November. The seven-day moving average of 190 also is the lowest in the county since early December.

The Georgia DPH reports cases and deaths two ways: By the dates cases and deaths are reported to the health agency, and the date of symptoms, or onset, and date of death.

The date of onset/date of death numbers also are going down, but high numbers of deaths in Cobb continue to lag.

There have been 15 deaths in Cobb via date of report since Monday, including 11 on Tuesday. But dates inside a 14-day window are likely to be revised.

On Jan. 26, the last day before current window, nine deaths took place in Cobb, a single-day high. Eight deaths occurred on two other recent days, Dec. 25 and Jan. 16.

Final January date of death figures in Cobb are not in; 137 deaths were reported by date of report statistics, which sometimes include deaths that took place in previous months.

Since the pandemic began last March, 754 people have died of COVID in Cobb County, and there have been 52,798 cases.

You can look through detailed Cobb County COVID data, include cases and deaths by age, race and ZIP codes, by clicking here.

Dr. Janet Memark, director of Cobb and Douglas Public Health, said in an update Tuesday to the Cobb Board of Commissioners that deaths typically lag cases and hospitalizations, which are also starting to go down.

She didn’t give specific numbers, but was also encouraged by a reduction in the level of community spread in Cobb County.

As the winter spike reached its peak, Cobb had a 14-day average of more than 1,000 cases per 100,000 people. “High community spread” is a two-week average of 100 per 100,000, and Cobb has been under that total only briefly, for a few days in the fall, since last summer.

But as of Wednesday, Cobb’s community spread figure is at 415, both the result of the PCR tests and rapid antigen tests.

“We were more than double these rates just a few weeks ago,” Memark said.

But the availability of vaccines for the general public remains limited. Cobb and Douglas Health has not been booking new appointments for the last two weeks, and is using its supplies for those who previously had appointments.

On Monday, Memark said the agency distributed only 668 vaccines at Jim Miller Park. You can hear her full remarks on the video below. She did not indicate whether new vaccine appointments would be opening for next week, saying Cobb and Douglas Public Health may not get a significant increase in supplies until March or April. 

Cobb and Douglas Public Health had been releasing appointments each Friday at 5 p.m. You can check that status and get more information about vaccine distribution by clicking here.

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Cobb Animal Shelter undergoing cleaning after strep zoo tests

Cobb animal shelter closes

The Cobb Animal Shelter will resume previously scheduled appointments for adoptions and surrenders as early as Friday after closing over the weekend due after two dogs were tested for strep zoo.

The county issued a statement Wednesday saying that the two dogs tested negative for strep zoo, which is a bacterial infection that is contagious for animals.

The shelter, located on Al Bishop Drive in Marietta, will undergo a deep cleaning followed by a phased reopening. Staffers will be contacting those people who had appointments canceled when the shelter closed to rearrange their visits.

Due to COVID protocols, appointments are necessary for people wanting to adopt pets from the shelter, or to turn them in. You can call 770-499-4136 for more information and to book an appointment, or visit the shelter’s website.

This is the second time in four months the Cobb Animal Shelter closed because of strep zoo cases in dogs, including the death of one animal. Two years ago, two dogs died at the shelter after strep zoo outbreak.

 

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