Cobb public health director urges public masking, vaccines

Cobb public health director masks vaccines
Cobb COVID-19 cases by month, according to date of onset, per Georgia Department of Public Health.

As the rate of COVID-19 cases rises around the country, thanks largely to what’s being called the Delta variant, the director of Cobb and Douglas Public Health said this week that citizens should take precautions.

Those including wearing masks when going out in public, including schools, and getting vaccinated if they haven’t already done so.

After dropping to pre-pandemic levels in June, the case rates have climbed back into what’s called the “high community spread” range, or a 14-day average of more than 100 cases per 100,000 people.

As of Friday, Cobb’s combined PCR and Antigen testing results showed that average to be 267 cases per 100,000.

You can check the Georgia Department of Public Health’s COVID-19 Daily Status Report for more details.

On Thursday, Dr. Janet Memark, director of Cobb and Douglas Public Health, sent out a message urging people in high transmission areas “to mask up while going out in public spaces.”

Those areas include Cobb and Douglas counties. At one point earlier this summer, Cobb’s test positivity rate was under two percent, with five percent being a threshold for concern. Now that figure is 8.4 percent.

She estimates that 80 percent of the virus that’s spreading around now is the Delta variant, which transmits at a faster rate than the main COVID-19 and is considered more contagious.

“It’s more deadly for people who are unvaccinated,” Memark said. “If you keep letting the virus circulate, to reproduce, it is going to find a way to beat us.”

She said Delta has made “some progress” against the vaccine, meaning that some fully vaccinated people can still get a positive test and have mild symptoms.

“But your chances of dying or being hospitalized are extremely rare, if you are vaccinated,” Memark said in a video produced by Cobb County government (you can watch it all below).

Of those “breakthrough” cases, Memark said it’s not true that the vaccines don’t work. Instead, they are reducing severe illness and symptoms.

Memark also said that COVID-19 hospitalizations in Cobb are up 300 percent from a few weeks ago, and many of them are younger patients, in their 30s-50s, who are not vaccinated.

Memark’s message comes as the Cobb County School District begins a new academic year on Monday. Earlier this week, the district reiterated it would follow a masks-optional policy for students, teachers and staff.

The district had a mask mandate for the 2020-21 school year but announced plans in May to drop that requirement. Cobb schools were sued by parents for the mandate, and that legal action was later dropped.

Gwinnett schools switched to a mask mandate this week following guidance from the Centers for Disease Control recommending mask-wearing at schools. In her messages this week, Memark urged parents to follow the new recommendations, which she admitted have been confusing.

“These recommendations were meant to try to keep as many children in school as possible to allow them to keep learning,” said Memark in a CDPH newsletter this week. “Because so many children have not or cannot get vaccinated, masking is one of the only prevention tools we have to decrease spread.”

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp said last week he would not order new restrictions, including a mask mandate, something he has been unwilling to do during the pandemic.

Some cities in Georgia have reimposed previous mask mandates, including the city of Atlanta. Cobb County has never done that, except in government facilities, with former chairman Mike Boyce saying last July it would impose an unfair enforcement burden on public safety personnel.

When East Cobb News asked if Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid may be considering a mask mandate, county spokesman Ross Cavitt said Thursday “not at this time.”

Cobb and Douglas Public Health is offering free Pfizer vaccines to the public (ages 12 and older) at its various centers and at selected other pop-up locations, either by appointment or via walk-up. For more information, click here.

“Please safely enjoy the last weekend before school starts,” Memark said. “Remember that we are not done with this pandemic yet. It is not too late to get your vaccine.”

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Cobb Community Health Expo to be held at Switzer Library

 Submitted information:Cobb Community Health Expo

Cobb County Public Library is presenting the Community Health Expo at the Charles D. Switzer Library, 266 Roswell Street in downtown Marietta, on Saturday, August 7 from 11 am to 2 pm.

The Expo will feature physical and mental health resources offered in the Cobb community by organizations engaged in promoting improved quality of life, said Renate Elliott, supervisor of the library’s Accessibility Services Department. The drop-in program is free and open to the public; no registration is required.

Georgia Mobile Audiology, a program of the state Department of Education, will provide free hearing screenings for children during the event and share information with parents and providers on positive language and literacy outcomes for deaf and hard of hearing (DHH) children.

“The Georgia Mobile Audiology team is on the road to address barriers of healthcare access of underserved deaf and hard of hearing children and provide critical support for families facing hearing loss challenges,” Elliott said. “We are very glad for this opportunity to elevate conversations and awareness of audiological services in our community.”

Participating organizations in the Expo also include Georgia Center of the Deaf and Hard of Hearing, Safe Kids Cobb County, NAMI Cobb, Cobb Community Services Board, and Cobb Senior Services.

The Expo is intentionally designed to introduce organizations providing a range of resources for health, including behavioral challenges and developmental disabilities, and will be empowering for Cobb adults and children seeking wellness and safety net services, library officials said.

For information on the Community Health Expo and resources of the Cobb County Public Library, visit www.cobbcounty.org/library or call 770-528-2320.

 

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East Cobb Rotary Club presents quarterly police officer’s award

East Cobb Rotary Police Officer Award

Submitted information and photo:

The East Cobb Rotary Club recently awarded its 2nd Quarter Police Officer’s Award from the County’s 2nd district to Officer Rene Maestre. Also looking on is his superior, Major Batterton, who recommended officer Maestre. 

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Rezoning redux: East Cobb Church, Ebenezer Road cases resume

East Cobb Church rezoning held
Single-family homes proposed off Waterfront Circle are what a nearby resident has described as “townhomes, just detached.”

Tuesday’s Cobb Planning Commission agenda includes a fourth hearing for the East Cobb Church mixed-use proposal on 33 acres Johnson Ferry Road and Shallowford Road and a second hearing for a new single-family development on Ebenezer Road.

Also delayed from recent months is a proposal for a senior subdivision on Sewell Mill Road at East Piedmont Road on land currently owned by the McCleskey Family-East Cobb YMCA.

The five-member planning board, which advises the Cobb Board of Commissioners, voted to hold the first two cases at its July hearing. The third case was delayed at the request of the applicant.

Here’s a summary of what’s on tap Tuesday, and the full 1,280-page agenda packet can be found here.

New filings were made in all three cases this week. For the East Cobb Church proposal submitted by North Point Ministries, there’s a revised site plan that came in on Tuesday and a lengthy new stipulation letter on Wednesday.

The changes are minor. The 130,000-square foot church and retail/office space have generated support, but opposition has generated around the 22 acres that would make up a 129-unit residential development with access off Johnson Ferry via Waterfront Circle.

Plans still call for 71 townhomes and 58 single-family detached homes on property requested for RA-6 zoning.

That request continues, although Planning Commissioner Tony Waybright suggested a fee-simple townhome designation at the July hearing, saying it would provide an ideal medium-density purpose in a community with lower-density residential.

The RA-6 category would allow just under 6 units an acre, density nearby residents and the East Cobb Civic Association said was too urban and incompatible with the area. 

Density issues were also raised in July for a proposed 99-home single-family detached development on nearly 50 acres on Ebenezer Road, between Blackwell Road and Maybreeze Road.

Pulte Homes revised that site plan and submitted a new stipulation letter this week, after questions were raised about density of around 2 units an acre, small lot sizes and a lack of amenities.

The Pulte proposal still calls for 99 homes, and the stipulation letter including enlarging some of the lots “to enhance the viewshed along Ebenezer Road” shifting some others and constructing sidewalks within the development. 

Under the proposed R-15 OSC zoning category, 17 acres would be held in an open space conservation status.

Orchards Development LLC requested a delay until August for its proposed 17-unit single-family detached senior residential development on 3.59 acres on Sewell Mill Road at East Piedmont Road.

The undeveloped lots, currently owned by the nearby YMCA, would go from low-density residential (R-20) to residential senior-living (RSL). The density would be 4.74 units per acre, similar to an adjacent RA-4 townhome development on Sewell Mill Road. 

The Planning Commission meeting begins at 9 a.m. in the second floor board room of the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta.They will be live-streamed on the county’s website, cable TV channel (Channel 24 on Comcast) and Youtube page. Visit cobbcounty.org/CobbTV for other streaming options.

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Cobb food scores: Mellow Mushroom; New China House; more

Mellow Mushroom, East Cobb food scores

The following Cobb food scores for the week of July 26 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

575 Bistro
840 Ernest Barrett Parkway, Suite 466
July 27, 2021 Score: 86, Grade: B

Chuck E Cheese’s
824 Ernest Barrett Parkway
July 27, 2021 Score: 94, Grade: A

Chuy’s
585 Ernest Barrett Parkway
July 29, 2021 Score: 89, Grade: B

McDonald’s
3011 Johnson Ferry Road
July 29, 2021 Score: 99, Grade: A

Mellow Mushroom Pizza
2421 Shallowford Road
July 29, 2021 Score: 88, Grade: B

New China House
1050 E. Piedmont Road, Suite 142
July 29, 2021 Score: 99, Grade: A

Olive Garden
429 Ernest Barrett Parkwasy
July 28, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

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Rep. McBath announces ‘Summer in the Sixth’ photo contest

Chattahoochee River trails management plan
One of our favorite local photos: Sope Creek at the Paper Mill Road bridge.

Submitted information:

Rep. Lucy McBath (D-Marietta) is announcing the start of her “Summer in the Sixth” Photo Contest program today. From this Sunday, August 1st through Sunday, August 29th, McBath’s office is accepting submissions of images and scenery in the Sixth Congressional District.

“There’s nothing like summer in the Peach State,” said McBath. “Our photo contest is a wonderful opportunity to share the images collected over the course of the summer and highlight the beauty of our community and of our district. I am so excited to see the photos our neighbors submit as this summer comes to an end.”

Photos should be taken outdoors in the community and can be submitted through this form by Sunday, August 29th at 11:59 pm. Full contest guidelines can be found in the entry form. Nominees will be selected by local residents and winners will be selected by the Congresswoman. The week of August 30th, nominations will be posted on McBath’s Facebook page. Voting will conclude on Monday, September 6th at 11:59 PM. Winners will be determined based on the number of engagements on Facebook – including shares, likes, and comments.

The first place photograph will be featured as the cover photo on McBath’s official Facebook and Twitter pages, and photos in second and third place will be announced and posted on the official Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook pages. The top three photos will also be featured in the weekly newsletter.

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Cobb included in N. Georgia heat advisory for Thursday, Friday

Cobb heat advisory

The National Weather Service in Atlanta has issued two heat advisories for North Georgia, including Cobb County, for Thursday and Friday.

The advisories last from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. each day, as temperatures have soared to their highest of the summer, and with extreme humidity in the forecast.

The heat index (temperatures and humidity) for those periods both days is expected to be above 100 degrees.

As of noon Thursday, the temperature in East Cobb was 90, but with 56 percent humidity the heat index was at 99.

Temperatures in the Cobb area were expected to reach the mid-90s Thursday, with similar humidity figures.

Across the heat advisory area, heat index values Thursday could reach as high as 105. For Friday, that high could get to 106.

How to stay cool, per the NWS:

Drink plenty of fluids, stay in an air-conditioned room, stay out of the sun, and check up on relatives and neighbors. Young children and pets should never be left unattended in vehicles under any circumstances. Take extra precautions if you work or spend time outside.

When possible reschedule strenuous activities to early morning or evening.

Know the signs and symptoms of heat exhaustion and heat stroke. Wear lightweight and loose fitting clothing when possible. To reduce risk during outdoor work, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration recommends scheduling frequent rest breaks in shaded or air conditioned environments.

Anyone overcome by heat should be moved to a cool and shaded location. Heat stroke is an emergency! Call 9 1 1.

There’s also a Code Orange air quality advisory issued for North Georgia for Thursday by the Georgia Department of Natural Resources Environmental Protection Division.

That means outdoor air quality is likely to be bad for seniors, children, people who are sensitive to ozone and those with heart and lung disease.

Those individuals should limit outdoor activities during the late afternoon or early evening, when ozone levels are at their highest.

The hot weather will continue through the weekend, with sunny skies and highs in the mid- to low-90s forecast for Saturday and Sunday.

At the start of next week, the temperatures will come down to highs in the 80s, with more rain moving into the area.

More details from the National Weather Service.

 

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Mt. Bethel UMC, North Georgia Conference enter mediation

Mt. Bethel Church prayer service, Jody Ray
Rev. Dr. Jody Ray at a prayer service Sunday at Mt. Bethel UMC.

From a statement issued Wednesday by the North Georgia Conference of the United Methodist Church:

The Board of Trustees of the North Georgia Conference and Mt. Bethel UMC have issued the following joint statement:

Mt. Bethel UMC and the North Georgia Conference of The United Methodist Church have jointly agreed to use their best efforts to resolve an ongoing dispute through a mediation process and will refrain from public comment on this matter until the mediation process has concluded. Mt. Bethel Christian Academy will also be included in the mediation process.

East Cobb News has left messages with Mt. Bethel and the Conference seeking additional information about the mediation process, which was not described in their statement.

The mediation agreement comes after several months of an open dispute between the East Cobb congregation and the local denomination office, often with pitched rhetoric and competing press releases.

In April, North Georgia Conference Bishop Sue Haupert-Johnson reassigned Rev. Dr. Jody Ray to a non-ministerial position with the Conference. But Mt. Bethel balked, saying Ray was not properly consulted about the move. 

He turned in his UMC ministry credentials and was retained by Mt. Bethel as a lay minister and CEO.

Haupert-Johnson said those moves went against the UMC’s Book of Discipline governing document. She also said the church created a new organizational structure and declined to provide Rev. Dr. Steven Usry, who was reassigned to Mt. Bethel, office space and to pay him a full salary.

Those were actions the Bishop cited in moving earlier this month to seize Mt. Bethel assets and install denominational management of the church, which has nearly 10,000 members and is the largest of the North Georgia Conference’s 800 congregations. 

Mt. Bethel also has stated an intent to disaffiliate from the national UMC, which is scheduled to vote next year on a process for conservative congregations to leave.

The issues are over doctrinal differences, including gay clergy and performing same-sex marriages, both of which are currently banned in the UMC.

Mt. Bethel has been a leading force in the Wesleyan Covenant Association, which is planning on forming the Global Methodist Church after any UMC separation. 

In his first sermon since resigning from the UMC, Ray addressed his children by saying he would never “kiss the ring of progressive theology.” 

Haupert-Johnson also declared earlier this that Mt. Bethel is a church “not in good standing,” which could prevent it from disaffiliation.

On Sunday, Mt. Bethel held a community prayer service in its main sanctuary, with Ray saying that “what the world needs now is a courageous church that is willing to stand up for what is right, for what is true.”

Former Johnson Ferry Baptist Church pastor Bryant Wright also told the Mt. Bethel congregation to prepare for “spiritual warfare,” which he said “intensifies when God’s about to do something good.”

The Mt. Bethel-Conference mediation announcement also did not detail anything more about why Mt. Bethel Christian Academy is involved in the process.

But in explaining its decision to seize assets, the Conference said that Mt. Bethel signed a 20-year lease of property to the Academy “without complying with the policies outlined in the Book of Discipline.”

The K-12 school, which holds classes at the main Mt. Bethel campus and on a facility on Post Oak Tritt Road, had 680 students in the 2020-21 school year. 

In 2018 it was the only school located in Cobb County to be named a National Blue Ribbon School by the U.S. Department of Education.

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Cobb schools: No changes to mask, public health policies

The day after the U.S. Centers for Disease Control revised indoor mask guidance, including for schools, the Cobb County School District said it is sticking to its announced public health protocols.

Those protocols include a masks-optional policy, making Cobb one of CCSD logo, Cobb 2018-19 school calendarsix school districts in metro Atlanta with such a policy.

Cobb schools return for the 2021-22 year on Monday, and the masks-optional policy applies to all activities, including school buses and extracurricular activities.

On Tuesday, the CDC encouraged indoor mask usage, even for vaccinated people and school students, due a surge in COVID-19 cases due to the Delta variant, and amid questions about the effectiveness of vaccines.

That decision was a quick reversal of CDC guidance issued July 9 saying that “fully vaccinated” people could go maskless indoors.

Tuesday’s new CDC guidance “recommends universal indoor masking for all teachers, staff, students, and visitors to schools, regardless of vaccination status.”

Gwinnett County Public Schools, the largest school district in Georgia, immediately announced Tuesday it was switching from a masks-optional policy to reimpose a mask mandate.

In recent days the transmission of the COVID-19 virus in Cobb County has risen above what’s considered “high community spread,” to a 14-day average of 190 cases per 100,000.

“High spread” is defined as 100 cases per 100,000 or higher, and until recently that figure had dropped into the 30s in Cobb County.

On Wednesday, a Cobb school district spokeswoman told East Cobb News that nothing about its public health protocols for the coming year has changed, issuing this statement:

“Recognizing that Cobb families want to be able to choose the learning environment that best supports the needs of their family, it was important to Superintendent Ragsdale that all Cobb families were given a choice between face-to-face and virtual classrooms for the upcoming school year. Establishing a registration process, and deadlines, has allowed our online learning staff to navigate those challenges while ensuring our face-to-face teachers remain focused on their face-to-face students.

She also linked to the public health protocols, which were released on July 20 (our previous post here), and which she said “continue to be our most up-to-date guidance.”

When asked to specifically clarify the masks-optional policy, the spokeswoman said “the most updated health protocols are linked in the statement.”

Cobb is the second-largest school district in Georgia, with nearly 112,000 students. While Gwinnett’s new mask mandate allows parents to change how their children will learn—either in-person or virtual—Cobb’s is not that flexible.

Cobb schools are offering in-person and virtual learning options for the new school year, but parents won’t be able to change like they did last year. And they had to make their decisions last spring, when case figures were lower and a mask mandate was still in place.

This spring Superintendent Chris Ragsdale outlined two separate academic environments that won’t be interchangeable for the 2021-22 school year.

Teachers have been hired exclusively for the virtual option, while teachers on campuses will be working only with “face-to-face” students.

That’s been the subject of concern and complaints from some parents in social media forums and elsewhere.

One of them is Nicole Russo, the mother of a rising 4th grader at Sedalia Park Elementary School in East Cobb.

She said that when the separate learning environments were announced, cases were down and a mask mandate was still in place.

But that was also the time parents had to choose one option or the other, with no ability to switch.

“This is what parents based this tough decision on,” Russo told East Cobb News. “Since then, Cobb County has changed their mask policy. However, Cobb is not allowing parents to change their virtual option choice. Cases are growing exponentially, and Cobb is well above the high transmission threshold.

“It is baffling that Cobb County schools are not following the CDC and the American Academy of Pediatrics advice of mask mandates. It is unthinkable that given the current COVID transmission rate and Cobb County’s change in safety protocols, they are not allowing the parents to make a safe choice for their kids.”

Russo said she chose in-person learning for her daughter, who “will be masked, but we all know that masks are not nearly as effective if they are not universally worn.”

Cobb, Marietta, Paulding, Cherokee, Forsyth and Fulton schools are the only school districts with masks-optional policies in metro Atlanta.

Cobb had a mask mandate last year, and the district was sued by a group of parents. That suit was dropped when Ragsdale announced in May masks would be optional starting with the summer sessions.

When asked by East Cobb News if the Cobb masks-optional policy could be changed, and what factors might prompt such a change, the district spokeswoman did not respond.

Cobb commissioners approve fiscal year 2022 budget

Lisa Cupid, Cobb adopts fiscal year 2022 budget
“Nothing in the budget I see is frivolous,” Cobb commission chairwoman Lisa Cupid said.

By a unanimous 4-0 vote, the Cobb Board of Commissioners on Tuesday approved a fiscal year 2022 operating budget of $496.6 million that includes pay raises for county employees and continues implementing a tiered salary increase plan for public safety personnel.

The board kept the general-fund millage rate at 8.46 mills, but technically the spending package constitutes a property tax increase under state law.

That’s because the adopted budget is an increase of nearly 5 percent from the adopted fiscal year 2021 budget of $473.8 million.

The county tax digest is expected to grow about 5.5 percent in 2021, and commissioners did not rollback the millage rate to offset that additional revenue.

Because of state law, the county had to advertise the budget proposal as a tax increase and conduct public hearings, and some citizens spoke out against that.

The budget includes a 3-percent merit increase for county employees, replenishes capital maintenance budgets and creates an officer for diversity, equity and inclusion.

Other additional spending will go for increased costs for county court operations and the county elections offices.

Budget documents and information can be found here.

In making remarks before the vote, the four present commissioners all said that the budget before them provides only basic services, contains no luxuries.

“I don’t want to see my taxes increased either,” chairwoman Lisa Cupid said. “But nothing in the budget I see is frivolous.”

She said county cannot continue “to fall behind on the basic things.”

County employees have not frequently seen raises in recent years, and the turnover and attrition due to them leaving results in “reduced quality of services” for citizens, she said.

Cupid said as for capital maintenance, “there are many years we did not do that” and that now the county is restoring that funding “to where it should have been” some years before.

Last year, with uncertainty over the financial impact of COVID-19 closures, commissioners approved $2.1 million in capital maintenance. This year, that figure will be $10.2 million, a boost of 377 percent.

She also defended the creation of a cabinet-level diversity officer, which was stipulated in the FY 2021 budget but wasn’t funded.

Commissioner JoAnn Birrell, who represents the Northeast Cobb area, said she was in support of the budget because of the increasing commitment to implementing a step-and-grade salary program for public safety employees.

She also said the 3-percent raise for other county employees is “well-deserved.”

The budget does not include a decrease in the percentage of water system revenues to the general-fund budget, as commissioners had pledged two years ago.

Until then, the county took 10 percent of water system revenues to help fund the operating budget. Commissioners embarked on a plan to reduce that by one percent a year, or about $2.4 million annually.

That figure is now at 8 percent, and while Birrell said she’s disappointed that figure will be holding this year, the extra money is needed for step-and-grade and other purposes.

“I support the budget,” Birrell said.

Commissioner Jerica Richardson, who represents part of East Cobb, echoed some of Birrell’s sentiments, and before casting her first budget vote said “this budget is not a fix” for continuing service issues for county government.

“It’s a bare minimum, frankly,” she said.

Cupid who was a South Cobb commissioner for eight years before being elected chairwoman in November, said that “this is not a perfect budget,” but she applauded her colleagues for being willing to address issues she said have been ignored in the past.

She is leading a Democratic-majority government that includes Richardson, who succeeded Republican former commissioner Bob Ott in January.

Commissioner Keli Gambrill of North Cobb, who with Birrell forms the Republican minority on the board, was absent from the meeting.

The FY 2022 budget goes into effect on Oct. 1.

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Inaugural Cobb County Youth Commission seeking applications

Submitted information:

High school students in rising grades 9th through 11th are encouraged to apply for the Inaugural Cobb County Youth Commission. This will be an excellent opportunity to learn about local government, engage in civic affairs and become leaders of change in their community. It is also great experience to add to resumes or college applications.

The application process includes a recommendation from a community member — such as a teacher, counselor, principal, religious leader or community leader — who has known the youth for at least one year.

The program will include:

  • Weekend of leadership development activities and learning about Cobb County agencies and programs
  • Three quarterly meetings that may include leadership development activities and community projects
  • Many opportunities for participants to volunteer and gain leadership experience in Cobb County meetings, events or activities
  • Graduation ceremony

Participants in this pilot program will provide input into the design of future youth commission programs. The completed application, including the community member recommendation form, is due by 5 p.m., Friday, Aug. 20.

To apply, visit cobbcounty.seamlessdocs.com/f/rls0kj6072pj.

Cobb Youth Commission

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Former Army Airborne Ranger running for 6th District Congress

Harold Earls, 6th Congressional District candidate

Continuing our series of introductory articles about 2022 political candidates: Harold Earls, a previously announced Republican who’s filed for the 6th Congressional District seat.

(Here’s his campaign website.)

One of four who’s announced on the GOP side (profiles here of Meagan Hanson and Jake Evans) to challenge Democratic incumbent U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath, Earls lives in Roswell and is a former Army officer, having served as an Airborne Ranger.

He’s a graduate Fellowship Christian Academy in Roswell and the U.S. Military Academy, where was captain of its baseball team. He also has led a group an Army combat team and veteran amputee on trips to Mt. Everest.

Those experiences were the subject of a book “A Higher Calling: Pursuing Love, Faith and Mt. Everest for a greater purpose.” He and his co-author and wife, Rachel Earls, run a digital media business in Roswell and are the parents to two sons.

He was a fellow for former Georgia U.S. Rep. Rob Woodall and was a guard commander of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery.

More on Earls and his background can be found here.

After another GOP candidate, Eric Welsh, pulled out in July, Earls said that the two of them were “not part of the Good Ol’ Boys Club.’ Welsh wanted to make a difference here in Georgia and was not a political opportunist waiting on favorable district lines.”

Earls continued that “over the last few years, there has been a growing disrespect in our government for our country and those who serve and have served to protect it. This makes me sick. Congress has become a melting pot of weak leaders who don’t care about you, me, or the United States. I am here to change that. I will lead. I will stand for our values, and I will stand up for you and your family. That is my promise.”

Earls said he will advocate for smaller government, and deplored trillions of dollars of American debt and noted that China is the country’s largest debt collector.

“That means that my two little toddlers are going to bear the burden of this generation’s failure to address balancing our budget at the behest of our biggest adversary,” he said.

On immigration, Earls said he supports a “merit-based system where the best and brightest who want to enter America have the chance to do so and allows us to keep bad actors out of the country.”

Earls said he wants to make permanent the Tax Cuts & Job Act to foster business innovation and also supports school choice options.

But he said he and his wife have had their business affected by occasional demonetizing by YouTube, where they have more than 540,000 subscribers.

Earls said he supports revisions to Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act to encourage “free speech, privacy, safety, competition and honesty.”

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Cobb Police to hold ‘National Night Out’ event Aug. 3

Submitted information:

Cobb County Police Department will host a National Night Out celebration 6-9 p.m., Tuesday, Aug. 3, at Jim R. Miller Park. This fun event will feature food trucks, live music and a variety of entertainment. Other public safety departments, including Cobb Animal Services, Cobb Fire and Emergency Services, Cobb Sheriff’s Office, Cobb 911 and Cobb Emergency Management Agency.

National Night Out is an annual community-building campaign that promotes police-community partnerships and camaraderie to make our neighborhoods safer, more caring places to live. National Night Out enhances the relationship between neighbors and law enforcement while bringing back a true sense of community. It also provides a great opportunity to bring police and neighbors together under positive circumstances.

Make plans to bring your family out on Aug. 3 to spend a fun-filled evening getting to know one another in a relaxed and celebratory environment with staff from Cobb PD, Cobb Sheriff’s Office, Cobb Fire and Emergency Services, Cobb 911 and Cobb Emergency Management Agency.Cobb Police National Night Out

 

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At prayer service, Mt. Bethel urged to ‘stand firm on the gospel’

Bryant Wright, Mt. Bethel prayer service
Former Johnson Ferry Baptist Church pastor Bryant Wright said “spiritual warfare intensifies when God’s about to do something good.”

A number of members of the clergy, both in-person and virtually, spoke to members of Mt. Bethel Church during a special community prayer service on Sunday.

The service took place in the church’s main sanctuary on Lower Roswell Road, and lasted more than two hours (you can watch a full replay here).

Mt. Bethel organized the service after officials with the North Georgia Conference of the United Methodist Church moved earlier this month to seize the East Cobb congregation’s assets and install denominational leadership over the church.

It was the latest move in an ongoing feud between the Conference and Mt. Bethel, which announced its intent to disaffiliate after Senior Pastor Dr. Jody Ray was reassigned this spring.

Ray resigned his UMC credentials instead and is remaining as a lay minister and CEO at Mt. Bethel, which said it would defend itself in court if Bishop Sue Haupert-Johnson of the North Georgia Conference takes legal action.

Ministers as far away as Africa and Brazil as well as metro Atlanta and Georgia spoke via recorded remote messages.

Those speaking to church members from the pulpit were eagerly applauded not just for their calls for prayer and uplift, but for defiance against denominational edicts.

“Realize who your enemy is,” said Rev. Bryant Wright, the retired founding pastor of Johnson Ferry Baptist Church. “It is not the Bishop, it is the devil.”

Mt. Bethel Church prayer service, Jody Ray
Rev. Dr. Jody Ray

His lengthy remarks included a call to Mt. Bethel members to prepare for “spiritual warfare,” which he said “intensifies when God’s about to do something good.”

Wright read from Ephesians 6:10, which implored Christians “to stand firm,” and after referencing Protestant dissidents Martin Luther and John Wesley, Wright told Mt. Bethel members they should be thankful for a leader in Ray.

“When a leader is accused of division, that is straight from the evil one,” Wright said.

Former Mt. Bethel member Chuck Savage, the pastor at Sardis UMC in Atlanta, encouraged the present congregation “to stand firm on the gospel.” He referenced comments from President Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War that “our concern is that we always be on God’s side because God is always right.”

Ray spoke briefly near the end, saying that “courage in moments like this doesn’t come from within ourselves. It’s the presence of Christ. O, that God would find us faithful in this hour.”

He added that “what the world needs now is a courageous church that is willing to stand up for what is right, for what is true.”

Ray then led the congregation in the Lord’s Prayer and offered a benediction.

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EPiCS Ignite! to offer free coding workshop for 3rd-6th graders

EPiCS Ignite! coding workshop

Submitted information:

Cobb residents Natalie Ajemian, a rising Junior at Wheeler Magnet, and Elly Kang, a rising Junior at the Marist School, co-founded EPiCS Ignite! with the goals of sharing computer science resources and holding events so they can help to bridge the educational digital divide. They’re holding a free online coding workshop and project competition for rising 3rd – 6th graders on Saturday, August 7, and Sunday, August, 8 (from 10:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. each day). Students from various local high schools will be teaching at the event. For more information and registration, go to www.epics-ignite.weebly.com.

EPiCS Ignite! coding workshop

 

 

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Cobb FY 2022 budget adoption, millage rate slated for Tuesday

Cobb FY 22 budget

Reminder about the final hearings for the fiscal year 2022 Cobb County government budget and millage rate, and adoption of both, on Tuesday.

The Cobb Board of Commissioners will meet at 7 p.m. (the full agenda is here), with the budget and millage rate items near the start of the agenda. 

A property tax increase for the general fund (now at 8.46 mills) is not included in the proposed $496.6 million spending package, which is an increase of nearly 5 percent from the adopted fiscal year 2021 budget of $473.8 million.

But the county is required under state law to advertise that there will be a tax increase. That’s because Cobb will be collecting more tax revenue in 2022 due to a 5.5 percent growth in the tax digest, and because there’s not a corresponding rollback in the millage rate in the proposed budget.

The budget proposal includes the continuation of STEP increases for Cobb public safety personnel (police, fire, 911, Sheriff’s Office) and a 3 percent merit raise for other employees.

Four new full-time positions are being recommended, including a diversity, equity and inclusion officer who will report to the County Manager and three others in elections.

More budget documents and information can be found here.

The meeting takes place in the second floor board room of the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta.

They will be live-streamed on the county’s website, cable TV channel (Channel 24 on Comcast) and Youtube page. Visit cobbcounty.org/CobbTV to find your favorite streaming outlet.

The FY 22 budget takes effect Oct. 1.

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Tommy Nobis Center named one of ‘Best and Brightest Companies’

Submitted information:Tommy Nobis Center

Tommy Nobis Center, a Marietta-based nonprofit that helps individuals with disabilities enter or return to employment, has once again been named one of the 2021 Best and Brightest Companies to Work For® In Atlanta by the National Association for Business Resources. This marks the fifth consecutive year Tommy Nobis Center has won this award, which honors organizations that display a commitment to excellence in their human resource practices and employee enrichment.

“We are humbled and honored to again receive this significant recognition,” says President & CEO, Dave Ward. “We focus on leveraging our great mission in connection with our strong core values to hire people who are hungry, humble, and smart. This award is a direct reflection of that.”

“The Best and Brightest is a powerful community of elite leaders who share ideas and practices and have proven they are employers of choice. Best and Brightest winning companies have also been a voice for important actions in creating a sustainable culture that works, ensuring the wellbeing of their employees comes first,” said Jennifer Kluge, President and CEO, Best and Brightest Programs.

Winners are selected from among the nominated companies based on various categories including communication, work-life balance, employee education, diversity, recognition, retention and more. According to the NABR, only companies that distinguish themselves as having the most innovative and thoughtful human resources approach are selected.

You can view all winners here.

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Rotary Club of East Cobb’s Dog Days Run returns in 2021

Dog Days Run

A little less than two weeks out (Saturday, Aug. 7), the Rotary Club of East Cobb is staging its Dog Days Run this year after cancelling due to COVID-19 concerns.

Registration continues for the 16th annual event, which once again starts and ends at the McCleskey Family-East Cobb YMCA (1055 E. Piedmont Road).

Here’s more from the Rotary announcement about what’s in store, and a link to the sign up page (and we thank the club for their sponsored post on our newsletter as well):

This 16th year is a special treat – we’re back in action, in person. All participants–young/old, runners/non-runners, local/worldwide–will band together to raise money for local Cobb charities.

Our “Dog Days” 5K honors the heat and humidity of summer. Over the years, the Rotary Club of East Cobb has donated more than $500,000 from race proceeds to local and international service projects!

https://dogdaysrun.com/

 

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Cobb to hold ‘Tomb of the Unknown Soldier’ special event

Submitted information: Michael Blassie, Cobb Unknown Soldier event

Join the Honorary Commanders Association, in partnership with CobbCounty Government, for a special event featuring Col Patricia Blassie, USAF (Retired) on July 29. Col Blassie will share the story of her brother, 1st Lt Michael Blassie, a USAF pilot who was killed in action during the Vietnam War in May 1972.

In 1984, his remains became the unknown service member from the Vietnam War, buried at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery. Due to the perseverance of his family, 1st Lt Michael Blassie was restored his name on July 11, 1998, when his remains were properly identified and later reinterred at Jefferson Barrack National Cemetery.

Attendees may register for this free event at www.cobbchamber.org/events. The program begins promptly at 10 a.m. at the Cobb County Civic Center.

Thank you to Event Host Cobb County Government and Printing Sponsor Tharpe Printing. The Honorary Commanders Alumni Association is sponsored by Yearlong Presenting Sponsor Arcadis. The Honorary Commanders Association is sponsored by Yearlong Presenting Sponsors Marriott Atlanta Northwest Galleria, Blue Sky Exhibits, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta and Hawthorne Global Aviation Services.

For more information about the Honorary Commanders Association, contact Joel Blockton at jblockton@cobbchamber.org or 770-859-2348.

More on Blassie can be found at the Arlington National Cemetery website.

 

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Reopened Atlanta Treatment Center to hold ribbon-cutting

Submitted information:Atlanta Treatment Center reopens

Atlanta Treatment Center (ATC), a mental health agency, is relaunching the company with a celebration and ribbon cutting ceremony on Wednesday, July 28 at 3 p.m. ATC reopened its doors on July 1st with the goal of being a valuable partner in the community. 

The agency’s celebration and ribbon cutting ceremony is open to the public. Local officials from the Cobb County Chamber of Commerce and community business leaders will attend the celebration. 

“ATC’s goal is to journey with each of our clients as well as the community,” stated Ufuoma Oyibo, Chief Executive Officer. “We want to give our clients a holistic approach with them driving the treatment and our team guiding. We give our clients the opportunity to go at their own pace as we embrace the healing journey together.”

ATC is committed to providing quality treatment and services to our clients and maintain a valued partnership with the community. ATC wants the community to remember that someone cares.

 

Atlanta Treatment Center is located at 1755 The Exchange; click here to visit website.

 

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