East Cobb student tutors hold blood drive, CPR training

East Cobb student tutors blood drive

Submitted information and photos:

American Assimilation Helpline (AAH!) is an International non-profit org. established in 2017 by three students—Abhishek Kona (a Senior at Walton High School), Abhinav Kona (a Senior at Walton High Schooland Elly Kang (a Junior at Marist School). AAH! is dedicated to provide free, virtual, one-on-one academic assistance to students from low income, immigrant and refugee backgrounds.

We’ve conducted a health fair and successful blood drive in conjunction with the American Red Cross on Sunday, Sept. 5, from 2-7 p.m. at the Lutheran Church of the Incarnation (1200 Indian Hills Parkway, Marietta, GA).

About ~25 elementary and middle school students attended the CPR training sessions within our health camp. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is one of the most important first aid tasks that must be known by everyone. CPR skills will help children to not just save a person’s life and also provided information about how to respond to the emergency situation. This includes calling 9-1-1 or the local hospital in case a person has suffered a heart attack.

As a Blood Drive Coordinator, the AAH! Health department takes leadership in working with Red Cross to bring people together in a spirit of teamwork and make the event successful, as well  as promote a cause that could help save millions of lives each year. It’s a deeply rewarding experience in that patients are able to receive the lifesaving blood they urgently need. Through this blood drive, American Assimilation Helpline (AAH!) has collected nearly 30 pints of blood from 28 donors and saved around 84 lives, as each donation can save up to 3 lives on average.

East Cobb student tutors blood drive

East Cobb student tutors blood drive

East Cobb student tutors blood drive

East Cobb student tutors blood drive

Related stories:

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

East Cobb Daughters of the American Revolution chapter seeks members

Submitted information:Daughters of the American Revolution

The Old Noonday Chapter of the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution invites you to join our chapter. Our meetings are held the second Wednesday of the month, September through May, at the Atlanta Country Club. Our meetings begin at 10:30 and include interesting speakers and presentations. Daughters are vibrant, active women who are passionate about community service, preserving history, educating children, as well as honoring and supporting those who serve our nation. Any woman 18 years or older, regardless of race, religion or ethnic background, who can prove lineal descent from a patriot of the American Revolution is eligible to join. Patriots include soldiers, sailors, supporters of the American Revolution as well as those who served on juries or paid taxes that supported the war effort. If you are interested, please contact me at carol.kiefer@gmail.com.

More about the Old Noonday chapter can be found here.

Send Us Your News!

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

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

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

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

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

The Avenue East Cobb begins fall ‘Comedy Live’ series

The Avenue East Cobb summer events

The Avenue East Cobb announced in July it was partnering with a new management company, North American Properties, which developed Avalon in Alpharetta and whose overhaul projects include Colony Square and Atlantic Station in Atlanta.

Among the priorities for revamping the East Cobb center—along with a bevy of new “chef-driven restaurants”—was to substantially add to live events.

Starting Monday, a free “Comedy Live” series will begin between Kale Me Crazy & Banana Republic, weather permitting (the forecast is gorgeous, sunny and in the 80s).

It’s part of a First Monday schedule (this month, the second Monday due to Labor Day) that continues on Oct. 4 and Nov. 1.

The show is from 7-8 p.m and is recommended for ages 13 and older. You can bring your own tailgate chairs or other seating.

The entertainers are from the Punchline Comedy Club, and this event, like many others at The Avenue, is aimed at getting customers to shop and grab a bite from local restaurants before the show.

More about events at The Avenue East Cobb can be found here.

Related stories

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb schools report 658 COVID-19 cases; 32 at Addison ES

Addison ES; Cobb schools COVID cases

A total of 32 active cases of COVID-19 are being reported at Addison Elementary School in Northeast Cobb, the largest number for any school this week in the Cobb County School District.

The district released its weekly COVID report on Friday, showing 658 active cases.

That’s down from the range of around 1K in each of the last three weeks, but it reflects a shortened school week due to the Labor Day holiday on Monday.

Since July 1, there have been 4,402 cases among students and staff. Addison had eight cases prior to this week, and is not the first elementary school in East Cobb with such large numbers.

For 10 days last month the entire 5th grade at East Side Elementary School went to remote learning due to an outbreak.

Rocky Mount Elementary School in Northeast Cobb has 24 active cases, more than doubling its previous cumulative total.

There are 13 cases at Lassiter High School and Dickerson Middle School is reporting 11 active cases this week.

Earlier this week the Cobb Board of Health approved a position statement urging universal masking in schools, a direct response to the Cobb school district’s masks-optional policy.

The guidance comes from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and the American Academy of Pediatrics, and includes several other provisions to combat growing numbers of cases and hospitalizations among school-age children.

Cobb superintendent Chris Ragsdale, a member of the board of health, abstained from voting, saying the district is following the other protocols, and indicated that “97 percent [of students and staff] are COVID-free.”

In Cobb County, the spread of COVID-19 remains high due to the Delta variant. Cobb and Douglas Public Health report that as of Thursday, there is a 14-day average of just under 800 cases per 100,000 people. “High community spread” is a two-week average of 100/100K.

Related stories

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

 

Youth mental health town hall is Tuesday at Sewell Mill Library

Last week we briefly mentioned an upcoming town hall focusing on youth mental health, as September is Suicide Prevention Month.Sewell Mill Library Youth Mental Health Town Hall

That’s taking place on Tuesday starting at 6 p.m. in the amphitheater at the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center (2051 Lower Roswell Road).

It’s being presented jointly by District 2 Cobb Commissioner Jerica Richardson and the Cobb Collaborative, a non-profit that works with struggling families and children.

Here’s more from the Cobb Collaborative about the issue, and how you can sign up to attend:

September is Suicide Prevention Awareness Month. A very important component to preventing suicide is taking proper care of mental health. Approximately half of all individuals who die by suicide have a diagnosed mental health condition and research shows that 90% of them have experienced symptoms consistent with their conditions. According to the National Alliance on Mental Health (NAMI), “Suicide is the 2nd leading cause of death among people aged 10–34 and the 10th leading cause of death overall in the U.S.” 

Awareness, advocacy, and action for mental health should begin early in life. Per the American Academy of Pediatrics, “It is imperative that we improve efforts around early recognition of mental health needs among children and adolescents and foster greater awareness of early warning signs. Early identification of mental health problems needs to be encouraged in preschool, childcare, K-12 education, health, child welfare, juvenile justice and substance use settings. Staff in these settings require additional training and technical assistance to understand the early warning signs of mental health problems, what to do about them and where to make referrals for further assistance.”  

The event starts at 6 p.m. with a tabling session, followed by a speaker panel at 7 p.m.:

All are invited to come to listen to the panelists, have questions answered, and have an educational and enjoyable evening while learning about the importance of youth mental health. Register at: bit.ly/2YBNaQJ or via registration event link at www.cobbcollaborative.org

For more information, contact Irene Barton, Cobb Collaborative Executive Director, at ibarton@cobbcollaborative.org 

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

East Cobb Park sustains extensive damage from heavy storms

East Cobb Park storm damage

The sun returned on Thursday and a handful of people were taking in a pleasant afternoon at East Cobb Park as the area starts to dry out from a major storm.

But parts of the park were damaged by the heavy rains and flooding from the adjacent Sewell Mill Creek, and repairs are getting underway.

According to Cobb government spokesman Ross Cavitt, most of the mulch in the main playground is gone, there are “multiple washouts” around the stage and pavilion area in the back of the park, a slate walking trail “was washed out badly” and there was serious erosion to the creek banks and Roswell Road bridge.

That’s been cordoned off, as seen below; a slice of the front quad closest to the creek is a muddy mess. Cavitt said the county is in touch with the stormwater and DOT offices about the erosion along the creek banks.

East Cobb Park storm damage

He also said new mulch will be sprayed in Thursday night “and we will hopefully be able to open part of East Cobb Park tomorrow. Some parts will stay closed for up to a week for repair.”

The East Cobb area got between 4-5 inches of rain late Tuesday and early Wednesday, as flooding shut down more than a dozen roads (including Columns Drive near the Chattahoochee River).

That was the heaviest amount of rain in Cobb, and the storm did more damage to east, in north Fulton and parts of Gwinnett County.

On the back side of East Cobb Park are ball fields along Robinson Road that’s part of Fullers Creek, and Cavitt said those fields remain closed due to flooding and should reopen by Saturday.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Marietta Kiwanis to hold 9/11 memorial service on Saturday

Marietta Kiwanis Field of Flags
From the 2016 Field of Flags event, which is held every five years. Courtesy: Marietta Kiwanis

The Marietta Kiwanis Club is continuing 9/11 observances this month with a memorial service on Saturday, the 20th anniversary of the terror attacks on the United States.

The event takes place from 7:55 am to 11:00 am in front of the Visitors Center at the Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park, and here’s the lineup of speakers and activities:

Memorial Service at the Field of Flags with Bagpiper Detective Tommy Burns, Speaker Retired NYFD Capt. James D’Avolio, Soloist Heather Graham Tamburello, Marietta Fire Department Color Guard, 21-Gun Salute by Cobb County Police Honor Guard, Riderless Horseman presentation by the Cobb County Sheriff’s Department, and Retired Homeland Security Agent Richard Rubio will play taps after the reading of the names of the 2,977 innocent victims at the end of the Ceremony at Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park, 900 Kennesaw Mountain Drive, Kennesaw, GA 30152.

The flags that were placed at the park last Saturday during the “Field of Flags” event will remain until Sept. 18.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Comment period ending for Georgia Power coal ash permit

From Hyde Farm-area resident Morning Washburn comes this report about the looming deadline for the public to comment on a proposed coal ash storage program in northwest Georgia by Georgia Power.Georgia Power suspending disconnections

That deadline happens to be on Friday, as the Georgia Environmental Protection Division considers a permit application for the Plant Hammond AP-3 landfill near Rome.

It’s partially located in a 100-year floodplain, according to the Coosa River Basin Initiative, which is organizing efforts to speak out against the permit.

Washburn notes that Georgia Power has applications pending for pits at Plant McDonough in Smyrna, near the Chattahoochee River.

Those requests are slated to be considered in December and January.

“As a life-long advocate for healthy water, land, air and communities, I’m angry and appalled that anyone wants to keep coal ash in unlined pits next to the Chattahoochee River at Plant McDonough in Cobb County and other areas of Georgia,” Washburn told us.

She said she’s “contacting EPD, our Cobb Chamber of Commerce and Georgia Power about their need and this opportunity to take an active stand for long term ecological and economic leadership.”

Here is Georgia Power’s resource page providing updates on environmental compliance, including ash pond dewatering results and permits.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Mt. Bethel Church sued by North Georgia UMC after mediation fails

Mt. Bethel Church

The North Georgia Conference the United Methodist Church is suing Mt. Bethel Church in East Cobb after attempts at mediation between the two feuding parties failed.

The lawsuit was filed in Cobb Superior Court on Wednesday by the trustees of the North Georgia Conference, which includes 800 churches and more than 340,000 members, and seeks Mt. Bethel properties and assets.

The Conference issued a brief announcement:

While the Conference and its representatives have engaged in negotiations with local church officials and have made good faith efforts to resolve the issues without litigation, the current situation has not changed and it is untenable. The Conference Board of Trustees will continue to take all necessary and appropriate actions to ensure compliance with the tradition and the Book of Discipline of The United Methodist Church.

The legal action (you can read the lawsuit here) seeks declaratory judgment against Mt. Bethel, which announced its intent to disaffiliate from the UMC this spring, after refusing to accept the reassignment of its senior pastor, Rev. Dr. Jody Ray.

Mt. Bethel leadership also refused to accept the reassignment of Rev. Dr. Steven Usry, declining to provide him office space and to pay him a full salary.

In addition, the church retained Ray as its CEO and top lay pastor, roles the Conference said violate the UMC’s Book of Discipline governing policies.

The Conference further ruled that Mt. Bethel was not a church in good standing, and ordered it to turn over its properties and other physical assets.

The cover letter to the lawsuit is dated July 12, the start of a 10-day window given to Mt. Bethel to turn over church assets.

That’s also when the Conference announced it was installing the trustees to manage Mt. Bethel operations.

Two weeks later, the Conference and UMC announced mediation and said neither would be commenting further.

In the legal filing, the Conference said that “in order to make provision for the spiritual guidance and pastoral care of many of the Respondent’s [Mt. Bethel] former members, it is essential that this Court declare that all the assets are the property of the Petitioner.”

The lawsuit also seeks a permanent injunction “restraining and enjoining Respondent from exercising or claiming to exercise any right, record title, ownership, possession, enjoyment, use, control to and of the assets.”

Ray and Mt. Bethel leadership remain in charge of worship and other activities on both of the church’s campuses. Usry has not assumed his duties, saying he would not do so during the dispute, and he has been highly critical of Mt. Bethel.

East Cobb News has left a message with Mt. Bethel seeking comment.

UPDATED, THURSDAY, SEPT. 9, 7:15 P.M.

Here’s a statement Mt. Bethel has just released:

“We are deeply saddened that we were not able to come to a mediated solution with Bishop Sue Haupert-Jonhson and the Trustees of the North Georgia Conference.

“Mt. Bethel is a healthy, vibrant church with a 180-year history. Despite the ongoing pandemic, worship continues, ministry thrives, the school buildings and the playing fields are full, and attendance at our weekly services remain among the highest in the conference. 

“We have been watching and praying for the final passage of the Protocol for Reconciliation and Grace through Separation when a special General Conference can finally take place (in fact, had the Protocol been passed in 2020 as originally envisioned prior to the pandemic, Mt. Bethel would have already parted ways with an increasingly progressive post-separation UM Church). Bishop Haupert-Johnson sees a different future, and she is entitled to her beliefs. Our beloved church is now simply asking for its voice to be heard; let us vote on disaffiliation. Give our members a chance to speak to the heart of our faith and stake a claim for the future of Mt. Bethel Church.”

ORIGINAL REPORT:

Mt. Bethel, with around 10,000 members, is the largest congregation in the North Georgia Conference.

The East Cobb church also is at the forefront of theological disputes within the UMC, the second-largest Protestant denomination in the U.S., that have led to a separation process delayed to 2022.

If that process—called Protocol for Reconciliation through Grace and Separation—is approved by UMC delegates, conservative congregations would be allowed to undertake a disaffiliation process, most likely to an entity called the Global Methodist Church.

That’s a denomination that’s been planned by the Wesleyan Covenant Association, a group of conservative churches that includes Mt. Bethel, and that was formed in recent years.

Among the points of contention within the UMC have been lesbian and gay clergy and performing same-sex marriages, both of which the denomination currently prohibits.

Ray, who’s been at Mt. Bethel for five years, was reassigned to a non-ministry role with the North Georgia Conference in April.

He said neither he nor Mt. Bethel were properly consulted about the move, as they claim the UMC Book of Discipline requires.

Ray turned in his UMC ministerial credentials immediately, and in his first sermon at Mt. Bethel after that, looked at his children and said “I want you also to remember this day, that your Daddy didn’t bow the knee, or kiss the ring, of progressive theology. . . . which is no theology.”

Related stories

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb Schools Foundation receives $125K in Publix gift cards

Submitted information by the Cobb County School District:Cobb Schools Foundation

Publix Super Markets recently named the Cobb Schools Foundation a recipient of the “Tools for Schools” campaign. Last week, Bruch Humphries, District Manager of Atlanta Central West Region, and two local store managers delivered over $125,000 in gift cards for Cobb students and teachers.

Anyone who has shopped at Publix and opted to support the Tools for School has helped Cobb students who may not have basic learning materials like pens, markers, crayons, or notebooks. In some classrooms, teachers have been known to use their own money to provide those resources. Thanks to Tools for School, teachers and students can focus on doing what’s most important—teaching and learning. Contributions through the Tools for School campaign support local charities dedicated to helping kids succeed.

“The Cobb Schools Foundation is overjoyed to receive the generosity of our local Publix shoppers. These gift cards will be distributed throughout the county to serve students in need as well as teachers who are doing all that they can to create the best learning experience for students,” shared Frank Wigington, President of Cobb Schools Foundation.

Out of the approximately 107,000 students who are enrolled in the Cobb County School District’s 112 schools, over 40% are considered economically disadvantaged. The gift cards donated by Publix will go directly towards supporting the needs of those students and teachers in the district.

For those interested in working together with the Cobb Schools Foundation to take student success to new heights, go here. The Cobb Schools Foundation is a 501 (c) 3 nonprofit and is the philanthropic arm for the school district and focuses on family stabilization, learning interventions, scholarships, and career development for students. 

Related stories

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Heavy rains rip through East Cobb, cause flooding, closed roads

Cobb heavy rains flooding
Cobb County Police Department

A fast-moving thunderstorm pushed through East Cobb late Tuesday night and early Wednesday morning, dumping several inches of rain and causing flooding on some major roadways.

Several inches of rain left portions of 15 streets and roads underwater, according to Cobb County officials.

Most of them were passable as the Wednesday rush hour began. Cobb County government said at 7:45 a.m. Wednesday that Columns Drive was closed, and has since reopened.

That’s along the Chattahoochee River, and other low-lying areas near the river were also affected. Here’s what the county posted around that time:

“DOT crews worked 15 reports of flooded roadways overnight and cleared more than a half-dozen roads blocked by trees.

“Cobb Fire and Emergency Services, along with Cobb Police, made multiple rescues of people trapped in flooded cars.

“There are reports of homes and apartments damaged by the flash floods that hit from several inches of rain that fell in a short amount of time.”

The National Weather Service has issued a flood warning for the the Chattahoochee River in the Morgan Falls area in Cobb and Fulton counties until further notice.

Portions of Delk Road, Terrell Mill Road and Powers Ferry Road also were under water for some time, according to Cobb County officials.

Sope Creek also was overflowing this morning, as seen below.

The Georgia Department of Transportation is reporting that he Northwest Corridor Express Lanes along I-75 were closed due to a power outage at I-75 at Terrell Mill Road.

The county also reported that the East Cobb Government Service Center on Lower Roswell Road was experiencing a power outage due to a lightning strike and is likely to be closed all of Wednesday.

Indian Hills Country Club experienced some flooding and said its golf course and driving range would be closed Wednesday as cleanup crews worked to drain excess water.

Motorists are urged not to try to drive through standing water on the roads and are advised to turn around.

A flash flood warning expired in the East Cobb area around 9 a.m., but more rain is expected during the day Wednesday, starting in the mid afternoon.

The forecast calls for a 30-60 percent chance of rain from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m., with highs in the high 80s during the afternoon, and low temperatures in the low 70s.

The sun returns on Thursday morning, and is expected to be that way for the rest of the week.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb Board of Health urges ‘universal masking’ in schools

Cobb health board school masking

The Cobb Board of Health adopted a statement Tuesday urging schools to follow Centers for Disease Control guidance on mitigating against COVID-19, including masking of all staff, teachers and students over the age of 2.

The eight-member appointed board, called to an emergency meeting late Friday, voted 6-0 to approve what it called a “position statement” for public and private schools in the county.

The statement, read before the vote by chairwoman Dr. Carol Holtz, also encourages all eligible persons in Cobb (age 12 and older) to get vaccinated, and supports a “multi-pronged approach to protect students and staff.”

Cobb’s 14-day average of 845 cases per 100,000 people is several times above the “high community spread” threshold of 100/100K.

During the meeting, health officials noted that Cobb is experiencing “extremely high” transmission due to the Delta variant, and that pediatric case numbers and hospital admissions of children have increased dramatically.

It was clear from comments by board members and Dr. Janet Memark, the director of Cobb and Douglas Public Health, that masks were the primary reason for the meeting, and especially regarding the Cobb County School District’s policy.

The health board cannot issue mandates or require policy changes.

Cobb is among the few school districts in metro Atlanta without a mandatory mask policy. Marietta City Schools mandated masks in late August.

“One child’s death is not worth not wearing masks in our schools, public and private,” health board member Wyman Pilcher III said, echoing the comments of several of his colleagues.

They included Cobb Board of Commissioners chairwoman Lisa Cupid, who called the current COVID-19 surge in the county “one of the most troubling issues of our time” that “could do grave harm to our community.”

Abstaining from voting was Cobb superintendent Chris Ragsdale, who emphasized during the nearly hour-long meeting that the district was following seven of the eight recommended CDC school-related protocols.

Absent from the meeting, which was viewed via Zoom by more than 800 people, was Marietta superintendent Grant Rivera.

“We are doing seven of the eight,” Ragsdale said, stressing that correct usage of masks, especially by elementary school-age children, is a challenge.

Ragsdale—who with Rivera is a member of the health board by virtue of his position—also said the statement read by Holtz was not the text he had received prior to the meeting.

After it was sent to him, he said he didn’t feel comfortable voting for something he hadn’t had a chance to read.

Ragsdale said the Cobb school district—with 107,000 students and 20,000 more teachers and staff—strongly encourages masks and vaccines, and appreciated updated quarantine provisions from Cobb and Douglas Public Health.

Since July 1, there have been 3,744 confirmed COVID-19 cases among students and staff in Cobb schools, representing 3 percent of the district’s population.

“Ninety-seven percent are COVID-free,” Ragsdale said.

For each of the last three weeks, nearly 1,000 cases have been reported in the Cobb school district, and for 10 days the entire 5th grade at East Side Elementary School in East Cobb went to remote learning due to an outbreak.

But Memark—who posted several slides with high transmission and pediatric hospitalization data—said it was important to “use as many of the tools as possible” to curtail the spread of the virus.

She said that since August, roughly 25 percent of all COVID-19 cases in Cobb have been between the ages of 5-17, as well as 136 outbreaks and four pediatric deaths.

“There is a lot of significant transmission happening in those groups,” she said.

The health board’s statement in part addressed that as follows:

“Hospitalizations in school-aged children are also the highest since the beginning of the pandemic. The fact that many of these children are not eligible to be vaccinated and have been shown to spread the virus to others has been concerning since the beginning of this school year.”

The statement—which you can read in full here—concludes:

“Each school system has their own unique challenges to meet the needs of students and faculty and we respect their authority to make the final decisions. All questions regarding school protocols should be directed to the relevant school district.”

Related content

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

 

Ebenezer Road rezoning gets Cobb Planning Commission approval

 

Ebenezer Road rezoning

By a 3-2 vote the Cobb Planning Commission on Tuesday recommended approval of a rezoning request for a 99-home single-family subdivision on Ebenezer Road, although numerous issues remain.

The application by Pulte Homes was for the rezoning of nearly 50 acres on the west side of Ebenezer, between Maybreeze Road and Blackwell Road.

Planning Commission member Deborah Dance, who represents District 3 in Northeast Cobb, incorporated some of those concerns in her motion to approve. They include requiring lot sizes to be a minimum of 10,000 feet, mandating that the developer maintain two lakes on the property in perpetuity and the construction of sidewalks and guest parking.

Those and other traffic issues also remain unresolved as the case goes before the Cobb Board of Commissioners Sept. 21.

Planning Commission chairman Fred Beloin and new appointee David Anderson of East Cobb voted against the recommendation of approval.

The land owned by the Phillips family on Ebenezer Road is one of the largest undeveloped tracts of land in the area, and due to the lakes the request called for rezoning from R-20 to the R-15 OSC category. That’s single-family residential with an open space community provision, meaning that not all of the land can be developed.

Last month the Cobb zoning staff continued Pulte’s request. The developer revised the initial site plan and submitted a new stipulation letter, after questions were raised about density of around 2 units an acre, small lot sizes and a lack of amenities.

But nothing new has been added to the case file in the last month, and an online petition was started called “Cobb Citizens Against Pulte Overdevelopment of Ebenezer Road Z-31.” Thus far it has more than 250 signatures.

Pulte representative Rob Hosack, the former Cobb County Manager, showed slides on Tuesday indicating Pulte’s agreement with some community concerns and with previous input from the Planning Commission.

He also noted how the density of the Pulte development would be in line with nearby neighborhoods at around two units an acre.

But John Stuetzer, a nearby resident speaking on behalf of neighbors, and the East Cobb Civic Association said that despite Pulte’s agreement to make changes at community meetings, there’s nothing in the case file indicating that.

Stuetzer said “99 units are too dense” and said there were too many variances being requested “and that’s unacceptable.”

Another resident, Veronica Little, who lives across from the property on Ebenezer Road, said her home would “wash away” without some protection.

She said the dams on the lakes haven’t been looked at since the 1970s: “Do you think these dams are any good? Probably not.

“If one thing happens to this lake, my neighbor’s house is gone,” said Little, asking for the request to be delayed.

Related stories

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

After 3.7M meals, Cobb Community Food Fleet program ends

Cobb Community Food Fleet ends
Cars lined up at Mosaic Church in Marietta to pick up food boxes being delivered by the Cobb Community Food Fleet.

Submitted information and photos:

On September 16, 2021, after fifteen months, the operations of the Cobb Community Food Fleet will come to an end. 

Since the end of May of 2020, a group of nonprofits, churches, businesses and government entities has been responsible for the receipt and distribution of 168,000 boxes of food being received and distributed throughout Cobb County and beyond.  That equates to 4.4 million pounds of fresh produce and proteins, the equivalent of nearly 3.7 million meals.  The group that has become known as the “Cobb Community Food Fleet” includes fourteen organizations that picked up the food from Truist Park, the Galleria, the Cobb Energy Centre and Sweetwater Mission, subsequently delivering it to over 50 other fleet members (primarily churches and other nonprofits) throughout the county.  Thanks to S.A. White and Mobilized Fuels who provided the diesel needed to run the trailers, refrigeration was never lacking.

The effort has been a joint initiative of Cobb Community Foundation and Noonday Association of Churches.  Costs were largely underwritten by the Atlanta Braves, who also contributed the use of the stadium’s massive refrigerator and loading docks as the first distribution center.  Cobb County’s Board of Commissioners provided CARES Act and ARP Act funding of $540,000 to purchase food boxes, but the vast majority of the food was provided through the USDA’s Farmers to Families program.  What made Cobb such an attractive partner for the program’s food distributors was having a central distribution center at easily accessible facilities with subsequent deliveries throughout the entire county being handled by others.  In this case, a “fleet” of nonprofits. 

The need for a centralized distribution center went away when the USDA’s Farmers to Families program ended, but the need for food remains.  Cobb Community Foundation took this issue to the Cobb Board of Commissioners earlier this year.  The Board of Commissioners ultimately allocated $1.5 million of American Rescue Plan funding for the purchase of food by Cobb nonprofits. 

Says Shari Martin, President and CEO of Cobb Community Foundation, “We will continue to work to ensure that food remains available when needed and where needed.”  To that end, Noonday Association of Churches, the Atlanta Community Food Bank and Cobb Community Foundation are working on an upcoming event for all nonprofit food providers at which attendees will be presented with census tract-level data on food insecurity to explore opportunities for collaboration.

Cobb Community Food Fleet ends
Tyler Holley of the Atlanta Braves Foundation unloading food for the Fleet to be refrigerated prior to pick-up at Truist Park.
Cobb Community Food Fleet ends
MUST Ministries picking up food from Truist Park.
Cobb Community Food Fleet ends
Food being distributed at Reflections of Trinity in Powder Springs.

Related stories:

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb County Sheriff’s Office warns of ‘grandparent’ scam

Submitted information:

A scam known as the Grandparent Scam has been reported in Cobb County. The Scammers are calling residents in Cobb County and reporting their grandchild has been involved in an automobile accident, hurt, or arrested. The Scammers will ask for you to withdraw cash from your bank account and meet with a courier to turn over the money.Cobb sheriff

If you receive a suspicious phone call, hang up and verify the safety of your family. DO NOT give cash to an unknown individual as cash cannot be tracked.

If you have any questions or believe you may have been the victim of fraud, please call our Fraud Unit at 770-499-4752.

Related content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb health board calls special meeting on COVID schools policy

Dr. Carol Holtz, chairwoman, Cobb Board of Health
Dr. Carol Holtz, chairwoman, Cobb Board of Health

UPDATED, SEPT. 7, 7:07 P.M.:

The Cobb Board of Health voted to encourage universal masking and vaccination in schools, but cannot issue mandates or require policy changes.

ORIGINAL STORY:

The Cobb County Board of Health will hold a special meeting Tuesday to discuss COVID-19 policy in schools.

The meeting takes place at 5 p.m. and can be seen via Zoom at this link; registration is required.

The meeting notice, issued late Friday afternoon by Cobb and Douglas Public Health, says the only item of business is “Position Request for Consideration: COVID-19 Guidance in public and private schools in Cobb County.”

The health board is made up of eight people, including Lisa Cupid, Chairwoman of the Cobb Board of Commissioners; Cobb County School District Superintendent Chris Ragsdale; Marietta City Schools Superintendent Grant Rivera; Marietta Marietta Steve “Thunder” Tumlin; and four others by appointment.

They include retired banking executive Wyman Pilcher by the City of Marietta. The Cobb Board of Commissioners appointees are Paula Greaves, M.D., an obstetrician and gynecologist with the Wellstar Health System; Pete Quinones, CEO of Metro Ambulance Service; and the health board’s chairwoman, Dr. Carol Holtz, a retired nursing professor at Kennesaw State University.

The call for the “emergency” meeting comes as COVID-19 case numbers remain high with the Delta variant. As of Friday, the 14-day average of cases per 100,000 people in Cobb County is 814, several times above the “high community spread” threshold of 100/100K.

According to Georgia state law, county health boards can “take such steps as may be necessary to prevent and suppress disease and conditions deleterious to health and to determine compliance with health laws and rules, regulations, and standards adopted thereunder.”

On Aug. 19, Cupid issued a 30-day emergency declaration in Cobb County, shortly after County Manager Jackie McMorris issued a mask mandate for indoor county facilities.

For the third consecutive week, the Cobb school district reported active COVID-19 cases in the 1K range, with an unknown number of other absences due to quarantine provisions.

While Marietta made masks mandatory in schools last month, Cobb is one of the few school districts in metro Atlanta with a masks-optional policy.

At a Cobb Board of Education meeting last month, Ragsdale announced revisions to quarantine guidelines but that masks, while “strongly encouraged,” would remain optional, saying he wanted parents to have a choice regarding their children.

There were two pro-mask rallies at Cobb school district headquarters last month that were met by counter-protestors, and parents on both sides of the issue spoke out at the August school board meeting.

The Centers for Disease Control has been urging indoor mask usage in schools, as has Dr. Janet Memark, director of Cobb and Douglas Public Health.

In early August, Cobb and Douglas Public Health issued a statement after a new Georgia Department of Public Health order that “each school system has their own unique challenges to meet the needs of students and faculty and we respect their authority to make the final decisions.”

Related content

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Chattahoochee National Park Conservancy to hold ‘walk and talk’

Chattahoochee National Park Conservancy

If you’re a member of the Chattahoochee National Park Conservancy, the organization is going to hold a “walk and talk” event on Friday, Sept. 17 along a portion of the park’s trails in the Akers Mill Road area.

The walk is from from 9:30-11:30 a.m. and covers two miles:

Join Kathryn Kolb, Director of EcoAddendum, for an informative walk on a wooded trail along the Chattahoochee River. Participants will learn to identify trees and beautiful fall wildflowers on high ridges and along the river, as well as how to read the floodplain and ridge landscapes.

The walk is a two mile, moderate hike at the Akers Mill unit. To learn more and register:
https://www.chattahoocheeparks.org/event-4388651

There’s a limit of up to 15 people, ages 12 and over, and you’re asked not to bring your dog.

Participants are also asked to have been vaccinated and wear masks during the program.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Ebenezer Road rezoning returns to Cobb Planning Commission

Ebenezer Road rezoning
Homes proposed for a new Ebenezer Road subdivision would be designed in farmhouse style.

After being delayed twice, the Cobb Planning Commission will once again hear a rezoning request for a new residential development on Ebenezer Road.

Last month the Cobb zoning staff has continued a request by Pulte Homes 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, after questions were raised about density of around 2 units an acre, small lot sizes and a lack of amenities.

Nothing new has been added to the case file since then, but last week an online petition was started by Tom Dilbeck and called “Cobb Citizens Against Pulte Overdevelopment of Ebenezer Road Z-31.” Thus far is has nearly 250 signatures.

The property is currently zoned R-20 OSC, the latter meaning “open space community” overlay, a special preservation designation.

The Planning Commission is a five-member advisory board appointed by the Cobb Board of Commissioners, who make final decisions on zoning cases.

Tuesday’s meeting starts at 9 a.m. Tuesday (you can read the full agenda here) in the second floor board room of the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta. It also 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.

The meeting also will be the first for David Anderson, a new Planning Commission member who was appointed last month by District 2 commissioner Jerica Richardson. He’s a resident of East Cobb with a background in commercial real estate investment and development and urban planning.

The application by North Point Ministries to build the East Cobb Church and sell land for homes and townhomes in the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford corridor was delayed in August at the behest of Richardson.

There were only four commission members present at the August zoning hearing and two of them said they could not support the request. Commission chairwoman Lisa Cupid was absent due to a death in her family.

That case will be taken up again on Sept. 21.

Related stories

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

 

 

 

Cobb Food Scores: Marietta Diner; Shai-Kerr Eatery; more

Marietta Diner, Cobb food scores

The following food scores for the week of Aug. 30 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

The Filling Station Cafe
550 Interstate North Parkway
August 30, 2021 Score: 81, Grade: B

Jersey Mike’s Subs
2960 Shallowford Road, Suite 106
August 31, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

Las Tortas Locas
749 Roswell Street
September 2, 2021 Score: 96, Grade: A

Marietta Diner
306 Cobb Parkway South
August 31, 2021 Score: 84, Grade: B

Mellow Mushroom
2950 New Paces Ferry Road, Suite 100
September 1, 2021 Score: 90, Grade: A

Ray’s Donuts
4805 Canton Road, Suite 400
August 31, 2021 Score: 96, Grade: A

Shai-Kerr Eatery
68 North Marietta Parkway
September 1, 2021 Score: 90, Grade: A

Tokyo Express
1304 Cumberland Mall
September 2, 2021 Score: 91, Grade: A

Waffle House
920 Cobb Parkway South
September 1, 2021 Score: 90, Grade: A

Wing City
2467 Windy Hill Road
August 30, 2021 Score: 83, Grade: B

Related stories

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb schools report 947 COVID-19 cases for week of Aug. 30

Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

This week’s Cobb County School District COVID-19 report shows similar numbers from recent weeks with 947 active cases.

They include double-figure cases at quite a few schools, including several in East Cobb.

They’re not as high as last week’s report of 69 active cases at Sprayberry High School, which is reporting 26 this week.

Since July 1 there have been 3,744 cases reported in the Cobb school district, both for students and staff, but the figures aren’t broken down further.

They also don’t divulge how many people are being quarantined.

What follows are active case counts at schools in East Cobb, with cumulative totals in parenthesis:

Elementary Schools

  • Addison 1 (12); Bells Ferry 4 (26); Blackwell 7 (29); Brumby 11 (34); Davis 12 (49); East Side 12 (118); Eastvalley 3 (18); Garrison Mill 2 (34); Keheley 7 (11); Kincaid 2 (13); Mt. Bethel 8 (33); Mountain View 8 (28); Murdock 4 (40); Nicholson 11 (24); Powers Ferry 2 (7); Rocky Mount 9 (31); Sedalia Park 2 (30); Sope Creek 19 (42); Timber Ridge 5 (12); Tritt 5 (17).

Middle Schools

  • Daniell 11 (35); Dickerson 13 (26); Dodgen 7 (35); East Cobb 12 (32); Hightower Trail 4 (20); Mabry 19 (40); McCleskey 22 (53); Simpson 6 (26).

High Schools

  • Kell 15 (38); Lassiter 11 (49); Pope 13 (33); Sprayberry 26 (146); Walton 21 (88); Wheeler 12 (60).

Related stories

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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