Garden Bargains program begins at Mountain View Regional Library

Submitted information:

Cobb Master Gardeners

Garden Bargains is the Gardeners’ Night Out program at 6:30 pm Tuesday at Mountain View Regional Library, 3320 Sandy Plains Road, Marietta.

Master Gardener Joy Chanin will share many time-, money- and space-saving ideas in the October 12 program. Gardeners’ Night Out programs are free and open to the public.

Gardeners’ Night Out programs are presented at Cobb County libraries by Master Gardener Volunteers of Cobb County in conjunction with Cobb County UGA Cooperative Extension Service.

Upcoming fall 2021 programs presented by Master Gardener Volunteers, all on Tuesdays at 6:30 pm, also include:

  • Perennials: Divide and Conquer! on October 26 at North Cobb Regional Library, 3535 Old 41 Highway, Kennesaw, and November 9 at South Cobb Regional Library, 805 Clay Road, Mableton.
  • Cherokee Ethnobotany – If Plants Could Talk at North Cobb Regional Library on November 30.

For information, visit www.cobbmastergardeners.com or call the Master Gardeners Help Desk at 770-528-4070.​​

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Mt. Bethel facing deadline in responding to UMC lawsuit

Keith Boyette, Wesleyan Covenant Association, Mt. Bethel lawsuit
Keith Boyette, Wesleyan Covenant Association. Photo: UM News

Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church has until Monday to respond to a lawsuit filed against it by the denomination’s North Georgia Conference.

In the initial filings in Cobb Superior Court dated Sept. 8 is a notice stating that Mt. Bethel has 30 days to provide a response, excluding the date of the complaint, or “judgment by default will be taken against you for the relief demanded in the complaint.”

The notice was signed by Superior Court Clerk Connie Taylor and is a standard provision of lawsuits (you can read the full Mt. Bethel complaint here).

Mt. Bethel is being sued by the North Georgia Conference as part of a months-long dispute over the East Cobb church’s refusal to accept the assignment of a new pastor, and to turn over property and assets after it announced its intent to disaffiliate from the United Methodist Church.

In April, North Georgia Bishop Sue Haupert-Johnson reassigned Mt. Bethel senior pastor Rev. Dr. Jody Ray to a non-ministerial role in the Conference as part of the UMC’s traditional spring moving day.

But Ray and Mt. Bethel refused, claiming they had not been provided proper consultation as called for in UMC policies.

After turned in his UMC ministerial credentials, church leadership retained him as CEO and head lay minister.

The Conference said those and other Mt. Bethel actions violated the UMC’s Book of Discipline governing policies.

Mt. Bethel also is not providing office space to Rev. Dr. Steven Usry, the Conference’s designated successor to Ray, nor paying him his full salary.

East Cobb News has left a message with Mt. Bethel seeking comment on its response to the lawsuit.

Mt. Bethel has nearly 10,000 members and is the largest denomination in the North Georgia Conference.

It’s been grappling for years with doctrinal and other disputes increasing in the UMC, especially over same-sex marriages and lesbian and gay clergy.

Mt. Bethel has been actively involved in the creation of the Wesleyan Covenant Association, which is being tapped as a future destination for conservative Methodist congregations.

Shortly after the lawsuit was filed, Casey Alarcon, chairwoman of the Mt. Bethel Staff Parish Relations Council (the church’s main governing body), wrote a commentary on the WCA website defending the “unashamedly theologically conservative congregation’s” positions.

She wrote that Mt. Bethel “is a healthy vibrant church despite all the turmoil and disruption Bishop Haupert-Johnson has caused. . . . But now our bishop thinks it is necessary to drag one of her healthiest congregations into the secular courts. It is truly a sad day.”

The national UMC is scheduled to meet next September to decide whether to accept protocols to allow congregations to leave.

Mt. Bethel has petitioned in Cobb Superior Court to allow Keith Boyette, the head of the WCA and a licensed attorney in Virginia, to join its case.

But according to the most recent court filings, North Georgia Conference attorneys are attempting to quash that move.

In a petition filed Sept. 30, North Georgia Conference attorney Tom Cauthorn said Boyette should not be allowed to participate because of a conflict of interest—he has “encouraged the congregation of Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church to disregard mandates and other doctrine” handed down by the Conference.

“One of Mr. Boyette’s primary goals was to take land and buildings currently used by the United Methodist Church from the United Methodist Church so that they can be used by a newly formed denomination,” the Conference filing states.

“One of his organization’s goals is to encourage churches to do exactly the type of things that [Mt. Bethel] did in this matter.”

(You can read the entire letter by clicking here).

Cauthorn concluded that Boyette’s application “may be an attempt to prevent discovery into communications” between Mt. Bethel and Boyette.

Cauthorn’s memo included a copy of a July 28 Mt. Bethel e-mail to congregation members recounting the saga and defending its defiance of Haupert-Johnson and Conference directives.

The e-mail was signed by several dozen WCA board members and chapter presidents around the country. It concludes:

“We have sadly acknowledged that we would not be able to remain as one church. But not all are through with the fighting. Not all are committed to a gracious parting. There are still those who are determined to have winners and losers and who are committed to winning, even if a different view of ‘the faith once and for all delivered to the saints’ and a belief that victory can be achieved through power and intimidation.

“The attempt of your bishop and the North Georgia Conference to seize control of your property and assets, as a thriving church, is unprecedented as far as we are aware. . . .

“Other churches in your conference are frightened that if this can be done to you, it can certainly be done to them. Orthodox churches around the country with progressive bishops are also watching closely, knowing that how your situation is resolved may embolden or restrain their bishop from following Bishop Haupert-Johnson’s lead.”

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East Cobb Food Scores: Willie Jewell’s; Vespucci’s; Fresh Squeezed; more

Willie Jewell's, East Cobb food scores

The following food scores for the week of Oct. 4 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Belen de la Cruz Empanadas & Pastries
1050 E. Piedmont Road
October 7, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

Bells Ferry Elementary School
2600 Bells Ferry Road
October 6, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

Brewsters Neighborhood Grille
3595 Canton Road, Suite 326
October 7, 2021 Score: 97, Grade: A

Fresh Squeezed Juice Bar
4880 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 445
October 4, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

Hoagie Bros.
3595 Canton Road, Suite 330
October 7, 2021 Score: 96, Grade: A

J.J. Daniell Middle School
2950 Scott Drive
October 8, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

McDonald’s
4819 Lower Roswell Road
October 4, 2021 Score: 96, Grade: A

Vespucci’s Pizza & Pasta Tavern
4805 Canton Road, Suite 100
October 5, 2021 Score: 90, Grade: A

Wendy’s 
2238 Roswell Road
October 6, 2021 Score: 87, Grade: B

Willie Jewell’s Old School Bar-B-Q
2550 Sandy Plains Road
October 6, 2021 Score: 92, Grade: A

Yogli Mogli
3605 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 150
October 6, 2021 Score: 80, Grade: B

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Wheeler Name Change group to hold virtual town hall

Submitted information from Zoe Shepard of the Wheeler Name Change Initiative:Wheeler High School Fall 2017 Senior Projects, Wheeler athletic hall of fame

“We will be having our second virtual town hall on Monday October 11 at 6:00pm where we will be recounting our initiative, giving updates, and opening the floor to questions.

“We are continuing to reach out to the board and attend board meetings, though we are still unable to elicit a response. Over the summer, we attended the June board meeting then launched an email campaign sending emails three times a week throughout the month of July.”

More specifically:

“Each board member received 22 emails from students within the initiative, but majority of the Board failed to respond even once.

“If the Board cannot adequately address the concerns of the community, they cannot properly represent said community. The sole obligation of the Board members is being willfully neglected, and we deserve better.”

There are two ways to sign up to watch the town hall: GoTo Webinar and Linktree.

Previous ECN coverage can be found here.

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Five men graduate from Cobb Drug Treatment Court

Judge Staley and four graduates

Submitted information and photos:

Judges and staff of the Superior Court of Cobb County congratulate five men who celebrated recovery and completed the Drug Treatment Court program on Monday, Oct. 4.

The intensive program, suited for criminal offenders who are generally non-violent, lasts a minimum of two years and aims to treat an individual’s underlying addictions and return him or her to a productive member of society while reducing incarceration costs.

Judge Mary Staley Clark recently took over as presiding judge of this accountability court program. 

“You persevered and kept going,” she told the graduates at the start of the celebration. “It takes enormous courage to do a program like this. You dug deeper into your mind, your heart, your soul.”

She is pictured above with graduates (from left) James, Jason, John and Joel.

Joel, 42, entered the program in December 2019, and during his time in the program has grown his business, gotten married, and become a father. 

“Life as I knew it has taken on a whole new meaning,” he said. “Drug Court provided me with the tools and resources, along with structure and accountability, to achieve and maintain a sober and happier life.”

Each graduate introduced family and friends who were attending in person or via Zoom, and thanked the staff and nonprofit groups that helped them get back on track. 

Jason, 44, began Drug Court in summer 2019. “I have my life back,” he proclaimed. 

More than 650 people have graduated from Cobb’s Drug Treatment Court. Many continue to support each other in their recovery, including through an alumni group.

DTC graduates with staff
New graduates of Drug Treatment Court join program officials in Judge Mary Staley Clark’s courtroom, Oct. 4, 2021.

A team that includes prosecution and defense attorneys, treatment counselors, probation officers, administrators and the presiding judge reviews each application for Drug Treatment Court and monitors admitted participants throughout. Punishment for violations can range from a night in jail to expulsion from the program.

Porsha Middlebrook is the Coordinator of Drug Treatment Court. Kayla Tomes is the Case Manager. 

Various county and state offices collaborate in operating individual Accountability Courts. Additional support is provided by nonprofit groups including the Davis Direction Foundation, Restoring Lives Alliance, and WorkSource Cobb. 

For more information, visit cobbcounty.org/SuperiorAC.

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Cobb school board member to run for state school superintendent

First-term Cobb Board of Education member Jaha Howard has filed paperwork run for Georgia Superintendent of Schools in 2022.Cobb school board COVID safety letter

Howard, a Democrat from Post 2 (Campbell and Osborne clusters) registered his campaign committee with the Georgia Government Transparency and Campaign Finance Commission on Sunday.

In late June, he filed a Declaration of Intent form with the same agency but didn’t specify which office he was seeking.

Official qualifying begins early next year for the May 2022 primaries.

A pediatric dentist from Vinings, Howard has been a controversial figure in his nearly three-year tenure on the school board, pressing for action on racial and diversity issues and challenging the Cobb County School District’s COVID-19 policies.

When he attempted to question Superintendent Chris Ragsdale about those protocols at the September board meeting, he was cut off by chairman Randy Scamihorn.

He and fellow board Democrats Charisse Davis and Tre’ Hutchins then walked out of the meeting room in protest.

That was the latest of several instances of party conflict on the Cobb school board since 2019.

Earlier this year, the three Democrats requested a special review by Cognia, the Cobb school district’s accrediting agency, that is expected to be released soon.

Howard is one of three school board members up for re-election in 2022.

Davis, who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters in Post 6, has not announced whether she’s seeking a second term.

Also in East Cobb’s Post 4, Republican David Chastain has said he will be running again. Kennesaw State University student Austin Heller is an announced candidate as a Democrat for that post, which includes the Kell and Sprayberry clusters.

No candidates have yet announced for Post 2. That was one of two school board seats that swung from GOP to Democrat in 2018 (along with Post 6), reducing Republican majority to 4-3.

Howard unsuccessfully ran in a special election for a State Senate seat in 2017, losing to Jen Jordan. She has announced she’s running for Georgia Attorney General next year.

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Cobb schools online learning lottery opens for spring semester

Submitted information:Campbell High School lockdown

As Superintendent Chris Ragsdale announced during the August Cobb Board of Education meeting, Cobb families will once again have an opportunity to choose the learning environment that best supports the needs of their student(s). 

The District is offering all students (PK-12th grade) the option to enter a lottery for seats in the Elementary Virtual Program (EVP) or Cobb Online Learning Academy (COLA) at Cobb Horizon starting in January 2022. 

Elementary lottery winners will remain enrolled in their current schools but will receive all instruction virtually from a certified EVP teacher starting in January. Middle and high school lottery winners will be withdrawn from their current schools and enrolled in COLA for the spring semester. 

Enrolling adults may enter the lottery for full-time online learning between October 6th and October 19th, 2021. 

Starting on October 6th, enrolling adults may enter the online learning lottery through ParentVue. Once logged in to ParentVueenrolling adults should click Online Learning Lottery in the menu on the left and then click again at the top of the page. Select your choice for each of your students and click submit. You will receive an email confirmation regarding your lottery entry after the lottery window closes. 

Lottery results will be emailed in early November.

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Cobb school board member’s e-mail discourages COVID vaccines

David Banks, Cobb school board member
David Banks taking the oath of office at the start of his fourth term in January. Photo: Cobb County School District

Cobb Board of Education member David Banks has sent an e-mail to constituents that strongly discourages them from getting the COVID-19 vaccine and accuses the government of “intentionally killing its citizens.”

Banks, who is in his fourth term representing Post 5 (Pope and Lassiter clusters), sent the e-email Sunday afternoon via his official school board e-mail address, that cited figures about adverse effects of the vaccine from a recent report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control.

The body of the message is as follows:

“It just gets worse and worse. The CDC has now published the Adverse effects of Covid Shots through September 24, 2021. (see item 8 of the attached.) The number of deaths resulting directly from Covid shots in the US alone are at a minimum of 122,592 based on the CDC September 24 report. Serious permanent injury from the shots has happened to more than 100,000 people. That is unacceptable. The government is intentionally killing its citizens. The Governments at all levels in America continue to take actions to force people to take the shots. There is no medical reason supporting those actions. Covid shots were proven NOT TO WORK almost two years ago in the governments own mandated trials performed by Pfizer, Moderna, and J&J. See item 2 of the attachment. My advice. Do not take the shots if you have not already done so. Contact your state and federal legislators and share the attachment with them.”

The attachment referred to, entitled “Things to Know About Covid19,” can be found by clicking here.

The source is from Macht Im Wissen Inc. of Georgia, and its CEO is Emery Leonard.

The phrase is German for “Knowledge is Power” and Leonard is an Atlanta resident and retired benefits professional.

At the bottom of the attachment, Leonard explained that he started an e-mail list to send “confirmed facts about current issues. My intention is to provide only true facts, show how they may interplay, or even affect you personally. Any factual information I may cite will not come from the media, as the media is not a reliable and trustworthy source.”

The attachment is broken down into several subjects, including the effectiveness of masks (“masks don’t work”), the COVID-19 vaccines, presidential COVID-19 advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci and alternative treatments. 

Leonard claims the the COVID-19 virus was created in a lab in China “and does not exist in nature,” and advocates for the use of substances such as Ivermectin and Hyrdoxycloroquine, which have been controversial subjects..

He also alleges that “there is no valid test for Covid19” and “there is NO valid test for any variation of the Covid virus.”

East Cobb News has left Banks a message seeking comment.

A constituent who forwarded his e-mail and attachment to East Cobb News said that she found it “very disturbing that this information is being circulated from an elected official and makes me despair over the decisions being made for the safety of my three children in Cobb County schools.”

Banks is the board’s current vice chairman and is part of a four-member Republican majority. Most of those members have not worn masks during in-person board meetings during the COVID-19 pandemic (along with Superintendent Chris Ragsdale).

Banks has said previously he doesn’t wear a mask because he thinks they don’t work.

Last August, he included an item in his “Grapevine” e-mail newsletter to constituents making reference to COVID-19 as the “China Virus,” upsetting some constituents.

He didn’t reply to an East Cobb News story for comment, and later responded that he got few negative replies to that e-mail and that “these people are racists and you carried their water.”

The Cobb County School District is one of the few in metro Atlanta with a masks-optional policy for the 2021-22 school year, after requiring masks last school year.

Before school board meetings in August and September, there have been pro-mask mandate rallies met by counter-demonstrators arguing that mask use should not be a parental and student choice.

On Friday, Cobb schools were sued by the parents of four medically fragile students who said the district’s COVID-19 policies, including masks-optional, make it impossible for their children to have an in-person education.

On Tuesday, the non-profit news organization Pro Publica published a lengthy piece interviewing parents of Cobb school district students concerned about high COVID-19 case numbers at the start of the school year.

They included East Cobb parents and a family with students at East Side Elementary School affected by the decision for fifth graders to learn remotely for more than two weeks.

The story was written by Nicole Carr, an Atlanta journalist who has pulled her own children from Cobb schools because of the masks-optional policy.

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Cobb Police officers awarded Medal of Valor by Cobb Chamber

Cobb Police Officers Medal Valor Cobb Chamber
Photo: Karl L. Moore/Mooreshots LLC, Courtesy of Cobb Chamber of Commerce

The Cobb Chamber of Commerce on Monday honored public safety personnel at its annual Public Safety Appreciation luncheon.

Among those honored were Cobb Police officers David Cavender, John Pearson and Bryan Moore, who responded to a carjacking in the Powers Ferry Road area in June 2020 that led to the shooting death of the suspect (previous ECN story here).

One of the officers was shot by the suspect, and for their work, they received the Chamber’s Medal of Valor, “the highest award recognizing an individual for an act of bravery in a life-threatening situation. The award is only presented when a deserving candidate is found.”

Here are more details about that incident:

On June 25, 2020, Cobb County Police officers responded to the area of Powers Ferry Road and Delk Road regarding a carjacking that had just occurred in a grocery parking lot. The victim reported that a male had brandished a knife and stole his Tesla vehicle. The suspect had arrived at the shopping center in a truck that he had earlier carjacked before fleeing in the Tesla. Cobb Police officers were able to locate the suspect and pursued him for several miles until the suspect abandoned the vehicle and fled on foot. He fired several rounds from a rifle at the pursuing officers, who took cover and lost sight of the suspect. Cobb Police SWAT Team officers David Cavender and John Pearson responded to nearby townhomes where residents had called 911 after observing the suspect entering their complex.

Officer Bryan Moore, of the Cobb Police K-9 Unit, responded to the townhomes and spoke with a resident who said that he had seen the suspect run behind a trash dumpster at the end of a parking lot. As Officer Cavender and Officer Pearson approached the dumpster on opposing sides. Moments later the suspect fired on Officer Cavender without warning. Officer Cavender was struck in the right temple by shrapnel from the one of the suspect’s rounds that had hit the holographic sight on his rifle. As Cavender turned his head to the right, he was struck on the back of his head by another rifle round. Fortunately, the round only grazed his scalp, and he was able to return fire and move to cover behind a vehicle. As that was occurring, Officer Pearson quickly located the suspect and stopped the threat. Once additional officers arrived, Officer Pearson escorted Officer Cavender to the front of the townhomes complex to meet with medical personnel. A short time later, supervisors created a tactical plan to approach the suspect and found him deceased.

Officers Cavender, Pearson and Moore are veteran members of the Cobb Police SWAT Team and K9 Unit. As they were searching for the suspect in the residential area that had dozens of potential danger areas and hiding spots, the three officers utilized their tactical training to analyze the situation and make an effective plan to solve the crisis.  Had they not changed their approach route to the suspect’s location, the incident could have had fatal consequences for Officers Cavender, Pearson and Moore, as well as many other officers and dozens of civilians who were enjoying the summer evening.

The 2021 Public Safety Appreciation Breakfast was made possible with the support of our event sponsors, including Platinum Sponsors, Cobb EMC and Wellstar Health System; Awards Sponsor, LoRusso Law Firm; Gold Sponsors, Genuine Parts Company and Walton Communities; Silver Sponsors, Barrow Wrecker Services, C.W. Matthews Contracting Co. Inc., GLOCK, Governor’s Gun Club, Kennesaw State University, Marietta Wrecker, MetroAtlanta Ambulance Service, Puckett EMS, Six Flags Over Georgia, The Cooper Firm, and Vinings Bank; and Patriot Sponsors, E. Smith Heating & Air Conditioning, Georgia Power, Marietta Family Restaurants, Mauldin & Jenkins, and Northside Hospital.

For the latest information on Public Safety Appreciation Week, visit www.cobbchamber.org/publicsafety.

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Cobb school board to hold special called meeting Thursday

The Cobb Board of Education will hold a special called meeting on Thursday to discuss legal matters, according to a notice posted on by the Cobb County School District website Monday.Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

The notice says the meeting will begin at 1 p.m. in the board room of the CCD central office (514 Glover St., Marietta) and then the board will convene to an executive session.

Elected bodies can discuss land, legal and personnel matters in executive sessions.

The district message didn’t elaborate what specific legal issues will be discussed.

On Friday, four parents with students in the Cobb school district filed a federal lawsuit, claiming COVID-19 protocols are preventing their medically fragile children from getting a proper education under the Americans With Disabilities Act.

Cobb schools is one of the few districts in metro Atlanta with a masks-optional policy, which the lawsuit cites, along with other distancing and safety measures the plaintiffs have alleged are not adequate.

In response to a request from East Cobb News for comment about the lawsuit, a district spokeswoman said this on Monday:

“As is the case with any issue, individual student needs are supported on a student-by-student basis and we actively encourage any student or family to discuss their needs with their local school. We cannot comment on pending lawsuits but appreciate the support of Nelson Mullins on all legal matters concerning the school district.”

The Cobb school district also is awaiting a report from its accrediting agency, which conducted a special review in August after getting complaints from three board members and 50 community members about governance, equity and academic performance issues.

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Cobb Planning Commission agenda for Oct. 5

Cobb Planning Commission

Northpoint Ministries’ application for a mixed-use development that includes East Cobb Church, retail and residential will be heard later in October by the Cobb Board of Commissioners.

On Tuesday the Cobb Planning Commission will consider an application for another church in the East Cobb area, albeit on a smaller scale.

The proposed Praise Harvest Community Church would go on Jamerson Road, west of Canton Road, in a small building zoned for neighborhood shopping (NS).

The church is seeking neighborhood commercial retail (NRC) zoning and the Cobb Zoning Staff has recommended approval with conditions (the staff analysis, site plan and other details can be found here).

The existing building includes 20,000 square feet, and the church is proposing a capacity of 100 people (membership is around 45) using the facility Wednesday-Friday evenings and Sunday mornings.

The Praise Harvest case is included on the Planning Commission’s consent agenda (summary here), and the meeting begins at 9 a.m.

It’s in second floor board room of the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta), and COVID-19 measures are in place, including required masks.

The meeting 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.

Also on the agenda is a proposal to convert a single family home on Scufflegrit Road, just below Sandy Plains Road, for a coffee shop with a conference room and tutoring service available by reservation only.

The current home is behind a closed drug store and faces the Sandy Plains Exchange shopping center.

But it’s surrounded by low-density single-family housing and also is on the consent agenda, which mean’s there’s no announced opposition.

The staff is recommending approval (agenda item here) with conditions that include buffering and exterior modifications to be approved by the district commissioner.

The full meeting agenda can be found here; a case that was scheduled to be heard Tuesday in the East Cobb area is being held back to November. The Furniture and Mattress Warehouse wants to develop a 30,000-square foot retail and professional center on and a car wash a vacant lot on Piedmont Road, east of Bells Ferry Road, between a CVS store and a subdivision (agenda item here).

The applicant asked for the continuance to continue working with the Bells Ferry Civic Association.

In addition to the East Cobb Church case, Cobb commissioners will reconsider the Ebenezer Road rezoning it’s delayed several times when it holds its next zoning hearing on Oct. 19.

No new filings have been added for either application since the September meetings.

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Cobb included in flash flood watch through Wednesday

Cobb flash flood watch

A rainy start to the week is expected to intensify through Wednesday, and the National Weather Service in Atlanta has issued a flash flood watch until then for much of north Georgia.

Cobb County is included in a stretch that’s expected to get the heaviest amounts of rainfall, between 4 and 6 inches, during that time.

The watch began Sunday night (when the above map was released) and is set to expire at 2 a.m. Wednesday.

On Monday there is a 60 percent chance of rain, followed by a 100 percent chance on Tuesday, 90 percent on Wednesday and an 80 percent chance on Thursday.

Temperatures will reach into the high 70s with lows in the mid 60s through that time.

The rain will begin to clear out by the weekend, with sunny weather in the forecast for Saturday and Sunday.

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Pleast visit East Cobb News at the ECBA Expo this Tuesday!

After being cancelled in 2020, the East Cobb Business Association Expo is returning on Tuesday, and East Cobb News will be there as a proud member and exhibitor.

The Expo, in its fourth year, is a great opportunity for the members of the public and other business owners in the community to come together.

In addition to the networking opportunities, you can enjoy food and drink, raffle prizes and other giveaways.

The event is Tuesday from 4:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at the Olde Towne Athletic Club (4950 Olde Towne Parkway), and the cost is $10 per person. But there are some limited free networking tickets (Click here to register) that have been donated, proceeds benefitting East Cobb public safety personnel.

If those free tickets are gone, you can still sign up at that link with the $10 charge.

East Cobb News has been working hard over these last 18 months or so to bring you all the latest COVID-19 news and everything else that’s been going on in very challenging times, and we’re eager to reconnect with fellow ECBA members, business owners and community members.

We’re increasingly becoming the go-to source for news, information and online community connection in East Cobb. That’s what we hear from readers, and that’s our pledge as we forge ahead in the wake of COVID-19.

While other media outlets are cutting back, East Cobb News is growing and adapting not only to how residents get their news, but how local businesses are having to tailor what they do.

We’ve updated our Media Kit (that you can download here) that’s designed to fit the promotional needs and budget of any kind of business, and we’re flexible to help you develop your marketing plan in these uncertain times.

We also want to work with civic and community organizations as they get back to having events, especially as the holidays approach, and we offer special advertising plans for those purposes as well.

If you’re coming to the Expo, please stop by our table to say hello! We’d love to meet you!

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East Cobb man raises $20K in ‘mega’ swim for 9/11 aid group

East Cobb man mega swim 9/11

An update to the story we ran in late August about James Whitcomb, who was preparing for a 10-mile “mega” swim at the Mountain View Aquatic Center to raise funds for a 9/11 organization:

He reports that his “Swim2Help” the Tunnel to Towers non-profit on Sept. 10 raised $20,601, from 119 donors.

Here’s his report—dated Sept. 11—and some photos from the pool:

The 10-mile MEGA swim was accomplished yesterday at 12:47 p.m. EDT.  (I began swimming at 6:14 a.m.)

To this moment collectively 105 supporters have contributed $19,017.00. Wow! Well done! Thank you!

It was a great day to swim with wonderful encouragement all throughout.

We had a very precise lap counter and time keeper in Suresh Sharma. Swim time was 5 hours and 48 minutes. I took 3 breaks which totaled 45 minutes.

My wife and our eldest, Philip, set up and kept everything operating pool side. 

The Japan American Society of Georgia hosted the live stream. Many have commented that Yoshi Domoto should be a newscaster – he’s got the looks and voice. Go Yoshi-san! You can see a replay at https://youtu.be/C2U6rNsH65M.    

Support swimmers (Natalie, Stephen and Jim Reed) provided me much needed motivation to keep swimming despite cramping and general fatigue.

As always, the staff at Mountain View Aquatic Center were phenomenally supportive. From setting up and breaking down to lifeguarding and sharing food with hungry supporters!  

Many people stopped in to cheer and keep spirits high.

Each of you played a very important role by sharing your resources. Your time, money donation, sweat and good cheer is very much appreciated. Our vets, first responders and their families will be helped and I know are grateful.

In closing, I sincerely thank each of you for your support of T2T (www.t2t.org) via my MEGA swim. Many hands do make light work and your hands helped make this task easy.  

East Cobb man mega swim 9/11
James Whitcomb (back row, second from right) with the volunteers, family and Mountain View Aquatic Center staff who assisted him during his swimming marathon.

East Cobb man mega swim 9/11

East Cobb man mega swim 9/11
Whitcomb praised the Mountain View Aquatic Center lifeguards as “always attentive!”

East Cobb man mega swim 9/11
James Whitcomb and his family.

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The Avenue East Cobb Fall Fest: Updated schedule, details

The Avenue East Cobb Fall Fest

A couple weeks back we mentioned that The Avenue East Cobb was having its inaugural Fall Fest on Saturday, Oct. 9, part of the expanded events calendar that’s the result of its new management partnership with North American Properties.

The thumbnail schedule is as follows:

  • 2 p.m. – Artist’s Row opens
  • 3 p.m. – Event begins with live music and roaming entertainment
  • 3:30 p.m. – Cornhole ATL tournament starts
  • 4 p.m. – Hayrides commence
  • 6 p.m. – Event ends

More details have been provided that NAP has passed along as noted below, with the event slated from 3-6 p.m.:

Starting at 3 p.m., Super Deluxe band will get the Central Boulevard rockin’ with crowd-favorite tunes. Throughout the afternoon, complimentary face painting, balloon art, hayrides and other surprise offerings will be available for guests to enjoy. Cornhole ATL is also hosting a cornhole tournament during Fall Fest and interested participants can pre-register online (October 8 deadline). Tournament winners will receive an Avenue East Cobb Experience basket filled with retailer and restaurant goodies.

Before Fall Fest officially kicks off, the first-ever Artist’s Row, curated by the Marietta Arts Festival, will come to life in the Avenue’s Central Boulevard and feature hand-crafted goods from local makers. The Artist’s Row opens at 2 p.m. and attendees are encouraged to arrive early to select their favorite pieces. A full list of participating artists can be viewed here.

All Fall Fest activities will happen in the Central Boulevard between Kale Me Crazy and Banana Republic. Drift Fish House & Oyster Bar will also provide drinks for purchase at its pop-bar in the Central Boulevard all afternoon long.

To stay in the know on updates at The Avenue East Cobb, follow the lifestyle center on FacebookInstagram and Twitter, or visit the website.

The festival is free for the public to attend; you pay for your own food, drink and shopping purchases.

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Cobb school district sued by parents over COVID-19 protocols

Cobb schools sued COVID-19 protocols
The middle school son of East Cobb resident Sara Cavorley has been learning at home due to a rare form of cancer.

Four parents of Cobb County School District students with disabilities or illnesses have filed a federal lawsuit against the district, saying its COVID-19 protocols aren’t protecting the students’ safety.

One of the parents is Sara Cavorley, whom East Cobb News profiled in August after she pulled four of her children out of schools in the Sprayberry High School attendance zone.

She did so, she said at the time, to protect her homebound son, a 13-year-old enrolled at Simpson Middle School but who suffers from acute myeloid leukemia (AML), a rare form of cancer.

Cavorley said she was unaware of the district’s masks-optional policy when the 2021-22 school year arrived and was upset that parents could not switch from in-person to virtual learning, as they could do during the previous school year.

In their lawsuit (you can read it here), filed Friday in U.S. District Court in Atlanta by local attorneys working with the Southern Poverty Law Center, Cavorley and the other three Cobb schools parents allege that the Cobb school district’s “current COVID-19 response jeopardizes the health and safety of more than 110,000 individuals in the District, approximately 15,000 of whom are students with disabilities, like Plaintiffs, as well as the District’s employees and the entire Cobb County community.”

As a result, the lawsuit contends, their children can no longer attend classes in person, and they are being deprived of an appropriate education.

According to the lawsuit, the Cobb school district has “acted with deliberate indifference to Plaintiffs’ rights to inclusion, health, and education” and are seeking “relief from this Court to ensure they receive the educational services, programs, and benefits to which they are legally entitled” under the federal Americans With Disabilities Act.

Ragsdale and each of the seven members of the Cobb Board of Education are listed as defendants.

The defendants are asking the court to require the Cobb school district to develop COVID-19 protocols that follow existing CDC guidelines for schools and to “maintain consistency with CDC guidelines in the event of subsequent changes.”

Earlier this spring, parents opposed to the district’s mask mandate at the time filed a federal lawsuit, but their attempt for a temporary injunction was denied. They dropped their suit when Ragsdale announced that a masks-optional policy would be in place for the 2021-22 school year.

In the August East Cobb News profile, Cavorley said she kept her children at home in the Cobb school district’s virtual option last school year to protect her son Leland, who needs regular blood transfusions.

He also was not old enough at the time to get the COVID-19 vaccine, which is available to people ages 12 and older.

But she wanted her children to return to in-person learning for this school year, and said they were upset when they returned to classes to be around staff and other students who weren’t wearing masks.

The lawsuit said her son has been vaccinated and his doctors approved him returning to in-person classes “so long as the 2020-2021 safety protocols were in place, namely universal masking, plexiglass between students, and social distancing. [Her son’s] doctors advised against him attending school in-person if the District discontinued those safety protocols.”

Cavorley withdrew her son from in-school instruction and requested hospital/homebound (HHB) services for him, according to the suit, which further claims that “HHB is not an appropriate placement for a child who could attend school in-person with reasonable modifications.”

The lawsuit continues that he gets only five hours of instruction a week and is isolated from his peers, as are the children of the other parents in the lawsuit.

According to the suit, the Cobb school district threatened to disenroll Cavorley’s other children, and her homebound son’s siblings “now attend school fearful of bringing COVID-19 home” while he is “being denied access to in-person education opportunities because of his disability.”

The lawsuit also details Cobb school board discussions about masking and COVID-19 protocols, noting the partisan divisions on the board, and also how Ragsdale abstained from voting for a Cobb Board of Health statement in September calling for universal masking in schools.

That’s following guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and the American Association of Pediatricians, as well as Cobb and Douglas Public Health.

At the Cobb school board’s September meetings, Ragsdale adamantly defended the district’s masks-optional policy, citing dropping COVID-19 case rates and saying its metrics weren’t much different from nearby school districts that mandated masks.

“This district will not be anti-mask,” Ragsdale said, emphasizing that mask use is “strongly encouraged” among students and staff.

After being refused a request to question Ragsdale, the three Democrats on the school board walked out of the meeting.

“Because of Defendants’ actions, Plaintiffs are being denied critical educational opportunities, including the social, emotional, and academic advantages of being in the classroom with their peers,” the lawsuit states.

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Cobb schools awaiting accreditor’s special review report

Cobb school district

The Cobb County School District is still awaiting a report from its accrediting agency, several weeks after a special review process was conducted.

Alpharetta-based Cognia interviewed district officials and Cobb Board of Education members over several days in August, following complaints from three board members and 50 others in the community on a range of board governance matters and concerns over equitable opportunities and student performance.

Mariama Tyler, Cognia’s vice president of public relations, said Thursday in an e-mail response to East Cobb News that “I do not have a timeline for the release of the report. It will be released to the Cobb Board of Education once completed.”

East Cobb News has left a message with the Cobb school district seeking comment. Cobb schools have been on fall break this week.

The district announced in April that Cognia would be conducting the review, expressing concern that determinations made through a Special Review Team can negatively impact college acceptance rates, college scholarships, enrollment, funding, and educator recruitment and retention . . . Impacts can also negatively affect a county’s economy, property values, and bond credit ratings.”

In 2019, Cognia reaccredited the Cobb County School District—the second-largest in Georgia, with more than 107,000 students—through 2024.

But Democratic board members Charisse Davis, Jaha Howard and Tre’ Hutchins went to Cognia after saying they were being ignored by the board’s Republican majority and Superintendent Chris Ragsdale to discuss early literacy, educator and employee support and board governance training topics.

They sent a letter to Cognia in January outlining their issues and that the district released to the public when announcing the special review:

“The continued silencing of board members who would like to not only talk about positives, but also publicly address challenges, continues. The three of us remain concerned that our governing body is not adhering to the leadership standards set forth by Cognia.”

They asked for third-party assistance in to help the board “navigate our differences,” specific agenda items for COVID-related staff support and safety improvements and additional agenda items “related to the study and expansion of targeted literacy interventions.”

Ragsdale responded in late March to Cognia, defending Cobb’s record on all three matters.

In addition, community members lodged complaints citing financial concerns, the district’s handling of COVID-19 matters and even the board’s refusal to consider requests to rename Wheeler High School.

Depending on the findings, a special review—which is a rare occurrence—typically affords districts time to make recommended changes before a possible loss of accreditation.

At the time Cognia undertook the Cobb process, it also was conducting a special review of Gwinnett County Public Schools, the largest system in the state.

In mid-September, Cognia announced that Gwinnett would retain full accreditation.

The Gwinnett review evaluated that school district based on six performance standards. Cognia found that Gwinnett schools exceeded one of those standards, met three others, and recommended improvements for two other standards, both relating to governing authority issues.

In the months leading up to the special review, the Cobb school district openly expressed frustration that Cognia would not disclose specifics of the 50 community complaints.

But WSB-TV reported in June that it had obtained a copy of a report detailing those complaints, something the district has said it had not been able to see.

A number of them apparently focus on allegations that the Cobb school board—with an all-white four-member Republican majority and a minority of three black Democrats—has not adequately responded to community concerns.

“We are only aware of specific complaints to COGNIA through reporting from select media outlets,” a district spokeswoman told East Cobb News in August, just as the review was set to begin.

The MDJ also reported it has been rebuffed in its efforts to see the complaints after unsuccessfully filing open records requests. The newspaper, which appealed to the Georgia Attorney General’s office for assistance but was denied, also reported that Cobb school officials demanded unredacted copies of the 50 complaints, but to no avail.

For more than a year, students, parents and others associated with Wheeler High School have been speaking at school board meetings about a desire to change the school name, and to get a response.

Wheeler, named after a Confederate Civil War general, is among the most racially and ethnically diverse schools in the Cobb district. Students in favor of a name change have said publicly they’re embarrassed and ashamed their school is named after someone they say doesn’t reflect what their school is about.

But they have said that only Davis, who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters, has responded in favor of their concerns—she signed an online petition supporting a Wheeler name change.

The issue hasn’t made a school board agenda because items can be added by members only with majority support, or unilaterally by the chairman or superintendent, none of which have happened.

On its Facebook page Thursday, the Wheeler Name Change group said that over the summer:

“We sent weekly emails yet only got a limited number of responses. We need to continue to increase public pressure on the Board so they can no longer ignore our efforts.”

Before the special review began, Cognia head Mark Elgart told the AJC that Cobb’s accreditation would not immediately be threatened by the special review.

Cobb district officials have cited a loss of accreditation in Clayton and DeKalb public schools in 2008 and 2011 respectively for their concerns about the process.

Shortly after the review was announced, the Cobb school district fired its longtime Marietta law firm and hired the Atlanta law firm of Nelson, Mullins, Riley & Scarborough.

At the same time, a Facebook group formed demanding a recall for the three board members who asked for the special review.

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‘Cumberland Sweep’ connectivity includes Chattahoochee NRA

Cochran Shoals Trail, Cumberland Sweep
The Cochrain Shoals Trail is one of the Cumberland Trails included in the Cumberland CID.

Last week the Cumberland Community Improvement District unveiled what it’s calling the “Cumberland Sweep”—a three-mile multimodal path designed to improve connectivity in that area, and not just for transit.

Its main connection points include The Battery Atlanta, Truist Park, Cumberland Mall, Cobb Galleria Centre and Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre, where shuttle connections also are being envisioned.

Recreational activities are another major part of the Cumberland Sweep plan, which has its own dedicated website.

Those include the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area, Bob Callan Trail, Akers Mill Trail and local bike share stations.

The Cumberland Trails include the Cochran Shoals Trail, which connects both edges of the Chattahoochee NRA from its southern point near Powers Ferry and Akers Mill Road and Columns Drive in East Cobb.

“The Cumberland Sweep name embodies the very essence of this path,” John Shern, Chairman, Cumberland CID Board of Directors, said in a statement. “The Sweep means movement and our goal is to move people more effectively and efficiently around the Cumberland area. This vital transportation resource will make our region more accessible connecting businesses, residents, and visitors to the best of what Cumberland has to offer.”

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