Cobb commissioners approve new NE Cobb police precinct

Cobb police precinct map
Current Cobb police patrol zones include Precinct 4, located on Lower Roswell Road in East Cobb.

UPDATED:

Commissioners approved the design/construction contract by a 5-0 vote, with District 3 representative JoAnn Birrell saying “this has been a long time coming.”

She said a groundbreaking will take place on Dec. 1 at 11 a.m.

ORIGINAL POST:

Initial design work for a new police station in Northeast Cobb is on the agenda for the Cobb Board of Commissioners Tuesday.

A contract for $723,980 with Batson-Cook Company is being presented to commissioners to design what would eventually become the Cobb Police Department’s Precinct 6.

It’s the first part of a two-phase project that’s been budgeted for $5 million in 2016 Cobb SPLOST funding.

You can read more by clicking here.

The Batson-Cook project work would include “design, project fee, and general conditions costs” for Precinct 6, according to the agenda item.

There was no other information available about the project, including the future precinct patrol area and location and how it would be staffed and funded.

Cobb government spokesman Ross Cavitt told East Cobb News in response to those questions that Precinct 6 would be located next to the Mountain View Aquatic Center (2650 Gordy Parkway).

Initially, the new facility will house the police department’s specialized units “and not have a patrol zone. That could change in the future, but that is the starting point.”

Most of the East Cobb area is currently included in Precinct 4, whose station is located on Lower Roswell Road.

That precinct runs from the Powers Ferry Road area to the east side of Canton Road.

Last month, the Cobb Police Department moved into its new headquarters on Fairground Street, in the former  LGE Community Credit Union building, a project that cost $13.5 million, also from the 2016 SPLOST.

The department had been operating out of overcrowded space on the North Marietta Parkway and Cherokee Street.

The full agenda for Tuesday’s commissioners meeting can be found here; it will start at 9 a.m. and take place in the second floor board room of the Cobb government building (100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta).

COVID-19 protocols are being followed, including mandatory masks and a limit on in-person attendance due to social-distancing.

The hearing 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.

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Cobb civic, business leaders to speak at ECBA, NCBA luncheons

John Loud, Cobb Chamber of Commerce
John Loud

Two of Cobb County’s leading business and civic leaders will be speaking to the East Cobb Business Association in November.

John Loud of LOUD Security and Jay Cunningham of Superior Plumbing will be the featured speakers at the ECBA’s Nov. 16 luncheon.

They’ll be speaking about “Short Cuts to Jump-Start Your Business.” They’ll be detailing their rise as owners of local start-up businesses to thriving companies in the Atlanta market.

According to the ECBA, they “will also address how they are dealing with the current worker shortages and supply chain challenges.”

Both are active in many business and civic endeavors. Loud is the current chairman of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce.

The luncheon is from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Nov. 16 at Rich Hart Global Studios (2030 Powers Ferry Road). The cost is $20 for members and $25 for non-members in advance, and $25 for members and $30 for non-members at the door. For information and to register, click here.

On Wednesday, Nov. 17, Cobb Chamber president and CEO Sharon Mason will the featured speaker at the Northeast Cobb Business Association luncheon.

That takes place from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Piedmont Church (570 Piedmont Road). Tickets are $15 for members and $20 for non-members. For information and to register click here.

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Ted’s Montana Grill closing for Thanksgiving and Christmas Eve

Ted's Montana Grill, East Cobb food scores

The Atlanta-based Ted’s Montana Grill restaurant chain, whose 39 locations include Parkaire Landing in East Cobb, announced that it will be giving its employees a day off for Thanksgiving and Christmas Eve for the first time this year.

From a release:

The restaurant wants its valued team members to enjoy well-deserved time to relax and unwind with family and friends.

The two holidays, Thanksgiving and Christmas Eve, are among Ted’s biggest sales days of the year. Ted’s will remain closed Christmas Day, as it has since it opened in 2002.

George McKerrow, CEO and co-founder of Ted’s Montana Grill, recognizes the challenging times in the restaurant industry and appreciates his team. He encourages all restaurants to close on the holidays so employees can enjoy time with loved ones. 

“Workers in the restaurant/hospitality industry have been the most impacted during these challenging times. We are incredibly grateful for our team members who came back to work with a positive, spirited attitude and the genuine hospitality that our guests expect. Our team has helped us thrive by making our guests smile and more importantly, feel like family. Now they deserve to spend quality time with their own families this holiday season. 

I’d also like to encourage everyone in the restaurant industry to close and take a break on the holidays. We should look past the revenue success and realize what truly matters now more than ever – making special holiday memories with the people we love the most.”      

 

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EDITOR’S NOTE: Love the Braves, hate the Cobb stadium deal

Cobb schools SPLOST vote World Series

The Atlanta Braves had not one, but two, parades on Friday, plus a special concert at Truist Park with rap luminaries Ludacris and Big Boi to celebrate their improbable World Series championship.

Tens of thousands of fans lined up in downtown Atlanta and along Cobb Parkway as the Braves’ caravan made its way to the ballpark.

For a moment, the exuberance almost got the best of Cobb County’s finest, as police surrounded a man whom they thought had wandered out from the crowd, but who was actually Braves’ relief pitcher Tyler Matzek.

It was hard not to get caught up in cheering on a team that was devastated by injuries, didn’t have a winning record until late in the season, then knocked off teams predicted to beat them, including last year’s champions, the Los Angeles Dodgers, in the playoffs.

As someone who grew up in metro Atlanta and whose family’s ties to the Braves go back to their days in Milwaukee, this last week truly has been special for me.

My first game as a fan was as an eight-year-old in 1969, when the Braves won their first pennant in town.

In 1995, when the Braves won the World Series at the same venue, I was a sportswriter at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. I don’t remember much about that decisive Game 6 on a Saturday night at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium, as I was coming back from somewhere after covering a college football game.

So it was a real treat to savor the first sports team I had ever followed beat back all the obstacles. This year’s Braves are a testament to determination, resilience, teamwork and optimism, qualities that take on special significance during these abnormal times of a pandemic.

The euphoria was bound to go overboard, of course, as these occasions sometimes do.

On Thursday, in a commentary published in our local daily newspaper, the headline referred to the late Tim Lee, the former county commission chairman who brokered the stadium deal that brought the Braves to Cobb, as the “angel in the outfield.”

Even more tellingly, the narrative glossed over the dubious process by which Lee, the Braves and local business insiders worked in secret for months, until they could keep their secret no more.

The above commentary asserted several times that “Tim did the right thing.” But the glaring lack of transparency, a bevy of investigations and ethics complaints and a rushed timeline without much of a chance to get meaningful feedback from the public are still gnawing.

This coming Thursday will mark the eighth anniversary that Lee announced a proposed 30-year memorandum of understanding with the Atlanta Braves to help construct a stadium in the Cumberland area.

In that agreement, Cobb would commit to a $300 million subsidy—taxpayer money—to help finance the ballpark, as well as to regular capital maintenance, public safety and other costs.

The four district members of the Cobb Board of Commissioners had exactly two weeks to digest a complicated long-term deal. The public had an even smaller window to ask questions of their elected officials at hastily arranged town hall meetings.

I covered these proceedings during my time at Patch, a hyperlocal network founded by AOL a little more than a decade ago.

Bob Ott, the former Cobb commissioner whose District 2 included the area along Windy Ridge Parkway and I-75 where the stadium would be built, was thrust into a sudden, and very glaring, spotlight.

Always accessible, Ott prided himself on holding informative town halls all over his Cumberland-East Cobb district.

But he made himself scarce for most of those two weeks, inundated with messages and calls from constituents and the media like no other issue in his then-two terms in office.

On the night before the vote, Ott held a town hall meeting not in his district, but in the commissioners’ meeting room off the Square in Marietta.

I found that odd, and asked him after it was over if he had made up his mind. He said he would do so when he pushed the button to vote.

Like the other town hall meetings I attended during that intense fortnight, I realized that the Braves stadium deal was a done deal.

Twenty-four hours later, in a cramped board room dominated by pro-stadium forces, the commissioners approved the MOU with a 4-1 vote, with Lisa Cupid, now the chairwoman, voting against.

Like many people who raised questions about the deal, Cupid wasn’t opposed to the Braves coming to Cobb County, or even having a partially publicly financed stadium built.

Like many of those same people, I also wondered about the rushed, secretive proceedings. Citizens groups as disparate as the Tea Party and Common Cause tried to get some answers, but community scrutiny wasn’t well organized.

Lee defended the timeline and process by asserting that if Cobb didn’t act, then the Braves would go elsewhere.

But as longtime Braves executive John Schuerholz admitted not long after the Cobb vote, the team didn’t have another venue in mind after wanting to leave the city of Atlanta after nearly 50 years.

In other words, the Braves played Cobb like Max Fried toyed with the Astros’ lineup on Tuesday, setting down the commissioners in almost perfect order.

The timing of all this is important to remember, as Cobb and much of the nation were starting to come out of the recession.

Commissioners JoAnn Birrell and Helen Goreham were doing verbal cartwheels from the moment the proposed stadium deal was announced, smitten by the catnip of economic development that has tempted elected officials everywhere.

You can love the Braves, as I have for most of my life, and still hate the way that stadium deal came down.

You can be excited about the dining and entertainment options at The Battery Atlanta, which the Braves have financed to the tune of nearly $400 million, and wonder why the franchise still needed the public’s “help” to build a ball park.

The process stunk to high heaven, lacked even a modicum of transparency, gave no thought to a referendum, and was followed by lame excuse-making.

Lee paid the ultimate political price when he was ousted in the 2016 Republican primary by Mike Boyce, and didn’t get to enjoy the ultimate payoff of his stadium efforts. He died two years ago of cancer at the age of 62.

After the stadium opened in 2017, the Cobb Chamber of Commerce commissioned an economic impact study proclaiming a nearly $19 million annual benefit to the county.

One of the more vocal critics of such claims, Kennesaw State University economics professor J.C. Bradbury, noted in an op-ed during the World Series that one can cheer for the Braves and not get caught up in such runaway economic development fever.

Not wanting to rain on a parade, but I feel the same way. The economic “home run” that was promised Cobb citizens still hasn’t been realized, and shouldn’t be conflated with success on the baseball field.

When a public official is hailed for doing something “right” without that individual being examined for how he/she conducted public business, that’s more than blind cheerleading.

The ends never justify the means, especially public officials spending tax dollars and not giving the citizens much of a say.

Holding elected officials—or the legacies of those who are no longer with us or who are out office—to account isn’t just about determining if what they did was the right (or wrong) thing to do.

It’s also scrutinizing how they do it that should matter.

 

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East Cobb teen holds basketball clinic for special needs kids

East Cobb teen special needs basketball clinic

As he has done for the last four years, Trevor Goldenberg, an East Cobb teenager, took timeout on Election Day to hold a basketball camp for special needs kids.

We profiled him three years ago when he conducted the clinic at Mt. Bethel Christian Academy.

Trevor started the “For Threeee” clinic when he was at Dodgen Middle School. Now, he’s a 16-year-old junior at Walton High School.

His mother Donna sent the following information and photos about the 5th annual “For Threeee” clinic, which was held in conjunction with East Marietta Basketball:

“Participants went through stations with their assigned volunteer and improved their overall skills.They even played some small games with other participants. But most importantly, they had a great time, participants had smiles on their faces and did not want to leave. Thanks to East Marietta Basketball and East Lake Chick-Fil-A for sponsoring this fantastic event.”

East Cobb teen special needs basketball clinic

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Cobb commissioners continue Mobility SPLOST town halls

We noted last week about an upcoming town hall meeting held by Cobb commissioner Jerica Richardson about the 2022 Cobb Mobility SPLOST.Cobb Mobility SPLOST town halls

That town hall was to have been held Tuesday at the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center but has been postponed.

Richardson’s office announced this week that the new date is Tuesday, Nov. 30, at 6 p.m. at the Fullers Park Recreation Center (3499 Robinson Road).

It will be the last of the town halls that are being held in each of the four commission districts. The first was held earlier this week at the North Cobb Regional Library.

The county information sheet on the Cobb Mobility SPLOST indicated that it is expected to be drafted in January 2022, followed by an estimate of generated revenue and the development of a project list, most likely to be compiled by county commissioners.

Here’s more from the county about the process behind getting public feedback for the M-SPLOST, as it’s being called:

Because of recent changes in Georgia law, the county has the option to ask the public to approve one or two referenda for additional sales tax revenues. The public was asked to provide opinions on these two sales tax options and possible project combinations during the CobbForward Comprehensive Transportation Plan update (in progress). The Cobb County Board of Commissioners has asked for additional public input to help refine the policy direction and funding packages for each option.

The purpose of this town hall is to provide information on Cobb Mobility SPLOST, including:

  • How this differs from the SPLOST referendum approved by voters in November 2020
  • The referenda options available
  • Initial investment options identified based on data and public input from the 2021 Comprehensive Transportation Plan Update (in progress)
  • Public involvement opportunities to provide input on these options

Nov. 9 at 6 p.m.
Switzer Library
266 Roswell Street, NE, Marietta

Nov. 10 at 6:30 p.m.
Cobb County Public Safety Police Academy
2435 East-West Connector, Austell

Nov. 30 at 6 p.m.
Fullers Park Recreation Center
3499 Robinson Road

 

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Cobb seeks public input on federal ARPA relief funding

Submitted information:Cobb ARPA relief survey

Cobb County launched its American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) Community Needs Survey this week. The online survey is designed to gather community input on how Cobb County should prioritize its $147-million allocation of federal ARPA funding. It is open to all Cobb County residents and organizations now through Monday, Nov. 22.

This American Rescue Plan Act was passed by the U.S. Congress in March 2021. It set aside funding for local and state governments to support public health, essential workers, infrastructure measures and to lessen the negative economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. The survey will help the county to reflect the community’s priorities in its plan for investing the funds between these eligible uses.

Over the next three weeks, county officials hope to hear from as many Cobb County voices as possible. The survey takes only minutes to complete, and every survey response will help to shape an investment strategy that addresses the community’s highest needs. Paper versions of the surveys are available at all Cobb Senior Services’ multipurpose centers.

The ARPA Community Needs Survey is open now through Monday, Nov. 22.

Take the survey here: 2021 ARPA Cobb County Community Needs Survey (deloitte.com)

 

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Cobb Veterans Day events: The Battery, Marietta Square festivities

We’ve posted previously about some Veterans Day events in Cobb County that are taking place this Saturday, Nov. 6, including the “Give Thanks for Those Who Served” festivities at East Cobb Park, and honoring women veterans at Jim Miller Park.

Also on Saturday, there’s a salute to veterans at The Battery Atlanta from 1-5 p.m. It’s organized by the Georgia Veterans Day organization for its 40th anniversary and starts off with a parade, followed by a program at the Georgia Power Pavilion Stage starting at 2 p.m

Veterans Day is Thursday, Nov. 11, and the 17th annual Veterans Day parade and ceremony presented by the Marietta Kiwanis Club and the City of Marietta.

The parade starts at 10:45 a.m. at Roswell Street Baptist Church, then heads to the Marietta Square, with an anticipated start time of 11:11 for the ceremony.

That commemorates the Armistice to end World War I on Nov. 11, 1918, at 11:11 a.m.

On Saturday, Nov. 13, the Marietta Square will be the venue for a military appreciation concert by the Georgia Symphony Orchestra starting at 10:30 a.m.

It’s part of a larger event that follows the 7th annual American Legion Post 29 Veterans Memorial 5K run/walk/wheelchair race.

Proceeds from the race will benefit Shepherds Men SHARE Initiative, the Georgia National Guard Family Support Foundation and Post 29 Service Officer.

All the other Veterans Day events included here are free and open to the public.

 

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Proposed East Cobb legislative redistricting maps revealed

Cobb Senate reapportionnent draft maps
New Georgia Senate maps proposed by Democrats, at left, and Republicans differ sharply. Click the links for more details.

Proposed redistricting of legislative seats in Georgia include some major changes in lines affecting lawmakers representing East Cobb.

As a special session got underway on Wednesday, legislators for both parties proposed new boundaries, based on the recent 2020 Census.

Republicans hold majorities in both the state House and Senate.

Since the last redistricting after the 2010 Census, most of East Cobb has been included in Senate District 32, which also includes slivers of Sandy Springs and North Fulton.

Since 2017, that seat has been held by Republican Kay Kirkpatrick.

The Democratic map revealed last week would keep those lines essentially the same, leaving all of the 32nd in East Cobb.

A map released Thursday by the Republican Senate Reapportionment Committee would slice up East Cobb into three Senate districts. The 32nd would include areas of Northeast Cobb and part of Cherokee County.

Senate District 6, which has been held by Democrat Jen Jordan, a candidate for Georgia Attorney General in 2022, is being proposed to include the Cumberland area and East Cobb closest to the City of Marietta and along part of the boundary with the Chattahoochee River.

Senate District 56, represented by North Fulton Republican John Albers, would be redrawn to include part of Northeast Cobb, south Cherokee and the Roswell area.

Cobb House reapportionment maps
Proposed State House districts in Cobb from the Democrats, at left, and the Republicans. Click the links for details.

In the House, a GOP map still includes five seats in the East Cobb area: District 37, held by Democrat Mary Frances Williams, and Districts 43-46, occupied by Republicans.

But notably, the Republican proposal drew two longtime GOP incumbents into the same district, State Rep. Matt Dollar of District 45 and State Rep. Sharon Cooper of District 43.

They are co-sponsors of the current East Cobb Cityhood bill that will be taken up in the 2022 legislative session, and they took part in a virtual town hall on the subject in April.

But on Thursday, Dollar announced he would not be seeking re-election after nearly 20 years in the legislature.

He did not explain his reasons in a response to the MDJ, but said he would be proud to be represented by Cooper.

She has been a lawmaker since 1997 and is the House Health and Human Services Committee Chairwoman, but has had two closely contested wins over Democrat Luisa Wakeman in 2018 and 2020.

East Cobb News has left a message with Dollar seeking comment.

The other two East Cobb House seats are held by Don Parsons (District 44) and John Carson District 46), who would continue to have safe seats in either of the proposed maps.

In September, Senate Republicans proposed a Congressional redistricting draft that would redraw the 6th District seat, held by Marietta Democrat Lucy McBath, into a more Republican area that would continue to include East Cobb.

In late October, legislative Democrats proposed their own draft that would keep the 6th largely as it is, including East Cobb, North Fulton, Sandy Springs and North DeKalb.

The special reapportionment session is expected to last at least through next week.

In January, when lawmakers reconvene for their 2022 session, they will conduct local reapportionment.

Cobb commissioner districts and school board posts will be redrawn by members of the county’s legislative delegation.

For more on reapportionment, click here.

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East Cobb food scores: My Friend’s Place; schools; care homes

My Friend's Place, East Cobb food scores

The following East Cobb food scores for the week of Nov. 1 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Arbor Terrace of East Cobb
886 Johnson Ferry Road
November 4, 2021 Score: 91, Grade: A

Arby’s
4367 Roswell Road
November 2, 2021 Score: 88, Grade: B

Cazadores Mexican Restaurant
3165 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite D-2
November 4, 2021 Score: 85, Grade: B

Infusion Crab ATL
2044 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 300
November 3, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

Jet’s Pizza
2900 Delk Road, Suite 300
November 1, 2021 Score: 96, Grade: A

Keheley Elementary School
1985 Kemp Road
November 4, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

Kincaid Elementary School
1410 Kincaid Road
November 3, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

La Bella Pizza
2635 Sandy Plains Road, Suite A-7
November 3, 2021 Score: 94, Grade: A

McDonald’s 
1291 Bells Ferry Road
November 1, 2021 Score: 80, Grade: B

Moe’s Southwest Grill
2022 Powers Ferry Road, Suite E
November 4, 2021 Score: 87, Grade: B

Mountain View Elementary School
3151 Sandy Plains Road
November 1, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

My Friend’s Place
1205 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 127
November 2, 2021 Score: 96, Grade: A

Simpson Middle School
3340 Trickum Road
November 1, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

The Solana East Cobb 
1032 Johnson Ferry Road
November 3, 2021 Score: 93, Grade: A

Sprayberry High School
2525 Sandy Plains Road
November 3, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

The Phoenix at Johnson Ferry 
9 Sherwood Lane
November 3, 2021 Score: 71, Grade: C

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DETAILS: Atlanta Braves parade, Truist Park celebrations

Atlanta Braves parade

Submitted by the Atlanta Braves late Wednesday:

The parade route will begin [Friday 12 p.m.] at the corner of Marietta Street NW and Peachtree Street and travel North up Peachtree to 10th Street. The second phase of the parade will then continue through Cobb County on Cobb Parkway, beginning at the corner of Riverwood Parkway and culminating at Circle 75 Parkway [starting at 2 p.m.]. 

Braves Country is invited to line the parade route to cheer on their World Series Champion Atlanta Braves. Fans can also watch the parade and join the post-parade celebration and concert with Atlanta natives and Grammy Award-winning artists, Ludacris and Big Boi inside Truist Park [starting at 3:30 p.m.]. The Braves encourage fans to arrive early.

Tickets will be free but must be reserved in advance. Tickets and parking passes for the celebration at Truist Park will be available TOMORROW at www.Braves.com/parade. Premium and A-List Members and Braves Insiders will receive early access to reserve their tickets, beginning at 10 a.m. and 11:30 a.m., respectively. Tickets will be available to the public beginning at 1 p.m.Atlanta Braves parade

To ensure the safety of all guests, The Battery Atlanta will have limited capacity on Friday, November 5, during the celebration. Access for non-ticket holders will be granted on a first-come, first-served basis. The Braves strongly recommend pre-purchasing parking.

Complete coverage of the World Series Championship Parade and team celebration will air live on Bally Sports South, Bally Sports Southeast, the Bally Sports app, and Twitter @BallyOnBraves beginning at 11:30 a.m. ET. The Bally Sports crew will be embedded throughout the city and The Battery Atlanta, including host Chip Caray; studio analysts Brian Jordan and Peter Moylan; and reporters Paul Byrd, Kelly Crull and Nick Green. Local channel listings can be found here.

To ensure the safety of all guests, The Battery Atlanta will have limited capacity on Friday, November 5, during the celebration. Access for non-ticket holders will be granted on a first-come, first-served basis.

Also, watch out for significant traffic delays in the area around Battery Atlanta throughout Friday afternoon. Major impacts to traffic & bus service anticipated. Known areas of impact include Cobb Pkwy (Riverwood Pkwy to Battery Ave) & cross streets. Please plan accordingly.

On Thursday afternoon, Cobb County government issued some more details and suggestions for those planning on attending the parade and/or Truist Park events:

  • Fans who receive tickets to the celebration inside Truist Park should get parking at the time they secure their tickets and proceed directly to the stadium. Braves parking lots will open at 9 a.m. and require a purchased ticket.

  • Anyone coming to watch the parade procession should plan on heavy traffic and avoid Cobb Parkway. People are advised to carpool, use a ride service, and use a traffic app like Waze to get into the area.

  • Road closures along and near the parade route could start as early as 10 a.m.

  • Most of the parking along the parade route is privately owned, so fans should make sure they find a lot that is available for celebration parking.

  • Anyone who watches the procession south of I-285 and wants to walk toward Battery Atlanta should NOT attempt to cross under the interstate along Cobb Parkway. They should instead use the pedestrian bridge accessible from the Galleria parking lot.

  • To ensure the safety of all guests, The Battery Atlanta will have limited capacity during the celebration. Access for non-ticket holders will be granted on a first-come, first-served basis.

If you can’t attend or would rather watch, the MLB Network will simulcast coverage starting at 12 p.m. Friday.

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Cobb schools closed Friday for Braves parade, celebrations

The Battery Atlanta, World Series Security

There won’t be any classes Friday in the Cobb County School District, which has declared a “student and teacher” holiday due to festivities surrounding the Atlanta Braves.

The Braves are holding multiple events Friday after the team won its first World Series in 26 years Tuesday over the Houston Astros.

Here’s from a Cobb school district announcement Wednesday afternoon:

“The Atlanta Braves parade and celebratory events will occur in Cobb County during the day and this holiday will also keep anticipated high traffic, throughout Cobb County, as manageable as possible for everyone who lives in Cobb.

“Friday will be a student and teacher holiday while all annual and hourly staff will receive direction from their direct supervisor. After-school program (ASP) will not be available and Friday night athletic activities will remain as scheduled.”

Some of the details of the celebrations are still to be released; for now, the Braves are saying that they will have a parade in downtown Atlanta, then head up Interstate 75 for a celebration near their home stadium at Truist Park.

The downtown Atlanta parade begins at noon Friday along Peachtree Street, from Marietta Street to 10th Street, before heading to Cobb.

Cobb DOT sent out the following message at 4 p.m. Wednesday:

“Braves parade will be on Friday (11/5) starting in Atl and ending in Cobb. Major impacts to traffic & bus service anticipated. Known areas of impact include Cobb Pkwy (Riverwood Pkwy to Battery Ave) & cross streets. Please plan accordingly. Details will be shared as available.”

Marietta City Schools and the Fulton County School System also have called off classes for Friday because of the Braves’ events.

Here are details about the parade and a Truist Park celebration that includes a free concert with Ludacris and Big Boi.

The World Series championship is the second for the Braves since they moved to Atlanta in 1965. The Braves also won Game 6 of the 1995 World Series at Atlanta Fulton-County Stadium, before moving to Turner Field from 1997-2017.

The franchise’s other World Series titles occurred in Boston in 1914 and Milwaukee in 1957.

Nearly 20,000 fans showed up at Truist Park Tuesday for a viewing party for the clinching Game 6 in Houston.

Crowds of more than 100,000 were reported at Truist and The Battery Atlanta for the three World Series games played last weekend in Cobb County.

A Veterans Day parade is scheduled for The Battery on Saturday.

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Cobb Chamber honors 2021 public school teachers of the year

Cobb Chamber honors 2021 teachers

Last week the Cobb Chamber of Commerce held a celebration luncheon for the teachers of the year at each of the schools in the Cobb County School District and Marietta City Schools, as well as overall recipients.

As we noted previously, Pope High School graduate Beth Foster was named the Cobb teacher of the year for 2021, and Michelle Gottenberg of Mabry Middle School was the middle school teacher of the year for the district.

They also were recipients of new automobiles, courtesy of the local Ed Voyles dealerships that they will pick up at the Cobb Chamber luncheon on Nov. 8.

Foster, who teaches at Osborne High School, also unveiled her handprints on the Teacher Walk of Honor at Glover Park in the Marietta Square.

Here are the other teachers of the year from East Cobb schools who were honored at the Chamber gathering:

  • Addison ES: Kara Jorgensen;
  • Bells Ferry ES: Peter Boomhower;
  • Blackwell ES, Karlie Caulk;
  • Brumby ES, Justine Heath;
  • Daniell MS, Kevin Vernie;
  • Davis ES, Darleen Johnston;
  • Dickerson MS, Brooke Whelan;
  • Dodgen MS, Kimberly Clark;
  • East Cobb MS, Jennifer Katz;
  • East Side ES, Amy Cardwell;
  • Eastvalley ES, Sandra Magee;
  • Garrison Mill ES, Victoria Moller;
  • Hightower Trail MS, Katie O’Ryan;
  • Keheley ES, Amy Judd;
  • Kell HS, Andrea Jenkins;
  • Kincaid ES, Nichole Bergerow;
  • Lassiter HS, Meredith (Dayle) Koester;
  •  Mabry MS, Michelle Gottenberg;
  • McCleskey MS, John Powell;
  • Mt. Bethel ES, Jennifer Sigmund;
  • Mountain View ES, Sarah Brown;
  • Murdock ES, Karen Smith;
  • Nicholson ES, Margaret McMurtagh;
  • Pope HS, Bradley Klink;
  • Powers Ferry ES, Lakeishia Strayhorn;
  • Rocky Mount ES, Alecia Beddard;
  • Sedalia Park ES, Priya Aiyer;
  • Shallowford Falls ES, Kristen Muller;
  • Simpson MS, Chelsie West;
  • Sope Creek ES, Kellie Buckner;
  • Sprayberry HS, Annie Thielen;
  • Timber Ridge ES, Amy Lee;
  • Walton HS, Tobie Hendricks;
  • Wheeler HS, Raymond Furstein.

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Dodgen student earns gold medals at table tennis championships

Dodgen student gold medals table tennis championships

Submitted by the Cobb County School District:

Geetha Krishna may only be in sixth grade, but she has already served as a representative of the United States on the world stage and has the gold medals to prove it. 

The Dodgen student recently participated in the International Table Tennis Federation Pan American World Championships in Cuenca, Ecuador. 

Geetha won a gold medal at the championship with her 2021 US National U-11 Girls’ teammate. During the tournament, Geetha and her teammate defeated Ecuador, Brazil, Puerto Rico, the other half of the US National U-11 team. In total, Dodgen student walked away from the games with a Team Gold, Girls Doubles Gold, and Girls Singles Bronze.

Pan American World Championships represent the highest level of competitive table tennis for Americans in the U-13 and U-11 age categories. 

“…the future of American table tennis is really in the hands of these young athletes…,” Sean O’Neill, the High Performance Director for USATT, said ahead of the championships.

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2021 Cobb Education SPLOST VI referendum passes easily

Sprayberry High School, Cobb Education SPLOST

UPDATED, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 3, 1:35 P.M.

Just as the Atlanta Braves were completing a 7-0 win over the Houston Astros to clinch the World Series, voters in Cobb County finalized another rout on Tuesday.

More than 72 percent of the voters casting ballots in the Cobb Education SPLOST VI voted yes (35,427), while 29 percent said no (13,713), with all 145 precincts fully reporting.

That means that starting in Jan. 2024, a one-percent sales tax for construction, maintenance and technology projects in the Cobb County School District and Marietta City Schools will be collected for another six years, ending in Dec. 2029.

The SPLOST extension is expected to generate $894 million in revenues for Cobb schools and $71.5 million for Marietta schools.

The results compiled by the Georgia Secretary of State’s office can be by clicking here; they are final and unofficial. Certification of results by the Cobb Board of Elections and Registration is scheduled for Nov. 8.

Slightly less than 50,000 of the 530,000 registered voters in Cobb County voted, a turnout of 5 percent.

From the earliest returns of advance voters, “yes” votes never had less than 70 percent of the vote.

The “yes” votes claimed every single precinct in Cobb. Final precinct breakdowns are not yet available; East Cobb News will list them in a separate post later in the week.

Voters in East Cobb were galvanized the project list for the Cobb school district, which include a rebuild of the main Sprayberry High School building and classroom additions at Kincaid, Mt. Bethel, Murdock, Sope Creek and Tritt elementary schools in East Cobb.

Voters in Cobb’s six cities also chose city council members and mayors on Tuesday.

In Marietta, three-term incumbent Mayor Steve “Thunder” Tumlin was re-elected after he defeated city council member Michelle Collins Kelly by 57-43 percent of the vote.

Kelly’s Ward 6 seat, which includes East Marietta, will be filled by Andre Sims, who was unopposed in the non-partisan election.

In Marietta school board races, Kerry Minervini, the incumbent in Ward 6 that includes East Marietta, was re-elected without opposition.

UPDATED, 11:30 PM:

With 95 percent of precincts reporting (138/145), yes votes are 34,257 (72%), no votes are 13,261 (28%) in the Cobb Education SPLOST.

Final figures to come Wednesday.

UPDATED, 11:15 PM:

With 77 percent of precincts fully reporting, yes has 29,441 votes (71.6 percent) to 11,662 no votes (28.4 percent).

UPDATED, 10:30 PM:

With 44 percent of the vote counted, yes leads SPLOST 20,093 to 7,965 voting no, 71.6-28.4.

UPDATED, 9:45 PM:

With 12 percent of the vote in, yes votes are 11,796 and no votes are 4,687, still a roughly 71-29 split.

UPDATED, 7:55 P.M.:

The initial returns from the Cobb Education SPLOST VI referendum show “YES” votes leading with 71 percent of the vote (advanced votes).

Those voting in favor are 6,928 thus far, and voting against are 2,824.

ORIGINAL POST, 7:01 P.M.:

The polls have closed in Cobb County and the the counting has begun for the Cobb Education SPLOST VI referendum and municipal elections.

Voters in Cobb County were asked whether to renew a one-percent sales tax for construction, maintenance and technology for the Cobb County School District and Marietta City Schools.

Voters in Cobb’s six cities were deciding city council races, including a contested mayor’s race in Marietta. Marietta voters also were voting in school board elections.

Headlining the SPLOST VI project list for the Cobb school district include a rebuild of the main Sprayberry High School building and classroom additions at Kincaid, Mt. Bethel, Murdock, Sope Creek and Tritt elementary schools in East Cobb.

See the East Cobb News voters guide for more information.

Voters who were in line at the polls by 7 p.m. Tuesday were eligible to vote. Voters in eight precincts were able to vote beyond 7 p.m. due to various technical issues. They included the Hightower and Post Oak precincts in East Cobb, which were to close at 7:05 p.m.

Absentee ballots also were either mailed in or hand-delivered to the Cobb Elections office by 7 p.m. Tuesday or dropped off at a designated location, including The Art Place (3330 Sandy Plains Road).

Cobb Elections said nearly 13,000 people voted during the advance voting period the last two weeks, in-person and absentee voting combined.

East Cobb News will update this post all evening.

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Eight Cobb voting precincts to stay open after 7 p.m. Tuesday

UPDATED, 7:40 P.M.: The polls have closed. Follow real-time results by clicking here.

 

From Cobb County government:Georgia runoff elections

A Cobb County Superior Court Judge has ordered eight Cobb County election precincts to remain open past the scheduled 7 p.m. closing time. The order comes after various issues caused the precincts to open late this morning for the municipal and ESPLOST election.

Elections officials say most of the delays were caused by minor technical issues that were quickly corrected. The exception was the McEachern 01 precinct that was briefly evacuated due to a fire alarm in the building.

The order affects the following precincts:

Bryant 02
Riverside Epicenter, 135 Riverside Parkway, Austell, GA 30168, open until 7:30 pm

Dowell 01
Dowell Elementary School, 2121 West Sandtown Road, Marietta, GA 30064, open until 7:25 pm

Marietta 5B
Turner Chapel Cathedral, 492 North Marietta Parkway, Marietta, GA 30060, open until 7:20 pm

Oregon 01
St Thomas Catholic Church, 4300 King Springs Road, Smyrna, GA 30082, open until 7:18 pm

Oregon 03
Fair Oaks Rec Center, 1465 Brandon Drive, Marietta, GA 30008, open until 7:15 pm

Hightower 01
Shallowford Church, 3662 Shallowford Rd, Marietta, GA 30062, open until 7:05 pm

Post Oak 01
Wesley Chapel Methodist Church, 4495 Sandy Plains Rd, Marietta, GA 30066, open until 7:05 pm

McEachern 01
Relentless Church, 4665 Macland Road, Powder Springs, GA 30127, open until 7:10 pm

ICYMI: East Cobb News Cobb Education SPLOST VI referendum voters guide

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Atlanta Braves to hold World Series watch party at Truist Park

Cobb schools SPLOST vote World Series

Game 6 of the 2021 World Series starts shortly after 8 p.m. Tuesday in Houston, and the Atlanta Braves are inviting fans to show up at Truist Park.

The gates open at 6:30 p.m. and ticket prices range from $10 to $75 to attend at the park.

Paid parking will be available at the Battery Atlanta Red, Green, Purple, Yellow and Silver decks.

The cost is $15 per vehicle and the lots open at 5:30 p.m.

The Braves can clinch their first World Series title since 1995 with a win Tuesday, since they lead 3-2.

If the Astros force a Game 7, the Braves will have another watch party at Truist on Wednesday, with the gates opening at the same time and the same pricing and parking arrangements applying.

For tickets and information, click here.

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Cobb Law Library offers legal information to the public

Submitted information:Cobb Superior Court, Cobb judicial emergency

Cobb’s Law Library is open to the public and provides resources for legal information for attorneys and laypeople.

The Law Library is on the fourth floor of Cobb Superior Court, 70 Haynes St., Marietta, and is open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The telephone number is 770-528-1884. We do not give legal advice.

Packets of some domestic relations forms, for situations including divorce, legitimation, and name change, are available for purchase in the Law Library. Bring cash! Packets range in price from $1 to $15. The forms – with instructions — are also available on our website at cobbcounty.org/courts/superior-court/administration/forms  We do not have forms available for every conceivable issue.

The Law Library has computers available for legal research. We also have self-help books available on a variety of common legal needs, such as drafting a simple will, the divorce process, and landlord and tenant rights.

No library or county employee can provide legal advice or advise individuals how to fill out forms. If you need legal advice, contact the Cobb Bar Association’s Lawyer Referral Service at 770-424-2947 or the Cobb office of Atlanta Legal Aid at 770-528-2565.

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Gussied Up Pet Boutique opens at The Avenue East Cobb

The newest business to come to The Avenue East Cobb, the Gussied Up Pet Boutique, opened as a pop-up retailer in late October, and offers a collection  of pet clothing and accessories; toys and bedding as well as gifts for animal lovers.

Here’s more from The Avenue about owner Beth Simpson:Gussied Up Pet Boutique Avenue East Cobb

Inspired by her dog Gus and the massive increase in pet adoptions, Simpson launched her first short-term store at Avalon during its inaugural Holiday Market in 2020, an idea initially sparked by Simpson’s interest in opening at the Alpharetta mixed-use destination. The success of the shop’s debut led Simpson to extend her lease, participate in Avalon’s 2021 Spring Market and prospect other locations with North American Properties (NAP).

“NAP is unrivaled in creating community-driven environments where retailers and restaurants can thrive and forge authentic relationships with shoppers. After having such a positive experience with the team at Avalon, I knew this was a partnership I wanted to expand on,” said Simpson. “Pets are such an important part of our lives and I love building inviting spaces where owners feel welcomed to bring their furry friends in-store and treat them with exceptional products.”

The store (4475 Roswell Road, Suite 1600) is open from 10-7 Monday-Saturday and 12-6 on Sunday; phone (617) 784-7376. For more click here.

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