Reapportionment, cityhood top Cobb 2022 legislative agenda

The 2022 session of the Georgia General Assembly began on Monday, with local reapportionment and cityhood bills of particular interest for the the Cobb delegation.

East Cobb cityhood
Outgoing State Rep. Matt Dollar is sponsoring the East Cobb cityhood bill, along with State Rep. Sharon Cooper.

The proposed City of East Cobb is one of four cityhood bills that have been introduced by Cobb lawmakers, along with Vinings, Lost Mountain and Mableton.

The Cobb delegation also will redraw lines for the four district seats on the Cobb Board of Commissioners and all seven posts on the Cobb Board of Education.

The initial East Cobb cityhood bill introduced in 2019 was abandoned by a committee pushing for incorporation after opposition surfaced from the community and Cobb elected officials.

State Rep. Matt Dollar has the support of State Rep. Sharon Cooper as a co-sponsor for the current bill, but it also will need the sponsorship of State. Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick.

She has not commented publicly on the bill; in 2019 she said she could not support it because of negative feedback from citizens.

In 2021 the Committee for East Cobb Cityhood held several virtual meetings and said it will be continuing to meet with individual civic groups as the legislative session continues.

The city would have a population of 55,000, centered by the Johnson Ferry Road corridor, and is proposing police and fire, planning and zoning and code enforcement services.

The East Cobb cityhood bill is HB 841 and you can track its progress here; it has been assigned to the House Governmental Affairs Committee.

(See all our previous coverage on our East Cobb Cityhood page.)

If the bill passes the full legislature, there will be a referendum in November for voters living in the proposed city limits to decide whether a City of East Cobb will be created.

The reapportionment wheels have already been cranked up for redrawing Cobb school board posts.

The board has a 4-3 Republican majority, and in December voted along party lines to recommend a map that would maintain that advantage.

Charisse Davis, Cobb Board of Edcucation
Cobb school board member Charisse Davis

It would redraw the current Post 6, which includes the Walton and Wheeler clusters, into the Smyrna-Vinings-Cumberland area, and reduce East Cobb representation to Post 5 and part of Post 4.

Post 6 Democratic incumbent and current Post 2 Democratic incumbent Jaha Howard would be put together in the school board’s recommended map.

But the Cobb delegation has a two-member Democratic advantage, and a draft map that’s been circulating since then would keep Post 6 very similar to what it is now, and keep Davis and Howard in separate posts.

She vocally opposed the school board’s recommended map, as has Amy Henry, a parent of four students in the Wheeler cluster who has announced her candidacy as Republican for Post 6 later this year.

Davis has not announced whether she’s seeking re-election; Howard has declared an intent to run for Georgia school superintendent.

Cobb lawmakers also will be redrawing lines for the four county commission districts. Currently there are three Democrats (including chairwoman Lisa Cupid, who was elected countywide) and two Republicans.

Both of the GOP incumbents are up for re-election in 2022, including JoAnn Birrell of District 3 in Northeast Cobb.

In a November special session, the legislature redrew Congressional and legislative lines that will take effect after the 2022 elections (you can view the adopted maps here).

Links to East Cobb-area lawmakers are included below. You can see what legislation they’re sponsoring, how they vote, see maps of their districts and find contact and information.

State Rep. Mary Frances Williams (D-37)

State Rep. Sharon Cooper (R-43)

State Rep. Don Parsons (R-44)

State Rep. Matt Dollar (R-45)

State Rep. John Carson (R-46)

State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick (R-32)

Related content:

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Family-run Vanilla Café e Gelato opens at The Avenue East Cobb

After running a bakery in their native Brazil for more than 20 years, Ubiracy and Raul Goncalves wanted to open something similar, but on a different scale, when they emigrated to the United States six years ago.Vanilla Cafe e Gelato opens Avenue East Cobb

In São Paulo, they had a staff that extended beyond their immediate family. When they moved to the metro Atlanta area and settled on an East Cobb location last year, they went looking for a physical space ideal for the new concept:

A European-style coffee house with homemade baked goods, aimed at luring pedestrian traffic.

“We didn’t want to necessarily have a Brazilian bakery,” said their daughter, Clara Goncalves, who along with her sister Ester helps out at the Vanilla Café e Gelato, which opened last week at The Avenue East Cobb.

It’s located in Suite 1010 (in the original Olea Oliva space), near the East Cobb mural. Indoors are five tables—room for 10-12 people, and two more outdoor tables near the entrance.

As she did in Brazil, Ubiracy makes all the baked goods—cakes, brownies, pastries, cookies and more—some of them from traditional Brazilian recipes. Ester Goncalves, her other daughter, took a course in gelato-making in Brazil and oversees that part of the operation.

The coffee comes from Bellwood, an Atlanta-based roaster, and there’s also a premium on locally-sourced food ingredients.

The aim, Clara says, is to entice customers to linger after shopping or a meal nearby.

“This area calls for a different kind of a coffee shop,” she says.

There aren’t many indie coffee shops in the East Cobb area—Mzizi Coffee Roasters, on Johnson Ferry Road near Shallowford Road—is an exception.

Vanilla Café opens as The Avenue East Cobb will soon be overhauled with more restaurants and events.

It’s part of a reimagined “socially magnetic” and “modern gathering place” undertaken by North American Properties, which is managing the retail center after developing Avalon in Alpharetta and renovating Colony Square and Atlantic Station in Atlanta.

Vanilla Café is open from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday-Saturday and from 12-6 p.m. on Sunday.

Related posts:

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Marietta History Museum to hold free MLK Jr. holiday events

The Marietta History Center is offering free admission Saturday, Jan. 15, in observance of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.Marietta History Museum MLK Jr. holiday events

The center is conducting Diverse Cobb programming that includes the “Lemon Street Chroncles,” a new oral history DVD about the Lemon Street High School.

It was Cobb County’s only all-black high school until 1967, when segregation in public schools in Cobb and Marietta ended.

The DVD, created by alumnus Tim Penn, includes interviews with other graduates and will be screened several times on Saturday.

Also featured at the museum is “Marietta 1899: Color Captured in Black & White.” It’s a special exhibit of the work of New York photographer James Shaw, who visited Marietta in 1899. The exhibit includes images of the Marietta Square, the Marietta National Cemetery, Kennesaw Avenue, Kennesaw Mountain and rural Cobb County. 

Shaw’s visit included the Federal Memorial Day celebration, with many of those in attendance being African-American.

“A truer version of life as it was, undiluted by the whitewashing of history,” the exhibit states. “While bias of a white perspective remains, Shaw chose to include the activities of both races, thus presenting multiple shades of color in black and white photography.”

That exhibit also will be featured at the museum. from May 19-28.

The Marietta Museum of History will have free admission from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. next Saturday. Screenings of the “Lemon Street Chronicles,” which lasts an hour and a half, are at 10 a.m., 12 p.m. and 2 p.m. 

The museum is located at 1 Depot Street, Marietta. For more information click here.

 

Related post:

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Atlanta Jewish Film Festival returns in hybrid form for 2022

Atlanta Jewish Film Festival 2022
The 2022 Atlanta Jewish Film Festival will feature in-person and virtual screenings and events.

Formal screenings of the Atlanta Jewish Film Festival start in February, and will include in-person and virtual events.

But the festival is getting an early start by showing a series of free short films each Wednesday.

The Shorts Program began on Wednesday, Jan. 5, and a new short will be available for streaming every Wednesday through Jan. 26. More information can be found by clicking here.

Tickets go on sale for the festival on Feb. 9, and the screenings will take place Feb. 16-27 at select theaters in metro Atlanta. Georgia residents also will be able to watch via remote streaming during the festival dates.

This year’s festival includes 40 feature films and 15 shorts in narrative, documentary, human rights and other categories.

The venues include the Sandy Springs Performing Arts Center, the Midtown Art Cinema and the Plaza Theater in Atlanta. A preview show takes place on Feb. 2.

For more information visit the Atlanta Jewish Film Festival website.

 

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Public Service Commission chair visits East Cobb Rotary Club

East Cobb Rotary Club

State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick, at left, meets with Tricia Pridemore, the chairwoman of the Georgia Public Service Commission, at the Rotary Club of East Cobb’s breakfast meeting on Wednesday.

Pridemore, a Republican of Marietta, was elected to the PSC in 2018 and was voted chairwoman in 2021.

She spoke to the Rotary Club about connectivity, clean energy and the future of energy initiatives in Georgia, among other topics.
Kirkpatrick, a Republican from East Cobb, represents District 32 in the Georgia State Senate and is a Rotary Club member.

The Rotary Club of East Cobb meets every Wednesday for breakfast at the Indian Hills Country Club, and is involved in numerous community projects.

For information about the club, click here.

Related posts:

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb Animal Services to hold ‘Betty White Challenge’ Jan. 17

Next Monday, Jan. 17, would have been the 100th birthday for actress Betty White, who died on New Year’s Eve.Cobb Animal Services Betty White Challenge

She was an ardent animal lover, and the Cobb Animal Services Department is holding a fundraiser on her birthday in her honor.

It’s called the Betty White Challenge, and those wishing to participate are asked to donate $5 in her name and/or sign up to volunteer at a local animal shelter.

“This gesture will make a world of difference to the shelter pets and the fellow employees and volunteers at the shelter,” said a Cobb Animal Services social media posting this week.

The link to donate can be found here; for volunteer information at the Cobb Animal Shelter, click here.

Related story:

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Deadline approaches for ‘Construction Ready’ sessions in Cobb

Construction Ready Cobb sessions
Construction Ready—formerly known as the The Construction Education Foundation of Georgia—is holding construction education sessions in Cobb County in February and March.

The deadline to sign up is Monday, Jan. 10, for the 20-day program, which includes training, credentialing and job placement. The training is free to eligible applicants.

Classes will take place Monday through Friday from 7:30 a.m. until 5 p.m., starting of Feb. 21 and ending March 18.

The Cobb classes will be held at the Construction Ready offices located at 1940 The Exchange SE, Suite 200, Marietta. For more information and to register, please click here.

Construction Ready says that “the need for skilleed workers has continued through the pandemic,” with several thousand construction job openings existing currently in Cobb County.

Partial funding for the program comes from the Governor’s Emergency Education Relief (GEER) fund, a part of the federal CARES Act. CEFGA received $3.3. million to expand Construction Ready, and the GEER funding also supports broadband and connectivity extensions, mental health services, workforce training, childcare, and tech innovation.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb government to distribute 60K at-home COVID-19 testing kits

East Cobb rapid COVID-19 testing
COVID-19 testing sites, including one at East Cobb UMC, have been overwhelmed since December.

Cobb County government said late Friday it plans to distribute more than 60,000 COVID-19 at-home testing kits paid for with federal CARES Act funding, and could spend more to purchase more tests.

A release sent out by county spokesman Ross Cavitt said that Cobb commissioners will be asked Tuesday to ratify a decision by the Cobb Emergency Management Agency to spend $816,480 in CARES Act funds for the tests, which cost $13.50 each (agenda item here).

He said that “the goal is to target segments of the community where people have had difficulty accessing testing” and that the aim is to have distribution events in each of the four Cobb commission districts, “along with help from nonprofits, churches, and other groups to get these COVID self-test kits to those in the county who need them the most.”

An unprecedented spike in COVID-19 cases in Cobb now stands at a 14-day average of 2,614 cases per 100,000 people, many times above the “high” transmission threshold of 100/100K.

Commissioners will be meeting in a virtual setting next week, including their Tuesday morning business meeting. That meeting, which starts at 9 a.m., will begin with a COVID-19 update from Cobb and Douglas Public Health.

Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid, who switched the meetings to a virtual format due to the COVID-19 spike, has declared a state of emergency in the county through Jan. 22.

Earlier this week, Cobb Superior Court Chief Judge Robert Leonard halted jury trials through Jan. 21 due to rising COVID-19 transmission.

Also this week, Cobb and Douglas Public Health opened two new COVID-19 testing locations, but like others in existence said demand is high and wait times are long.

Cavitt said that county leaders want to receive the kits and hold a distribution event on the Martin Luther King holiday on Jan. 16.

“County and Public Health officials are working with the Cobb County NAACP chapter to finalize details of the event,” Cavitt said.

In the release, Cupid was quoted as saying that “we have the resources to be able to help many of our residents who have told us getting tested for COVID has been a challenge. So it makes sense to use these federal relief funds to help distribute test kits to help contain the spread of COVID in Cobb.”

Cavitt said the Cobb Emergency Management Agency will store the kits “while a plan to distribute them across the county comes into focus.”

Related posts:

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb commissioners to hold public meetings online next week

Cobb commissioners public comments

The Cobb Board of Commissioners will hold its first meetings of 2022 via teleconference and online due to a dramatic increase in COVID-19 cases.

Cobb government spokesman Ross Cavitt said in a release Thursday that a Monday agenda work session at 9 a.m., a Tuesday regular business meeting at 9 a.m. and a Tuesday work session at 1:30 p.m. will be livestreamed.

The public also will be able to participate in public comment sessions during the Tuesday business meeting by virtual means.

Here’s more on how you can watch and participate; the sign-up link for speaking can be found here.

Public comment slots for the Tuesday 9 a.m. commissioners meeting are available by clicking here; other speaking spots also are available for public hearings on selected agenda items for that same meeting.

You can sign up to speak at a public hearing at this link until 5 p.m. Monday.

The Monday agenda work session covers items to be taken up at the Tuesday business meeting. The agenda work session can be seen on the county’s YouTube channel starting at 9 a.m.

The Tuesday business meeting and Tuesday afternoon work session can be seen on the YouTube channel as well as CobbTV, the county’s cable outlet.

The agenda for the agenda work session and business meeting can be found by clicking here; the meeting will lead off with an update on COVID-19 by Cobb and Douglas Public Health.

The Tuesday afternoon work session (agenda here) will feature results of public feedback for a potential potential Mobility Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax referendum and for departmental budget presentations for the fiscal year 2023-24 cycle.

Related posts:

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

East Cobb food scores: Mediterranean Grill; Capozzi’s; Chicago’s

Mediterranean Grill, East Cobb food scores

The following East Cobb food scores for the week of Jan. 3 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Arby’s
2161 Roswell Road
January 6, 2022 Score: 100, Grade: A

Capozzi’s Restaurant
4285 Roswell Road
January 6, 2022 Score: 94, Grade: A

Chicago’s Restaurant
4401 Shallowford Road, Suite 106
January 6, 2022 Score: 100, Grade: A

Mediterranean Grill
1255 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 15
January 6, 2022 Score: 97, Grade: A

Tin Lizzy’s Cantina
4475 Roswell Road, Suite 150
January 5, 2022 Score: 94, Grade: A

Related posts:

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb school board chooses 2022 officers with partisan sparring

David Banks, Cobb school board
For the third year in a row, the vice chairman of the Cobb school board is David Banks, whom one of his colleagues said is “an embarrassment to this county.”

The first Cobb Board of Education meeting of 2022 went just like quite a few of their public gatherings last year, and included votes and arguments along predictable partisan lines. 

The chairman and vice chairman for the new calendar year both come from posts in East Cobb.

David Chastain, of Post 4 (Kell and Sprayberry clusters) will be the chairman, and David Banks, of Post 5 (Pope and Lassiter clusters) will serve as vice chairman.

They’re part of the four-member Republican majority, and were elected in 4-3 party line votes.

Each year the board holds a special meeting in January to elect new officers, with the proviso that the chair cannot serve two consecutive years.

That policy doesn’t apply to the vice chair, and it was the nomination of Banks to that position for the third consecutive year that sparked charged rhetoric during the brief meeting.

Banks, who is serving his fourth term, came under fire in 2021 for sending an e-mail on his official school board account discouraging recipients from getting the COVID-19 vaccines. and publicly said he doesn’t wear masks because he thinks they don’t work.

Democratic member Jaha Howard, who nominated fellow Democrat Tre’ Hutchins for both leadership posts, said Banks’ statement on masks is “contrary to our policy.”

He also said Banks has some “concerning behavioral issues that have been discussed behind the scenes and for some reason he’s continuing to be nominated. 

“He’s also done several things that have been an embarrassment to this county. I’m very concerned that he would be nominated at all, let alone having potentially four votes.”

Howard, who represents Post 2 in Smyrna, attended some of the same public schools in southwest Atlanta as Banks, whom he referred to as his “classmate, whom I do love as child of God. But I do have very significant concerns about his leadership.”

Outgoing board chairman Randy Scamihorn said Howard’s comments were inappropriate, and ordered his microphone to be cut.

“Do you feel powerful doing that?” retorted Howard.

Howard laid out a laundry list of issues he’s referenced during his time on the board for supporting Hutchins, saying that Tre’ “encourages leaders to look beneath the shiny surface of our academic and discipline data in order to get even better as a district . . . believes that our schools should not be named after confederate generals . . . believes it’s bad to sympathize with the January 6th insurrection” among other things.

Howard also said Hutchins “would not take weeks to return phone calls from other board members . . . demonstrates a love for the entire county . . . believes in listening to experts when making decisions, especially during a pandemic.”

Banks, who did not respond to Howard’s remarks, was elected 4-3.

In an October 2020 candidate profile with East Cobb News, he said that he thinks the biggest long-term issue facing the Cobb school district is “white flight” and accused Howard and Charisse Davis, a Democrat who represents Post 6 (Walton and Wheeler clusters) of “trying to make race an issue where it has never been before.”

Davis said she couldn’t support Chastain, who is in his third term, because “I do not feel he is the leader we need now.”

He was chairman in 2019, the first year on the school board for Davis and Howard, and proposed a policy change to ban board member comments during public meetings. The newcomers alleged the measure was aimed at censoring them, but Chastain said it was needed to prevent board members from having to judge the appropriateness of colleagues’ remarks.

“This chair does not want to be the scorekeeper,” he said at the time.

After Chastain was elected on Thursday, Scamihorn didn’t turn over the gavel, as school board attorney Suzanne Wilcox had suggested.

Instead, Scamihorn presided as Cobb superintendent Chris Ragsdale provided an update to COVID-19 protocols and did not permit board discussion.

The school board on Thursday also approved the 2022 meeting schedule by a 5-2 vote, with Davis and Howard opposed.

Chastain, who is up for re-election this year along with Davis and Howard, will preside starting with the first public school board meetings on Jan. 20.

Related posts:

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb schools revise COVID-19 protocols after new state order

The day after the spring semester began in the Cobb County School District, superintendent Chris Ragsdale said revised measures for COVID-19 testing, contact tracing and employee quarantine will be implemented.Cobb schools revise COVID protocols

Speaking at the end of a Cobb Board of Education meeting Thursday afternoon, Ragsdale said he had received “hot off the presses” a letter Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp sent to all public school districts in the state.

That letter included provisions to conduct more COVID-19 testing at schools, allow for optional contact tracing of cases at schools and to extend quarantine provisions for employees that currently have been for students.

The latter permits students identified as close contacts and who were exposed in a school setting to return to school right away if they are asymptomatic and wear masks for seven days.

The new guidance, which comes in the form of a new order from the Georgia Department of Public Health, also would permit teachers, administrators and support staff, regardless of vaccination status or point of exposure, to return to school immediately if they are asymptomatic and wear masks for seven days.

“It will greatly assist us in maintaining all our classrooms being open,” said Ragsdale, who informed parents Sunday that Cobb schools would begin the spring semester in face-to-face settings.

Several other metro Atlanta school districts are beginning classes this week online.

The revised Cobb school district protocols can be found by clicking here. The changes go into effect immediately.

Cobb and Marietta schools both resumed on Wednesday in-person and also do not have mask mandates.

Regarding the new contract tracing changes, Cobb has chosen not to contact-trace all suspected COVID-19 cases: “We continue to encourage families to make health decisions which are best for their families and to not send students to school sick.”

Ragsdale said during the Thursday meeting, which was called to elect 2022 school officers and meeting schedules, that contract-tracing duties has been “the biggest lift on staff resources . . . to have that accomplished and in a timely manner.”

He said there’s been considerable communication from parents about contact-tracing that occurs after a student’s quarantine period is over.

“This is a great option for some school districts,” Ragsdale said, referring to the new optional provision. “We will be choosing not to contact-trace all cases. There can be a situation where we do need to contact-trace, in some of those cases.”

More testing along the lines of “test to stay” provisions are included in the new protocols, and Ragsdale said he’s hopeful further resources will be coming from the state for schools to conduct those tests.

Ragsdale’s remarks came at the end of the meeting, but before he spoke, outgoing board chairman Randy Scamihorn said there would be no discussion of the new protocols among board members.

After Ragsdale was finished, the half-hour meeting was adjourned.

Related posts:

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Closings at The Avenue East Cobb: BB & B; K Squared Boutique

The Avenue East Cobb Bed Bath Beyond closing

Some changes afoot at The Avenue East Cobb include the closing of the Bed, Bath and Beyond store and the K Squared Artisan Boutique.

The BB & B closing is part of a multi-store paring down by the national household wares chain, including a store near Perimeter Mall.

The Avenue East Cobb store will be open until the end of February, and there’s a 20 percent off sale for everything in stock, plus other sales. 

K Squared Artisan Boutique, which sells, jewelry and handcrafted gifts made by local artists, announced Wednesday that it’s closing this month.

“It’s the end of a dream, but the beginning of new ones. We had a great run, but we have decided to close K Squared this month,” read a social media announcement.K Squared The Avenue East Cobb

K Squared, which was started by Katy Colvin and Kesha Darji, former jewelry business owners, is holding a store closing sale next week (Jan. 10-16) with 50 percent discounts, and all displays will be on sale.

“Can’t thank all the great artists and customers who supported us through this journey!,” they said Wednesday. “We met so many incredible people and are proud of what we created. Please keep in touch and stop by K Squared one last time!”

Another store has opened nearby at The Avenue, in the former Olea Oliva space, and that we’ll be featuring soon in a separate post.

It’s called Vanilla Cafe e Gelato, and it’s in Suite 1010 (near the East Cobb mural). We’re talking to the owners and will be featuring them soon. 

Related posts:

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb schools: 2.4K students enrolled online for spring semester

As the spring semester began with in-person instruction Wednesday in the Cobb County School District, a small fraction of students were taking their classes online.Cobb online learning spring semester

Of the district’s estimated 107,000 enrollment, around 2,400 are signed up for virtual classes across all grade levels (elementary, middle and high), according to a district spokeswoman.

That’s around 2 percent of the district’s student body.

“When given the choice last fall, about 98 percent of Cobb families chose in-person learning for the second semester of the 2021-2022 school year,” the spokeswoman said.

Cobb and Marietta schools were among those in metro Atlanta that began the spring semester with face-to-face, rather than remote, instruction.

COVID-19 cases are rising more sharply than ever during the pandemic, which was declared 22 months ago, and school officials are bracing for high numbers reported as classes resume.

Cobb and Marietta also don’t have mask mandates. Gwinnett, which does, also is starting back in-person, while Atlanta, Fulton, DeKalb, Clayton and other school districts are starting at least this week remotely.

Cobb said said an additional 830 students signed up to go online via a lottery system announced by the district in October, after a sharp rise in COVID-19 cases at the start of the school year.

The district hasn’t said how many lottery slots were made available.

Students learning online are enrolled in the Elementary Virtual Program (K-Grade 5) or the Cobb Online Learning Academy (Grades 6-12).

The elementary students are enrolled in their current schools but are getting their instruction from what the district calls a “certified” EVP teacher for the full spring semester, which ends in May.

Students in middle school and high school who were awarded online lottery slots were pulled from their home schools and will be enrolled in COLA.

Aside from a Sunday night message to parents, the Cobb school district hasn’t elaborated on its reasons for returning to face-to-face classes.

When asked if there has been any update about that since Sunday, the spokeswoman told East Cobb News that the district “remains committed to providing our students with an internationally competitive education, ensuring a safe instructional environment, and prioritizing our community’s overwhelming preference for in-person learning. We ask for our community’s continued support in helping to keep our schools safe by not sending students to school sick and following the most updated CCSD protocols for COVID-19.”

She also was asked about staffing levels (teachers, administrators and support staff) to handle an in-person student return and how shortages will be handled with COVID-19 transmission rates so high.

“Our schools are open. Our buses are running. Our teachers are teaching, and our students are learning in the second largest school district in Georgia,” she said. “As in the prior semester, we remain committed to balancing the importance of in-person learning and the frequent changes associated with COVID-19.”

Related posts:

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb GOP cancels event on anniversary of U.S. Capitol attack

Cobb GOP cancels Jan. 6 event
The flyer for the original event, which included a welcome from Cobb GOP chairwoman Salleigh Grubbs.

The Cobb Republican Party has cancelled a candlelight prayer vigil scheduled at its Marietta headquarters for Thursday.

That’s the first anniversary of the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol by supporters of then-President Donald Trump as members of Congress were certifying results of the 2020 presidential election.

In a brief statement, the Cobb GOP said it was calling off the vigil, which was to have included a livestream of a press conference held by Trump, “due to the mischaracterization of the event . . . “and the ensuing concerns of safety of those in attendance.”

Earlier this week press reports revealed that the Cobb GOP had scheduled a “Celebrate Freedom” event to start at 5 p.m. Thursday at its Roswell Street offices that included a prayer vigil to commemorate the Jan. 6 events.

Trump also has cancelled his press conference.

A woman protestor was shot and killed during the siege, and four others, all police officers responding to the rampage, later died, including some by suicide.

More than 700 people have been charged for participating in the attack, including more than a dozen from Georgia.

The Cobb GOP statement Wednesday also said those who were planning to attend the Thursday event were “encouraged to pray for those families who suffered the loss of a loved one, along with the pre-trial prisoners held in DC prisons in inhumane conditions in thoughtful prayer.”

The party also took down a social media posting on Tuesday from chairwoman Salleigh Grubbs, who said the intent of the event was to “acknowledge the Americans who lost their lives and to pray for those who have been denied justice.”

They were, she said in reference to those arrested for the attacks, being denied their Constitutional rights as criminal defendants.

“To those who have cast quick judgement concerning this event, under no uncertain terms are we condoning any form of violence nor the glorification of what happened at the United States Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.”

Her message concluded by saying that “it is unfortunate that so many have issues with prayer. Everyone should be concerned when our Constitutional rights are being abused.”

Former Cobb GOP chairman Jason Shepherd was critical of the event, saying it was sending the “wrong message” as the party is struggling to believe in certain “core values” and “principles” or “are we simply following one person?”

In a social media posting, State Rep. Teri Anulewicz, a Cobb Democrat, referred to the Cobb GOP event as an “homage to treason.”

The Cobb COP statement Wednesday ended by saying that “it is our fervent hope that all those who committed unlawful acts against our Nation’s Capital are brought to swift justice.”

The vigil was to have taken place several hours after a memorial service to late former U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson in Atlanta.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb and Douglas Public Health opens more COVID-19 test sites

East Cobb rapid COVID-19 testing
Testing sites, including one at East Cobb UMC, have been overwhelmed since December.

Cobb and Douglas Public Health has opened two more places to get a COVID-19 test in Cobb County.

Jim Miller Park (1295 Al Bishop Drive, Marietta) is conducting testing from 8-6 Monday-Friday and 8-3 Saturday. Enter at Gate 1.

You must schedule an appointment in advance and can do so by clicking here.

The hours for the new spot at Kennesaw State University (3305 Busbee Drive, Kennesaw, in the old Brandsmart space) are 8-4 Monday-Friday and noon-4 Saturday and Sunday.

Registration is encouraged but not required and can be done by clicking here.

The tests are PCR only, and there no walk-up costs, but your insurance will be billed.

Those new locations have been added as COVID-19 case counts surge to their highest levels since the pandemic began due largely to the Omicron variant and as school resumes after the holidays.

Cobb and Douglas Public Health said the 14-day average of cases in Cobb is at 2,468 per 100,000, far above the 100/100K high transmission threshold.

According to the CDC, the Cobb test positivity rate over the last 7 days, more than 10,000 cases have been reported, and the test positivity rate has been more than 37 percent (5 percent or higher are considered high).

Later on Wednesday, Cobb and Douglas Public Health Director Dr. Janet Memark sent out a message imploring citizens who haven’t done so to get vaccinated.

She said hospitals are becoming strained and while the Omicron variant typically comes with milder symptoms, “it is much more infectious, and these are still those people who will get seriously ill. It has been able to even evade some of our immune and vaccine protection against transmission of the virus. These mutations have given it the ability to infect more people much faster.

“With tens of thousands of people sick at the same time, even a small percentage of those who get sick enough to go to the hospital can still be a large number and overwhelm the health system that we have in place.”

Private and public testing sites have been inundated with people wanting to get tested, and the public health agency said that long wait times at the sites are to be expected.

Test results are typically available 24-72 hours after the test.

The agency also has been conducting PCR testing at the Wellstar East Cobb Health Park  (3747 Roswell Road) in a drive-through format. Hours are 9-4 Monday-Friday and 10-2 Saturday-Sunday.

You’re encouraged to sign up in advance by clicking here, and your insurance will be billed.

Private testing locations are listed here; and Cobb and Douglas Public Health has more COVID-19 testing, vaccination and other related information here.

Related posts:

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Cobb school board to select officers, set 2022 meeting schedule

Cobb school board COVID-19

The Cobb Board of Education will meet Thursday afternoon for its 2022 organizational meeting.

Board members will be voting on who will serve as chairman and vice chairman during the year, and also to set the meeting schedule.

Thursday’s meeting begins at 1 p.m. in the board room of the Cobb County School District central office (514 Glover St., Marietta).

The meeting agenda can be found here; the proceedings also will be live-streamed on the district’s BoxCast channel and on CobbEdTV, Comcast Channel 24.

Unlike regular school board public meetings, there will be no public comment period at the organizational meeting.

But it could be contentious, given the school board’s partisan divide over the last three years.

Each year the board votes on a chairman, which must be a different person from the previous year, and a vice chairman.

They are the presiding officers during the meetings and the chairman represents the board in an official capacity.

The chairman also has the power to place board business items on the meeting agendas unilaterally, as does Superintendent Chris Ragsdale.

Republicans hold a 4-3 majority, and while members of the Democratic minority have nominated one another for leadership positions, they have never gotten a GOP vote.

The 2021 chairman was Republican Randy Scamihorn of Post 1 in North Cobb, who under board policy cannot succeed himself.

Last year he was at the center of several controversies that involved procedures and votes during board meetings.

The first Cobb school board meetings of 2022, if adopted Thursday, will take place on Jan. 20.

Related posts:

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Memorial service for former U.S. Sen. Isakson to be livestreamed

On Thursday the late former U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson will be honored at a memorial service in Atlanta.Isakson blisters Trump

That service, scheduled to start at 2 p.m. at Peachtree United Methodist Church (3180 Peachtree Road NE) can be seen online via the Vimeo streaming platform by clicking here.

Isakson, 76, the longtime East Cobb resident who served a total of 45 years combined in the Georgia legislature and U.S. Congress, died Dec. 19 after a lengthy battle with Parkinson’s Disease (official obituary here).

This week his former official social media accounts have been posting news about the service, as well as links to speeches.

After his retirement at the end of 2019, Isakson started the Isakson Initiative, a non-profit that conducts research into and raises awareness for neurocognitive diseases including: Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s and related dementia.

The Isakson family is asking that in lieu of flowers donations be made to the Isakson Initiative by clicking here.

Those planning to attend the memorial service in person are asked to have been vaccinated for COVID-19 and to wear masks.

Related posts:

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Jury trials in Cobb courts paused due to rising COVID-19 cases

The chief judge of Cobb Superior Court has ordered that jury trials to be paused for three weeks due to a sharp increase in COVID-19 transmission.Cobb Superior Court, Cobb judicial emergency

Judge Robert Leonard on Monday said the delays will go through Jan. 21, which coincides with the day before the end of an emergency declaration issued by Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid.

The courts have operated under separate orders during the COVID-19 pandemic, and Leonard said that “I did not make this decision lightly. We must keep in mind that jury service compels people of all walks of life, with all health conditions and vaccination status to attend court. Additionally, the likelihood of successfully getting through a lengthy jury trial when our community spread is at this record level is slim.”

The delay will not affect grand jury proceedings, according to a statement issued late Monday by Cobb County government.

Cobb State Court, which hears misdemeanor cases, also will be following suit with a jury trial delay, according to the county statement.

In addition, Cobb Juvenile Court has imposed some changes to its operations that continue through Feb. 4.

Leonard’s order was issued on the first working day of 2022, after the Christmas and New Year’s holidays, which have been marked by a rapid spike in COVID-19 cases.

Cobb and Douglas Public Health is reporting that the 14-day average of cases per 100,000 in Cobb is 1,975, far above the “high” transmission threshold of 100.

As of Friday, that figure was at 1,505, and those figures represent the highest transmission levels in Cobb since the pandemic was declared in March 2020.

The Cobb County School District and Marietta City Schools are returning to classes Wednesday for the start of the spring semester on an in-person basis, as other metro Atlanta school districts are going remote for this week.

In his order, Leonard said that “I will continue to consult with our stakeholders and the department of public health and re-evaluate things in the weeks ahead. I will continue to strive to take a measured approach and may extend this pause in jury operations or resume it as appropriate.”

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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

Professional Women of East Cobb to hold January luncheon

Professional Women of East Cobb, which is part of the East Cobb Business Association, holds a lunch meeting the first Friday of each month.Professional Women of East Cobb

The January meeting will take place this Friday, Jan. 7, at Kouzina Christos (1255 Johnson Ferry Road) from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.

The group formed in 2020 with the purpose of building relationships and “to support, learn, and grow from one another.”

Initially the meetings were at Marlow’s Tavern at Merchants Walk but as gatherings grew the location was switched to Kouzina Christos, which opened last year at the former Aurelio’s Pizza space.

The luncheons also require registration in advance. The cost is $20 for ECBA members and $25 for non-members, and the signup can be done online by clicking here.

Related posts:

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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