Gas prices in Cobb, Georgia jump by an average of 13 cents

Cobb gas prices

Gasoline prices in Cobb County and across Georgia rose by an average of 13 cents a gallon in the last week, according to AAA-The Auto Club Group, and are likely to increase more due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Regular unleaded gas prices that were commonly around $3.29 a gallon in the East Cobb area last week are now at or around $3.45 a gallon. In Cobb County overall, the AAA-calculated average is $3.48 a gallon.

The Georgia average is $3.50 a gallon, costing motorists $52.50 to fill a 15-gallon tank of gasoline.

The national average is even higher, at $3.60 a gallon. Current prices are about a dollar more than they were this time a year ago, and are closing in on record prices that exceeded $4 a gallon at the start of the economic recession in 2008.

Last week national crude prices neared $100 a barrel after a sharp 71-cents-a-gallon rise as Russian military troops invaded the Ukraine.

“As the conflict escalates with more sanctions and retaliatory actions, the oil markets will likely respond by continuing to increase the price of crude oil to reflect more risk of disruption to tight global oil supplies,” AAA-The Auto Club Group concluded.

Some tips from AAA-The Auto Club Group on saving money on gas:

  • Slow down — if you’re on the highway, know that gas use increases as your car passes 50 mph. If you drive the speed limit, you could reduce your car’s fuel consumption.
  • Drive more gently — gradually brake and accelerate, rather than stomping on the gas pedal or brake pedal.
  • Avoid engine idling — it can waste fuel.
  • Make one trip, instead of many — make a comprehensive list of items you need to buy and then make a single trip outside of your home, rather than multiple short trips.
  • Clean out the car — lighter cars use less fuel. Get the junk out of your trunk, cargo areas and passenger compartments.
  • Stay regular on vehicle maintenance — get your car checked out regularly and make sure your tires are filled to the correct pressure level.

You can check more gas prices by clicking here.

 

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Cobb Youth Leadership accepting applications for 2022-23 class

Submitted information from the Cobb Chamber of Commerce:Cobb Chamber of Commerce

The Cobb Youth Leadership (CYL), a development program sponsored by the Leadership Cobb Alumni Association and Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta that focuses on developing leadership skills through interactive participation, is seeking applications for members of its 2022-2023 class.

Created in 1989, the program provides students a unique opportunity to learn about their community as well as meet and interact with students from other high schools. Students attending public or private high schools or home-school students in Cobb County must complete and submit an application for CYL in the spring of their sophomore year. Applications are reviewed by the CYL Steering Committee and approximately 55 students are chosen for the class. Students participate in the program during their junior year of high school.          

Applications are now being accepted for the 2022-2023 class. Students may complete the online form at www.cobbchamber.org/cyl. All applications must be submitted by Friday, April 15, 2022.

For more information about Cobb Youth Leadership, contact Katie Guice at (770) 859-2334 or kguice@cobbchamber.org.

 

 

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Property restoration franchise PuroClean opens in East Cobb

Marietta native Sam Springer has opened an East Cobb location of PuroClean, a restoration and remediation franchise.Sam Springer, PuroClean East Cobb

Located at 1230 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite J-10, Puro Clean provides 24/7 emergency water damage remediation, smoke and fire damage restoration, mold, and biohazard removal services.

The franchise service area also includes Kennesaw, Dunwoody, Marietta and nearby communities in metro Atlanta.

“Starting business ventures and exploring entrepreneurial opportunities has been one of my greatest passions for well over a decade,” Springer said in a release issued by PuroClean.

“I am proud and excited to be a part of the PuroClean network so that I can continue doing what I love to do – servicing my community in a meaningful way.”

Springer opened his first restoration business after graduating from college, and also was an insurance property adjuster.

PuroClean was founded in 2001 and has more than 375 franchise locations in North America, all independently owned and operated.

For more information on PuroClean East Cobb, call (770) 627-0900.

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CDC rates Cobb as ‘medium level’ for COVID with new guidance

CDC COVID community level map

As it updated its guidance on masks on Friday, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control also unveiled a new tool to gauge COVID-19 community transmission levels.

The COVID-19 Community Level tool can be searched for any county in the country, and it rates Cobb County in the medium category. That’s yellow in the map above, while green areas are low and orange areas are high.

Each category—high, medium and low—comes with a recommended set of prevention steps to take, and here’s what the CDC is saying about the medium level:

The factors the CDC used to assign community levels include hospitalizations and bed use for COVID-19, case rates and test positivity rates.

According to Cobb and Douglas Health, Cobb currently has a 14-day average of 246 cases per 100,000 people.

That’s continuing a steep fall from more than 2,500/100K in January at the peak of the Omicron surge.

The test positivity rate in Cobb also is nearing the desired threshold of 5 percent or lower. According to the CDC, it’s currently at 5.45 percent.

The CDC data also indicate that Cobb has 12.6 percent of hospital beds that are being used by COVID-19 patients, and that Cobb is averaging 15.7 COVID-related hospital admissions per 100,000 people.

Earlier this week, Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid said she will continue with an emergency declaration until transmission rates fall below 100/100K.

That order, which continues through mid-March, continues the use of the county’s emergency operations plan and requires citizens attending commission meetings in person to wear masks and observe social-distancing protocols.

A separate mask mandate for indoor county facilities issued by Cobb County Manager Jackie McMorris is set to expire Monday. That mandate includes libraries and indoor recreation facilities.

Roughly 70 percent of the country falls in the low- and medium range in the new CDC calculations. In its new guidance, the CDC is recommending that only people living counties in the high range continue to wear masks indoors in public.

CDC director Rochelle Walensky said Friday that regardless of where one lives that “if you are more comfortable wearing a mask, feel free to do so.”

But Cobb has never had a mask mandate for private businesses or other non-government entities, like Atlanta and several other Georgia cities.

The Cobb County School District also has not had a mask mandate for the current 2021-22 academic year. Most other metro Atlanta school districts are dropping mask mandates.

Cobb government officials said this week they will end COVID-19 tests at Jim Miller Park next Saturday, March 5.

Also next Saturday, the Cobb Emergency Management Agency and Cobb and Douglas Public Health will distribute free COVID-19 test kits from 2-4 p.m. at Piedmont Church (570 Piedmont Road).

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Catholic Church of St. Ann to hold garage sale in March

St. Ann Catholic Garage Sale

Submitted information:

For those who like to shop and give to a good cause, look no further than the Catholic Church of St. Ann’s annual garage sale. Organized by St. Ann’s Council of Catholic Women, the sale will take place March 24-26. Shoppers can come look through a variety of items, such as women’s and men’s clothing, children’s toys, kitchen accessories and much more. All proceeds from the event will go to the parish and local charities. 

St. Ann has hosted the garage sale for several years but was forced to put the event on hold due to the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic. Event co-chair Beth Kosbab is thrilled to bring the event back. 

“The garage sale has the unique benefit of helping our community in three distinct ways,” Kosbab said. “We first provide a convenient place for people to get rid of excess in the homes and aid in their spring cleaning. Secondly, the items are priced quite low, which helps families on a budget get essential things for their home. Finally, the money raised goes to our parish and local charities. Plus, all of the volunteers have a good time.”

The sale will be from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. March 24 and 25 and 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. March 26 at the church, located at 4905 Roswell Road Marietta 30062. Half-price day will be March 25. Then on March 26, shoppers will get to fill a provided bag for $5. The Archdiocese of Atlanta requires those who are unvaccinated to wear masks while on campus. No strollers are allowed and credit cards will be accepted for $10 minimum purchases. For questions, contact garagesalestann@gmail.com or visit www.st-ann.org/garage-sale.

For more information on what you can and cannot donate for the sale, click here.

 

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Aging care specialist speaks to Rotary Club of East Cobb

Rotary Club of East Cobb

Submitted information:

“Last week Staci Hannah spoke to the East Cobb Rotary Club. Staci’s company, Aging Navigator, helps clients create end of life care plans who suffer from dementia and Parkinson’s disease and equip their love ones with the tools and techniques to provide quality care. She is shown above with Rotary member, Jonathan Lyons.”

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Cobb commission, school board redistricting maps approved

Cobb redistricting
Democrats Charisse Davis of the Cobb school board and Jerica Richardson of the Cobb commission have had the East Cobb portions of their districts removed.


Two first-term Democrats who represent part of East Cobb on the Cobb Board of Commissioners and the Cobb Board of Education will have different electoral boundaries soon.

The Georgia Senate finalized redistricting bills for both bodies on Wednesday, clearing the way for Gov. Brian Kemp’s signature into law.

The bills were sponsored by Cobb Republicans over the objections of the county’s Democratic-led legislative delegation, and easily passed in the legislature, which has strong GOP majorities.

Cobb GOP BOC redistricting map
For a larger view of the new Cobb commissioners map, click here.

Jerica Richardson, who was elected to commission District 2 in 2020, was drawn out of her district in a map that for the next decade will place most of East Cobb in District 3 (in gold on the map at right).

District 2 has included the Cumberland-Smyrna-Vinings area and part of East Cobb. Richardson moved into a new home off Post Oak Tritt Road last year, but will have to move again by the end of the year if she seeks a second term in 2024.

The new District 2 (in pink) will include Cumberland-Smyrna-Vinings, some of Marietta and other areas along the I-75 corridor.

The bill’s main sponsor, Republican John Carson of Northeast Cobb, has said that his map will likely keep the commission’s current 3-2 Democratic majority.

But Richardson and other Cobb Democrats have been vocal at Georgia Capitol press conferences in opposing the GOP maps.

“This bill essentially overwrites the vote you made 2 years ago and creates a new map that doesn’t take the community’s input into consideration,” Richardson said on her Facebook page Thursday.

“This is a dangerous precedent, and I plan to continue making my voice heard in order to support this community and its needs.”

District 3 commissioner JoAnn Birrell, a Republican, is nearing the end of her third term this year. 

Charisse Davis, who has represented the Walton and Wheeler clusters on the Cobb school board since 2019, also was drawn into a new post that no longer includes East Cobb.

She lives in the Cumberland-Smyrna-Vinings area, which forms the heart of the new Post 6. Davis is up for re-election but has not announced whether she’s seeking re-election.

Cobb school board redistricting town hall
For a larger view of the new Cobb school board post map, click here.

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

She noted on her Facebook page recently that the Cobb GOP maps affecting her, Richardson and current 6th District U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath are “ensuring that the east Cobb area will no longer have representation from any of the Black women whose districts currently include east Cobb.”

While East Cobb has been solid terrain for Republicans, Democrats have been making gains in recent elections as the once-conservative county undergoes significant demographic and political change.

Only on the Cobb school board do Republicans have a local majority.

For the last three years, the school board has held a 4-3 GOP edge (after Republicans previously enjoyed a 6-1 advantage), and has been roiled controversies that generally have fallen along partisan lines.

The shifting lines for the school board also reduce East Cobb representation to two members. They are current chairman David Chastain, a Republican who has said he will be seeking another term in 2022 for Post 4, and David Banks, the GOP vice chairman whose Post 5 will now cover most of the Walton and Wheeler areas.

Davis and fellow first-term Democrat Jaha Howard, also of the Smyrna area, have been in the middle of disputes over the senior tax exemption, equity issues, student discipline matters and the Cobb County School District’s COVID-19 response.

The new maps put Davis and Howard, currently of Post 2, together. But he has announced he is running for Georgia School Superintendent this year.

(PLEASE NOTE: The process of redistricting elected school board posts has nothing to do with the boundaries of school attendance zones, which are drawn by school district administrative staff and are done mainly to balance out school capacity.)

McBath, completing her second term, has switched to the 7th district, which includes most of Democratic-leaning Gwinnett County after the legislature redrew the 6th to create a GOP-friendly seat that includes East Cobb, North Fulton, part of Forsyth County and Dawson County.

Part of East Cobb also is included in newly redrawn 11th District, which is represented by Republican Barry Lowdermilk.

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East Cobb food scores: Moxie Burger; Moxie Taco; Sakura; more

Moxie Burger Moxie Taco close COVID

The following East Cobb food scores for the week of Feb. 21 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Firehouse Subs
4648 Woodstock Road, Suite 250, Roswell
February 23, 2022 Score: 88, Grade: B

McDonald’s
3101 Roswell Road
February 22, 2022 Score: 100, Grade: A

Marco’s Pizza
2986 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 100
February 25, 2022 Score: 100, Grade: A

Moxie Burger
255 Village Parkway, Suite 110
February 24, 2022 Score: 95, Grade: A

Moxie Taco
255 Village Parkway, Suite 330
February 24, 2022 Score: 88, Grade: B

Rosa’s Pizza
3605 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 110
February 21, 2022 Score: 85, Grade: B

Sabor do Brazil
2800 Delk Road, Suite E
February 21, 2022 Score: 83, Grade: B

Sakura Restaurant
4880 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 10
February 23, 2022 Score: 96, Grade: A

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Cobb commissioner to hold stormwater ‘follow up’ town hall

George Hitchcock, who lives near East Cobb Park, showed commissioners this week photos of flood damage to his property from the Sept. 7, 2021 storms.

Cobb Commissioner Jerica Richardson will be holding a virtual town hall meeting Tuesday to evaluate options to address continuing stormwater problems stemming from heavy flooding last fall.

Richardson said the meeting is a “follow up” to a previous meeting she held for homeowners who sustained heavy damage from those storms, and who have been critical of the county’s response.

The town hall via Zoom takes place from 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, and the public can sign up by clicking here.

A number of homeowners in Richardson’s East Cobb district have expressed frustration at being told they’re responsible for making repairs ranging from $25,000-$250,000 for what they said was flooding caused by poor stormwater infrastructure.

Several East Cobb residents sounded off to commissioners again on Tuesday about their continuing plight.

Hill Wright, who lives in the Spring Creek neighborhood off Holt Road, has been coordinating an effort to press the county for a stronger response, and said he talks to previously affected residents every time it rains.

“What I hear is that the damage is worse or it’s happening again,” he said during a public comment session. “They tell me they don’t know how long they can hang on, or if the next storm will push them over the edge.”

Dan Larkin, a resident of the Meadow Brook neighborhood off Powers Ferry Road, said one of his neighbors had four feet of water flood their home during the September storm.

Stormwater is collecting in two vacant lots on Oriole Drive, and the amount has been escalating due to runoff from new homes in areas “that should never have been built on.

“This is not looking out for the public at all,” Larkin said. “What will be done to keep this from happening again?”

Rebecca Klein bought a home in 2020 near a creek that feeds into Sope Creek, close to the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center.

She said on the night of Sept. 7, “I looked in horror as that peaceful little creek raged to eight feet deep in our back yard.”

There was muddy water in the basement that rose to more than three feet.

The cleanup, Klein said, wasn’t the problem. The floods destroyed her neighbor’s driveway and crushed the culvert in her yard, creating a sinkhole near the foundation of her home.

She said she was told by the Cobb stormwater office that it had no record of the culvert and the homeowners may have installed it.

“This is not possible,” Klein said, her voice breaking with emotion. The culvert “was far too large for us to install with the house in the way. There’s no possible way of the county not knowing as this crosses three properties.”

She said she was told she would be responsible for what she said are six-figure repairs.

“How in the world can a homeowner afford these repairs?” she said. “How can the county pick and choose what to maintain?

“We are facing financial ruin on a home we haven’t even lived in for two years. Every time it rains, I cringe in fear that that hole is going to get bigger.”

George Hitchcock, who lives off Robinson Road near East Cobb Park, said on Sept. 7 his neighborhood received 6-7 feet of stormwater runoff from Robinson Creek. His driveway and those belonging to two neighbors were washed out.

“We recognize that this was a unique event, but in the last two months we’ve had two more flash floods,” Hitchcock said. “Even an inch of rain now is enough to put the creek up and out of its bounds.”

He said while he has FEMA flood insurance, it wouldn’t cover the repair costs from the Sept. 7 flooding, resulting in a “significant out-of-pocket expense.”

At the end of the meeting, Richardson announced the town hall, saying that her presentation will detail a “comprehensive list . . . . of options that we can take as a community to curb this issue holistically.”

She said some items can be addressed immediately, while others will require more time, but the objective is to address the problem systemically.

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As Mt. Bethel UMC lawsuits proceed, church member subpoenaed

Mt. Bethel Church

Attorneys for Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church have issued a subpoena for a church member and may call others for depositions as lawsuits proceed involving the East Cobb congregation and the denomination’s North Georgia Conference.

A deposition with the church member that was scheduled for Wednesday has been delayed to next Tuesday after she retained a lawyer, according to filings in Cobb Superior Court.

(You can read the Mt. Bethel documents by clicking here and entering case number 21106801.)

The North Georgia Conference sued Mt. Bethel in September after months of conflict over reassigning its top clergy and a failed attempt at mediation (you can read the lawsuit here).

In addition to trying to recover church assets and properties claimed by the North Georgia Conference, Mt. Bethel is demanding in its countersuit (you can read that here) that it vote to disaffiliate from the United Methodist Church before the denomination’s scheduled General Conference meeting in September.

The Mt. Bethel church member is addressed in the subpoena as a “non-party,” meaning she is not a defendant or other party in the suits.

She was ordered to appear at the offices of Mt. Bethel’s attorneys with communications between her and “any agent of the North Georgia Conference of the United Methodist Church” regarding Mt. Bethel or the lawsuit.

The subpoena also ordered her to provide communications between her and Rev. Dr. Steven Usry, the appointed senior pastor at Mt. Bethel that the church has refused to accommodate, as well as Bishop Sue Haupert-Johnson and superintendent Jessica Terrell of the North Georgia UMC.

The church member also was ordered to provide communications between her and members of the press and between “you and with any person since Jan. 1, 2018” regarding Mt. Bethel or the suit.

Cobb Superior Judge Mary Staley Clark has scheduled a March 15 hearing to consider motions in a lawsuit filed against Mt. Bethel by the North Georgia Conference, as well as Mt. Bethel’s countersuit. Both sides are seeking injunctions to be considered the week of April 25, according to court filings.

Mt. Bethel leadership has called a church administrative council meeting for Sunday at 4 p.m. in the sanctuary on the main campus (4385 Lower Roswell Road).

On Friday, Mt. Bethel’s lead attorney sent a congregation-wide e-mail explaining that the process of collecting documents and testimony from “from individuals and entities they believe may have knowledge of relevant facts” is part of every lawsuit, “and such requests are in no way accusatory, nor should assumptions be drawn based upon them.”

That message, written by Robert D. Ingram of the prominent Marietta law firm of Moore, Ingram, Johnson & Steele, added that “while the inconvenience and disruption caused by the discovery process is unfortunate, it is an important tool for developing and preserving relevant facts. It is in this way that the truth both comes to light and may then be presented in a court of law.”

‘What purpose is served by this?’

Mt. Bethel members who are against the actions by church leadership have formed a group called the Friends of Mt. Bethel, and on Tuesday sent out an e-mail denouncing the subpoena of the church member.

“Our church is using this legal process to go after some of its own members, people who are in no way responsible for any of the decisions at issue in this lawsuit,” said the Friends of Mt. Bethel e-mail.

The message acknowledged that while issuing subpoenas to its members is legal, “it should never have happened. These members are not parties to the lawsuit, and they had no involvement in the decisions at issue in the case. Their private messages should not have been requested by Mt. Bethel, nor should the Conference have shared them without a court order.

“Imagine the amazement, concern, and fear when people realize their own church has served them legal papers and that they must now obtain legal counsel. What purpose is served by this?”

Mt. Bethel, with nearly 10,000 members, is the largest of the 800 congregations comprising more than 300,000 members in the North Georgia Conference.

The Mt. Bethel dispute arose in April 2021, when Haupert-Johnson reassigned Rev. Dr. Jody Ray, Mt. Bethel’s senior pastor, to a non-pastoral post in the North Georgia Conference office.

Mt. Bethel refused the reassignment of Usry to replace him, alleging the church was not properly consulted. Ray turned in his UMC ministerial credentials and was hired by Mt. Bethel as a lead pastor and CEO.

The church also declined to provide Usry office space or pay his full salary. Although he has met with Mt. Bethel members elsewhere since his appointment, he said he is staying away from the Mt. Bethel premises during the legal dispute.

Mt. Bethel’s countersuit lists North Georgia UMC leadership as defendants, as well as five “John Doe” defendants it describes as “unknown individuals or entities who conspired with the other counterclaim and third-party claim defendants and engaged in the wrongful conduct described herein.”

According to Mt. Bethel, North Georgia UMC officials and other defendants in the Mt. Bethel countersuit “agreed, schemed, combined and aspired . . . to prevent Mt. Bethel’s disaffiliation vote and to take its property.”

After declaring it was not a church in good standing, the North Georgia Conference concluded that “exigent circumstances” prompted it to possess Mt. Bethel properties and assets, and ordered it closed.

Claims of ‘fraudulent conspiracy’

Mt. Bethel claims that’s part of a “fraudulent conspiracy” to strip the church of those properties, valued at nearly $35 million by the North Georgia Conference.

Activities at the main Mt. Bethel campus on Lower Roswell Road and another property on Post Oak Tritt Road are continuing, and Ray remains in the positions created for him.

The North Georgia UMC said those actions and others, including Mt. Bethel’s treatment of Usry, violate the denomination’s Book of Discipline governing procedures.

Nearly 200 UMC delegates are asking that the General Conference be delayed to 2024 due to continuing COVID-19 issues.

That policy-making body was originally scheduled to meet in 2020, but has been delayed by COVID-19 concerns.

The UMC—the second-largest Protestant denomination in the U.S.—has been roiled in recent years by conflicts over theological issues, particularly gay and lesbian clergy and performing same-sex marriages.

The UMC currently bans both, but conservative congregations, including Mt. Bethel, formed the Wesleyan Covenant Association in 2016, anticipating that would change.

The North Georgia Conference claims churches not in good standing are not eligible to have a disaffiliation vote.

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Rep. McBath announces 2022 Congressional Art Competition

East Cobb students Congressional art contest
A photograph submitted by a Pope High School student in the 2020 Congressional Art Competition.

Submitted information:

Congresswoman Lucy McBath announced the start of the 2022 Congressional Art Competition, her fourth art competition since taking office in 2019. The competition is open to high school students in Georgia’s Sixth Congressional District and the deadline for submissions will be Friday, April 22, 2022. 

“Supporting and encouraging participation in the arts is so vital for our young people, which is why I am thrilled to launch this year’s Congressional Art Competition,” McBath said. “Each year, I am blown away by the talent and creativity of students from right here in our community. I look forward to seeing the incredible artwork from our local high schoolers, and I encourage all who may be interested to submit and be a part of this exciting competition.”   

Each spring, a nationwide high school arts competition is hosted by the U.S. House of Representatives. The Congressional Art Competition is an opportunity to recognize and encourage the artistic talent of students in the Sixth Congressional District and across the nation. Winning artwork from the Sixth District Congressional Art Competition (1st, 2nd, and 3rd place) will be eligible for display in the U.S. Capitol or in one of Rep. McBath’s offices.

Submissions will be accepted by McBath’s office over the next two months and will only be accepted digitally at arts.mcbath@mail.house.gov. More information and the required release form for the competition can be accessed at https://mcbath.house.gov/art-competition. For any additional questions, please contact McBath’s Sandy Springs District Office by calling (470) 773-6330.

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Cobb schools to hold resource fair for students with disabilities

The Cobb County School District will hold a resource fair for students with disabilities and their parents on March 8 at North Cobb High School.Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

The event will provide information about summer camps, ballet, swimming, sports, theatres, museums and other extracurricular opportunities.

The fair, which last was held in March 2020, right before the COVID-19 pandemic was declared, takes place from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. on March 8 and reservations to attend can be made by clicking here.

More than 50 vendors will be on hand to provide information about sensory-friendly and accessible options.

They include the Alliance Theatre, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, Children’s Museum of Atlanta, Cobb Aquatics, Cobb County Public Library System, Cobb PARKS Cultural Arts, Girl Scouts, High Museum of Art, Rockstar Cheer, Six Flags Over Georgia, Tellus Science Museum and Zoo Atlanta.

“We are so excited to offer this fair as an in-person event again – it gives our families the opportunity to interact with representatives who can directly share their accessibility and sensory-friendly offerings! We have new participants joining this year along with the former,” said Dominique Terens, Cobb Schools Special Education Compliance Supervisor, in a release issued by the district.

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Cobb COVID rates fall sharply, but emergency order continues

Cobb paid leave county employees

The rate of COVID-19 transmission in Cobb County is nearing a benchmark figure.

But Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid said it’s not enough to end an emergency declaration she extended last week into March.

At the end of Tuesday’s Cobb Board of Commissioners meeting, Cupid said that the 14-day average of COVID cases per 100,000 people in the county is now 246.

That’s a steep drop from more than 2,500 in January, at the peak of the Omicron surge.

But public health officials consider anything more than 100 cases per 100K a “high” rate of community spread.

“Shall we have rates that that fall below the rates of high transmission, I will be glad to end the order,” she said, adding that she’s also considering the burden on local hospitals.

Cupid didn’t have any specifics on that, but said that she understands public frustration over the order.

“I am no glutton for the punishment that I receive in the e-mails and calls that I get,” said Cupid, who in recent months has been publicly masked, and also tested positive for COVID earlier this month.

“I look forward to the day where I don’t have to wear this mask and we can see all of our county facilities full again.”

The order continues the use of the county’s emergency operations plan and requires citizens attending commission meetings in person to wear masks and observe social-distancing protocols.

A separate mask mandate for indoor county facilities issued by Cobb County Manager Jackie McMorris is set to expire Feb. 28. That mandate includes libraries and indoor recreation facilities.

A previous emergency order limited the number of spectators at county-run indoor aquatics centers, spurring complaints from high school swimmers and their families who were unable to watch meets.

Cupid said among the metrics she watches is the COVID test positivity rate—five percent is considered high—and indicated that the current rate in Cobb is around eight percent, also down from 22 percent at the start of February.

She said the emergency order could end before the renewed 30-day window, and that “the numbers are dropping, and I am very hopeful that day will be with us soon.”

Cupid did not say if she might issue another order if the case rates in Cobb go over 100.

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NE Cobb resident announces campaign for Cobb commissioner

Judy Sarden, an attorney and homeschooling advocate who lives in Northeast Cobb, has announced her campaign for District 3 on the Cobb Board of Commissioners.Judy Sarden, Cobb commission candidate

She is running in the May 24 Republican primary, and has lived in Cobb County for 15 years, initially residing in South Cobb.

District 3 is currently held by Republican JoAnn Birrell, whose third term expires at the end of 2022.

Sarden announced her campaign on Friday, and in a release said that she “understands first-hand why people move to and stay in Cobb County as well as the challenges that Cobb families face—specifically, zoning issues, county finance accountability, keeping taxes low, providing the best education for our children and maintaining an active and vibrant community.”

She said that her objective “is to serve the people of District 3 as a Commissioner who listens to her constituents and who ensures that their voices are heard at the county level. She understands that regardless of who a constituent voted for, our County commissioner represents all residents of her district and she hopes to help our community begin to healafter the divisiveness of the recent past.”

Sarden’s campaign website can be found here. She filed her declaration of intent to run on Feb. 11. Qualifying for the primaries is March 7-11.

On her campaign site, Sarden also mentioned East Cobb Cityhood, which is also on the primary ballot for eligible voters in the proposed city.

Sarden said while she supports voters having the right to decide on whether to become a city, “there appear to be many unanswered questions that the original feasibility study did not answer and that need to be addressed and debated before a vote should occur.”

She said the referendum is taking place along a “rushed timeline” and linked to a special work session held by commissioners last week (previous ECN story here).

While the current District 3 boundaries do not include the proposed city of East Cobb, a bill moving through the Georgia legislature would redraw the seat to cover the proposed city, and most of the East Cobb area in general.

Sarden and her husband homeschool two children and she also has an adult son and two grandchildren. The family attends First Baptist Church in Woodstock.

She earned a business degree from Auburn University and law degree from Samford University, and has been a corporate attorney for more than 20 years.

Sarden also has written a book about homeschooling and has spoken around the country on that topic.

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Cobb Comprehensive Plan District 2 meeting set for Thursday

Cobb 2040 Comprehensive Plan update
For a larger view of the Cobb Future Land Use Map, click here.

A virtual meeting to present the 5-year update to the 2040 Cobb Comprehensive Plan will take place on Thursday.

The focus will be on District 2, which includes a part of East Cobb, and is scheduled for 6-8 p.m.

You can view the meeting by clicking here; the meeting number is 2308 013 1067. Participants can also call in toll free at 415-655-0003, with the same access code. 2308 013 1067

Four meetings have been scheduled, and will culminate with an in-person open house on April 14, at a location and time to be announced.

Every five years the state requires local governments to update their long-term planning priorities. The last update in Cobb was in 2017 (you can read it here).

The update covers a wide range of planning topics, including land use, transportation, housing, economic development, community facilities, human services, public health, education, natural and historic resources, public safety, intergovernment coordination, disaster resilience, military compatibility and place-making.

Citizens can also provide feedback to the Cobb Community Development Agency by clicking here to complete this survey today.

For more information on the Comprehensive Plan update, click here.

 

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East Cobb Cityhood group to hold town hall meeting March 7

East Cobb Cityhood town hall meeting
The Committee for East Cobb Cityhood interactive map outlines the proposed boundaries down to the neighborhood level. For more detail, click here.

The Committee for East Cobb Cityhood will be holding an in-person town hall meeting on March 7 to discuss the upcoming May 24 referendum.

The town hall starts at 6 p.m. at the Olde Towne Athletic Club (4950 Olde Towne Parkway), but it’s open only for citizens who live in the proposed city boundaries.

The cityhood group announced that the event sold out quickly and no more reservations are being accepted for those wishing to attend in person.

Group spokeswoman Cindy Cooperman said the event room at Olde Towne has a capacity of 300 and she’s received at least that many RSVP requests.

She said the group is working to live-stream the town hall and that likely will be available on its Facebook page.

This will be the first in-person event the group has had since East Cobb cityhood was revived in 2021.

The group had several virtual information sessions, including one earlier this month as cityhood legislation was being approved by the Georgia legislature.

While those sessions included questions from the community, they were selected by cityhood group leaders for discussion.

In the initial East Cobb cityhood effort in 2019, cityhood leaders held several town hall meetings and also participated in a forum with opponents.

But it was after that forum at Olde Towne that cityhood advocates said they would delay their efforts to 2021.

The current cityhood group includes some of the original members, and has not indicated if there will be other in-person meetings before the referendum, other than with specific community and neighborhood associations.

The referendum will ask registered voters in the proposed city whether or not they wish to incorporate. The East Cobb legislation included a map of around 60,000 people, centered along the Johnson Ferry Road corridor.

The law signed by Gov. Brian Kemp last year (you can read it here) includes a charter setting up a governance structure, proposed services and city operating procedures, and election boundaries.

If the referendum is approved, then elections for the mayor and six city council members would take place in November.

The cityhood group also has revised an interactive map produced for the original campaign that allows residents to search by address to see if their neighborhood is in the proposed city.

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Credit Union of Georgia participating in America Saves Week

Credit Union Georgia America Saves Week

The Credit Union of Georgia—which has a branch in East Cobb at 1020 Johnson Ferry Road—is taking part in America Saves Week this week.

It’s an annual national effort to encourage individuals and families to develop automatic savings habits, prepare for unexpected expenses and retirement and reduce debt.

Through Friday the Credit Union of Georgia will be posting savings tips on its social media platforms.

The credit union’s savings products include regular savings accounts, money market funds, certificates of deposit, club accounts, college savings accounts and kids club accounts.

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Cobb food scores: Garden and Gun Club; Sterling Estates; more

Garden and Gun Club, Cobb food scores

The following Cobb food scores for the week of Feb. 14 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Garden & Gun Club
2605 Circle 75 Parkway, Suite 410
February 14, 2022 Score: 80, Grade: B

Jersey Mike’s
2960 Shallowford Road, Suite 106
February 18, 2022 Score: 100, Grade: A

McDonald’s 
3011 Johnson Ferry Road
February 16, 2022 Score: 100, Grade: A

Panda Express
2580 Windy Hill Road, Suite 600
February 15, 2022 Score: 91, Grade: A

The Patty Wagon
4796 Canton Road, Suite 500
February 16, 2022 Score: 100, Grade: A

Starbucks
3629 Sandy Plains Road
February 17, 2022 Score: 100, Grade: A

Sterling Estates of East Cobb
4220 Lower Roswell Road
February 14, 2022 Score: 90, Grade: A

Wendy’s 
2961 Shallowford Road
February 14, 2022 Score: 100, Grade: A

Windy Hill Athletic Club
135 Interstate North Parkway
February 17, 2022 Score: 92, Grade: A

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Former UGA coach Mark Richt to speak at Cobb Prayer Breakfast

Former University of Georgia football coach Mark Richt will be the keynote speaker at the Cobb County Prayer Breakfast on May 5.Mark Richt

The breakfast takes place at the Cobb Galleria Centre starting at 7 a.m. on May 5, which is the National Day of Prayer.

Richt coached the Bulldogs from 2001-2015 and compiled a record of 145-51. He also coached his alma mater, the University of Miami in Florida. He currently is a college football analyst with the ACC Network and last year was diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease.

Richt was a longtime assistant coach at Florida State University under Bobby Bowden before he came to UGA.

Scott Gregory, co-chair of the Cobb County Prayer Breakfast Committee, said “Coach Richt’s faith walk has been such an enormous influence on scores of young people over the years, including my own.

“I was fortunate to attend Fellowship of Christian Athlete meetings in Tallahassee as a young person, where Coach Bowden and Coach Richt shared the importance of faith, family and football. The stories and lessons had a lasting impact on me. We are so grateful to Coach Richt for his willingness to join our community in prayer and to share the power of prayer and faith with us.”

Tickets for the prayer breakfast are $30 each and tables of 10 and sponsorships are available at http://www.cobbcountyprayerbreakfast.org.

For additional information contact: ccprayerbreakfast@gmail.com.

 

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Cobb DA’s office to hold prayer vigil for Ahmaud Arbery Day

The Cobb District Attorney’s Office said this week it will be holding a prayer vigil Wednesday in observance of Ahmaud Arbery Day.Arbery prayer vigil

The prayer vigil will take place at the Marietta Square at 2 p.m. Wednesday, on the two-year anniversary of Arbery’s death.

He was a 25-year-old black man in Brunswick who was shot to death on Feb. 23, 2020, as he was jogging through a neighborhood.

The Cobb DA’s office prosecuted the murder trials of Travis McMichael, Greg McMichael and William R. Bryan, who were convicted by a Glynn County jury in November.

The three men also are defendants in an ongoing federal hate crimes trial in Savannah.

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