Lawsuit filed to stop East Cobb Cityhood referendum

East Cobb traffic, Johnson Ferry at Roswell Road
The intersection of Roswell and Johnson Ferry roads would be in the heart of a City of East Cobb.

A lawsuit was filed in Cobb Superior Court Thursday trying to stop or delay a May 24 Cityhood referendum in East Cobb by the same attorney who’s making similar challenges in Lost Mountain and Vinings.

Atlanta attorney Allen Lightcap said he filed the suit on behalf of Colin Brady, a longtime East Cobb resident and retired businessman opposed to a new city being formed in the community.

(You can read the East Cobb lawsuit by clicking here.)

Like suits filed earlier this month regarding the Lost Mountain and Vinings referendums—also scheduled for May 24—the defendants are members of the Cobb Board of Registration and Elections and Director Janine Eveler.

And like the other two complaints, Lightcap said he would be seeking an emergency hearing given the timeliness of the referendums. The East Cobb case has been assigned to Chief Judge Robert Leonard, who also has been given the Lost Mountain and Vinings suits.

The East Cobb suit claims that the bill passed this session by the Georgia legislature is unconstitutional, violating state home rule provisions on four grounds.

Lightcap said that the General Assembly “may not limit or regulate a city’s home rule supplementary powers except by general law.”

The East Cobb bill, like the Lost Mountain and Vinings bills, he said, is a local law.

The East Cobb suit claims that the bill’s “unconstitutional defects go to the heart of the bill, and they cannot be severed without completely defeating the purpose of the law. . . .The voters should not be forced to vote for or against a proposed city whose charter is clearly unconstitutional.”

Specifically, the suit claims that the East Cobb bill, HB 841—which you can read here—unconstitutionally regulates how the proposed city can use its supplementary powers, including services to be provided.

Secondly, the lawsuit states, the legislation “takes away the proposed City of East Cobb’s discretion to use or not use some of its supplementary powers. Supplementary powers are purely discretionary for counties and municipalities; this discretion is constitutionally protected and cannot be abrogated by local law.”

The charter in the East Cobb legislation specifies five services to be provided—planning and zoning, code enforcement, police, fire and emergency services and parks and recreation.

New cities in Georgia are required to provide at least three services from a list of 14 services, but home rule provisions allow for a choice by the municipalities.

The East Cobb complaint said that city charter in the legislation also violates home rule law by capping the millage rate, something that cannot be done via a local law.

The suit also alleges that Cobb County’s home rule provisions would be unconstitutionally regulated during a two-year transition process if a city of East Cobb is created.

“This provision forces Cobb County—without regard to its own agency or discretion—to use its supplementary powers and provide services in the transition for the benefit of the City of East Cobb,” the lawsuit states.

The Committee for East Cobb Cityhood is denouncing the lawsuit, calling it a “last-second, copycat and desperate legal maneuver [that] is nothing more than a shameless attempt to stop the vote.”

Committee chairman Craig Chapin said in a statement that “opponents of Cityhood are hoping to legislate from the bench and block the citizens of East Cobb from having their voices heard in the May 24 Cityhood referendum. It has nothing to do with the actual merits of forming the City of East Cobb.”

Lightcap said last week he was not intending to be a part of a lawsuit to stop the East Cobb vote, but plans fell through for retaining another attorney.

He said there are no other plaintiffs. In Lost Mountain, the leader of a group opposing the referendum there, West Cobb Advocate, is the plaintiff.

But Lightcap said the East Cobb Alliance, the main group opposing cityhood here, is not involved in the suit he filed Thursday.

This story will be updated.

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Cobb schools FY ’23 budget includes ‘highest salary increase ever’

Cobb school budget record pay raise
Brad Johnson, the Chief Financial Officer of the Cobb County School District.

The Cobb County School District is presenting a proposed fiscal year 2023 budget of $1.4 billion that will include what Superintendent Chris Ragsdale said is the biggest salary increase for employees in district history.

At a Cobb Board of Education work session Thursday afternoon, Ragsdale made the announcement, saying the raises for full-time, non-temporary employees will range from between 8.5 percent and 13.1 percent.

The proposed budget was then presented by Chief Financial Officer Brad Johnson, who said the millage rate will we staying the same—18.9 mills.

The Cobb tax assessor is projecting that the county’s tax digest will grow by more than 10 percent in 2022.

Roughly half of the school district’s budget comes from local property taxes, and the state provides most of the rest through the Quality Basic Education Act.

The budget documents have been posted on the district’s website at this link.

The board adopted a tentative budget Thursday evening, but another public hearings will take place next month before the budget is formally adopted on May 19.

Ragsdale said the number of work days for teachers will be reduced to 187 days and salaried year-round employees will work 237 days.

Part of that is due to Juneteenth being a county and state holiday in June.

But Ragsdale said that there will “not be diminished pay to go with the diminished days.”

Ragsdale, who has been superintendent since 2015, added that this is the second time during his tenure that the district has proposed a record pay raise.

“That says a lot,” he said.

The 2022-23 budget takes effect on July 1.

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East Cobb Weekend Events: Pope Band; Book Sale; more

East Cobber parade, Pope Band community show

More community events are taking place as spring gets underway and COVID-19 measures are being phased out.

We’re back to compiling calendar listings in one handy place on our site (If you have events to share with the public, please e-mail: calendar@eastcobbnews.com and we will post them here) and we’ll round up weekend events on occasion.

This weekend’s events kick off on Thursday with a school festival—they’re coming back strong too! From 5-8 p.m. it’s the “Dragonpalooza” health fair at McCleskey Middle School (4080 Maybreeze Road) presented by the school’s physical education department.

Other activities include a student art show, a craft fair with local vendors and a silent auction. The public as well as the school community are invited; admission is free.

Friday marks the return of the Cobb Library Book Sale at the Cobb Civic Center (548 South Marietta Pkwy). Hours are 9-5 Friday and Saturday and 1-5 Sunday. Parking and admission are free, and you’re encouraged to load up on books for all ages in both hardcover and paperback, DVDs, Books on CD and audiocassette, and magazines.

Prices range from 10 cents to $4. Proceeds benefit the library system’s purchase of items for its 15 branches.

This is a big weekend for the Pope High School band programs. From 7-9 p.m. Friday and Saturday they’re having their XPlosion Show at the school’s performing arts center (3001 Hembree Road). Tickets are pre-sale only and available on GoFan—$10 for adults, $5 for students and $15 VIP seating.

In between, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, it’s the Pope Band Recycling Fundraiser at the Northeast Cobb YMCA (3010 Johnson Ferry Road). Admission is $10 per vehicle, and they’ve put together a detailed list of what they will and won’t accept, and additional charges for specialty items.

The Good Mews Animal Foundation is having another of its Microchip and Vaccination Clinics Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the shelter (3805 Robinson Road). Services for cats and dogs also include nail trims and appointments are required. Fees range from $10 to $25.

Also back, after a two-year absence, is the Taste of Marietta Festival. It’s from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sunday on and around the Marietta Square. Admission is free, and food tickets will be on sale throughout the premises.

The event includes cooking demonstrations, and live musical performances.

 

 

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At East Cobb Cityhood debate, citizens asked to keep an open mind

East Cobb Cityhood debate
East Cobb Business Association president Brian Kramer introduces the representatives of the Cityhood debate at Olde Towne Athletic Club.

When a May 24 referendum on East Cobb Cityhood was called earlier this spring, John Beville said was undecided on how he might vote.

A resident of the proposed city of nearly 60,000 residents, Beville said he initially thought he could support voting in favor of a new municipality when “city light” legislation was introduced last year.

Unlike a previous East Cobb Cityhood effort, this one would be centered not around public safety services but planning and zoning as a means to preserve the suburban character of the community.

Even after a financial feasibility study was released last November that included police and fire services, Beville said he was riding the fence.

But after hearing arguments for and against Cityhood at an East Cobb Business Association debate Tuesday, Beville said he’ll likely vote no.

“There’s still a lot of information that has not been feathered out,” Beville, an ECBA member, said after the Olde Towne Athletic Club event. “You’re dealing with a lot of ‘what ifs.’ ”

A former banker and now a financial advisor, Beville said the Cityhood supporters “are trying to sell an emotional issue without a financial substantiation of that issue.

“I’ve been ambivalent all along, but there’s no way I can support this.”

Beville, wearing a button in support of Republican gubernatorial candidate David Perdue, said he’s not enamored with some of the Cobb zoning votes of the Democratic majority on the county commission.

But he thinks the East Cobb financial study, prepared by researchers at Georgia State University, doesn’t contain enough details for him about the costs of police and fire equipment, personnel and training.

Stressing local control

During the hour-long debate, moderated by EAST COBBER publisher Cynthia Rozzo, who asked predetermined questions, the Committee for East Cobb Cityhood and the East Cobb Alliance repeated familiar talking points they’ve been raising for the last few months.

Before the Q and A session began, Susan Hampton of the ECBA said to the audience that even “if you have already made up your mind, please listen to the other side. We’re all neighbors.”

East Cobb Cityhood debate
Cindy Cooperman and Craig Chapin of the Committee for East Cobb Cityhood.

The pro-Cityhood group stressed the need for development and growth to be handled at the truly local level. The East Cobb area, they noted, will have one commissioner for nearly 200,000 people who could be outvoted.

“What’s the future of East Cobb going to look like?” asked Cindy Cooperman of the Cityhood group.

In response to a later question, she said that “you have to look at the decisions have been made” regarding rezoning, density and growth elsewhere in Cobb.

“It’s just a matter of time” before the East Cobb area must confront that reality, Cooperman said. “Why not elect people who reflect you views and your values?”

Mindy Seger of the East Cobb Alliance, which opposes Cityhood, said that “We do love East Cobb just the way it is.”

She repeated the familiar claims that incorporating would create an extra layer of government, and that residents of a city would be paying more in taxes, as those living in Cobb’s existing six cities do.

And commissioners “are up for re-election. That’s where you can make that change.”

Questioning public safety

Both sides hashed out repeated positions on the quality of services provided by a city against the current county services.

Unlike the three other Cobb Cityhood referendums—Lost Mountain, Vinings and Mableton—East Cobb is providing police and fire.

At previous town hall meetings, Cobb officials have expressed concerns about increased response times.

Alliance representatives were eager to repeat them.

East Cobb Cityhood debate
Robert Lax and Mindy Seger of the East Cobb Alliance

“I’m most concerned about public safety services,” said Robert Lax of the East Cobb Alliance. “Those services are hard.”

He said the “aggressive assumptions” in the financial feasibility study “make it less difficult to provide the same quality.

“City light was what was proposed. Why are we taking heavyweight services here?”

The Alliance has said in previous public meetings that the Cityhood forces are underestimating the cost of acquiring public safety equipment beyond the state-approved $5,000 transfer of a fire station.

But Craig Chapin, chairman of the Cityhood committee, said that they’re “the top services that you can get in a smaller community.”

It’s part of a larger question Cityhood supporters have been asking during their campaign: “What’s your vision of East Cobb?”

Chapin said that Cobb government officials are “crystal clear” about proceeding with “the urbanization of our neighborhoods.”

He said he’s also confident that “we do not need to raise taxes to create a city.”

While East Cobb Alliance representatives poked holes in the feasibility study, Cooperman and Chapin said their questions are all contained in the report, including start-up costs and franchise fees.

But many of the details of the provisions of services and negotiations of intergovernmental agreements would be hammered out by a future East Cobb mayor and city council.

Should the Cityhood referendum pass, those elections would take place in November, followed by a two-year transition period to begin in January 2023.

East Cobb Cityhood debate
More than 200 citizens turned out for the debate at the Olde Towne Athletic Club.

Alleged developer ties

The debate remained relatively civil—with members of each side passing a microphone back and forth—until a question was asked about commercial real estate interests on the Cityhood side, and what their agendas may be.

During the 2109 Cityhood campaign, the Alliance noted that 11 of the 14 members of the Cityhood committee either were in the development industry or had connections to it.

“Those people are still around,” Seger said, adding that if a city is formed, pressure will mount to increase a City of East Cobb’s commercial tax base (the feasibility study said the proposed city has a tax base that is 90 percent residential).

Chapin took umbrage at the suggestion to “follow the money.

“That’s categorically false and a conspiracy theory,” he said with some emotion.

Cooperman was also visibly upset.

“This time it’s the sweat of this man [Chapin], myself and the committee members who have been doing it.

“What evidence do they have? Zero evidence,” said Cooperman, who like Chapin was not involved in the the 2109 Cityhood campaign.

Handing out flyers in support of Cityhood at the debate was Andy Smith, an Indian Hills resident and a former member of the Cobb Planning Commission who ran for the Cobb Board of Commissioners as a Republican in 2020.

Smith said while he understands the concerns about public safety services, East Cobb citizens need to be watching the kinds of zoning decisions that have been made in recent years in the county.

He referenced the East Cobb Church rezoning last year in the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford area, and specifically the residential component of the mixed-use project that generated community opposition.

While the community-focused idea of a church fits in with the JOSH Master Plan, Smith said, housing density at around five units an acre is out of line with the nearby community.

Smith applauded the work of his Planning Commission successor, Tony Waybright, in pushing for a site plan that lowered the density cap, but said in the future that kind of effort is no guarantee.

You can watch a recording of the debate by clicking here.

The Rotary Club of East Cobb is holding a similar debate on May 4 at Pope High School but that event is sold out for in-person attendance.

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Ex-business partner of murdered East Cobb man gets 20 years

Ross Byrne, Ex-business partner sentenced murder East Cobb man
Ross Byrne

A former bakery owner charged with plotting the murder of his former roommate and business partner in East Cobb more than eight years ago was sentenced this week to 20 years in prison.

Ross Byrne, 58, pleaded guilty in Cobb Superior Court on April 8 to charges of violating the RICO Act, conspiracy to commit concealing a death, conspiracy to commit hindering apprehension of a suspect, and criminal solicitation to commit murder, according to the Cobb District Attorney’s Office.

The Cobb DA said in a release Tuesday that the sentence was handed down by Judge Mary Staley Clark.

Byrne was arrested in 2018 for his role in the death of Jerry Moore, who was found stabbed to death 32 times in his home off Holly Springs Road in January 2014.

They were partners in The Best Dang Bakery Around in Woodstock and both lived together for a time at Moore’s East Cobb home.

Byrne was charged two weeks after Johnathan Wheeler, an employee at the bakery, was convicted of killing Moore and sentenced to two consecutive life terms without parole.

Byrne’s indictment alleged that he plotted the killing after Moore wanted out of the business partnership because the bakery was financially struggling.

Jerry Moore
Jerry Moore

According to Byrne’s indictment and testimony presented in court, Byrne—who had since moved elsewhere—helped clean blood from Wheeler’s clothes after the murder and kept items stolen from Moore’s home.

Prosecutors said after the murder, Byrne became the sole owner of the bakery, which opened on Highway 92 in Woodstock in 2008.

Byrne had denied knowing anything about the murder, but prosecutors claimed in court that after Wheeler’s trial, Byrne asked an inmate to kill Wheeler, fearful he would testify against him.

The DA’s office said that in entering his guilty plea, Byrne admitted his roles in both plotting Moore’s murder and in wanting Wheeler killed.

“Despite having introduced Jerry Moore to his killer, this defendant showed absolutely no remorse for Johnathan Wheeler’s vicious killing,” said Cobb Senior Assistant District Attorney Stephanie Green said in the statement, who prosecuted the Wheeler and Byrne cases.

Wheeler is serving his sentences at the Georgia Diagnostic and Classification State Prison in Jackson, according to the Georgia Department of Corrections.

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East Cobb real estate sales for the week of April 4, 2022

The Shoals at Murdock; East Cobb real estate sales
The Shoals at Murdock

The following deeds for residential East Cobb real estate sales were filed the week of April 4 with the Cobb Superior Court Clerk’s Office Real Estate Department.

The addresses include ZIP Codes and the subdivision names and high school districts are in parenthesis:

April 4

3203 Powder Mill Place, 30067 (Old Paper Mill, Wheeler): Ronald Mitchell to Johann and Chantelle Beyers; $775,000

3615 High Green Drive, 30068 (Indian Hills, Walton); Ujam Group LLC to Dorri Investment LLC; $531,000

1543 Murdock Road, 30062 (The Shoals at Murdock, Pope): William Alvarez to Vineet and Asha Fernandes; $1.2 million

4153 Avid Park, 30062 (East Haven, Walton): Gail Allen to George Patterson; $900,000

1503 Keener Lane, 30066 (Romans Ridge, Sprayberry): Lot One Homes of Georgia LLC to Ahmed Akbar & Khan Heba; $619,525

2236 Kristen Mill Drive, 30062 (Kristen Mill, Sprayberry): Kyung Joon and Ko Hee Song to Ricky and Christine Lee; $499,999

2390 Castle Lane, 30062 (Newcastle, Pope): Thomas and Emily Lavin to Plesnarski Michael & Jamey Jones; $666,500

2346 Milstead Cricle, 30066 (Landsdowne, Sprayberry): Purchasing Fund 2020-1 LLC to Jordan Ghoreishi; $440,320

3847 Bluffview Drive, 30062 (Creekside Bluffs, Lassiter): John Levine to Stephen and Sarah Nottke; $400,000

April 5

546 Virginia Place, 30067 (Meadow Brook, Wheeler): Jack Gentry Jr. to Hayley Adamson and Cody Stepp; $300,000

3354 Alexis Court, 30066 (Carrington Place, Sprayberry): Trevor Tucker to Open Door Property Trust; $374,400

3843 Bluffview Drive, 30062 (Creekside Bluffs, Lassiter): James Regan to I&G SFR II Borrower LLC; $398,000

3343 River Birch Way, 30062 (Chimney Lakes, Lassiter): Robert Badircu to Jonathan Rice and Koszarek; $605,000

1412 Highland Bluff Drive, 30339 (Highlands at Akers Mill; Wheeler): Christopher Ross to Michael Mahroum: $205,000

April 6

2856 Goldfinch Circle, 30066 (Woodrush Court, Sprayberry): Estate of Susan Spencer to Shashee and Jyoti Jyoshi; $520,000

2268 Murdock Road, 30062 (Walton): David White to SFR Acquisitions 2 LLC; $489,000

362 Cove Island Way, 30067 (Kings Cove, Walton): Dynamis Investment LLC to Eric Mason and Rebecca Fath; $610,000

140 Dickerson Road, 30067 (Walton): Jonna Carson to Ryan Lees; $870,000

1637 Raleigh Circle, 30067 (Bentley Ridge, Wheeler): Steven Johnston to Marion Kelly; $235,000

April 7

4997 Bedell Road, 30075 (Bernham Woods, Lassiter): Kim Chi Nguyen to Eric de Leon Sandoval; $385,000

885 Trace Circle, 30066 (Highland Trace, Kell): Yunxia Lu to Olympus Borrower LLC; $310,000

April 8

405 Millbrook Trace, 30068 (Millbrook Farm, Wheeler): Temison Leonis to Open Door Property Trust; $551,900

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Sprayberry HS rebuild architectural plans to be considered

The first step toward the rebuild of the main Sprayberry High School classroom facilities comes before the Cobb Board of Education Thursday.Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

It’s a proposal to hire an architect to design the reconstruction, which includes other upgrades and renovations.

The Cobb County School District is recommending that a $3.464 million contract be awarded to CGLS Architects Inc. of Atlanta.

According to an agenda item, that amount is 5 percent of the estimated cost of the rebuild, which was earmarked as a major project on the Cobb Ed-SPLOST VI list.

The extension of the sales tax for school facilities and maintenance projects was approved by Cobb voters last November, and collections begin in January 2024.

The rebuild is part of a larger renovation project underway at Sprayberry that currently includes the construction of a new main gymnasium and renovations to the school’s CTAE (Career, Technology and Agricultural Education) facility.

That roughly $20 million project is being funded with SPLOST V revenues and is expected to be completed in 2023.

The school board will be presented with the rebuild architectural proposal at a work session that begins at 2 p.m. Tuesday. There also is a board business meeting where it is expected to be voted on starting at 7 p.m.

The meetings will take place the board room of the Cobb County School District central office (514 Glover St., Marietta).

Agendas for the board work session and business meeting can be found here. The meetings also will be live-streamed on the district’s BoxCast channel and on CobbEdTV, Comcast Channel 24.

The board also will have an executive session between the meetings.

At 6:30 p.m., the board also will conduct a public hearing on the proposed fiscal year 2023 budget. The board will be presented with the proposal at the work session, and the hearing also will be livestreamed.

Also on the school board’s agenda for Thursday is a request for formalized the phase-out of the current campus of Eastvalley Elementary.

A new facility is being built on the former campus of East Cobb Middle School on Holt Road, and the state requires old campuses to be phased out.

At the 7 p.m. meeting on Thursday, the board will recognize student-athletes who recently won Georgia state championships, including David Panone and May Prado, Lassiter wrestlers; Joey Robinson, a Pope wrestler; and Zyan Hall, a Wheeler wrestler.

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Valvoline oil change proposal OK’d for Roswell-Johnson Ferry

Valvoline Roswell-JF site plan approved

Cobb commissioners on Tuesday approved a site plan amendment and development details for an oil change business at a vacant quadrant of the Roswell-Johnson Ferry Road intersection.

The proposal by Valvoline Instant Oil Change to build a 2,088-square-foot building at the site of a former Chevron station was included on the commissioners’ consent agenda during a rezoning hearing.

You can read through the revised request by clicking here and an updated development plan by clicking here.

The new business will have three bays and will have access on a right-in, right-out basis. Plans call for a landscaping plan and 15 parking spaces. The Chevron station, which closed in 2020, was demolished last year and the nearly three-acre tract has stood vacant ever since.

The land stands in front of, but is not part of, the Merchants Festival Shopping Center.

Also submitted before the vote were comments by the East Cobb Civic Association that were not immediately available online.

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Health care outsourcer Soliant holds ribbon-cutting for Cobb office

Soliant Ribbon Cutting  Cobb County

Last week Soliant, a health care, education and life sciences staff outsourcing company, held a ribbon-cutting for its new Cobb offices at the Atlanta Galleria Office Park.

The new space includes nearly 23,000 square feet and initially will have 130 employees, with a goal of having up to 300 employees by 2023.

Soliant currently has a workforce in metro Atlanta of around 850 employees, including a recent expansion in Peachtree Corners.

The company has other locations in Tampa, Boston and Jacksonville.

Solana was founded in Atlanta in 1992 The Atlanta Galleria Office Park will offer convenient amenities to Soliant’s internal colleagues, including a fitness center, outdoor sports league and fitness, daycare, concierge service, on-site restaurant, café, bike share, and electric vehicle charging stations. They also have direct access to The Battery, which includes Truist Park, home of the 2021 World Series Champions the Atlanta Braves, as well as more than 500,000 square-feet of dining and entertainment options.

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PHOTOS: Cobb Master Gardeners hold plant sale and expo

Cobb Master Gardeners plant sale expo photos

Submitted information and photos:

The Master Gardener Volunteers of Cobb County wish to thank the community for coming out and supporting our 22nd Annual Plant Sale and Expo. About 3,000 guests supported almost 100 vendors selling plants and crafts over this two-day event. Mark your calendars for April 21-22, 2023 for next year’s event.

Cobb Master Gardeners plant sale expo photos
Birdhouses, art and other garden decoratives for sale.

Cobb Master Gardeners plant sale expo photos

Cobb Master Gardeners plant sale expo photos

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Marietta Golden K members visit new MUST Ministries shelter

Golden K Kiwanis tours MUST shelter
(L-R) John Kone, Marietta Golden K president elect; Kaye Cagle, Vice President of MUST Marketing; Rev. Ike Reighard, Senior Pastor Piedmont Church and MUST CEO; Rosie Teague, Vice President of Marietta Golden K and MUST ministries chairperson.

Submitted information and photos:

On April 2 members of the Kiwanis Club of Marietta Golden K toured the “state of the art” MUST Ministries HOPE HOUSE. Kiwanis members Jim Perry, Rosie Teague and John Kone joined alongside other visitors as they toured the $14 million Hope House.

Kaye Cagle, VP of Marketing & PR added, “The shelter was $16 million of the consolidated campus expense of $23 million. We are now remodeling the Marietta Client Services and Headquarters building next door to the shelter and some funds went toward paying off the Donation Center behind the shelter.”

MGK members are regular “food donation” contributors to MUST Ministries and on the 1st Thursday of each month, MGK members bring in their food donations. After the meeting, members take the food sacks out to the parking lot where they are loaded into the trunk of Rosie Teague (Vice President of MGK and MUST Ministries designated chairperson). Then, Rosie takes the food over to MUST Ministries.

The new shelter includes the following:

  • 43,556 square feet and two stories
  • 136 beds and 36 respite beds for inclement weather
  • A chapel, where clients can pray and have a moment of reflection
  • The dining hall features picture windows to help alleviate claustrophobia
  • A rooftop retreat for families features play areas, tables and seating
  • The playground area allows our youngest casualties of poverty to play during their time at the MUST Hope House
  • Clients with minor medical needs can be seen by medical professionals in one the three examination rooms
  • Those in need of clothing can “shop” at an onsite clothing boutique.
  • 10 Family Rooms with 5 beds and a private bath in each allows families to stay together.
  • The Children’s Afterschool Learning Center allows children to read, study, do homework and work with tutors.
  • Workforce development offers clients private rooms to make phone calls and work on resumes and job applications. A computer lab houses 10 work stations and a “jobs” professional.

Other amenities include:

  • Two classrooms
  • Staff Offices
  • Laundry rooms
  • Outreach showers and restrooms
  • Staff and volunteer breakrooms
  • Meeting/conference rooms
  • Staff workrooms

For the past 33 years, MUST has given thousands of families shelter in the Elizabeth Inn in Marietta.

But we wanted to do more, help more, and have a place for those families that was built with their needs at the forefront. Thanks to a successful capital campaign and an ambitious vision, the MUST team designed and built this new shelter to house those experiencing homelessness, while also being one of the first in the nation to do so. At the MUST Hope House, MUST is able to more than double the number of people we are able to shelter and serve. This shelter not only gives those in need a place to sleep – its amenities provide them with a sense of dignity and respect.

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Lawsuit to stop East Cobb Cityhood referendum ‘inevitable’

An attorney who’s filed lawsuits in Cobb Superior Court to stop May referendums to create cities in Vinings and Lost Mountain said it’s “inevitable” a similar lawsuit will be filed to prevent a referendum next month in East Cobb.

But Allen Lightcap, an Atlanta lawyer, told East Cobb News Thursday that he’s not involved in a potential East Cobb lawsuit.

East Cobb City Council district map
Proposed East Cobb city boundaries include three council districts. For a larger view click here.

“There will be a suit,” he said, “but I’m not part of it.”

Lightcap said he doesn’t know which parties may be approached about serving as plaintiffs in an East Cobb lawsuit, but anticipates that one will be filed soon.

That’s because it’s a little more than six weeks before May 24 referendums in Vinings, Lost Mountain and East Cobb.

Last week, Lightcap filed suit to stop the Vinings referendum (you can read it here) on behalf of Joseph Young, a Vinings resident who was a legislative director to former Gov. Roy Barnes.

On Wednesday, Lightcap’s suit (you can read it here) names Dora Locklear, the head of West Cobb Advocate, a group fighting Lost Mountain Cityhood, as a plaintiff.

Both suits were filed against the Cobb Board of Elections in order to stop the referendums due to what Lightcap calls unconstitutional language.

State law requires cities to provide three services, and under home rule provisions they can choose from a list of 14 services.

The Vinings, Lost Mountain and East Cobb bills passed by the legislature this session and signed into law by Gov. Brian Kemp specify in their proposed charters which services those cities would be providing.

Under the Georgia Constitution, that cannot be done via local legislation, according to the two lawsuits, which have been assigned to Cobb Superior Court Chief Judge Robert Leonard.

No hearings have been scheduled for either lawsuit, according to court records.

The Vinings bill includes a charter saying that city “shall” provide specific services: planning and zoning, code enforcement and parks and recreation.

The same language is included in the bill for Lost Mountain, which would provide planning and zoning, code enforcement and sanitation services.

The proposed East Cobb charter calls for planning and zoning, code enforcement, police, fire and parks and recreation services.

As we noted last week, here’s the provision of the East Cobb bill (you can read it here) that specifies which services the city “shall” provide, in lines 157-161:

“Except as provided in subsection (c) of this section, the city shall exercise the powers enumerated in subsection (a) of this section only for the purposes of planning and zoning, code adoption and enforcement, parks and recreation, police and law enforcement services, fire and emergency services, and those items directly related to the provision of such services and for the general administration of the city in providing such services.”

A fourth cityhood referendum in Cobb, in Mableton, is expected to take place in November, but that legislation doesn’t contain the same language about specific provision of services.

The Committee for East Cobb Cityhood blasted the Vinings lawsuit last week, saying it’s “a flagrant attempt to legislate from the bench.”

East Cobb News has left a message with the East Cobb Alliance, the main group opposing Cityhood, for comment on possible litigation.

Earlier this week the East Cobb Cityhood group sent a letter to Cobb officials demanding that they stop holding town hall meetings and making public comments about the cityhood referendums, saying their violating state law by advocating against them.

But a county spokesman said they will continue, including a town hall next week in Vinings, and that Cobb officials are providing objective information for citizens who’ve been asking.

Representatives from the East Cobb Cityhood Committee and the East Cobb Alliance will be debating the referendum twice in coming weeks, including a Tuesday forum sponsored by the East Cobb Business Association at Olde Towne Athletic Club.

That event is sold out for in-person attendance, as is a May 4 debate by the Rotary Club of East Cobb at Pope High School, but both will be either livestreamed or recorded.

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Comments sought for proposed Chattahoochee River NRA changes

Chattahoochee NRA proposed changes
The Gold Branch Unit trails of the Chattahoochee NRA in East Cobb. Photo: National Park Service

The National Park Service is soliciting comments from the public about major proposed changes to the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area.

The feedback period ends April 30 for the Chattahoochee NRA’s Comprehensive Trails Management Plan and Environmental Assessment. You can read through and download the 508-page report and related documents and submit comments online by clicking here.

The Chattahoochee NRA currently has 65 miles of trails and in 2021 attracted more than 3 million visitors. The proposed changes would cost around $10 million.

The proposal includes changes to the design and feel of the Gold Branch, Johnson Ferry and Cochratrails in East Cobb.

The “desired condition statement” for the Gold Branch Unit would be to provide “active and scenic opportunities for birding, hiking, and trail running, including longer duration hikes and runs that include both ridgetop and water-adjacent trail experiences.”

To accomplish that. the report states (page 33), the trail system would be redesigned “to take advantage of the significant topography and be more conducive to hiking and running.”

That would include constructing 1.8 miles of contour-aligned trails would be constructed and limiting trail access points while existing the parking lot at the main trailhead.

An ongoing Hyde Farm Trail and Environmental Assessment would help drive proposed changes to the Johnson Ferry North trail, including a potential new trail to connect to the 1830s farmhouse and community garden.

The Cochran Shoals trails would undergo a “full-scale redevelopment and environmental restoration to create a sustainable, manageable trail system with a high diversity of quality trail experiences.”

That would include overlaying two “largely separate” trail networks—one for pedestrians only and another that would allow cyclists.

During periods of heavy use in what’s been a very busy portion of the trail system, bidirectional traffic requirements, alternate day uses or separate trail segments might be implemented, according to the report.

The Sope Creek mileage area would be increased from its current 9.4 miles.

The report also contains information about environmental impact and several appendices with maps and other information and data about the Chattahoochee NRA.

If you prefer to submit written comments via standard mail, here’s the address:

National Park Service
Denver Service Center
Attn: CRNRA Trails Plan / Charles Lawson
12795 West Alameda Pkwy
Denver, CO 80228

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Cobb first responders, veterans treated to appreciation luncheon

Cobb first responders luncheon

Submitted photos and information:

On Wednesday, March 30th, The Janice Overbeck Real Estate Team held a BBQ lunch to honor some of Cobb County’s finest. Local police officers, K-9 units, firefighters, emergency medical technicians, and military veterans & personnel congregated on the private patio and enjoyed hamburgers, hot dogs and a variety of sides served by The Capital City Home Loans Food Truck. 

This appreciation lunch gave local citizens and businesses a chance to say “thank you” to some of the hardest-working men and women in the community. Local partners such as Arrow Exterminators and AmeriSpec showered our heroes with praise and some fun swag to show their gratitude. 

Cobb first responders luncheon

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Cobb school board to hold hearings on proposed FY 2023 budget

The Cobb Board of Education is beginning the process for adopting the fiscal year 2023 budget, and will start holding public hearings next week. Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

The first public hearing is scheduled for next Thursday, April 21, from 6:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. in the board room of the Cobb County School District central office (514 Glover St., Marietta).

That’s before the board’s monthly business meeting at 7 p.m. The hearings also will be available for public comment on the district’s allocation of American Rescue Plan (ARP) Act funding.

Members of the public wishing to speak can do so at that time, and will be able to sign up between 6-6:25 p.m. Speakers will have between 1-5 minutes to speak, with time to be determined by the board chairman.

A tentative budget request is expected to be made to the board at a work session Thursday that starts at 2 p.m.

Agendas for the board work session and business meeting will be posted at this link early next week. The meetings also will be live-streamed on the district’s BoxCast channel and on CobbEdTV, Comcast Channel 24.

The board also will have an executive session between the meetings.

A second hearing on the proposed budget and ARPA funding will take place May 19, from 6:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.

The Cobb school district’s current fiscal year 2022 budget is $1.5 billion.

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McCleskey MS invites public to ‘Dragonpalooza’ festival

The public is invited to attend McCleskey Middle School’s “Dragonpalooza” event next Thursday, April 21, from 5-9 p.m.McCleskey MS Dragonpalooza festival

The free festival is being organized by the McCleskey Foundation, along with students and staff at the school.

Events include a health fair, a student art showcase, student performances and the display of student STEAM projects.

A craft fair will include local and student vendors and a silent auction to benefit the McCleskey Foundation. 

Door prize drawings will take place and concessions will be available for pre-purchase and on the night of the event. 

McCleskey Middle School is located at 4080 Maybreeze Road in Northeast Cobb.

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Brumby ES unveils ‘The Aku Mural’ for school community use

Brumby ES unveils Aku Mural

Brumby Elementary School is the proud new owner of what may be the first Non-Fungible Token (NFT) work of art at a public school in the U.S.

“The Aku Mural” is the collaboration of Brumby, its foundation, the Cobb County School District and a local non-profit, PaintLove and artists to transform what had been a blank 1,100-square-foot retaining wall into an inspiration for students.

The Cobb school district said the mural is themed around the artwork of Micah Johnson and his NFT character Aku, inspired by the question of “Mom, can astronauts be Black?”

The muralist is Muhammad Yungui, and the artwork is designed to serve as a backdrop for school community events, including musical performances, cookouts and movie nights.

“The Aku movement seeks to serve as a source of inspiration for children to dream big and not allow limits to be set on their dreams,” the district release states. “While Aku inspires children to chase their dreams, he is also about building a community where members help and encourage the success of others.”

Brumby ES unveils Aku mural

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Marshalls not confirming move to Merchant’s Walk—for now

Marshall's Merchant Walk East Cobb

For several months, Edens Real Estate—which owns and operates the Merchants Walk Shopping Center in East Cobb—has listed a Marshalls retail store (1311 Johnson Ferry Road) in its directory as a soon-to-be-occupant of some of the former Stein Mart space.

While there’s no indication on the exterior of what’s coming, we checked recently with Edens to get some more information.

East Cobb News was told last month that Edens doesn’t comment about such matters regarding its tenants, and we were referred to a spokeswoman for The TJX Companies, Marshalls’ parent company.

She said in response to our request for information that “although we appreciate your inquiry, Marshalls has not announced any store changes in Marietta at this point.”

These aren’t uncommon replies from corporate retail companies, who like to announce openings and relocations on their own time.

But we continue to get queries from readers, and have contacted TJX again and will post more when we get an update about when the store may be opening.

Marshalls has been located in East Cobb as an anchor the East Lake Shopping Center for many years, but Brixmor, the landlord of that property, has the Marshalls space listed on its directory as being available.

In January, ToNeTo, an Atlanta blog focusing on retail and restaurant news, cited an unnamed Marshalls source saying that the store would be moving from East Lake to Merchant’s Walk and taking up most, but not all, of the Stein Mart space.

There’s not much space available at Merchant’s Walk. Roadrunner Sports has moved from a space adjacent to the Stein Mart space to Suite 310, and the Verizon Store has moved to Suite 90, where Nuvo Salon was located.

Next Door, Suite 70, the old Calico Home space, is available.

Suite 470, the free-standing building near Whole Foods were Verizon was previously located, will become a One Medical location.

The former 18/8 men’s clothing store (Suite 120) also is vacant. Suite 440, which had housed a Bar Method fitness studio, will be occupied by a Perspire Sauna Studio.

Marshalls Merchant's Walk East Cobb
Marshalls would occupy most of the former Stein Mart location, according to a Merchant’s Walk map posted by Edens Real Estate, the retail center owner.

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East Cobb Food Scores: Righteous ‘Que; Williamson Bros.; more

Righteous Que, East Cobb food scores

The following Cobb food scores for the week of April 11 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Arby’s
4367 Roswell Road
April 11, 2022 Score: 99, Grade: A

Cafe Hot Wing
1153 Roswell Road
April 11, 2022 Score: 83, Grade: B

Powers Ferry Elementary School
403 Powers Ferry Road
April 11, 2022 Score: 100, Grade: A

Righteous ‘Que
1050 E. Piedmont Road, Suites 136-140
April 11, 2022 Score: 92, Grade: A

Rise Coffee & Tea
4651 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 108
April 14, 2022 Score: 90, Grade: A

Sabores de Mexico
1951 Canton Road, Suite 330
April 12, 2022 Score: 95, Grade: A

Tandoor Restaurant
279 Powers Ferry Road, Suite F
April 12, 2022 Score: 94, Grade: A

Williamson Bros. Bar-B-Q
1425 Roswell Road
April 12, 2022 Score: 96, Grade: A

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East Cobb Cityhood debates sold out for in-person attendance

East Cobb city forum
As it did in 2019, the East Cobb Business Association is sponsoring a Cityhood debate. (ECN photo by Wendy Parker)

Two debates on the upcoming East Cobb Cityhood referendum have sold out for citizens wishing to attend in person.

The East Cobb Business Association has scheduled a debate for next Tuesday, April 19, at the Olde Towne Athletic Club (4950 Olde Towne Parkway) from 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.

On May 4, the Rotary Club of East Cobb is organizing a debate at Pope High School (3001 Hembree Road) from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.

The ECBA is not livestreaming its debate but said a recorded video of the event will be posted on its website.

Blaine Hess of the Rotary Club told East Cobb News that livestreaming plans are in the works but “I am not 100% sure what the logistics are currently” and those will be announced when they’re finalized.

Those are the only debates that have been agreed to by the Committee for East Cobb Cityhood, which is spearheading the Cityhood referendum, and the East Cobb Alliance, which opposes Cityhood.

The Rotary Club sent out a message Tuesday afternoon saying it had reached its capacity limit of 500 people at the Pope auditorium and asked those who had signed up that “if your plans change and you can not make it to the event, please cancel your order so somebody else can come!”

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