East Cobb Food Scores: Chili’s; Panera Bread; Rio Steakhouse; more

East Cobb food scores; Chili's Bar and Grill

The following food scores for the week of April 17 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Brazil Pizza
279 Powers Ferry Road, Suite B
April 19, 2023 Score: 96, Grade: A

Chili’s Bar & Grill
4111 Roswell Road
April 19, 2023 Score: 90, Grade: A

Faith Lutheran School
2111 Lower Roswell Road
April 17, 2023 Score: 91, Grade: A

Lassiter High School
2601 Shallowford Road
April 20, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

Mountain View Elementary School
3151 Sandy Plains Road
April 20, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

Panera Bread
4475 Roswell Road, Suite 1350
April 20, 2023 Score: 87, Grade: B

Rio Steakhouse and Bakery
1275 Powers Ferry Road, Suite 230
April 17, 2023 Score: 83, Grade: B

Sedalia Park Elementary School
2230 Lower Roswell Road
April 17, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

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East Cobb women lead Salvation Army Kettle Krush fundraiser

East Cobb Kettle Krush volunteers
(L to R) Mary Allphin, Dawn Menear, Tonya Cheek and Cindy Theiler pose with The Salvation Army’s Captain Kettle.

 Submitted information:

The Salvation Army’s Women’s Auxiliary’s Kettle Krush 5K run/walk annual fundraiser is going strong – thanks in part to four East Cobb women who are leading its efforts for the sixth consecutive year. The organization – that includes many women from East Cobb – is nearing the $500,000 mark in net proceeds over its five-year history.

The women – Dawn Menear, fundraiser chair; Tonya Cheek, SAWA president; Mary Allphin, SAWA vice president; and Cindy Theiler, communications chair – are striving through this year’s event on May 20 in Marietta Square to exceed that total. The event’s purpose is to help The Salvation Army “krush” poverty, homelessness and human trafficking while supporting youth enrichment and veterans in metro Atlanta.  Funds raised support Salvation Army programs, services, and initiatives in the metro area, including in Cobb County.

“We strive annually to increase our participation and dollars raised as well as awareness of all The Salvation Army in metro Atlanta does to support our community,” said Menear. “We hope to exceed last year’s record of 500+ participants.”

“Since taking over this event six years ago from The Salvation Army, SAWA has been able to provide The Army with financial support for many initiatives, programs, and services, including replacing bunk beds at The Salvation Army’s Red Shield Shelter to help homeless veterans, providing funding to fight hunger through the Annual Can-a-thon, helping the Boys and Girls Clubs with youth enrichment through summer day camp, and supporting the capital campaign to renovate Red Shield Shelter,” said Theiler, who chaired the first race for SAWA. “When Covid hit, we knew The Salvation Army needed funds more than ever so we did a Race in Place live broadcast on Facebook for two years to continue our annual fundraising. The community really supported our efforts those years.”

For more information about the event, including registration, click here.

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$1M pedestrian bridge approved for Walton HS sports complex

Walton HS sports complex pedestrian path

Walton High School is visible in the background from a construction site for a new field for the school’s baseball teams.

Tennis courts at the new Walton athletics facility at Pine Road and Providence Road have been completed and are in use.

Connecting the latest addition to the Walton campus to the main facilities on Bill Murdock Road is the final piece of a long process of overhauling most of the school’s facilities.

It’s also proven to be challenging.

The baseball field was reconfigured in the design stage after nearby residents were concerned about noise and lighting issues.

Walton HS sports complex pedestrian bridge
Cobb DOT won’t be realigning the Pine-Bill Murdock intersection.

Safety and traffic considerations also have factored in. Cobb DOT was planning to realign and straighten out the intersection of Bill Murdock and Pine Road, but that project has fallen through.

The school district also tried to get Cobb DOT to increase pedestrian crosswalks, but Cobb County School District Superintendent Chris Ragsdale said that was a “no go.”

Last week, the Cobb Board of Education approved spending $1 million for a dedicated raised pedestrian bridge, a project included in the Cobb Education SPLOST V.

The construction contract was awarded to Lewallen Construction Co. on Bells Ferry Road, and details of the project are still being worked out. The expected timeline is to begin construction this summer and finish in December.

When Cobb DOT announced the Pine-Bill Murdock plans last spring there wasn’t a set price tag.

“Originally, the design was going to have students, teachers, parents, everybody who parks at the school walk all the way up Bill Murdock, cross it, then walk all the way up Pine Road,” Ragsdale said during a board work session last Thursday.

“We know high school kids. They’re not going to make that journey on the sidewalk. We had to provide a safer path that we knew kids would take.”

Cobb government spokesman Ross Cavitt told East Cobb News that Cobb DOT and the school district “agreed last year on a more cost-effective option over a realignment.”

The path will include a sidewalk along Bill Murdock, with the bridge traversing a creek located in a flood plain area near the intersection.

School board member David Banks, whose post includes the Walton attendance zone, said the Pine-Bill Murdock intersection is dangerous.

“That curve is a very high-level safety concern,” he said. “You’ve got to find some way of slowing people down where they can see around the curve because those students, they’re not always going to look.

“The people who live around Walton, they know the danger. We need to find ways to to minimize this,” he said, suggesting the school district consider a crosswalk in the future.

Walton HS sports complex pedestrian bridge

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Lassiter HS senior accepts appointment to U.S. Naval Academy

Luke O’Malley, a senior at Lassiter High School, has accepted an appointment to enroll in the the U.S. Naval Academy.Luke O'Malley, Lassiter student accepts U.S. Naval Academy appointment

He also had received an appointment to to the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, but has opted for the USNA and will be joining the Class of 2027 for I-Day in Annapolis, Md., at the end of June.

His parents, Brian and Shelley O’Malley, are Naval Academy graduates and retired Navy veterans. She was a Navy aviator and Delta Air Lines pilot. His older sister, Lauren O’Malley, was a swimmer at Lassiter and also attended the Naval Academy.

A football player at Lassiter, Luke O’Malley was a 2021 finalist for the Atlanta Falcons Man of the Year, which is given to prep athletes who “make a positive difference on the field, in the classroom and in the community.”

His career ambitions include being a Navy or Marine pilot after graduating from college.

The service academies have a 5-year service commitment after graduation.

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Walton HS Winter Guard reaches finals of world championships

Walton Winter Guard reaches world championships finals

The Walton High School Winter Guard team recently competed in the finals of the Winter Guard International World Championships in Dayton, Ohio.

Thanks to Christopher Johns, Walton’s associate band director, for the information and the photos.

The WGI is a competition for color guard teams that in Walton’s category included more than 140 teams. The Walton students were among 20 groups to reach the finals in the Scholastic A Class, and the only team from Georgia to get that far, finishing in 13th place.

The Walton Winter Guard, which is a part of the Walton Band program, finished the season prior to that undefeated and was named the Scholastic National A Champions in the Southern Association for Performing Arts competition circuit.

The Walton Winter Guard is led by coach Scott Beck and staff members Jordan Casey, Jenn Cunningham, Stephanie Stewart, Adam Sage, and Michael James.

Team members include Laylah Gaines, Abigail Martin-Hoster, Sarah Musau, Emily Balado, Jordyn Sewell, Hailey Klim, Rowen Black, Victoria Markey, Katherine Parfenov, Olivia Reilly, Quinn Reilly, Madeleine Hodges, Misora Furuya, Olivia Nice and Lejla Hadzic.

Walton Winter Guard reaches world championships finals

Walton Winter Guard reaches world championships finals

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Cobb commissioners approve King’s Hawaiian site plan request

King's Hawaiian rezoning request approved
Final revisions to King’s Hawaiian plans include turning a mural inward, permitting right-in, right-out traffic access only and maintaining a 40-foot buffer (at right) adjacent to Harrison Park.

Despite some community opposition, the Cobb Board of Commissioners on Tuesday approved a site plan at a busy Northeast Cobb intersection for a King’s Hawaiian fast casual restaurant.

By a 4-1 vote, and with some final revisions, commissioners granted the request by Stein Investment Group to construct a 3.200-square foot restaurant with parking and a double drive-thru at the northwest intersection of Shallowford Road and Gordy Parkway.

The applicant received rezoning in 2021 for a self-storage facility on a portion of land that was once the GTC Cobb Park 12 movie theater, and asked to develop the remaining 1.14 acres for a restaurant.

The case was first proposed last summer and has been delayed and continued several times (you can read the case file here).

The restaurant would be the first King’s Hawaiian locations in metro Atlanta, and would include an outdoor patio area.

King’s Hawaiian was founded in Hilo, Hawaii, in 1950, as a bakery known for its signature sweet rolls.

Now based near Los Angeles, the company opened a major bakery and warehouse near Gainesville in 2011, where most of its products are made.

They are sold at grocery stores and through other restaurant franchises, including Arby’s.

There are two King’s Hawaiian locations near company headquarters in Torrance, Calif. (here’s a menu for the original restaurant) and the parent company also is opening another restaurant concept, Hello Hilo, near Gainesville.

As in a rejected rezoning case for the same land in 2017 for a proposed Lidl grocery store, nearby residents said the restaurant would cause too many traffic and safety issues.

The King’s Hawaiian would be open from early morning hours—contributing to the commuting and Lassiter High School traffic rush—until 10 p.m. at night.

A double drive-thru, said Highland Park resident Denise Fissel, would increase the chances of people in vehicles “rushing to get in and out” and said the restaurant proposal is “too intense” for the property.

Jason Linscott of Stein Investment Group said the traffic plan for the restaurant reduces traffic in the area by 40 percent from the movie theater, but didn’t provide specifics.

Fissel countered that “those are your numbers, not ours,” and said the project “is not like a theater.” She noted that the other fast-food restaurants in the area—Wendy’s, Taco Bell and Chick-Fil-A—are all accessed within shopping centers, and not directly on major roads.

The East Cobb Civic Association also opposed the application, especially a proposed reduction of a 40-foot barrier between the back of the property and the adjacent Harrison Park tennis courts.

Stein Investment Group wanted to cut into that buffer by 36 feet for parking and the drive-thru lanes.

But District 3 commissioner JoAnn Birrell, in making a motion to approve the application, scotched any reduction of that buffer, saying “it would set a precedent. It was put in place for a reason” when the property was rezoned in the 1980s.

She acknowledged that a restaurant that size on such a small amount of land “is rather intense” but her motion included several other stipulations, including last-minute letters and recommendations from parties on both sides of the matter.

Garvis Sams, the attorney for Stein Investment Group, said that maintaining the 40-foot buffer “impinges on the development. It will cause a considerable re-engineering.”

Birrell’s other conditions include maintaining a treeline along Gordy Parkway, between the property and the entrance to Harrison Park, “in perpetuity,” allowing for dead or damaged trees to be removed.

Other conditions include recommendations from the Gordy Architectural Control Committee and the formation of a landscaping committee, and Birrell would sign off on the final site plan as well as landscaping plans.

Construction hours for the restaurant would be limited from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday-Friday and from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday with no Sunday work permitted.

The restaurant hours would be from 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. seven days a week.

The only voted against was from commissioner Monique Sheffield of South Cobb, who said she thought the project was too intense.

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East Cobb residential real estate sales, March 27-31, 2023

Alpine Lakes, East Cobb real estate listings
Alpine Lakes

The following deeds for residential East Cobb real estate sales were filed March 27-31, 2023 with the Cobb Superior Court Clerk’s Office Real Estate Department.

The addresses include ZIP Codes; subdivision names and high school attendance zones are in parenthesis:

March 27

5097 Ravenwood Drive, 30066 (Ravenwood, Kell): Barbara Kaminsky to GCO Capital LLC; $290,995;

4942 Keota Run, 30075 (Indian Creek, Lassiter): Donald Millen to John and Elizabeth Wicker; $367,500

4592 North Landing Drive, 30066 (North Landing, Kell): David Weise to Daniel Becerra and Alicia Martinez; $375,000

4075 Dunnington Drive, 30062 (Woodbine, Lassiter): Open House Atlanta Realty & Investments to Crane Asset Holdings Co. Ltd.; $530,000

3488 Sabrina Court, 30066 (Swanson Heights, Lassiter): Open House Atlanta Realty & Investments to Umetsu Kyogo Co. Ltd.; $465,000

175 Kathryn Drive, 30066 (Brookhaven, Sprayberry): Open House Atlanta Realty & Investments to Ikawa Yukihiro; $427,000

2866 Interlaken Drive, 30062 (Alpine Lakes, Pope): Open House Atlanta Realty & Investments to Grand Japan Design Co.; $735,000

281 Lake Shore Drive, 30067 (Kings Cove, Walton): Courtney Crooks to Rajib and Arpita Auddy; $630,000

March 28

4050 Keheley Glen Drive, 30066 (Keheley Bend, Kell): KYK LLC to Helena Oliveira and Wanessa Aruda; $380,000

2604 Middle Coray Circle, 30066 (The Oaks at Mill Pond; Lassiter): Ahmet and Emine Tomha to Ralph and Jacqueline Puerta; $1.145 million

3558 Chestatee Drive, 30066 (Shallowford Heights, Lassiter): Nicholas Betker to Matthew Channell and Katherine Mallett; $505,500

2942 Timberline Drive. 30062 (Mountain View, Sprayberry): Jordan Davila to Clayton Demirtas; $365,000

March 29

330 Rockmoor Trail, 30066 (Piedmont Hills, Sprayberry): Gerald Sanders to Congli Qiu and Haimang Daniel Zhu; $463,000

2920 Dara Drive, 30066 (Northeast Colony, Sprayberry): Nancy Arn to Sydney Guthrie and Shawn Melsopp; $427,500

2644 Jewell Drive, 30066 (Sprayberry): Alex Chuong to Robin Cofresi; $385,000

March 30

1415 Hialeah Court, 30062 (Roswell Downs, Walton): Hitachi Noen Co. Ltd. to Victor Nguyen; $470,000

591 Ridgewater Drive, 30068 (Indian Hills, Walton): Capital Design Homes LLC to Ikenna and Alicia Okpareke; $1.79 million

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Cobb recycling roundtable to be held at Sewell Mill Library

Cobb recycling roundtable
For a larger version click here.

Recycling and trash businesses and a local green non-profit will hold a Recycling Roundtable on Friday, April 21, at the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center (2051 Lower Roswell Road).

The event takes place from 10:30-11:30 a.m. and you can register by clicking here.

April 22 is Earth Day, and a panel of experts will be on hand from the Cobb County Sustainability Department, WestRock, Waste Management, Trash Taxi and B Green to discuss recycling matters.

Among the questions they will address:

  • Are you confused about what can and cannot be recycled?
  • Are you concerned about where your recycling goes after it is picked up from your curb?
  • Do you question the benefits of recycling?

The sponsors of the event are Cheers to Recycling, an East Cobb-based curbside glass recycling service, and
My Green Earth, Inc., a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit devoted to improving environmental sustainability in Cobb County.

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Cobb first responders, veterans treated to appreciation lunch

Cobb first responders appreciation luncheon

Submitted information and photos:

On Wednesday, April 12th from 11:00 AM – 2:00 PM, The Janice Overbeck Real Estate Team held an appreciation barbecue lunch to honor local police, firemen, EMT’s and military. Churchill Mortgage served bbq with a variety of sides and drinks sponsored by Arrow Exterminators. Attendees were welcome to use the patio to enjoy their meal, or they could take it on the road. Additional sponsors for the event included: First American Home Warranty, and Chick-fil-A East Lake. Local Cobb County and surrounding area first responders, police, fire, detective units, and military were all invited. For more information on community events at the Janice Overbeck Team office, visit: www.JaniceOverbeck.com.

Cobb first responders appreciation luncheon

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JOSH residential developer seeks delay to change stipulation

East Cobb Church rezoning held
A rendering of single-family homes shows a tight distance between residences, in some instances as little as seven feet.

As we noted last week, plans for the residential portion of land at the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford intersection that was part of the East Cobb Church rezoning approval are still in the works.

Questions over residential density, traffic and stormwater were the primary concerns of those who opposed the final site plan and stipulations that Cobb commissioners approved in October 2021.

Among the stipulations the developer, Ashwood Atlanta, agreed to was to limit impervious surfaces to 40 percent.

The Atlanta-based builder is proposing 77 detached homes, after dropping the 44 townhomes and 51 detached homes that were in the approved site plan.

The owner of the 19 acres of land that is zoned RA-5, Johnson Ferry Road LLC, recently filed a request to increase the impervious surface maximum to 45 percent, with the additional runoff “designed into the retention area,” according to an agenda item for a Tuesday zoning hearing of the Cobb Board of Commissioners.

The proposed change, the agenda item states, is “would help to accommodate development consistent with the area,” but there was no further elaboration.

But Kevin Moore, the developer’s attorney, asked the Cobb Zoning Office this week for a continuance to May to finalize the plans.

The homes will be built on land west of Johnson Ferry Road, north and south of Waterfront Drive and east of Waterfront Circle.

The Cobb stormwater office said it has no objection to the request, but “storm water quality design for the development will need to include the additional impervious area.”

Citizens serving on a plan review committee said they wanted the final plan to get as close to the 40 percent stipulation as possible.

Ashwood Atlanta site plan 3.14.23
The latest site plan includes 77 single-family detached homes on 19 acres. For a larger view click here.

While that case won’t be heard Tuesday, commissioners will consider long-delayed plans for a King’s Hawaiian restaurant in Northeast Cobb.

They voted last month for a continuance after some residents expressed traffic and safety concerns.

The restaurant would be located on the northwest intersection of Shallowford Road and Gordy Parkway, next to a self-storage facility where a movie cinema once stood.

Cobb DOT is recommending right-in and right-out access on Gordy Parkway (agenda item here).

A couple other East Cobb cases we’ve written about here before and that are continuing to be delayed are for a residential development on Post Oak Tritt Road and an expanded Starbucks at Paper Mill Village (see links below). Those also have been continued to May.

The zoning hearing hearing begins at 9 a.m. Tuesday in the second floor board room of the Cobb government building (100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta), you can view the full agenda and individual case files by clicking here.

You also can watch on the county’s website and YouTube channels and on Cobb TV 23 on Comcast Cable.

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Cobb school board hires law firm in redistricting lawsuit

The Cobb Board of Education on Thursday approved the hiring of a separate law firm for a federal lawsuit that challenges the reapportionment of Cobb Board of Education seats last year.

Cobb school board redistricting town hall
Cobb Board of Education maps that went into effect on Jan. 1 took Post 6 out of East Cobb. For a larger view click here.

After an executive session, the board voted to hire Galleria-based Freeman Mathis and Gary LLP, which filed a motion in late March seeking judgment, and earlier this month subpoenaed plaintiffs seeking documentation and records.

A June 22 hearing has been scheduled in the courtroom of U.S. District Court Judge Eleanor Ross in Atlanta over the district’s motion for judgment.

The district and board have been represented on most legal matters since 2022 by the Atlanta firm of Parker Poe Adams.

The board didn’t discuss the matter during Thursday’s meeting, including the cost for the legal services by Freeman Mathis and Gary. East Cobb News has left a message with the Cobb school district seeking more information.

The Cobb Board of Elections and Registration was sued last summer by several Cobb parents, who are being represented by the Southern Poverty Law Center, the ACLU Foundation of Georgia and other advocacy groups.

They claim that the Georgia legislature adopted Cobb school board maps that violated the U.S. Voting Rights Act and used race as a guiding factor in redrawing the seven posts.

Those actions included Post 2 and 3 in South Cobb and Post 6, which had covered most of the Walton and Wheeler high school attendance zones, and which was moved out of East Cobb, and mostly into the Cumberland-Smyrna-Vinings area.

Until last November’s elections, those three posts were represented by black school board members; the board’s current African-American members represent Post 3 and Post 6.

The plaintiffs filed an amended complaint last August (you can read it here) that alleges that the four-member Republican school board majority undertook a secretive process to have a map drawn that was then introduced by State Rep. Ginny Ehrhart, a West Cobb Republican.

The managing director of Freeman Mathis Decisions, the government relations arm of the law firm representing the Cobb school district, is her husband and predecessor, former State Rep. Earl Ehrhart.

He previously held a similar position at Taylor English Decisions, a lobbying component of Taylor English Duma LLP, a law firm that drew the Cobb school board maps recommended by the board Republicans.

The Ehrhart-sponsored maps were adopted by the legislature last year.

The Democratic-majority Cobb legislative delegation backed another map that would have made few changes to those lines, but it was never voted on in the legislature.

That latter event—ignoring local courtesies—is also at the heart of a separate redistricting lawsuit filed against the Cobb Board of Commissioners, whose Democratic majority voted last October to invoke home rule over reapportionament that drew District 2 commissioner Jerica Richardson out of her seat.

“Ultimately, the Board and General Assembly enacted a redistricting plan that whitewashed the northern, eastern, and western districts by packing Black and Latinx voters into the Challenged Districts, as a last-ditch effort to limit the power of their emerging political coalition,” the Cobb school plaintiffs’ amended lawsuit states.

The Cobb school district responded in March, accusing the plaintiffs of making “scurrilous accusations” about board members in what was a “purely political dispute” based on partisan differences.

They included school board actions over the district’s COVID-19 response as well as racial and equity issues—mentioning the banning of teaching critical race theory and the board majority’s refusal to consider renaming Wheeler High School, named after a Confederate Civil War general.

The plaintiffs represent organizations “that in reality promote partisan Democratic causes, and individuals they recruited who are also partisan Democrats, are upset that the effect of the redistricting process did not align with their preferred partisan outcome: a Democratic takeover of the Board of Education,” the Cobb school district motion states.

(You can read the school district’s motion here.)

The school district motion said that the Cobb school board, which isn’t named as a defendant in the lawsuit, can’t be held liable for a redistricting map approved by the state legislature.

The complaint against the new maps, the school district motion said, involves “run of the mill political disputes over which Republicans and Democrats clash every day.”

The plaintiffs’ attorneys were given until April 28 to produce documents and prepare for the June hearing for the Cobb school district’s motion.

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Longtime Mountain View Elementary School principal to retire

Mountain View Elementary School, ECCC PTA
Mountain View Elementary School teacher of the year Kristin Shildneck, principal Renee Garris and classified employee of the year Barbara Glynn at a 2018 luncheon.

Renee Garris, who has been the principal at Mountain View Elementary School at East Cobb since 2010 and has been an educator for more than three decades, will retire at the end of the 2022-23 school year.

The Cobb County School District announced her retirement, effective June 30, at a Cobb Board of Education meeting Thursday night following an executive session.

Garris also was an administrator for six years and a classroom teacher for 14 years in the Cobb County School District.

She helped prepare the school community for the relocation of the campus from its longtime venue on Sandy Plains Road near Shallowford Road in 2017 to a new site on Sandy Plains, at the intersection of Davis Road.

Garris is a graduate of Cobb County schools and has been on the board of directors for the Northeast Cobb Business Association, which has a formal partnership with public schools in the area.

Also on Thursday, new principals were announced to fill vacancies for the 2023-24 year.

Ashley Beasley, who has been the director of the Cobb school district’s Elementary Virtual Program, was appointed principal at Davis Elementary School.

She has 18 years of education experience, including nine years as an assistant principal. She attended Cobb schools, graduating from McEachern High School, and earned bachelor’s, master’s, educational leadership and educational doctorate degrees from Kennesaw State University.

Beasley is succeeding Kristin Erbskorn, who is retiring.

The new principal at Shallowford Falls Elementary School is Lindsey McGovern, who has been the assistant principal there since 2019.

She has 20 years of experience in the Cobb school district and has taught and was an assistant principal at Brumby Elementary School.

McGovern, who succeeds retiring principal Donna Long, earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of Georgia and obtained graduate degrees from Kennesaw State.

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Sprayberry Crossing redevelopment to begin a year after demolition

Sprayberry Crossing redevelopment to begin

It was a year ago this week that demolition began on the Sprayberry Crossing Shopping Center, and the site at Sandy Plains Road has sat empty since then, surrounded by fencing.

Land disturbance permits are expected to be issued soon, with the first phase of construction commencing by the summer on a 132-unit apartment building for seniors aged 55 and older.

Atlantic Residential’s redevelopment plans also have been evolving over the last year for a project it is calling East Cobb Walk.

When the Cobb Board of Commissioners approved rezoning in 2021, the plans called for more than 30,000 square feet of retail. The Lidl grocery store chain backed out beforehand, due to traffic access problems.

A more recent but incomplete site plan showed that retail has been cut down to 14,500 square feet: a 13,000-square-foot building in front of the Mayes Cemetery, and 1,5000 square feet of space on the ground floor of the senior apartment building.

 

East Cobb Walk bw site plan
Atlantic Residential said it intends to finalize a site plan with the nearly 30,000 square feet included in a rezoning stipulation letter.

Tim Carini, one of the leaders of the group that opposed any apartments on the site, even for seniors, thought the name change ironic.

“There is nowhere to walk within this development,” he said.

But when he saw the lesser space for retail, he said that “the County needs to hold this developer to that number” that is included in a stipulation letter that was part of the rezoning approval.

“Without this retail for the community, all we are getting is apartments and townhomes that are squeezed as tight as possible into this property,” said Carini, organizer of a Facebook group called Residents Against Apartments At Sprayberry Crossing.

Shane Spink, who led citizen support of the redevelopment and has been part of a post-rezoning site plan review, told East Cobb News he and other supporters also were taken aback by what appeared to be less than half of the proposed retail space.

He said he was later told by Richard Aaronson, the CEO of Atlantic Residential, that the developer intends to “maximize the commercial buildout for commercial use as provided in the zoning.”

Sprayberry Crossing site

He said the site plan reflecting only 14,500 square feet of retail space was an engineering rendering produced without the developer’s input that was meant to be a “placeholder” for a final plan.

“We apologize for any confusion and will circulate an updated site plan that identifies maximum commercial density provided by the zoning,” Aaronson told Spink. “We do intend to start marketing the commercial parcel once site work is initiated in the coming weeks.”

East Cobb News has contacted Aaronson and Atlantic Residential for more information.

The senior apartment building will be the first phase of construction for East Cobb Walk, tentatively slated to get underway in August with completion by September 2024. Those units are one and two bedrooms and there will be amenities in the builidng.

The 102 townhomes will be the second phase, scheduled to start in January 2024. That developer was to have been Pulte Homes, but that phase will be built instead by Toll Brothers. They will be around 2,000 square feet each (renderings below).

East Cobb Walk townhome rendering

Proposed Cobb schools FY ’24 budget would cut millage rate

Cobb schools to hire armed guards
Cobb schools superintendent Chris Ragsdale

The Cobb County School District presented on Thursday a pr0posed fiscal year 2024 budget of $1.448 billion that includes a pay raise for employees and a property tax cut for citizens.

Superintendent Chris Ragsdale said at a Cobb Board of Education work session Thursday afternoon he is proposing a reduction in the property tax rate from 18.9 mills to 18.7 mills, which amounts to a cut of $7.6 million in recurring revenue each year.

If approved by the school board, the millage rate reduction would be the first change in the general fund property tax rate for the Cobb school district in nearly 15 years.

Ragsdale’s pay raise would be a minimum of 7.5 percent for full-time employees, with a range of up to 12.1 percent.

He also is proposing to hire 11 more officers for the Cobb school district’s police department, which currently has 70 officers.

The current fiscal year 2023 budget of $1.3 billion includes what Ragsdale called “historic” raises (between 8.5 and 13.10 percent for non-temporary employees).

The board voting Thursday night for tentative adoption of the budget.

That allows the district to advertise the proposal for another hearing on May 18, during which formal adoption is scheduled. The fiscal year 2024 budget goes into effect July 1.

Details of the budget proposal, which weren’t released in advance of the board presentation, have been posted at this link.

The school millage rate produces the largest portion of a Cobb homeowners’ property tax bill, and those age 62 and over (except in the city of Marietta) can apply for a senior exemption from paying school taxes.

Chief financial officer Brad Johnson, in his presentation to the school board at the work session, said there is an estimated 13 percent growth in the Cobb tax digest.

He said the budget also would be funded with $87 million in budget reserves, an amount he said is “more than usual . . . but we think is sustainable.” The district has an unassigned fund balance of $198 million, which Johnson said amounts to 40 days of operating expense.

Ragsdale said in response to a question from board member Tre’ Hutchins about the fund balance that because of the estimated expansion of the digest, “we are comfortable” cutting the millage rate and using that much of reserve funding.

He said the additional police officers were requested in response to the deadly shootings of six people at a Christian school in Nashville earlier this month.

“Armed officers onsite help” to prevent deadly shooters, he said, adding that “it’s an absolute preventative measure.”

He has come under some criticism for his plan last year to hire armed but not certified armed guards on school campuses. Some citizens protested the vote last summer when the school board approved the plan.

Ragsdale said Thursday the new officers to be hired will be uniformed officers certified by the Georgia Peace Officers Training Council.

This story will be updated.

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Marietta mayor vetoes Powers Ferry Road apartment project

Apartments proposed Powers Ferry Kroger site

Despite pleas from the developer and nearby community members Wednesday night, Marietta Mayor Steve “Thunder” Tumlin vetoed a proposed apartment complex at Powers Ferry Road and Delk Road.

The Marietta City Council voted 5-2 to approve the 322-unit on the site of a Kroger store that will be moving later this year.

There was no opposition from the public, and the Marietta Planning Commission had voted 7-0 to recommend approval in March.

But Tumlin, who has been vocal recently about too many apartments being proposed in the city, as well as their density, immediately vetoed the approval.

City council member Joseph Goldstein, whose Ward 7 includes the site, then made a motion to override the veto, which needed five votes.

But his colleague Grif Chalfant, who voted for the rezoning, then joined council members Johnny Walker and Andy Walker, who had voted against the application, in voting against overriding the veto.

Developer WC Acquisitions LLC of Atlanta had proposed the five-story luxury apartment building, a six-story parking deck and 6,000 square feet of retail space on 4.7 acres.

Kroger is vacating a 42-year-old building later this year to occupy a new superstore up the street at the MarketPlace Terrell Mill.

William Casaday, the applicant, told council members Wednesday that the site has no future for commercial and retail use. He sought a change from a commercial zoning category to mixed use, and noted a glut of supermarkets and low demand for retail.

He said the mixed-use development would generate a third of the traffic of the Kroger, and that it would luxury units with numerous amenities, with rents starting at $1,800 a month.

Patti Rice, of the Powers Ferry Corridor Alliance, urged approval, saying the development “has the potential to set a very high bar and to positively influence the quality of future development” in the area.

She said she feared that if the development wasn’t approved, the site “could be a blight and detrimental to the surrounding community.”

Don Barth of the nearby Cloverdale Heights neighborhood in the city of Marietta, said he shops often in the Powers Ferry corridor and the apartment building would be an asset.

“A lot of professionals are living in apartments for a reason,” he said. “It’s not something bad. What would be bad would be to let this property go to blight.

“We want to attract professionals to this area. This is the gateway going into East Cobb.”

But the council didn’t discuss the case before the vote.

Later in the meeting, the council approved a six-month moratorium on apartment building, with only Goldstein opposed.

The freeze does not apply to the Powers Ferry application and others that have been filed.

That includes a proposed mixed-use development including apartments at the former site of Harry’s Farmers Market at Roswell Road and Powers Ferry Road.

Apartments also have been proposed near the Marietta Square on land that doesn’t need rezoning and that is opposed by Tumlin, but must be approved by a city historic review board.

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Cobb school board candidate: ‘You have to be passionate to do this’

Cobb school board candidate John Cristadoro

Ever since he was a teenager, John Cristadoro has tried his hand at any number of activities and jobs.

He’s been a veterinarian technician, clerked in a law firm, took acting classes (appearing briefly on the soap opera “General Hospital”), worked as a personal trainer and began his current career in media sales, initially booking advertising sponsorships on Los Angeles Dodgers’ radio games when he lived in California.

He moved to Atlanta more than a decade ago for a radio sales position, then started his own media agency, Alliance Activation, with present clients including Heineken and Baccardi.

Another client, prominent Cobb business leader John Loud, urged Cristadoro to think about doing something entirely different: running for political office.

John Loud, Cobb Chamber of Commerce
John Loud

Specifically, he was being asked to consider a campaign for the Cobb Board of Education.

The 45-year-old Cristadoro moved to East Cobb a dozen years ago, where he and his wife are raising their two children, a son at Dodgen Middle School and a daughter at Walton High School.

Between entrepreneurial life (he’s also involved with two other small businesses) and being a coach for Walton youth sports teams, Cristadoro admits he has a rather full plate.

The son of an Army veteran who graduated from Gilmer County High School in north Georgia, Cristadoro earned a political science degree from the University of New Orleans.

He also served in the U.S. Air Force before settling into a business career.

In a recent interview with East Cobb News, the 45-year-old Louisiana native was also bothered by what he was seeing on the Cobb school board in recent years.

Partisan bickering on racial and equity issues and the Cobb County School District’s response to COVID-19 prompted a special accreditation review that was later withdrawn last spring.

Republicans hold a 4-3 majority on the board, and three of the GOP members, including Post 5 incumbent David Banks, are up for re-election in 2024.

Banks, who’s been a controversial figure, told East Cobb News last week that he’s undecided about seeking a fifth term. Laura Judge, a Democratic activist, has filed a declaration of intent form for the Post 5 seat, and said she will announce he decision in several weeks.

Cristadoro said that in recent months, “people came to me and said, ‘John, you need to run.’ ”

One of them was Loud, owner of Loud Security Systems, and a former chairman of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce.

“He said this school board [elections] are very big,” Cristadoro said, referending Loud, whom he said is a big fan of Superintendent Chris Ragsdale. “They’ve been on the firing line the last couple years.”

After listening to a number of community and school leaders, including meeting with Republican school board members David Chastain and Randy Scamihorn, Cristadoro announced his candidacy earlier this month in the GOP for the seat in Post 5, which includes the Walton, Wheeler and Pope high school clusters.

“I committed mentally and spoke with people and asked for a lot of support,” Cristadoro said. “I’m not a halfway kind of guy. You’ve got to be passionate to do this.

“What made me move to Cobb County? It wasn’t my company [which is based in the city of Atlanta]. It was the schools. I want to work to protect that.”

He said he’s attempted to talk to Banks, but hasn’t made contact.

“I’m not running against him,” Cristadoro said. “I’m running for the school board.”

Cristadoro said that after giving a campaign “a lot of thought,” what’s prompting him now is a desire to “make sure our classrooms remain excellent.”

Here’s his campaign website. He also has formed a steering committee led by Loud, former Cobb school board member Scott Sweeney, the current chairman of the state education board and various East Cobb civic and community leaders.

Cobb school board redistricting town hall
The new Post 5 territory (in purple) includes the Walton, Wheeler and Pope clusters.

‘Not fire and brimstone’

That a political novice has garnered such support for a seat with a longtime incumbent still in office is a reflection of the heightened interest in the control of the school board.

Democrats hold majorities on the Cobb Board of Commissioners and the Cobb legislative delegation.

Cristadoro describes himself as a solid Republican, but “not a fire and brimstone Republican.”

He was upset by the special review by Cognia, the Cobb school district’s accrediting agency, and said it was “totally unnecessary . . . Accreditation should not be a political football.”

He said complaints that led to the review—especially racial and equity claims—haven’t panned out.

“If you look at the quality of outcomes of the schools,” Cristadoro said, “it’s not true.”

Cristadoro also said he supports Ragsdale, saying the superintendent has “done a great job” handling the COVID-19 response.

He said his priorities would be to ensure the physical and mental safety of students, including more resources for those experiencing mental health issues.

Cobb school board candidate John Cristadoro
Cristadoro has coached youth football and wrestling in the Walton feeder programs.

He also said he would “promote the laser focus of our schools’ leadership and teachers’ instruction of all our children.”

When asked about the teaching of critical race theory—which the Cobb school board voted to ban and which is not included in the Georgia education department’s curriculum standards—Cristadoro said the general state-approved measures “have been very successful. The results have been phenomenal. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”

Cristadoro also supports the continuing Cobb Education SPLOST sales tax referendum for school construction and maintenance.

He also pledged uphold the Cobb senior tax exemption for homeowners aged 62 and over. Although that can be changed only by the Georgia legislature, “I will not support passing a resolution that would alter that exemption.”

Another priority would be to stress entrepreneurial education for students, especially since not every student is college-bound.

“In East Cobb there’s a big push to go to college, and that’s great,” he said. But he added that “here are negative connotations about not going to college” that he doesn’t think are fair.

But he said regardless of their career paths, students need to be “be introduced into fundamental business concepts which will allow them to compete in the world’s economy.”

‘A father who cares’

Given the high stakes involved in the Post 5 race, Cristadoro acknowledged the need for an early start—the 2024 primaries are next May—to gather political and financial support.

His campaign manager, Audrey Neu, is the Cobb Republican Party’s school liaison, and he said a formal campaign committee is being finalized.

He cited a ballpark fundraising figure of around $85,000—Catherine Pozniak, Chastain’s Democratic opponent in Post 4 in 2022, raised around $60,000.

“I know a lot of people and I don’t believe it’s going to be hard to raise money,” Cristadoro said. “I feel very confident I’m going to get a good response.”

He said he keeps hearing in the community that “it’s time for a change” and acknowledged that if he faced Banks in the Republican primary, “it would be tough but I think we would prevail.”

When asked if some might perceive him to be a “Chamber” candidate or one of the local political establishment, Cristadoro responded by saying “I’m my own person. Do I listen to smart people? Absolutely. But no one’s going to tell me what to do.

“I’m interested in listening to people who don’t look, talk or sound like me.”

Cristadoro said he’s going to run “as if I’m running for president.”

He said he wants to stress the “why” behind his candidacy, saying simply that “I’m a father who cares.”

He said a youth football player he coached sent him a hand-written note thanking him for “always having my back.

“I have their backs,” Cristadoro said, stretching the reference to all students in the Cobb district. “That’s the reason we have to do this.

“This is extremely important. Our kids’ futures depend on it.”

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FY ’24 Cobb schools budget, facilities contracts on agenda

The Cobb County School District’s proposed fiscal year 2024 budget will be presented on Thursday to the Cobb Board of Education, which also will be asked to approve several facilities contracts.Campbell High School lockdown

A public budget forum will be held at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in the board room of the CCSD central office (514 Glover St., Marietta), followed by a formal budget presentation at the board’s voting meeting at 7 p.m.

The board will be asked to tentatively adopt the budget, the first step toward formal adoption in May or June.

Budget information is expected to be made available at this link; the current fiscal year 2023 budget of $1.4 billion includes what Superintendent Chris Ragsdale called “historic” raises (between 8.5 and 13.10 percent for non-temporary employees).

He has not publicly offered any budget priorities for the FY 2024 budget, which takes effect July 1.

Last year the board approved the budget unanimously using additional revenues from the Cobb tax digest, which increased by 10 percent in 2022, and by using nearly $30 million in reserve funding.

Last week the Cobb Tax Assessor predicted the county tax digest would go up by 13 percent. The digest is formalized in July.

The largest portion of a Cobb homeowners’ property tax bill (outside the city of Marietta) is for the Cobb school district, which has held at a millage rate of 18.90 mills for more than 15 years.

The school board will meet at 2 p.m. in a work session at which contracts for architectural and engineering design for a number of new construction projects will be presented.

An executive session follows the work session. Agendas for the public meetings can be found by clicking here.

The open meetings also will be live-streamed on the Cobb County School District’s BoxCast channel and on CobbEdTV, Comcast Channel 24.

The new construction projects include a $50 million special events facility approved last month. That will be the new location for graduation ceremonies, as well as a number of academic and extracurricular activities.

The board also will ask to approve design contracts for renovations at Blackwell Elementary School ($5.4 million) and Shallowford Falls Elementary School ($4.1 million) and for the district to hire a construction manager for the replacement classroom building project at Sprayberry High School.

A construction contract for a pedestrian bridge linking the Walton High School campus to the school’s new athletic complex also is on the agenda.

The cost for the bridge is $1 million. The tennis courts have been completed at the new facility, while a baseball field will be under construction soon. The complex, with a cost of $6.7 million, is expected to be completed in December.

At the Thursday evening board meeting, the recognitions include state champion wrestlers from Lassiter, Pope and Sprayberry high schools and state champion basketball team from Kell and Wheeler.

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East Cobb Food Scores: Bradley’s; Montana’s; Catfish Hox; more

East Cobb restaurants opening, Bradley's Bar and Grill

The following food scores for the week of April 17 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Bradley’s Bar & Grill
4961 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 117
April 11, 2023 Score: 94, Grade: A

Catfish Hox
2595 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 101
April 14, 2023 Score: 95, Grade: A

East Cobb Middle School
825 Terrell Mill Road
April 14, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

Mediterranean Express
3162 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 100
April 14, 2023 Score: 90, Grade: A

Montana’s Bar & Grill 
2995 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 330
April 11, 2023 Score: 87, Grade: B

Starbucks@Kroger
2100 Roswell Road, Suite 300A
April 10, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

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Motorcyclist injured in Roswell Road crash in East Cobb

A motorcyclist suffered non-life-threatening injuries Monday when the motorcycle he was riding on Roswell Road in East Cobb crashed with a car, according to Cobb Police.Northeast Cobb car crash, Cops on Donut Shops

Police said Felix Witt, 23, was taken to Wellstar Kennestone Hospital after the crash, which occurred at 6:10 p.m. Monday at Roswell Road and Willeo Rill Road.

Police said that Witt was traveling westbound on Roswell Road on a a black 2022 KTR 390 when it crashed into the rear of a white 2017 Mazda CX5, which was heading eastbound on Roswell.

According to police, the Mazda, driven by Sandra Craine, 76, was attempting a U-turn at the intersection when the crash took place.

Craine was not injured, according to police, who are continuing to investigate the crash. Anyone with information is asked to call the Cobb County Police STEP unit at 770-499-3987.

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Cobb Library System to hold spring book sale at Cobb Civic Center

Weekend events, Cobb Library Book Sale

Submitted information:

This week, Cobb Library staff and volunteers are getting ready for out huge Spring Book Sale this coming up weekend on April 14 to 16 at Cobb Civic Center located at 548 South Marietta Pkwy SE, Marietta, GA 30060.

Hours for the sale are Friday and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Don’t forget to bring comfy shoes, something to carry materials out because you know you are not just buying one book, & some cash (just in case)!

We accept cash, checks, and credit accepted. All profits from this book sale go directly to buying more items for Cobb County Public Library’s 15 branches and bookmobile. Find a price list here.

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