At East Cobb interfaith service: ‘Anti-Semitism is an everyone problem’

East Cobb interfaith service anti-Semitism
“Do justice now. Love mercy now. Walk humbly now,” East Cobb UMC pastor Rev. Kristin Lee said. ECN photos.

In the seven years he has been the senior rabbi at Congregation Etz Chaim in East Cobb, Daniel Dorsch said that the responses to anti-Semitic acts in the community were always organized by Jews.

Wednesday was different.

At a “prayer and action” service at East Cobb United Methodist Church, faith leaders and citizens turned out to pack the sanctuary.

So did elected and law enforcement officials.

Five days after several Neo-Nazis waved swastika flags and held up anti-Semitic signs in front of the Chabad of Cobb synagogue, a sweeping, community-wide celebration of love, hopefulness and justice followed the condemnations and expressions of outrage.

“What’s different is you,” Dorsch said. “You saw us. You did this and we came. Thank you for seeing us tonight.”

With several Cobb Police vehicles patrolling the East Cobb UMC parking lot, and Police Chief Stuart VanHoozer attending the service inside, Dorsch noted the expenses that synagogues pay for security.

That money, he said, could be spent instead to help feed the hungry and attend to other community needs.

Jews can be reluctant to attend services, he said, because “Pittsburgh, Poway and Jersey City”—cities where mass shootings took place in 2019—”are in the back of their minds.

“Anti-Semitism isn’t a Jewish problem. It’s an everyone problem.”

Saturday’s protest along Lower Roswell Road by the Goyim Defense League drew many more counter-protestors who gathered across the road.

East Cobb real estate agent Mechel McKinney-Hoffman was one of them.

Jarred not only by a Neo-Nazi presence in East Cobb but also a previous rally earlier in the week in her hometown of Macon, McKinney-Hoffman sprung to action in the aftermath.

Working with Rev. Kristin Lee, the East Cobb UMC pastor, she and others put together the special service, which also was called in response to anti-Semitic flyers that have been distributed in neighborhoods in Cobb County and metro Atlanta.

“Just standing by to watch wasn’t an option,” McKinney-Hoffman said, her voice breaking with emotion at times.

“That is what has brought us together as a community. Living in outrage isn’t an option. Living in anger is easy. Living in love is hard.”

East Cobb interfaith service anti-Semitism
State Rep. Solomon Adesanya of East Cobb speaks, with legislators John Carson and Esther Panitch listening.

That was the constant message through the nearly 90-minute service, whose attendees included the Israeli Consul-General in Atlanta and representatives of Atlanta-area Jewish organizations.

In her remarks, Lee stressed the urgency for citizens to “do justice now. Love mercy now. Walk humbly now. . . . You don’t have to do it all now and you don’t have to do it alone. But I pray that we will do this with the same calling that we will find to complete this work. As a community. One.”

State lawmakers who sponsored a hate crimes bill that would write anti-Semitism into state law also spoke.

State Rep. John Carson, an East Cobb Republican, was a main sponsor, and said that he was “disgusted” by the open anti-Semitic act in his community.

“What you have done is unite us,” Carson said, referencing the Neo-Nazis. “You are not welcome here, and we will win on this issue. What you see here is a united front against this action.

“This is a wonderful showing of love.”

East Cobb interfaith service anti-Semitism
Citizens were asked to text ‘acts of kindness” that formed a word cloud.

The bill, HB 30, passed the Georgia House this session but got bottled up in the Senate. Some lawmakers, including Cobb State Sen. Ed Setzler, expressed concern that a criticism of the Israeli government could be considered anti-Semitic.

Current hate crime laws cover race, religion and national origin.

State Rep. Esther Panitch, a Democrat from Sandy Springs and the only Jewish member of the legislature, says current law “doesn’t go far enough. . . . We were almost there. We need Georgia to adopt it.”

Cobb Commissioner Jerica Richardson read a resolution passed by the Cobb Board of Commissioners Tuesday condemning the anti-Semitic protest.

“I want you to walk away feeling encouraged and inspired,” she said. “The East Cobb community—it’s a special one.”

She also joined the counter-protestors Saturday, and said “it was absolutely beautiful. It was in the face of hatred that love stood out.

“That was inspiring. That was our community coming together. That’s the only way that we can push back against hate in all its forms. I want to make sure that hate isn’t met with silence.”

Nearly the end of the service, and overwhelmed by the community response, Etyan Davidson, regional director of the Anti-Defamation League in Atlanta, noted that he is the grandson of Holocaust survivors.

“They didn’t have neighbors like you,” he said. “We lost six million people because they didn’t have neighbors like you. You showed up. Thank you. Thank you.

“When we stand together, hate cannot win.”

After the service, Dorsch said that he initially was torn about organizing a response, not wanting to give a small band of anti-Semitic protestors too much attention.

At the service, he read a statement from Chabad Rabbi Ephraim Silverman, who was not in attendance, and recited a Holocaust Kaddish.

“But this was inspiring,” Dorsch said. “I came away from this inspired.”

East Cobb interfaith service anti-Semitism

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East Cobb Food Scores: J. Christopher’s; Mellow Mushroom; more

J. Christopher's Powers Ferry, East Cobb food scores

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

J. Christopher’s 
1275 Powers Ferry Road
June 27, 2023 Score: 90, Grade: A

McDonald’s
1291 Bells Ferry Road
June 27, 2023 Score: 90, Grade: A

Mellow Mushroom
2000 Powers Ferry Road, Suite G
June 27, 2023 Score: 90, Grade: A

Tokyo Boat
4750 Alabama Road, Suite 101, Roswell
June 29, 2023 Score: 86, Grade: B

Turmeric Indian Restaurant
1043 Sandy Plains Road
June 28, 2023 Score: 91, Grade: A

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Register officially appointed as Cobb Public Safety Director

Register officially appointed as Cobb Public Safety Director
Register with Cobb Police Chief Stuart VanHoozer and Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid.

Mike Register was a man of few words Tuesday, but he insisted on having a lot of people share in his return as Cobb Public Safety Director.

Cobb commissioners on Tuesday voted 5-0 to formally appoint Register to come back to his old job.

For the last year he has been the director of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, and served as a deputy to Cobb Sheriff Craig Owens.

Register succeeds Randy Crider, who retired at the end of last year and was among those in attendance.

“Thank you for the opportunity to come back,” said Register, who was Cobb police chief and public safety director from 2017-2019.

Many of those he previously served with posed with him for photo ops, along with his wife and retired Cobb NAACP director Deane Bonner.

“Let’s do our job, let’s make Cobb County a better place for all,” he said, noting it’s been a “hard week” in the Cobb public safety community.

A former Cobb Sheriff’s deputy passed away, as did the 18-year-old daughter of Col. Eric Yeager, a 35-year Sheriff’s Office veteran.

Register wore a purple tie in honor of Kylie Yeager, a Marietta High School graduate.

“I’m glad to be home and appreciate the opportunity,” Register said.

Before the vote, Cupid said that “this is a decision [commissioners] all agreed on.”

Commissioner JoAnn Birrell told Register afterward “welcome home.” We’re glad to have you.”

In other action Tuesday, commissioners voted 5-0 to approve spending $720,897 for a sidewalk connecting the Walton High School campus on Bill Murdock Road with a new sports complex on Pine Road at Providence Road.

Commissioners also voted 5-0 to spend $204,000 for state and federal legislative consulting services with Dentons US LLP for 12 months.

Birrell also announced the appointment of East Cobb resident Susan Hampton to the Cobb Neighborhood Safety Commission.

She’s a banking and financial services professional who is the co-chair of the Cobb Public Safety Foundation, which provides support to public safety personnel.

Hampton replaces Larry Sernovitz, who resigned last week as rabbi at Temple Kol Emeth in East Cobb.

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Cobb commissioners condemn Neo-Nazi protest at synagogue

Cobb commissioners condemn Neo-Nazi protest at synagogue
Photo submitted to East Cobb News from an anonymous reader. The Neo-Nazi group left the scene around 10 p.m. Saturday.

The Cobb Board of Commissioners on Tuesday unanimously approved a resolution condemning a Neo-Nazi protest last weekend in front of the Chabad of Cobb synagogue in East Cobb.

The resolution was added to the commissioners’ agenda and was voted on without discussion.

The resolution (you can read it here) also mentioned the distribution of anti-Semitic flyers in metro Atlanta neighborhoods in recent weeks, including some in Cobb:

“WHEREAS, the Board of Commissioners recognizes that any group has the right to free speech and the ability to peacefully protest, demonstrate, and distribute information regarding its beliefs, no matter how reprehensible to others; and

“WHEREAS, when such speech threatens any person, minority group, or religious community, residents should respond by educating others with voices and actions as loud as those spreading the hateful speech;

“NOW, THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, the Cobb County Board of Commissioners does hereby denounce the actions of those who threaten members of our community, attempt to shatter the belief that Cobb County is a safe and welcoming place, and call for all to stand against their hate speech and attempts to divide our county.”

Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid made the motion to approve, and District 2 commissioner Jerica Richardson seconded it.

Here’s a portion of Cupid’s statement:

“While disheartened these messages were spread in our county, I appreciate that these events ended peacefully.  Our public safety personnel have our complete support, as do members of the Jewish community and those in Cobb who find these displays reprehensible.

 “My desire is for no one to perpetuate a heinous history that signifies hate in our county.  Cobb is a community that is moving forward, together, and where we are all in, in establishing a county where all can safely live, work, and enjoy.”

And Richardson’s statement:

These actions do not represent the values of the East Cobb community that I know.  As soon as I heard where this was going on, I went to the Synagogue. There, I found the most remarkable display of the community coming together to chant, defend, and support our Jewish sisters and brothers at the Synagogue. 

On Sunday, there were among many public elected officials who issued denunciations of the protest, which included around 10 people from the Goyim Defense League.

Gov. Brian Kemp, U.S. Sens. Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock, and state lawmakers also issued statements agains the protest, which was the second incident in Georgia involving the GDL last week. A similar event took place in Macon on Friday, and a public rally of support for a synagogue there was held in response.

A number of other faith communities and organizations also issued calls of support for Chabad, including the Etz Chaim and Temple Kol Emeth synagogues in East Cobb.

A prayer event was scheduled for Wednesday evening at East Cobb United Methodist Church.

And the Georgia chapter of the Council on Islamic American Relations also issued a statement:

“We condemn this deeply-disturbing antisemitic incident and stand in unwavering solidarity with the Jewish community in the face of blind hatred. Such abhorrent acts of hate and bigotry have no place in our society and must be unequivocally condemned. Together, we will stand against this hatred and work toward a future in which every individual can live free from fear and discrimination.” 

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East Cobb residential real estate sales, June 5-9, 2023

Berkshire Estates, East Cobb real estate sales
Berkshire Estates

The following East Cobb residential real estate sales between June 5-9, 2023, were compiled from agency reports. They include the subdivision name and high school attendance zone in parenthesis:

June 5

225 Dunstans Pass, 30066 (Canterbury North, Sprayberry): $727,500

221 Woodlawn Drive, 30068 (Boulevard at Woodlawn, Walton): $1.5 million

331 Mossy Creek Drive, 30067 (Freywood Estates, Wheeler) $325,000

3273 Mitsy Forest Way, 30068 (Mitsy Forest, Walton): $535,000

923 Red Apple Drive, 30066 (Sprayberry): $420,000

3589 Chastain Trail, 30066 (Chastain Glen, Sprayberry): $305,000

1704 Christie Drive, 30066 (Shallowford Oaks, Kell): $460,000

2973 Forest Chase Terrace, 30066 (Forest Chase, Lassiter): $390,000

1296 Adams Oaks Landing, 30062 (Enclave at Adams Oaks, Walton): $1.325 million

3251 Berkshire Flat Court, 30066 (Berkshire Estates, Sprayberry): $1.073 million

June 6

697 Fern Street, 30068 (Dogwood Park, Wheeler): $490,000

53 Brookcrest Drive, 30068 (Brookcrest, Wheeler): $555,000

4903 Township Brow, 30066 (Jefferson Township, Lassiter): $764,000

June 7

2505 Princess Lane, 30067 (Red Oak Park, Wheeler): $267,000

2301 Woods Field Lame, 30062 (Post Oak Square, Pope): $678,000

2964 Summitop Court, 30066 (The Summit at Sweat Mountain, Lassiter): $950,000

5248 Pikes Peak Court, 30066 (Plantation Place, Walton): $635,000

4650 Newell Drive, 30062 (Chadds Walk, Pope): $749,900

4533 Karls Gate Drive, 30068 (Princeton Lakes, Walton): $612,000

June 8

459 Old Canton Road, 30062 (Sope Creek Farms, Wheeler): $380,000

2836 Hitchcock Mill Run, 30068 (Princeton Mill, Wheeler): $750,000

2228 Snug Harbor, 30066 (St. Charles Square, Sprayberry): $533,000

2774 Whitehurst Drive, 30062 (Jacksons Square, Pope): $775,000

2215 Carlyle Drive, 30062 (Cedar Hill Estates, Pope): $670,000

2330 Sumter Lake Drive, 30062 (Sumter Lake, Pope): $600,000

4960 North Ellipse Road, 30068 (Wimbledon Place, Walton): $366,000

June 9

1234 Rosette Way, 30062 (Rutledge Place, Walton): $940,000

746 Robinson Farms Drive, 30068 (Robinson Farms, Walton): $715,980

3975 Chatooga Trail, 30062 (Indian Ridge, Walton):$910,000

1417 Siesta Lane, 30062 (Hickory Grove, Walton): $1.25 million

2489 Hembree Drive, 30062 (Walton): $875,000

1760 Canton Hills Circle, 30062 (Canton Hills, Pope): $428,500

2552 Blakely Court, 30066 (Morgan Crossing, Sprayberry): $430,000

3024 Alberta Drive, 30062 (Holly Springs, Sprayberry): $465,000

3795 Glengarry Way, 30075 (Loch Highland, Lassiter): $750,000

520 Gardenia Lane, 30068 (The Gardens at Parkaire, Walton): $320,000

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East Cobb synagogue target of Nazi flags, anti-Semitic signs

East Cobb synagogue target of Nazi flags anti-Semitic signs

A small handful of people stood in front of the Chabad of Cobb synagogue in East Cobb on Saturday, waving Nazi swastika flags and holding up signs with anti-Semitic messages.

A Facebook user named Tamara Stevens was collecting photos, videos and other information from passers-by as the incident unfolded late Saturday afternoon and into early Saturday evening.

This appears to be the second protest in recent days in Georgia by a group calling itself the Goyim Defense League, which conducted a similar event at a Macon synagogue.

Chabad of Cobb is located on Lower Roswell Road, next to the East Cobb Government Services Center and across from Mt. Bethel Church and a branch of the U.S. Postal Office. East Cobb synagogue target of Nazi flags anti-Semitic signs

Police officers were on either side of the road and directing traffic. A group of counter-protestors across the road shot videos and yelled, shouting at the pro-Nazi group to “go home!” and threatening to tell their employers.

But the pro-Nazi protestors were undeterred, and made gestures in return.

Their signs said “Every Single Aspect of [a particular topic] is Jewish,” with the topics including abortion, the media, the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank and elected officials.

At the bottom of the signs was a Web address to the Goyim group’s YouTube page, with videos including a program called “Saturday White Live.”

One of those shooting videos confronted the protestors directly, including a man holding up a sign saying “Every Single Aspect of Abortion is Jewish,” and called him “an idiot.”

He retorted that “we shouldn’t lie to our children” as he shot a selfie video of himself.

She later went up to a protestor holding a sign saying “Every Aspect of the Federal Reserve” is Jewish. It included photos of past chairs, with the Star of David marked on the foreheads of some of them.

East Cobb synagogue target of Nazi flags anti-Semitic signs“You’re a Nazi and you’re an idiot,” she told him.

Another protestor held a sign vilifying the Anti-Defamation League, saying it was established to “Protect a Jewish Child Murdering Pedophile Leo Frank.”

The sign included a photo of Frank, who was found guilty in 1913 of raping and murdering Mary Phagan, a Marietta girl, at an Atlanta pencil factory. When his death sentence was commuted in 1915, Frank was abducted from a south Georgia prison and hanged from a tree in Marietta, near Roswell Road and Interstate 75.

It was the first known lynching of a Jew in American history, and local Jewish leaders are still working to get Frank full exoneration.

Updated, Sunday 12:56 AM:

Chabad of Cobb just issued this statement:

We are extremely appreciative and thankful for the outpouring of support and concern from all segments of the community. We have been in communication with Cobb County officials, who have identified these individuals as part of a small group that travel around the country in order to spread their hateful message.

East Cobb has been a wonderful home to a flourishing Jewish community for many years. These individuals do not represent the sentiments of the citizens of East Cobb .

We are working closely with Cobb County officials and the Police Department to ensure the security and safety of our campus. There is no threat whatsoever at this time.

Ultimately, we must remember that the most potent response to darkness is to increase in light. Let’s use this unfortunate incident to increase in acts of goodness and kindness, Jewish pride, and greater Jewish engagement.

Original report continues:

On Saturday, citizens in Macon gathered to to respond to the anti-Semitic incident at Temple Beth Israel.

Temple Beth Israel Rabbi Elizabeth Bahar told the Macon Telegraph that “I’m obviously saddened to find Macon being the unexpected target of these extremists. This organization, they’re interested in air time and attention, but on the flip side, I feel that I must confront antisemitism when it rears its ugly head.”

Chabad of Cobb is one of three synagogues in East Cobb, where anti-Semitic incidents in recent years have prompted a strong response in the Jewish community.

Swastika graffiti was found in bathrooms at Pope and Lassiter high schools, and a neighborhood off Holly Springs Road and Post Oak Tritt Road.

The Anti-Defamation League said the Goyim Defense League—containing the Yiddish term for non-Jews—is a “small network of virulently antisemitic provocateurs” whose “most zealous and visible actors” include some in Georgia.

“GDL’s overarching goal is to cast aspersions on Jews and spread antisemitic myths and conspiracy theories,”
the ADL says on its website.

“This includes frequent references to Jews having undue power through their ‘control’ of major institutions such as media networks, the economy or the government, or disparaging Jews as degenerates who molest children and advocate for pornography, abortion and LGBTQ+ communities.”

East Cobb synagogue target of Nazi flags anti-Semitic signs

East Cobb synagogue target of Nazi flags anti-Semitic signs

 

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East Cobb Sterling Estates resident aims for Transplant Games

East Cobb Sterling Estates resident aims for Transplant Games
Risa Rambo wants to compete in the Transplant Games in Birmingham, Ala., next summer because “this one is so close and I hope my boys and sister can go.” ECN photo.

After undergoing a heart transplant in her mid-40s, Risa Rambo found refuge—as well as a rigorous physical rehab regimen—in competitive sports activities.

She earned medals in two different runnings of The Transplant Games of America, including being the most Valuable Participant for the Team Georgia in 2012.

East Cobb Sterling Estates resident Transplant Games
Some of the medals Rambo has earned at The Transplant Games of America.

A year later, the former high school and college basketball player was at her home on St. Simons Island when she suffered a hemorrhagic stroke, a life-threatening rupture of a blood vessel in the brain.

“My son found me, I was unconscious,” Rambo, 63, says in an interview with East Cobb News in the lobby of the Sterling Estates assisted living community on Lower Roswell Road, where she has lived for the last eight years.

After being rushed to a hospital in nearby Brunswick, Ga., she had emergency brain surgery. Rambo was unconscious for several weeks, and later had to undergo a more grueling rehab in Atlanta at the Shepherd Center, which helps patients recover from spinal cord and brain injuries.

She would be lifted out of bed by rehab specialists, and “they would work you real hard,” from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. almost daily.

“They had to teach me how to walk again,” Rambo said. “I was real scared.”

Part of the therapy was putting a basketball in her hand when she walked, to keep her head up.

Rambo, who as Risa Turton was a hoops star at Crisp Academy and Crisp County High School in Cordele, Ga., and played at the University of Mississippi and Mercer University, knew she would never be able to live the same way again.

After college, she married and raised three sons, and after her divorce, stayed active playing golf on St. Simons. She returned there after leaving Shepherd.

But she could no longer do basic things for herself, such as cook or even change bed linens.

East Cobb Sterling Estates resident Transplant Games
Rambo as a basketball player at Ole Miss.

“I just needed help,” she said. “I couldn’t live by myself.”

Paige Sander, her sister and legal guardian, lives in East Cobb, and in 2015 Rambo came to live at Sterling Estates to be closer to her. There, the staff cooks her meals, does her laundry and cleans her room once a week.

She walks with something of a limp, but is alert and responsive in a busy facility where she greets everyone, including a 106-year-old resident.

Rambo takes walks around the Sterling Estates pedestrian loop and enjoys the facility’s small pool.

But she says she wants to try cooking again soon, and desires some more independence.

Most of all, Rambo wants to get back to the Transplant Games, which became a major source of support and social life with her fellow transplant recipients.

The next Transplant Games take place in the summer of 2024 in Birmingham, Ala., and Rambo is excited about an in-person return. A virtual competition took place during the pandemic, and she was mailed some medals.

But she misses the camaraderie and wants her family to take part in the experience, which like the Olympics also includes opening and closing ceremonies.

East Cobb Sterling Estates resident Transplant Games
Rambo had a long recovery from a stroke in 2013.

“This one is so close,” Rambo said. “I hope my boys and my sister can go. The closer it gets, the harder I train.”

She wants to compete in swimming, cycling and basketball. She and her sister attend Johnson Ferry Baptist Church, where Rambo shoots basketball two or three times a week.

“I’m still trying to get it up to the goal,” she said. “I’ve got a year to work on it.”

Rambo says she can drive, but prefers not to, and gets where she needs to go with her sister and via the Sterling Estates vans that circulate around East Cobb.

She has checkups twice a year at Emory University for her heart, and said that she “checked out well” after a recent EKG.

While she knows the activities are helpful for her brain and body, it’s the connection to others that she values just as much.

After having to retire due to her medical situation, Rambo said “I didn’t do anything for a while, and I got depressed. I wasn’t sleeping.”

At Sterling Estates, she pulls out the facility’s daily activities calendar, which is crammed with outings, bingo, movies and physical therapy and exercise sessions.

East Cobb Sterling Estates resident Transplant Games
Rambo’s stroke rehab included walking with a basketball to help keep her head up.

She also enjoys spending time with friends she has made on the Team Georgia of the Transplant Games. They’ve gone to Braves games and are having a fish fry in August.

Rambo speaks matter-of-factly about the myriad of health issues she’s endured—”I’ve come a long way”—and even the death of one of her sons last year to suicide at the age of 30.

A good support system, Rambo said, has been vital for her recovery.

“You trust in God, and my friends and my family,” she said.

East Cobb Sterling Estates resident Transplant Games
Water workouts are part of Rambo’s continuing recovery from a stroke.
East Cobb Sterling Estates resident Transplant Games
Family visits and social activities with fellow transplant recipients have been a big part of Rambo’s support system.

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Cobb to consider Walton HS sports complex sidewalk project

Walton HS sports complex pedestrian bridge
The proposed sidewalk covers 0.1 mile on Bill Murdock Road across from the Walton HS campus.

Funding for a sidewalk connecting the Walton High School campus with a new sports complex for the school will be requested Tuesday by Cobb DOT.

The Cobb Board of Commissioners will be asked to spend $720,897 for the one-tenth of a mile sidewalk along the southern side of Bill Murdock Road, between Old College Way and Pine Road (see map below).

In an agenda item for Tuesday night’s meeting (you can read it here), Cobb DOT said $359,762 would come from the 2022 Cobb SPLOST School Zone Improvements component. Another $384,762 in Cobb DOT water system funding would be needed to relocate water lines.

The low bidder was Advanced Sports Construction, LLC of Woodstock.Walton HS sidewalk project

The sidewalk would extend to a $1 million pedestrian bridge that the Cobb Board of Education approved in April to the sports complex, traversing a creek located in a flood plain area near the Bill Murdock-Pine Road intersection.

The sports complex is located on property on Pine Road and Providence Road that the Cobb County School District has purchased to construct a $6.738 million sports complex, housing the Walton varsity tennis and baseball teams.

Walton’s tennis teams played home matches there this spring, but the baseball portion of the complex is still under construction.

Safe access to the complex from the school campus to the complex, which will have 80 parking spaces, is necessary for practices as well as competitions.

The Cobb school district tried to get Cobb DOT to increase pedestrian crosswalks, but to no avail. Cobb DOT also was looking at realigning Bill Murdock Road and Pine Road to straighten out a curve near the intersection, but that also will not be happening.

Traffic at the intersection is regulated by a three-way stop sign.

The Board of Commissioners meeting Tuesday will take place starting at 7 p.m. in the second floor board room of the Cobb government building (100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta).

On the agenda will be a recognition of two students at Hightower Trail Middle School and another at Dickerson Middle School who have attained the Girl Scout Silver Award.

Another agenda item includes confirming the appointment of Georgia Bureau of Investigation director Michael Register as Cobb Public Safety Director. Register would be returning to a position he briefly held in 2018-19.

You can read through the full agenda by clicking here.

The meeting will be live-streamed on the county’s website, cable TV channel (Channel 24 on Comcast) and Youtube page. Visit cobbcounty.org/CobbTV for other streaming options.

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Cobb to add hazardous waste events after ‘overwhelming response’

Cobb to add hazardous waste events

Cobb County government said this week that its beautification agency, Keep Cobb Beautiful, will be working with Cobb commissioners to add hazardous waste dropoff events for the public.

That’s in the wake of an event last Saturday at Jim Miller Park that prompted an “overwhelming response” and resulted in some citizens being turned away because it had reached capacity.

“Many residents told us these hazardous materials built up at their homes during the pandemic, and they were eager to drop them off so they could be disposed of responsibly,” the county said in its Cobbline Weekly e-mail newsletter.

“People arrived as early as 6 a.m. to wait in line, and even though the volunteers worked as fast as possible, the lines grew throughout the morning.”

Keep Cobb Beautiful has held hazardous waste events on an annual basis, accepting auto, household and garden products, and paint, hobby and pet products.

KCB also has separate events to accept appliances and electronics at a community recycling event, and controlled substances and medications at a medication buyback event.

The county said Keep Cobb Beautiful will be providing updates on future events.

 

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Mt. Bethel Church, MUST partner in Summer Lunch Program

Mt. Bethel Church and MUST Ministries are accepting donations and seeking volunteers to help with its Summer Lunch Program.MUST Summer Lunch program

The program aims to feed around 8,000 children in Cobb County for nine weeks during the summer.

Volunteers have begun assembling meal kits that will be distributed until the end of July. In addition to financial donations, participants can also shop for food for the program via Amazon and help deliver meals.

MUST estimates that 43,000 children in Cobb County received free or reduced-price lunches during the school year—roughly 40 percent of the school system enrollment.

Furthermore, around 24,000 children are considered transient, and another 2,700 homeless:

“We will be packing and delivering Meal Kits each Wednesday, beginning May 31, with donations accepted any day of the week. Why not make this opportunity to serve a family affair? You and your family can be part of our efforts to feed the children who experience food insecurity in Cobb County and BE the hands and feet of Jesus!”

You can find more information, including a list of needs and volunteer and donation details, by clicking here.

Donations will be accepted through July 25.

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GBI chief Register to return as Cobb Public Safety Director

Less than a year after he became the director of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, Mike Register is resigning.Mike Register, GBI Director

On Tuesday the Cobb Board of Commissioners will vote on confirming his appointment, which was announced late Thursday afternoon by Cobb County government.

Register was both Cobb police chief and public safety director between 2017 and 2019, then resigned for what he said were family reasons.

In 2021, he was named one of the top assistants to newly elected Cobb Sheriff Craig Owens, a former Cobb police officer.

In August 2021, Register left that job after he was appointed by Gov. Brian Kemp to head the GBI. Register succeeded Vic Reynolds, a former Cobb District Attorney and current Cobb Superior Court judge.

“It has been an honor to be the director of the GBI and serve under one of Georgia’s greatest governors, Brian Kemp,” Register said in the county release.

“I leave a great law enforcement agency with some of the most dedicated and competent professionals I have ever worked with. I look forward to leading the tremendous men and women who make up public safety in Cobb County and once again serve a great community.”

Register would succeed Randy Crowder, who retired at the end of 2022. Current Cobb Fire Chief Bill Johnson also has been serving as interim public safety director.

Public safety includes the county’s police, fire and emergency services, emergency management, 911 and animal services departments.

Register has had a 30-year career in public safety, including a stint as Clayton police chief. He is a past member of the Georgia Peace Officers Standard Training Council and the state Judicial Qualification Commission and served on the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Forces’ Executive Board.

“We are thrilled that he has agreed to come back and lead Public Safety in Cobb,” Chairwoman Lisa Cupid said in the Cobb government release. “We are making tremendous strides in public safety, and it will be a tremendous benefit to our citizens to have a director who has already forged relationships in the community and has a deep understanding of the opportunities we have as a county.”

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Mini-Con returns to Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center

MiniCon, Sewell Mill Library weekend events

Submitted information:

MiniCon 2023 – a day of fantasy, sci-fi, anime, fandom, and gaming – will be held 10 am to 5 pm Saturday, June 24, at Sewell Mill Library & Cultural Center, 2051 Lower Roswell Road, Marietta 30068.

The third annual free family-friendly MiniCon features activities for all ages, including crafts, panels, a photo booth, role playing game demonstrations, miniature war gaming, a board game room, costume/cosplay contests, cosplay karaoke and more. Entertainment will include live music by Phantasm, Tim Between, and Stone Soup.

“If you like anything in the realms of gaming, cosplay, anime, sci-fi, comics, or fantasy, you will find something amazing to do at MiniCon,” said Jay Morgan, Creative Studios Librarian. “We’re also going to have special guests, live music, and even a theatrical performance of Beowulf. There’s even going to be a special storytime and crafts for the younger patrons. When I say MiniCon has got it all, I mean it has got it all.”

The 2023 line-up of MiniCon panels include:

  • 11 am: Voicing Acting
  • Noon: Cosplaying on a Budget
  • 1 pm: Pokemon Trivia
  • 2 pm: Sci-Fi & Fantasy Writer’s Workshop
  • 3 pm: Tabletop RPG: There and Back Again

MiniCon 2023 is presented by the Sewell Mill Library and Cobb County PARKS department.

For information on MiniCon 2023, call 770-509-2711 ext. 2.

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Cobb Chairwoman Cupid to kick off 2024 re-election campaign

Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid will hold a fundraiser next week at the formal launch of her re-election campaign.Cupid re-election campaign kickoff fundraiser

The event takes place next Thursday, June 29, from 5-7 p.m. at 45 South Avenue in the city of Marietta, just below Roswell Street.

Cupid, a Democrat in her first term in the position, sent an official announcement to supporters on Thursday, and included a link for donations.

Cupid is the first woman and the first African-American to be the elected head of county government, as well as the first Democrat since Ernest Barrett in the 1980s.

She also is one of three members of the Cobb Board of Commissioners whose terms expire at the end of 2024. They include fellow Democrats Monique Sheffield of District 4 in South Cobb that Cupid represented for two terms, and the District 2 seat occupied by Jerica Richardson that is embroiled in a legal battle over reapportionment.

Cupid’s updated campaign website declares that she’s a “History Maker. Difference Maker.”

In her message to supporters, Cupid said Cobb has “accomplished a lot and overcome much by way of a pandemic, cityhood efforts and historic redistricting to limit all five of our commissioners from serving. Through all of this, Cobb remains a vibrant, economically strong county that continues to attract new residents, businesses, and energy.”

She noted that the county has maintained its triple AAA bond rating and has expanded partnerships to boost transit, provide housing assistance, and recover from the COVID pandemic.

“Moreover, we have increased in population and diversity with measures to strengthen policing in a way that builds trust. We are also modernizing our purchasing processes to make it easier for minority-, women-, and service-disabled veteran businesses to do business with the County.

Over the next four years, we have the opportunity to continue the important work of aligning our county with sound business practices in strategic management, sustainability, and workforce retention. We also look forward to finally letting citizens cast their vote on transit investment and expansion in 2024.”

Cupid’s first two-and-a-half years as chairwoman have come with some controversy, and the five-woman board has been divided along partisan lines on a number of issues.

Republican District 1 member Keli Gambrill has filed a lawsuit against the county over the Democrats’ vote to invoke home rule to keep Richardson in office [a hearing has been scheduled in Cobb Superior Court next month].

Gambrill and fellow GOP member JoAnn Birrell of District 3–whose East Cobb boundaries are also being contested in the legal dispute—have opposed the Democrats on the need for a county strategic plan, the length of the proposed transit tax, and some diversity issues.

At the first meeting of the year in January, they tried to protest the home rule vote by refusing to vote on routine county business, but Cupid said that violated board policy and she ordered them to leave the dais.

More recently, Cupid responded to citizens who have lashed out at her during public comment periods. At a recent Cobb Prayer Breakfast, Cupid referenced the Cobb school district and drew a sharp rebuke from Superintendent Chris Ragsdale.

Cupid—who has themed her agenda around the slogan “All in Cobb,”—didn’t specify in her supporters’ message details of her priorities in a second term.

“I am positive about where we are headed; however, I recognize we still have more work to do,” she said. “I look forward to making these strides with you.”

Cupid, who defeated then-incumbent Republican chairman Mike Boyce in 2020, is the only announced candidate thus far.

In 2024, most countywide offices will be on the ballot, including District Attorney and Sheriff.

Democrats hold all but one of them in a Cobb County that until recent years was dominated by GOP office-holders. Tax Commissioner Carla Jackson is the only Republican, and in 2020 had no Democratic opposition.

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East Cobb Food Scores: Cava, Eggs Up Grill; First Watch; more

East Cobb Cava Grill gets business license

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

Arbor Terrace of East Cobb
886 Johnson Ferry Road
June 23, 2023 Score: 80, Grade: B

Cava
4400 Roswell Road, Suite 157
June 20, 2023 Score: 96, Grade: A

Eggs Up Grill
4401 Shallowford Road, Suite 126
June 21, 2023 Score: 88, Grade: B

G’Angelo’s Pizza
3205 Canton Road, Suite 133
June 21, 2023 Score: 84, Grade: B

First Watch
3460 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 130
June 22, 2023 Score: 99, Grade: A

Heritage of Sandy Plains
3039 Sandy Plains Road
June 22, 2023 Score: 95, Grade: A

Jersey Mike’s Subs
1050 E. Piedmont Road, Suite 124
June 20, 2023 Score: 91, Grade: A

Johnny’s Pizza
2970 Canton Road
June 23, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

McDonald’s
4819 Lower Roswell Road
June 21, 2023 Score: 96, Grade: A

Pappasito’s Cantina
2788 Windy Hill Road
June 23, 2023 Score: 80, Grade: B

The Solana East Cobb
1032 Johnson Ferry Road
June 21, 2023 Score: 85, Grade: B

Smitty’s Lockdown BBQ
2900 Canton Road
June 20, 2023 Score 88, Grade B

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East Cobb weather update: A wet, sloppy first day of summer

wet first day of summer
Lights were on vehicles as they pushed through waterlogged spots on Johnson Ferry Road Tuesday on the first day of summer. ECN photo.

The summer solstice was officially noted in the U.S. Eastern time zone a little before 11 Wednesday morning, but it was a rainy one locally.

A second consecutive day of steady rain showers rain fell over the community on the first day of summer, and a wet forecast is in store through the end of the week.

The summer solstice in the Northern Hemisphere falls on June 21, and is the “longest” day of the year and “shortest” night of the year.

That’s when the Earth’s tilt toward the sun is at its maximum. Sunrise was at 6:27 a.m. and sunset is at 8:52 p.m., but the sun won’t be seen in East Cobb.

Nearly a half-inch of rain is expected to fall in East Cobb on Wednesday, and Thursday’s forecast calls for a 90 percent chance of rain, followed by a 70 percent on Thursday.

Temperatures are also a bit lower, with highs Wednesday and Thursday in the low 70s.

On Friday, the rain is expected to clear with the sun returning and the weather getting warmer, with highs in the low 80s.

The weekend will really feel like the summer, with sun and highs back in the mid 80s.

 

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Police: Missing East Cobb juvenile ‘safely returned to family’

Marietta Police said late Tuesday that a 13-year-old boy living in an East Cobb apartment complex is back at home.Missing East Cobb juvenile found safe

Police said Elijah James went missing from his home in the 2600 block of Bentley Road (Stratford Ridge Apartments) Tuesday night, and according to his family, “he is believed to be an at-risk youth.”

He was last seen on foot on Delk Road, heading toward Terrell Mill Road, according to police.

The initial message went out around 10:30 Tuesday, and police followed up with another message about an hour later saying that James “has been located and safely returned to his family.”

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After 15 years, Zéba Hair Salon finding new vibe, customers

Zeba Hair Salon 15 years old
“COVID changed everything,” Zéba owner Sima Abbasi said. “Some for the better, some not.” ECN photos

In January, Zéba Hair Salon marked its 15th anniversary, a testament to the resilience of a small business that like many of its kind had to weather a devastating blow when it was closed at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Making changes along the way was nothing new for owner Sima Abbasi, who started a hair-care and makeup business started at the Merchants Festival Shopping Center in 2008.

She opened a second location at the Shallowford Falls Shopping Center in 2017 and developed a loyal staff and clientele. One of her stylists, Paige Whiffen, had come on board as a business partner, as Zéba built on being a L’Oréal Elite salon with other colorists specializing in Redken and INOA.

Then the unthinkable happened, when Gov. Brian Kemp’s emergency order kept many personal-care businesses, restaurants and other public-facing enterprises shuttered for weeks. To be declared non-essential, Abbasi, said, was a surreal experience.

Zeba Hair Salon 15 years
Zéba partner Paige Whiffen

“We were so numb,” she said, sitting down with Whiffen in a recent interview with East Cobb News. “COVID changed everything. Some for the better, some not.”

After being closed for two months, Zéba couldn’t reopen fully due to social-distance requirements, and it wasn’t until November that they “were okay again. But we could only see so many people.”

Business at Zéba’s two salons had barely rebounded when 2021 arrived in “one of the worst” stretches of time as the pandemic continued.

“It was a lot of everything” said Whiffen, who oversees the Shallowford Falls salon.

“People weren’t coming back to work so they didn’t need a haircut as much,” she said. And there were those who were still feeling apprehensive about returning to closed indoor spaces.

“Some couldn’t wait to get back, but others weren’t so sure, Whiffen explained. “We tried to do curbside service as much as possible.”

Zeba Hair Salon 15 years

Along the way, Zéba used the occasion to assess many aspects of the business.

“The biggest blessing was that it helped us re-establish our culture,” Whiffen said. “We needed to care care of these people [their employees].”

Along the way, a “better family dynamic” emerged, and there was the usual turnover that is standard in the hair-care industry. Zéba currently employs around 25 people at both locations.

More than anything, Whiffen said, she and Abbasi saw their employees and clients in a new way.

“It was cool to see how much you impact their lives,” Whiffen said. “We’re super fortunate that our new clients are more now that we have ever had. And the trends have completely changed.”

Among them are what Whiffen calls lived-in haircoloring that lasts longer and grows softer.

“A lot of pe0ple just want a more natural look,” she said.Zéba Hair Salon 15 years

She said some clients also come to get hair care less than before, but their appointments tend to last longer.

Zéba also has become dedicated to recycling many of its products, including shampoos and coloring materials, hiring a private service that does come with a cost.

“But people love it,” Abbasi said. “They care about the environment.”

The salons have several events during the year to help local charities, donating 10 percent of proceeds on a Saturday in the spring to the Atlanta Humane Society, and another Saturday in the fall to benefit MUST Ministries.

Zéba also invites women from a local homeless shelter to help themselves to shampoos and other products that are no longer for sale.

Zéba continues its emphasis on education for its staffers and especially its colorists, with the aim of helping them understand the broader dynamics of the business.

“It’s not just about doing hair,” Abbasi said. “It’s everything. It’s connecting with people.”

As her business passed a milestone, she said she attests Zéba’s staying power to “a lot of faith and hard work and persistence.

“I just want us to be better today than we were yesterday.”

Zéba Hair Salon 15 years

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Schedule, speakers announced for 185th Marietta Campmeeting

Marietta Campmeeting returns

The non-denominational Marietta Campmeeting revival, which began in 1837, will mark its 185th edition starting on Friday, July 14 with an opening picnic and services, and concluding on Sunday, July 23.

The revival-style festivities include daily worship services that are free and open to the public, along with a children’s service, a watermelon cutting, an ice cream social and tentholder meetings.

Featured speakers include ministers from the East Cobb area, including East Cobb United Methodist Church, the home church of the Campmeeting.

Descendants of some of Cobb County’s oldest families—Lassiter, Gantt, Allgood, Lecroy, and Groover—still have a tentholding presence.

Campmeeting organizers said that a memorial service for two members of the King family, JerryKing and Randy King, will be held at 3 p.m. on Sunday, July 16.

Schedule updates are being made on the Campmeeting Facebook page and website.

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NE Cobb rezoning request withdrawn on historic home site

NE Cobb rezoning historic preservation efforts

The owner of a car wash chain eyeing property near the Town Center area in Northeast Cobb has withdrawn its rezoning request.

Attorney Parks Huff submitted the request Monday on behalf of Tommy’s Express by Northgate, telling Cobb commissioners Tuesday at their monthly zoning hearing that his client had contractual and other obligations that prevented the case from going forward.

Commissioners were to have heard the request to rezone two acres at Bells Ferry Road and Barrett Parkway that includes an 1840s-era home that was the headquarters for a Union general during the Civil War.

Earlier this month, the Cobb Planning Commission voted 4-0 to recommend approval to convert the property from residential to neighborhood retail commercial (NRC) and low-rise office (LRO) after Huff presented a revised site plant that would have kept the McAfee House on the site.

Trevor Beemon, Cobb Landmarks’ executive director, told the Planning Commission that his organization wants to relocate the house, saying it’s not ideal to serve as a cultural center, although there is some community support for keeping it there.

Huff didn’t elaborate on why his client was backing out after the Planning Commission vote. Commissioners voted 4-0 Tuesday to formalize the withdrawal without prejudice, meaning it can be refiled again at any time.

Commissioner JoAnn Birrell said she’s hopeful a new applicant can come in and pursue development of the land, which is across from Bells Ferry Elementary School and is surrounded by commercial development.

In a social media post late Monday, Cobb Landmarks said it will continue efforts started in 2019 to preserve the house:

“For those suggesting the house be used as a museum or other public use—if money wasn’t a factor, then yes. However, the estimate to restore the house for commercial/public use is about $700,000. Maintenance is estimated to be about $23,000 a year. Not to mention the list price near $1M to acquire it. It would cost $1.7M+ just to get started, and then more to operate it once it’s finished. This would be extremely challenging for anyone to pull off.”

This is the second rezoning case in recent months that involved an historic structure in East Cobb that eventually was abandoned.

Huff also was the attorney for Kenneth B. Clary, who had sought rezoning on Post Oak Tritt Road for a subdivision that drew opposition for stormwater issues.

The site near McPherson Road also contained an 1840s cabin that Cobb Landmarks has wanted to preserve. Some residents and a member of the Cobb Cemetery Preservation Committee claim area around the Power-Jackson cabin includes a small family cemetery, but Huff said he has no evidence of any burials on the site.

Huff withdrew that request last month after the Planning Commission voted to continue the case.

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East Cobb residential real estate sales, May 30-June 2, 2023

East Cobb real estate sales, Cambridge Crossing
Cambridge Crossing

The following East Cobb residential real estate sales between May 30-June 2, 2023, were compiled from agency reports. They include the subdivision name and high school attendance zone in parenthesis:

May 30

3906 Chapel Heights Drive, 30066 (Chapel Heights, Lassiter): $1.197 million

2551 Acacia Park Place, 30062 (Westminster, Walton): $1.675 million

3258 Winthrop Circle, 30067 (Amberley Park, Wheeler): $730,000

3276 Winthrop Circle, 30067 (Amberley Park, Wheeler): $810,000

4018 Columns Drive, 30067 (River Plantation, Walton): $795,000

2059 Clearwater Drive, 30067 (Freywood Estates, Wheeler): $335,000

1810 Murdock Road, 30062 (Walton): $700,000

2021 Dayron Court, 30062 (Piedmont Chase, Sprayberry): $700,000

2559 Kingswood Drive, 30066 (Kings Wood Estates, Sprayberry): $485,000

3225 Henford Court, 30062 (Chastain Commons, Sprayberry): $425,000

3598 Autumn Leaves Way, 30066 (Autumn Ridge, Sprayberry): $465,000

2272 Wickingham Drive, 30066 (Cambridge Crossing, Lassiter): $485,000

587 Woods Trail, 30068 (Woodland Trails, Walton): $630,000

May 31

2745 Birch Grove Lane #2745, 30067 (The Oaks at Powers Ferry, Wheeler): $530,000

3583 Steinhauer Road, 30066 (Shallowford-Trickum, Lassiter): $270,000

11 Worthington Drive, 30067 (Sewell Manor, Wheeler): $325,000

4391 Blackland Drive, 30067 (Sanders Field Estates, Walton): $2.6 million

2589 Middle Coray Circle, 30066 (The Oaks at Mill Pond, Lassiter): $1.55 million

2279 Nottley Drive #1, 30066 (Barrett Creek Townhomes, Sprayberry): $330,000

2809 Stone Hall Drive, 30062 (Stone Hall, Walton): $2.359 million)

2817 Adams Oaks Lane, 30062 (Enclave at Adams Oaks, Walton): $1.2 million

2423 Montclair Park Lane, 30068 (Montclair Park, Wheeler): $620,000

2991 Byrons Green Court, 30062 (Byron’s Pond, Pope): $720,000

2484 Cedar Canyon Road, 30067 (Cedar Canyon, Wheeler): $227,800

610 Oriole Drive, 30067 (Meadow Brook, Wheeler): $367,000

279 Hunting Creek Drive, 30068 (Weatherstone, Wheeler): $600,000

1777 Danforth Court, 30062 (Sewell Farms, Walton): $892,000

1681 Huntington Drive, 30066 (Huntington Woods, Sprayberry): $325,000

2070 Stanrich Court, 30062 (Folkstone, Pope): $660,000

2177 Cedar Forks Drive, 30062 (Cedar Forks, Pope): $660,000

2370 Brownstone Court, 30062 (Brownstone, Pope): $680,000

2282 Wilderness Way, 30066 (Natures Cove, Sprayberry): $355,000

2307 Milstead Circle, 30066 (Landsdowne, Sprayberry): 480,000

2666 Lee Ann Drive, 30066 (Piedmont Hills, Sprayberry): $406,000

3111 Randall Drive, 30066 (Russell Plantation Estates, Sprayberry): $312,000

3669 Asbury Court, 30062 (Wesley Hills, Lassiter): $402,000

4041 Ebenezer Road, 30066 (Philmont Estates, Sprayberry): $418,000

4291 Arbor Club Drive, 30066 (Arbor Bridge, Lassiter): $620,000

4176 Liberty Trace, 30066 (Windsor Oaks, Lassiter): $760,000

543 Charing Cross Drive, 30066 (Canterbury North, Sprayberry): $320,000

2443 Stockton Drive, 30066 (Stocktons Ford, Lassiter): $455,000

5554 Woodberry Circle, 30068 (Willow Point, Walton): $575,000

June 1

4038 Rocky Valley Court, 30066 (Rocky Mountain Estates, Lassiter): $457,000

3705 Providence Road, 30062 (Independence Square, Walton): $650,000

3805 Oxford Way, 30062 (Wesley Hills, Lassiter): $469,000

4120 Devon Wood Drive, 30062 (Devon Oaks, Lassiter): $765,000

5119 Sapphire Drive, 30068 (Tiffany Park, Walton): $1.2 million

1193 Forest Brook Court, 30068 (Forest Brook, Walton): $469,000

June 2

4800 Holmes Farm Court, 30066 (Holmes Farm, Lassiter): $855,000

522 Stepney Court, 30067 (Glens at Powers Ferry, Wheeler): $$406,000

1654 Cedar Bluff Way, 30062 (Cedar Bluff, Wheeler): $240,000

3524 Princeton Corners Lane, 30062 (Princeton Corners, Walton): $630,000

2190 Murdock Road, 30062 (Walton): $655,000

4214 Stanhope Circle, 30062 (The Park at Lost Forest, Pope): $$725,000

2700 Meadow Ridge, 30066 (Pine Meadow, Sprayberry): $285,000

1832 Chasewood Park Drive, 30066 (Chasewood Park, Sprayberry): $460,000

2751 Long Grove Drive, 30062 (Madison Hall, Pope): $1.285 million

1961 Kerry Creek Drive, 30066 (Kerry Creek, Sprayberry): $460,000

4120 Hubert Drive, 30066 (Longford, Kell): $373,814

321 Tiger Lily Court, 30067 (Woodlawn Park, Walton): $731,000

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