Cobb Water System requesting $7M in Sope Creek sewer repairs

Cobb Water System requesting $7M in Sope Creek sewer repairs
The bridge over Sope Creek along Lower Roswell Road where the Cobb Water System says sewer repairs are needed.

The Cobb Board of Commissioners will be asked by the Cobb Water System on Tuesday to approve nearly $7 million in funding for sewer repairs at five points along Sope Creek in East Cobb.

An agenda item for Tuesday’s regular business meeting said that a total of 2,070 linear feet of 12- and 36-inch ductile iron gravity sewer pipe needs to be relocated, including the removal of three aerial lines at bridges and installing new lines under the creek.

“Over time, Sope Creek has expanded and eroded the streambanks, exposing the existing sanitary sewer line that parallels the creek at two locations,” the agenda item states. “Also, trees, limbs, and other debris are washed down the creek during storms and collect on three aerial sewer lines that cross the creek, which puts them at risk of being damaged and requires regular maintenance to clear the debris.”

Those locations are creek overpasses at Lower Roswell Road, Indian Hills Drive and Holt Road.

Two other areas of Sope Creek, just below Lower Roswell and east of Holt Road and north of Old Sewell Road, also need to be repaired (see map).

Sope Creek Sewer Repairs

Another 700 feet of channel protection material also needs to be installed to stabilize the streambank and “hinder further erosion,” the agenda item states.

A construction cost estimate for $6.765 million will come from the water system’s capital improvements budget, with additional expenses, including $135,000 from the county reserve fund, bringing the total cost to $6.989 million, according to the agenda item, which is on the commissioners’ consent calendar.

The request did not indicate a timetable for the repairs to be made.

Also on Tuesday, commissioners will hold an initial public hearing for proposed code amendments relating to animals, the environment, licenses, permits and businesses, zoning and administration.

The full agenda for the meeting can be found by clicking here.

It begins at 9 a.m. in the second floor board room of the Cobb government building (100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta).

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

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Roswell-Johnson Ferry oil change project getting underway

Roswell-Johnson Ferry oil change project

About a year and a half after getting a site plan change approved by the county, Valvoline Instant Oil Change is beginning to break ground for a new facility on the former site of a Chevron gas station at Roswell Road and Johnson Ferry Road.

Crews have been digging up what’s left of the Chevron pavement in the northwest corner of one of East Cobb’s busiest intersections and we noticed this sign for the first time on Friday.

As we reported last year, Valvoline needed to run a site plan amendment by Cobb commissioners to convert the 0.95-acre tract into a three-bay oil change facility totalling 2,088 square feet.

Plans call for a landscaping plan and 15 parking spaces, and access will be right-in and right-out only on Roswell Road westbound.

The Chevron station that opened in the 1970s closed in late 2020, and was demolished in early 2021. The property has sat largely untouched ever since.

The Valvoline filings and county property tax records indicate that the two parcels making up the 0.95 acres have a combined appraised value of $822,240.

The owner one of those tracts, Ruth McLaughlin, the former Chevron owner, also owns 0.71 acres directly behind it that’s valued at $1.24 million.

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Grace Resurrection Methodist Church marks first anniversary

Grace Resurrection Methodist Church marks first anniversary

A year after breaking away from Mt. Bethel Church, Grace Resurrection Methodist Church held a special “homecoming” celebration last weekend.

The independent congregation meets at the former location of the now-closed Lutheran Church of the Incarnation (1200 Indian Hills Parkway) and is led by Rev. Randy Mickler, who was the senior pastor at Mt. Bethel for 29 years.

During a special service last Sunday, Grace Resurrection members dedicated commemorative items, children filled a time capsule with mementos and had a church picnic lunch to mark their first year.

“These folks have worked so hard over the past year to create this church,” Mickler said in a release issued by the church, referring to a mostly volunteer initiative. “It warms our hearts to see everyone celebrating and connecting.”

Among those taking part in the festivities was a 106-year-old member who handed that day’s newspaper to a 10-year-old girl to put in the time capsule box.

Grace Resurrection started with 30 members who left Mt. Bethel after that congregation’s dispute with the United Methodist Church’s North Georgia Conference, and that ultimately resulted in a $13.1 million settlement (see previous ECN coverage here).

Since opening, Grace Resurrection has added mission programs, a music ministry, small groups, service projects, Sunday Schools, and children’s moments.

Services are composed of very familiar hymns and follow the traditional liturgy, but the congregation is focused on the future. “We welcome everyone. Three generations can often be seen in our pews,” said Rev. Charlie Marus, associate pastor.

Grace Resurrection Methodist Church marks first anniversary

Grace Resurrection Methodist Church marks first anniversary

Grace Resurrection Methodist Church marks first anniversary

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East Cobb Weekend Events: Fall festival; Oktoberfest; more

Holy Trinity Oktoberfest, East Cobb weekend events
Get your oompa on! Oktoberfest returns to Holy Trinity Lutheran Church Saturday for the first time since 2019.

It’s starting to feel like fall, as a number of fall-oriented events are taking place across East Cobb this weekend.

The East Cobb office of Harry Norman Realtors is having its second annual Fall Festival on Friday from 4-7 (4651 Olde Towne Parkway) that’s a fundraiser for their non-profits, the Orange Duffel Bag Initiative and Canine Assistants.

Admission is $15 and features a pumpkin patch with supplies for decorating, face painting, games, vendors and artisans, a food truck (not included in the ticket price) and a raffle in which a lucky winner takes home half of the money raised.

You can register by clicking here or purchase a ticket on-site.

Due to the COVID-19 response, it’s been four years since Holy Trinity Lutheran Church held its Oktoberfest celebration.

The German cultural festival returns Saturday from 10-6 on the grounds of the church (2922 Sandy Plains Road) with many of the same features: Music, food, a vendor fair, kids’ games and other activities, including a petting zoo.

Admission is $3, $7, $20 or equal cans of food to benefit MUST Ministries, and overflow parking will be available at the adjacent U.S. Post Office after 1 p.m.

On Sunday, the Good Mews Animal Foundation (3805 Robinson Road) is holding its annual Vaccination Clinic and Outdoor Market from 10-4 to support its programs caring for and placing homeless cats.

Vaccinations, microchipping and nail trimming services are available for dogs and cats (but you must sign up for an appointment by clicking here). The market takes place from 10-3 and includes a book sale, board games and puzzles, as well as gently-used pet merchandise.

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East Cobb Food Scores: Marietta Burger Bar; Hoyle’s; Studio Movie Grill; more

Marietta Burger Bar, 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:

Chick-Fil-A
1110 Roswell Road
October 2, 2023 Score: 94, Grade: A

Chick-Fil-A East Lake 
2105 Roswell Road
September 25, 2023 Score: 91, Grade: A

Daniell Middle School
2950 Scott Drive
October 5, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

Eastside Christian School
2450 Lower Roswell Road
October 5, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

Harold’s Chicken & Ice Bar
1477 Roswell Road
October 6, 2023 Score: 96, Grade: A

Hoyle’s Kitchen & Bar
1440 Roswell Road, Suite A
October 2, 2023 Score: 92, Grade: A

Little Caesar’s 
2200 Roswell Road, Suite 180
October 4, 2023 Score: 88, Grade: B

Marietta Burger Bar
1392 Roswell Road, Suite B
October 2, 2023 Score: 93, Grade: A

Pelican’s Snoballs
1642 Roswell Road
October 6, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

Planet Smoothie
1050 E. Piedmont Road, Suite 200
September 29, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

Studio Movie Grill
40 Powers Ferry Road, Suite 400
October 2, 2023 Score: 91, Grade: A

Subway
2200 Roswell Road, Suite 110
September 29, 2023 Score: 96, Grade: A

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Cobb Planning Commission continues NE Cobb rezoning cases

Cobb Planning Commission continues NE Cobb rezoning cases
Toll Southeast wants to build more than 100 homes on nearly 20 acres on Sandy Plains Road at Ross Road that includes Little Noonday Creek.

The Cobb Planning Commission heard three major rezoning cases in the Northeast Cobb area on Tuesday, and decided to delay making a recommendation on all of them.

All three were continued to the November zoning calendar.

Among them is a proposal to build a 105-home single-family detached subdivision on Sandy Plains Road near Kincaid Elementary School in an area that’s a flood plain.

The nearly 20-acre site on Ross Road is includes Little Noonday Creek, and the site plan reflects that nothing would be built on a sliver of the property to the west.

But the applicant, Toll Southeast LP Company, is also asking for variances that would substantially reduce the minimum lot size, set and front setbacks and width between homes and increase the impervious surface maximum to 70 percent.

(You can read the case file by clicking here; and the site plan can be found here.)

The new homes would be built adjacent to another subdivision near the Scufflegrit Road intersection, and Toll’s attorney, Kevin Moore, noted that nearby subdivisions in Cobb and Marietta city limits have similar or less dense zoning categories.

“We’re simply asking to be treated equally by what has been approved by this county and the city that you legally have to acknowledge,” Moore said.

But Laurie Wood, who lives in the nearby St. Charles Place subdivision, said the land is in a wetlands, and that the Toll development design does not include a deceleration lane, unlike other communities along Sandy Plains Road.

A traffic study done earlier this year does not factor in other subdivisions under construction for a total of 90 homes.

Planning Commissioner Deborah Dance, who represents District 3, wants to see a more detailed traffic study, and said she’s concerned about the variances.

Quick Trip wants to build on a former Rite Aid site, but nearby businesses are objecting.

A few minutes before that, she asked for a continuance for a proposed Quick Trip gas station and convenience store at the intersection of Canton Road and Jamerson Road.

It’s on a 1.6-acre site that was formerly a Rite Aid pharmacy, and next to a retail center that includes Vespucci’s Italian Kitchen, a Planet Smoothie and Ray’s Donuts. (case filings here).

The shopping center’s attorney and Vespucci’s owner told planning commissioners the shared entry and parking lot on Canton Road would adversely affect their businesses.

“This represents an existential threat to these businesses,” attorney Lawton Jordan said. “These are small neighborhood businesses.”

He said a traffic study showed there would be three times as much traffic coming the Quick Trip than the pharmacy “that’s going to have a negative effect” on his clients.

Carol Brown of the Canton Road Neighbors civic group said there are 11 gas stations in a five-mile radius along Canton Road, and two are within walking distance.

“The neighborhoods love these restaurants,” she said of efforts to recruit more “destination” businesses to a corridor saturated with automotive enterprises.

But Moore said 75 percent of the access to the Quick Trip would be along Jamerson Road.

“We love the local businesses they have, but we think this can work very well,” Moore said. He said that long-term vacancies such as the empty Rite Aid building “is devastating to a community.”

Nearby residents are opposed to warehouse/distribution buildings in a proposed mixed-use development at Chastain Road and I-575.

Another request would level one of the largest remaining wooded tracts in the area for a mixed-use development with townhomes, senior apartments, retail and distribution warehouses off Chastain Road.

A request by SDP Acquisitions LLC has been delayed before, but after nearly an hour of presentations and questions, the Planning Commission voted to wait for a traffic study and for the developer to meet with community leaders concerned about the proposed industrial buildings.

SDP has proposed 145 townhomes, 220 apartments for 55 and over residents and nearly 30,000 square feet of retail space fronting Chastain Road near I-575.

Citizens opposed to the project have no problem with that, but objected to plans to build three large buildings totalling 425,000 square feet along ChastainMeadows Parkway for what SDP attorney Kevin Moore described as office space (case filing here).

But Tullan Avard of the Bells Ferry Civic Association said the site plan is too intense for the property, and the distribution warehouse usage that’s proposed doesn’t fit the office category that’s being sought.

They’re to be operated 24/7, she said, and each building will have 30 loading docks, unlike other office/service facilities in the area.

“There would be almost a million—a million—square feet of speculative industrial space on nearly 60 mostly impervious acres,” Avard said. “Warehouses are not permitted under the OS office-services category” that’s in the county’s future land-use map for the property.

Dance said that the proposed uses “as shown are appropriate,” but said more time to work out traffic and other details.

All three cases were held by 4-0 votes, with Planning Commission Chairman Stephen Vault absent.

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East Cobb residential real estate sales, Sept. 11-15, 2023

Tiffany Lane, East Cobb real estate sales
Tiffany Lane

The following East Cobb residential real estate sales were compiled from agency reports. They include the subdivision name and high school attendance zone in parenthesis:

Sept. 11

4120 Riverlook Parkway Unit 204, 30067 (Willows by the River, Walton): $318,000

162 Vintage Club Circle, 30066 (Vintage Club Condos, Sprayberry): $430,000

2290 Abbey Cove Court, 30062 (Piedmont Cove, Sprayberry): $990,000

3410 Winter Wood Court, 30062 (Country Crossing, Pope): $481,000

4830 Rockwood Drive, 30066 (Gray Rock Estates, Kell): $390,000

Sept. 12

4315 Lake Chimney Court, 30075 (Chimney Lakes, Lassiter): $700,000

288 Robin Lane, 30067 (Red Oak Park, Wheeler): $380,000

656 Indian Hills Parkway, 30068 (Indian Hills, Walton): $2.65 million

2295 Piedmont Ridge Court, 30062 (Piedmont Forest, Sprayberry): $489,900

2832 Jacqueline Lane, 30062 (Pine Shadows, Pope): $450,000

846 Thackston Drive, 30068 (Northchester Heights, Walton: $600,000

Sept. 13

3434 Woodshire Crossing, 30066 (Northampton, Lassiter): $950,000

1014 Canton View Way, 30062 (Canton Glen, Walton): $1.776 million

4458 Leesburg Road, 30066 (The Grove at Highland Pointe, Lassiter): $1.295 million

791 Powers Ferry Road, 30067 (Dogwood Park, Wheeler): $320,000

4159 Gemstone Terrace, 30062 (Tiffany Lane, Pope): $1.2 million

Sept. 14

248 Terrydale Drive, 30067 (Cayuga Forest, Wheeler): $425,000

360 Briarwood Court, 30068 (Indian Hills, Wheeler): $673,100

1021 Plainview Drive, 30066 (Sprayberry): $386,000

195 Ashleigh Terrace, 30062 (Heartwood, Pope): $470,000

3787 Rivaridge Drive, 30062 (Village North Highlands, Lassiter): $525,000

4748 Forest Valley Place, 30066 (Forest Chase, Lassiter): $400,000

Sept. 15

3921 Riverlook Parkway Unit 201, 30067 (Willows by the River, Walton): $305,000

1101 Willow Field Drive, 30067 (The Oaks at Powers Ferry, Wheeler): $500,000

2865 Shaw Road, 30066 (Channon, Sprayberry): $240,000

209 Laura Lake Road, 30066 (Sprayberry): $500,000

645 River Knoll Drive, 30067  (The Columns, Walton): $3.66 million

4034 Columns Drive, 30067 (River Plantation, Walton): $807,000

281 Blue Sky Drive, 30068 (Beverly Hills Estates, Wheeler): $494,000

1784 Poinsettia Drive, 30062 (Hasty Acres, Sprayberry): $475,000

2719 Chestnut Ridge Way, 30062 (Chestnut Ridge, Pope): $535,000

4314 Arbor Landing Drive, 30066 (Arbor Bridge, Lassiter): $499,000

512 Gardenia Lane, 30068 (The Gardens at Parkaire, Walton): $440,000

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