Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
Friday was the 20th anniversary of a fundraiser to benefit childhood cancer research in the memory of former Pope High School student and football player Matt Hobby.
Before the football game against Lassiter, the school announced that it was designating the sports stadium Matt Hobby Field.
Hobby died of Ewing Sarcoma, an aggressive form of cancer, in 2006, right before his graduation, and a year after the Rally Foundation had been formed to conduct childhood cancer research.
Each year during the football season, a Pope home game is designated as a fundraiser for the Rally Foundation.
At that fundraiser, special t-shirts are sold, and a player is honored who wears Hobby’s jersey No. 70. That player is chosen before the season by coaches who “best exemplifies Matt’s qualities.”
This year, No. 70 is James Burns, and he’s wearing that shirt all season. Here are all the No. 70 recipients, starting in 2012.
“When Matt realized he would not survive cancer, he asked that money be raised for childhood cancer research so younger kids could live,” said Dean Crowe, founder and CEO of Rally Foundation, earlier this week.
“In 2005, he stood in uniform on the gridiron as the Pope community rallied around him, beginning a tradition that became the Matt Hobby Classic. Since then, 4 Quarters 4 Research has raised more than $450,000 at Pope alone and spread to schools nationwide, and it proves that Matt’s legacy of hope and generosity is still changing lives 20 years later.”
In addition to football, Pope’s soccer and lacrosse teams also compete at what is now Matt Hobby Field, along with track and field athletes.
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up and you’re good to go!
This November, The Center for Family Resources (CFR) will kick off its 39th annual Thanks for Giving campaign, a longstanding community initiative dedicated to supporting Cobb County families facing food insecurity during the Thanksgiving holiday. The campaign provides families with a full Thanksgiving meal and enough groceries to sustain children while schools are closed for the holiday break.
In 2024, CFR distributed more than 1,000 food boxes (some 53,200 pounds of food) and stocked nearly 18,000 pounds of pantry staples, extending support well beyond the holiday season. This year, a new kickoff day for food drop-off—Friday, November 14—will help streamline packing and delivery to local schools and families.
The Thanks for Giving campaign helps families by:
Ensuring children who rely on school meals don’t go hungry during the break
Providing a full Thanksgiving dinner for families in need
Offering a week’s worth of groceries to reduce stress and restore dignity
Making healthy food accessible when it’s often out of reach
Community involvement is essential to the success of this campaign. The CFR invites businesses, civic groups, faith organizations, and individuals to be part of this powerful movement. Your involvement helps transform a week of worry into a season of joy for families who need it most. Ways to support the campaign include:
Sponsoring the campaign to help fund food purchases and logistics
Donating funds to support meal boxes and pantry staples
Hosting a food drive to collect non-perishable items
Volunteering to help pack and distribute food boxes
Together, we can ensure that every family in Cobb County has the opportunity to celebrate Thanksgiving with nourishment, dignity, and hope. To learn more, to donate, or to get involved in volunteering to sort, box and help distribute food between Nov. 14 & Nov. 17-21, visit http://bit.ly/477q45A. If you have questions, please contact Melissa O’Brien at melissaobrien@thecfr.org.
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After a week of sadness, anger, chaos and confusion, several hundred people gathered at East Cobb Park Thursday night to remember and pray for Charlie Kirk.
Holding up candles and singing “Amazing Grace,” as seen in the video below, the participants listened to their fellow citizens not only honor the memory of a young conservative activist, but also heard calls to rise above the rancor that has increasingly resulted in deadly political violence.
Kirk was just the latest victim, shot dead Sept. 10 while speaking at a college campus in Utah, a familiar setting for the 31-year-old leader of Turning Point USA, who relished political dialogue, especially those with differing viewpoints.
Some of those speaking at the vigil organized by Jenna Ruth Byars of the East Cobb Republican Women’s group on Facebook were young people, including a Kennesaw State University student who said that “if we don’t stop this, it could end up bad. It’s up to us.”
“This is what this night is all about,” said another speaker, as the late afternoon sun gave way to a beautiful twilight.
“Sharing the light.”
The vigil was moved twice, from the East Cobb Government Services Center and Woodlawn Square Shopping Center, as organizers did not clear the event with those venues beforehand.
In the days leading up to the vigil, sheer ugliness broke out across the political spectrum about the murder of Kirk, who was instrumental in persuading young people to vote for Donald Trump.
Several Cobb County School District employees were placed on leave, and two have since been told they’re no longer with district, for making social media posts that purportedly celebrated Kirk’s murder.
Some vile remarks came on our social media accounts at East Cobb News and those of other media outlets—some of the worst I’ve ever seen, in more than 40 years of doing journalism.
Unhinged adults, acting like third-graders, cared to rant more about what they thought about Kirk’s views than the horror of him being assassinated in cold blood, in the broad daylight of public, simply for uttering them.
When we posted a video of the vigil on one of our social channels Thursday night, a follower left this kind message: “Vomit.” This individual, according to her profile, is “trying to be better than yesterday.”
Well, tomorrow is always another day, so there’s the obligation to try a good bit harder. Yet she also got more likes than most, as did someone who lamented that such acts of violence are all worthy of vigils.
While that may be true, why aren’t those complaining about it organizing them?
Those who did for this Charlie Kirk vigil were acting on the fly. Despite the late switch to East Cobb Park Thursday afternoon, the front field quickly came aglow as the sky turned dark. Organizers said they gave out around 500 candles.
There were messages of faith from several speakers, reflecting Kirk’s profession of Christianity, and included Psalm 23.
Members of the crowd were invited to take the microphone, and one urged those in attendance to follow Kirk’s path and talk about issues openly, and with civility.
“We should be willing to have those conversations in Charlie’s name,” said Evan Draim, who said he knew Kirk while still in high school. The best way to honor Kirk, he continued, was with “patience, love and kindness.”
Other speakers disputed criticisms that Kirk held racist and divisive views, and were adamant about where they thought the blame lies.
Byars told the crowd that Kirk died fighting for the truth, that being that “the left ideology is a sickness and we are here to carry his torch.”
Arielle Kurze, an East Cobb resident, told the gathering that “his fight is our fight. I will not rest until the scourge of ideology that took him is gone.”
Yet these comments just aren’t very helpful either.
If you organize a vigil to try to cool down the tensions, why say things like this? Political figures and elected officials are the targets of all kinds of assassins, would-be and realized, for all kinds of reasons.
The man charged with killing a Democratic Minnesota legislator and her husband and injuring another lawmaker and his wife in June is accused by authorities of planning a murderous rampage that included other elected officials for reasons that are still under investigation.
The causes for this violence aren’t limited to just one “ideology.” They’re the result of increasingly intolerant ideological demands that instantly cast aspersions, if not demonize, those with other views.
I wasn’t especially familiar with Kirk, but he was a rarity in resisting that urge. He was the first guest on the podcast of California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a possible Democratic candidate for president in 2028.
Many people on the left expressed emotional distress over Kirk’s murder, including Jamie Lee Curtis, who was tearful talking about it this week.
But battle lines always have to be drawn among the most politically committed, leaving most of the rest of us weary, and frankly, more than disgusted. That’s the ideology that’s destroying us right now.
The warring tribes of our current politics have no interest in tamping down any of their rhetoric. The incentives are too great—for attention on social media, and to keep their ideological bona fides up to date.
Our political leaders are a big part of the problem—never backing down, always ready to use a sledgehammer to attack the “other side,” whether it’s a Republican president or Democratic members of Congress.
They should be modeling the behavior that they want us to follow. In the vacuum, as the speaker mentioned above noted, it is up to us.
Thankfully, in East Cobb, that’s been happening. The “No Kings” rally that took place the day of the deadly Minnesota shootings went off without a hitch. Thursday’s vigil for Charlie Kirk was in the same vein.
While we’ve got a long way to go in this country to recalibrate the political temperature, in our community there are people of good will, who may disagree strongly with one another, but who are also offering a light out of this awful darkness of violence and retribution.
May we continue to follow that path.
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Cobb Police said that “Debra Jo Story has been located safe. The lookout for her has been cancelled.”
ORIGINAL REPORT:
Cobb Police have issued a missing persons report for an East Cobb woman they said hasn’t been seen since Thursday night.
Police said that Debra Jo Story, 63, who lives in Indian Hills and has dementia, was reported missing by her sister at 6 a.m. Friday, and was last seen at 11 p.m. Thursday before going to bed.
“Her vehicle and cell phone remained at the residence,” police said in a social media posting early Friday afternoon. “It is unknown what clothing she was last wearing.”
Police are asking with information about Story is asked to call Cobb County Emergency 911 or (770) 499-3911.
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Cobb school employees “should never – ever – be the cheerleaders for a school shooter,” Superintendent Chris Ragsdale said.
Cobb County School District Superintendent Chris Ragsdale said Thursday that two employees who had been placed on administrative leave for their comments about the death of Charlie Kirk are no longer with the district.
During remarks at a Thursday Cobb Board of Education meeting, Ragsdale said the two individuals, whom he didn’t identify, “are no longer with the district.”
He didn’t say whether they were fired or resigned.
The district said Monday that an unspecified number of employees were placed on leave while it investigated allegations that they posted comments on social media “appearing to celebrate the death of Charlie Kirk.”
The district also didn’t detail the messages of the post or identify the platforms where they were published.
Kirk was a conservative political activist who was shot and killed Sept. 10 while making an appearance at Utah Valley University.
Making multiple references to school shootings, Ragsdale said that “good educators must and do abhor school shootings.” While he said that “this is not in the vast majority of how Cobb school members act,” some condoned the Kirk killing in violation of district policies.
He didn’t mention what those policies were in his remarks, but the district has a social media policy for employees that also has provisions for what employees are permitted to post on their personal and social media accounts.
Among the provisions, employees are refrained from posting material that “displays inappropriate personal information, videos, or pictures that impair the employee’s professionalism and reputation” and “harms the reputation of or discredits the District.”
Ragsdale said that many of the complaints about the postings about Kirk’s murder came from other teachers, and that the ensuing investigations have been “incredibly disruptive” to the educational process.
He said teachers are committed to “a life of service, sacrificing much of one’s present for someone else’s future.” He mentioned a Virginia Tech professor who was killed during a 2007 mass shooting, as he blocked a door allowing his students to escape.
Ragsdale said that teachers “are heroes in a school shooting event. They should never, ever be the cheerleaders for a school shooting.”
The Cobb County Democratic Party on Wednesday blasted the district’s decision to place the employees on leave, saying it smacked of hypocrisy and that “Mr. Kirk’s killing has been used as an excuse by MAGA to persecute anyone who doesn’t adhere to their beliefs.”
On Thursday, Ragsdale said that the disciplinary action isn’t about political party or religious affiliation, but is “entirely a question of good and evil.”
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Eastvalley Elementary School third-grader Finley Nelson recently won the regional qualifier for the Boys 7-9 age division of the Drive, Chip and Putt competitionat TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.
His next step is The Masters course in Augusta for the Drive, Chip, and Putt National Finals that will be played at Augusta National Golf Club in April 2026.
“I’m very excited to go to the Masters, and see it and actually get to play on it,” Finley said in a release issued this week by the Cobb County School District. “You have to be the best of the best to get there, and it’s very prestigious.”
Eastvalley principal Dr. Whitney Spooner said Finley’s accomplishments were noted on the school’s morning news update: “His classmates and teacher were so excited.”
Calley Anderson, Finley’s homeroom teacher, said in the release that “as soon as Finley told the class he had won the regional in Florida, the class could not contain their cheers. The whole class was jumping up and down.”
His teacher and classmates also made a good luck card and poster for him.
Finley said that “I was very happy that they were all cheering for me.”
“Finley is a very thoughtful, respectful, and dependable student,” Dr. Spooner said in the release. “He is soft-spoken, but very eager to learn.”
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This fall, two milestone anniversaries come together in the fight against childhood cancer. Rally Foundation for Childhood Cancer Research is celebrating 20 years of funding innovative research, supporting families and advocating for better treatments. At the same time, Pope High School will host its 20th annual Matt Hobby Classic football game on Friday, September 19, at 7:00 p.m. at Pope High School, 3001 Hembree Road, Marietta, GA 30062. The annual game has supported Rally Foundation since its beginning.
The Matt Hobby Classic honors the memory of Pope student and football player Matt Hobby, who was diagnosed in 2003 with Ewing sarcoma, a rare and aggressive cancer that develops in and around the bones. With the encouragement of his teammates and the Pope community, Matt vowed to “STANDTOUGH” through treatment. He passed away on May 30, 2006, just days after his high school graduation. Before his passing, Matt asked his parents to keep raising money for research so that “the little kids with cancer get a chance to live.”
The Pope community, together with Matt’s family and Rally’s founder Dean Crowe, turned his request into action. In 2005, they hosted the very first 4 Quarters 4 Research (4Q4R) game, which was Rally Foundation’s first fundraiser. Buckets were passed through the stands to collect spare change in support of childhood cancer research. That event later became known as the Matt Hobby Classic. Over the past 20 years, Pope High School has raised more than $450,000 through the annual event, including more than $33,000 last year alone. The 4Q4R idea also spread to schools across the country, multiplying Matt’s legacy and fueling childhood cancer research nationwide.
Rally Foundation was founded in 2005 with the mission to fund the best research wherever it takes place. Over the last 20 years, Rally has awarded more than $40.5 million in research grants through more than 680 projects across the United States and around the world. From its first $5,000 grant in 2006 to a record-breaking $5.5 million in 2025 alone, Rally’s funding has helped advance safer, more effective treatments for kids with cancer.
“When Matt realized he would not survive cancer, he asked that money be raised for childhood cancer research so younger kids could live,” said Dean Crowe, founder and CEO of Rally Foundation. “In 2005, he stood in uniform on the gridiron as the Pope community rallied around him, beginning a tradition that became the Matt Hobby Classic. Since then, 4 Quarters 4 Research has raised more than $450,000 at Pope alone and spread to schools nationwide, and it proves that Matt’s legacy of hope and generosity is still changing lives 20 years later.”
About Rally Foundation for Childhood Cancer Research:
Childhood cancer is the number one disease killer among children in the United States. In 2025, Rally Foundation for Childhood Cancer Research (Rally), a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, proudly celebrates 20 years of impact, dedication and progress in the fight against childhood cancer. Rally empowers volunteers nationwide to raise awareness and funds for research to find better treatments with fewer long-term side effects and, ultimately, cures. Rally received the Independent Charities Seal of Excellence and GuideStar Valued Partner seal, and according to independently audited financials’ five-year average results, 93 cents of every dollar raised supports Rally’s mission.
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Just a few hours before Thursday’s Charlie Kirk vigil, the event has relocated for a second time, to East Cobb Park.
The event is slated for 7 p.m. in the front field of the park (3822 Roswell Road).
Organizers were forced to move the event from Woodlawn Square Shopping Center when Retail Planning Corp., its property management company, said it was not told about it.
Organizers said they received permission from the manager of the Chick-Fil-A to hold the vigil near the restaurant.
But Beth Wallace, the assistant property manager for Woodlawn Square, told East Cobb News the retail center never has had events like this and doesn’t, for liability reasons.
The vigil was moved Tuesday from the East Cobb Government Services Center when county officials said the vigil organizers didn’t notify them, and that it doesn’t allow public gatherings that would interfere with public safety operations at the Cobb Police Precinct 4 and Cobb Fire Station 21.
East Cobb Park is operated by Cobb PARKS. East Cobb News asked Cobb government spokesman Ross Cavitt if the vigil organizers needed to get permission before holding such an event, and he said “only if they were planning on using any of the facilities which it’s too late for that now.”
Candles will be distributed, and participants will be invited for song and prayer.
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Jacques Navant, president of the Auto Glass Safety Council, left, and Glenn Fell of Wyndshyld Auto Glass.
Submitted information and photo:
The Auto Glass Safety Council (AGSC) has officially announced that Glenn Fell, president of Wyndshyld Auto Glass has become the first person to earn the newly created AGSC Certified Glass Calibration Specialist designation. The certification, introduced for the first time last week during Auto Glass Week ’25, marks a groundbreaking advancement in the safety of customers having their auto glass replaced.
Fell is the first to complete the certification process, which included training and testing and distinguished himself by earning a perfect score on the certification exam.
The ADAS-Glass Calibration Certification program was developed by the Auto Glass Safety Council to recognize and credential professionals who demonstrate advanced expertise in the critical process of glass calibration—an essential element in ensuring safety and functionality in modern vehicles equipped with Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS).
“Glenn’s accomplishment sets the bar for excellence in our industry,” said Jacques Navant, AGSC president. “Becoming the very first Certified Glass Calibration Specialist demonstrates both his leadership and his commitment to advancing safety standards in auto glass service.”
Approximately 110 individuals participated in the first certification training and testing. For more information about the Certified Glass Calibration Specialist program, please visit www.agsc.org.
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
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The chairwoman of the Cobb County Democratic Committee on Wednesday issued a statement blasting the Cobb County School District for placing teachers on leave for the comments they’re accused of making about the death of conservative political activist Charlie Kirk.
Essence Johnson said in a statement authorized by the party that the school district “is once again picking and choosing which employees get a pass, and which are harassed until the ends of the earth.”
The district didn’t specify what the messages said, but indicated that the employees won’t be allowed in classroom settings while on leave, and that they could be subject to disciplinary action that could involve possible revocation of their teaching certificates.
Johnson said the Cobb school district’s decision smacks of hypocrisy, and referenced a December 2023 report in the Cobb County Courier alleging that employees in the district’s communications office had ties to a conservative Powder Springs group, American Vision.
In that report, Cobb school district chief accountability officer John Floresta—who oversees the communications staff—was quoted as saying that the district isn’t “interested in the personal or political views of any of our staff.”
“For those unfamiliar, Gary DeMar, the [American Vision] founder, supports the death penalty for people in the LGBTQ community,” Johnson said in her statement Wednesday. “Now, after two years the school system has changed its stance on the personal or political views of its staff according to a statement released on Monday about the suspension of a teacher.”
Johnson, an East Cobb resident and former Georgia legislative candidate, further stated that “make no mistake, we reject political violence, regardless of which ‘side’ it comes from. However, Mr. Kirk’s killing has been used as an excuse by MAGA to persecute anyone who doesn’t adhere to their beliefs.”
“To those hellbent on rewriting history and ratting out their neighbors over perceived slights, we urge you to stop. To Cobb County Schools, we demand you stop using our teachers as political pawns and allow them to do their jobs.”
The Cobb school district has a social media policy for employees that also has provisions for what employees are permitted to post on their personal and social media accounts.
Among the provisions, employees are refrained from posting material that “displays inappropriate personal information, videos, or pictures that impair the employee’s professionalism and reputation” and “harms the reputation of or discredits the District.”
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The organizers of the East Cobb vigil for Charlie Kirk on Thursday said they have relocated the event to the Woodlawn Square Shopping Center on Johnson Ferry Road.
The vigil is set for the same time—7 p.m.—and will take place near the Chick-Fil-A (1201 Johnson Ferry Road).
The organizers were forced to find a new venue after Cobb County officials said Tuesday they could not have it at the East Cobb Government Services Center on Lower Roswell Road, which had been announced as the location.
The facility houses Cobb Police Precinct 4 and Cobb Fire Station 21.
County officials said they weren’t informed there was a group meeting there, and said that such gatherings are not allowed “due to the potential disruption of public safety operations. Anyone who attempts to attend will not be permitted to gather there.”
Candles will be provided and the vigil along the lines of other vigils across the country for Kirk, a conservative activist who was shot to death last week at a college event in Utah.
He was the founder of Turning Point USA, an advocacy group that organized youth around a message of conservative populism.
Kirk was a strong ally of Trump who hosted his own podcast and spoke at the Republican National Convention in 2024.
A public memorial service is scheduled for Sunday at a football stadium near Phoenix, where Kirk lived.
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An East Cobb man indicted last year for the death of his wife due to what prosecutors alleged was an extreme case of neglect has been sentenced to life in prison.
Cobb Superior Court Judge Kellie Hill handed down the sentence after a jury found Gary Williams guilty of felony murder and neglect at his trial earlier this week, according to the Cobb District Attorney’s Office.
The DA’s office said that Williams, 66, badly disregarded the needs of his disabled wife, Addreinne Gordon, to the point that her body was covered in sores and lesions and her bed was blackened with human waste.
Gordon was 66 years old when she was admitted to Wellstar Kennestone Hospital on Nov. 9, 2021, “and placed on maximum-level life support,” according to a release from the Cobb DA’s office. “She died the following day from blood poisoning.”
Williams was Gordon’s caregiver at a home in the Lake Fjord neighborhood that is owned by her estate.
According to the DA’s office, Gordon was visited by Adult Protective Services at the hospital before her death and “reported numerous injuries,” according to the release.
An arrest warrant for Williams stated that Gordon was observed with “multiple and severe bed sores, extremely matted hair, untrimmed toenails and fingernails, feces under and around the toenails and a large, deep laceration to the left hip area.”
Williams was arrested at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport in late July 2022, then was taken into custody at the Cobb Adult Detention Center, and has been held there without bond ever since, according to Cobb Sheriff’s Office booking reports.
“This case was not about how she died—it was about how she was forced to live,” Cobb DA Sonya Allen said in the release, referring to Gordon.
“She suffered slowly, trapped in a body she could not care for, completely dependent on the one person who vowed to protect her. The only person who could have given her dignity, safety, and comfort instead allowed her to endure a living torture until she died.”
According to her obituary, Gordon worked for the Xerox Corp. for 30 years until her retirement in 2008, and is survived by a daughter, six grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.
“Addreinne, who was affectionately known to her family as ‘Honey,’ was known as a giver with a wide smile and huge personality. She loved cooking and entertaining and celebrated every holiday with excitement. Her favorite times included being with her family, especially her grandchildren.
“Her laugh and zeal for life was contagious to all who knew her.”
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Come for the rides and food. Stay for the shows and exhibits. The North Georgia State Fair is coming back this week with amusements for all interests Sept. 18 – 28. This year’s shows include motocross, a demolition derby, monster trucks, bull riders, magicians, a circus, a hypnotist, racing pigs, and Frisbee dogs.
New traffic plans: All vehicles will be directed to County Services Parkway. Eastbound Al Bishop Drive will be closed to through traffic starting one hour prior to the fair opening each day. Westbound Al Bishop Drive will be two-laned for incoming fair traffic. Uber/Lyft pick-up and drop-off will be located at the Cobb Safety Village, 1220 Al Bishop Drive, Marietta. This year, parking is free.
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Neighbors said they’ve seen dogs fighting and being a nuisance while unattended in the backyard of Annie Lou Crispell, who wants to run a dog-training and boarding business from her home.
Earlier this month the Cobb Planning Commission voted to hold a proposal for a gas station/convenience store by RaceTrac at Bells Ferry Road and Barrett Parkway until October.
Two other cases in East Cobb that were to have been heard Tuesday by the Cobb Board of Commissioners also will be waiting for a month, continued by Cobb Zoning Staff.
That includes a proposal for a dog- training and boarding business by Annie Lou Crispell at a home off Terrell Mill Road that we wrote about in August.
But the five-member board voted on Sept. 2 to recommend denial, with Planning Commission member Deborah Dance saying the business was not appropriate for a residential neighborhood.
Since that vote, no new information has been added to that filing. Cobb Zoning Division manager John Pederson did not explain the reason for the continuance.
That case will go before county commissioners Oct. 21.
Little Sunshine’s Playhouse to rezone two acres at Sandy Plains Road and Trickum Road for a 12,330-square-foot day care center also is on hold until October (you can read the filings here).
The two land parcels fronting Sandy Plains Road are residentially zoned and have older homes on them, and are surrounded by other residential properties.
On Aug. 27, the applicant’s attorney, Parks Huff, submitted a list of stipulations to satisfy concerns from the East Cobb Civic Association.
Those cases will be heard by the Planning Commission on Oct. 7.
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Tate Fall, who was hired less than two years ago to run the the Cobb Board of Elections and Registration, will be leaving her post.
Cobb government announced last week that she will be departing near the end of the year, after her leave period expires.
Fall has been on an unspecified leave for the last few months. Michael D’Itri, a deputy director in the elections office, has been named the acting director.
A former deputy elections director in Arlington County, Va., Fall started her tenure to succeed Janine Eveler in Cobb County in December 2023.
Fall was chosen after a search for Eveler’s successor was extended because a lack of qualified candidates.
At the time, then-Elections Board Chairwoman Tori Silas said that “it was difficult to find someone with the level of experience needed along with the zeal for this job. We believe we have found the right person at the right time.”
In Fall’s time in Cobb, the five-member appointed board has been embroiled in a number of disputes, including county commission redistricting.
Last month, the board sparred over electing officers following the appointments of two new members. Fall was absent at that meeting, at which the extension of her leave was announced.
No timetable was mentioned for hiring her successor, which will be chosen by the elections board.
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On September 10, Cobb Community Foundation (CCF) and a panel of 30 trained community leaders selected and finalized 27 Cobb County nonprofits to participate in this year’s highly anticipated Match Magic Giveathon. The announcement marks the start of a season of giving that rallies the community around organizations working to meet critical local needs.
Through a rigorous review process, volunteer leaders spent hours in small and large groups evaluating over 50 applications and determining which nonprofits would take part. The result: a dynamic cohort of organizations that reflect the diversity and strength of Cobb’s nonprofit sector.
Fundraising kicks off November 11 and runs through December 2, 2025—but right now, we’re building the Match Pool, a special fund powered by generous donors to boost every gift—andwe’d love your support. Want to help make the magic happen? See details below.
What is Match Magic?
Match Magic is Cobb Community Foundation’s signature giving campaign that provides local nonprofits with tools, visibility, and matching dollars to amplify their year-end fundraising. Last year, thanks to generous donors, we raised over $800,000 in donations for 25 nonprofits in 2 weeks—a story that made waves in local media.
The results were extraordinary.
$700,000+ raised by participating nonprofits in 2-weeks
$100,000+ raised as a “match pool” by CCF
$800,000+ TOTAL distributed to 25 Cobb nonprofits
64% gained new donors
76% saw larger gifts from existing supporters
“This is what collective giving can do. The generosity of our donors and the commitment of our nonprofits make this possible,” said Shari Martin, President & CEO of Cobb Community Foundation. “We’re proud to provide the infrastructure, tools, and support to help nonprofits succeed, and we can’t wait to see what this community can achieve together this year.”
Help Us Build the Match Pool
To make Match Magic possible, CCF is raising a Match Pool that proportionally boosts every community gift, depending on how much the organization raises overall. Last year, a $108,000 Match Pool helped amplify nearly $700,000 in donations, giving most contributions a 15% boost.
This year, CCF is hoping to raise $200,000 for the Match Pool. Community members and donors are invited to contribute here: http://bit.ly/45bT9LT, or call or email Cobb Community Foundation directly.
“We are grateful to Walton Communities for once again seeding our 2025 Match Pool with a generous $50,000 gift, and to the Marietta Daily Journal (MDJ) for helping to spread the word by distributing our Match Magic Giving Guide throughout the county,” Martin added.
Supporting the pool means you’re fueling ALL 27 nonprofits at once — it’s a gift to the whole community.
Announcing our 2025 Participating Nonprofits
Acworth Cultural Arts
Aloha to Aging, Inc
Arts Bridge Foundation
Atlanta Humane Society
Backpack Blessings, Inc.
Blue Thanksgiving, Inc.
Circles Cobb
Cobb County Bar Association CSF Children’s Emergency Fund
Cobb Police Athletic League Inc
CobbWorks, Inc.
Cumberland Counseling Centers
Family Life Restoration Center, Inc.
Food Security for America
Four Corners Group Inc
Friends of The Strand, DBA Earl and Rachel Smith Strand Theatre
Good Samaritan Health Center of Cobb
Highland Rivers Foundation
LiveSafe Resources
Loving Arms Cancer Outreach, Inc.
Matthew 25:40 Car Care Ministry
NAMI Cobb (local affiliate of National Alliance on Mental Illness – Georgia)
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up and you’re good to go!
A vigil for the slain conservative political activist Charlie Kirk has been scheduled for Thursday in East Cobb.
But the vigil that had originally been scheduled to take place at 7 p.m. Thursday at the East Cobb Government Services Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road) is being relocated
A group of East Cobb mothers organized the event, according to a message about the event sent to East Cobb News on Monday. The East Cobb Government Services Center facility includes Cobb Police Precinct 4 and the Cobb Fire Station 21.
But they did so without notifying the county, which told East Cobb News on Tuesday “that this location is not appropriate for large public gatherings, as such activity could interfere with critical police and fire operations.
“Public safety officials have attempted to contact the organizers without success. The public should be aware that this facility cannot accommodate this event due to the potential disruption of public safety operations. Anyone who attempts to attend will not be permitted to gather there.”
Randi Beth Soniker, one of the organizers, told East Cobb News Tuesday that “we were not told no” but said her group was making arrangements for another location to be determined.
A number of vigils have been taking place across the country since Kirk was killed last Wednesday while speaking at a university in Utah.
Among the vigils included a Sunday event at the Kennedy Center in Washington that drew cabinet members of the Trump Administration and 85 members of Congress.
A vigil even was held in the Utah hometown of the 22-year-old suspect, Tyler Robinson.
The East Cobb organizers said that at Thursday’s vigil, it will be “just community coming together to talk about Charlie Kirk and open with a prayer or two. People can speak about how they are feeling and what’s on their mind. We’ll light candles in honor of Charlie Kirk. Just a peaceful event to bring the community together.”
Kirk, 31, was shot once in the neck from long range while speaking at Utah Valley University, and later was pronounced dead at a hospital.
He was the founder of Turning Point USA, an advocacy group that organized youth around a message of conservative populism.
Kirk was a strong ally of Trump who hosted his own podcast and spoke at the Republican National Convention in 2024.
A public memorial service is scheduled for Sunday at a football stadium near Phoenix, where Kirk lived.
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The Cobb County School District said Monday an unspecified number of employees have been placed on administrative leave while it investigates allegations that they posted messages on social media “appearing to celebrate the death of Charlie Kirk.”
In a release sent out Monday afternoon, the Cobb school district said the employees on leave “will not be in a classroom or interacting with students or parents while on leave. The District will complete a thorough investigation and will take appropriate personnel action. We will also report the matter to the Georgia Professional Standards Commission, the ethics board for Georgia educators, requesting appropriate action against their Georgia teaching license.”
The district didn’t indicate how many employees have been placed on leave, and how many are teachers. Nor did the district detail the social media messages or identify the social media platforms where they were posted.
East Cobb News left a message with the Cobb school district seeking more information, but a district spokeswoman said that “We cannot discuss personnel specifically.”
Kirk, 31, was a conservative political activist who was shot and killed in Utah last Wednesday while speaking at a college event.
His death sparked outrage from many conservatives on social media and elsewhere, including President Donald Trump, whom Kirk supported.
But the assassination also has sparked some who opposed Kirk’s politics to express comments that have prompted more controversy.
Employers are taking action against workers who have been accused of cheering Kirk’s killing. Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines has suspended some employees with a message from its chief executive officer.
Cobb school district media and communications director Nan Kiel said in the release that the district was informed by parents about the posts, which she said “are incredibly rare instances and do not reflect the outstanding professionalism demonstrated by the vast majority of Cobb educators daily.”
Kiel further stated that more complaints about the posts “have been received from Cobb educators, stating these behaviors are inconsistent with the professional duty educators owe their students and the Cobb community. We could not agree more. Professional educators are expected to exercise sound judgment and professionalism in and outside the classroom. ”
The Cobb school district has a social media policy for employees that also has provisions for what employees are permitted to post on their personal and social media accounts.
Among the provisions, employees are refrained from posting material that “displays inappropriate personal information, videos, or pictures that impair the employee’s professionalism and reputation” and “harms the reputation of or discredits the District.”
In its release Monday, the district said that “posts that celebrate or support the murder of an innocent person by a school shooter are unprofessional and disruptive to the school environment. We expect Cobb educators to help students learn and grow, which requires limiting disruptions to their classrooms and school. ”
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up and you’re good to go!