Cobb schools report 331 new COVID-19 cases; 18 at Walton HS

Cobb ACT results
Walton has reported 99 confirmed COVID cases since last July, the most in the Cobb County School District.

As COVID-19 case rates drop in Cobb County, so have the numbers of confirmed new cases in the Cobb County School District—but only slightly.

The district reported on Friday 331 new cases, the lowest one-week total since 470 were confirmed the week of Jan. 15.

Since the district began reporting cases last July 1, there have been 3,499 cases among students and staff. Most have come since students returned for in-person classes in October.

Walton High School in East Cobb had 18 of this week’s new cases, the most for any school in the 113-school Cobb district.

Since last July, there have been 99 cases recorded at Walton, 85 at Lassiter, 83 at Pope and 74 at Kell. At Walton, 64 of those cases have been reported since Dec. 18.

Near the end of the first semester in December, 23 cases were reported in a single week at Walton, before the district announced classes would finish all-remote.

The Cobb school district does not break down the number of students and staff who get COVID, nor does it disclose how many individuals are out due to quarantine.

For a week in January, classes went all-remote due to what the district said were high absence rates for those testing positive and in quarantine.

That also came after the deaths of three Cobb school district teachers since Christmas, and pleas from other teachers to stay virtual.

Nearly two-thirds of the district’s 107,000 students are taking in-person classes during the spring semester that began Jan. 6.

Metro Atlanta school board members and superintendents, including from Cobb, have asked Gov. Brian Kemp to consider moving teachers up in line to receive the COVID-19 vaccines.

But on Wednesday, he said during a press conference in Marietta that the state is running extremely short on vaccine supplies for everyone, including seniors.

“We want to expand the criteria, but it’s just not feasible now,” Kemp said.

The seven-day moving average of COVID-19 cases has fallen in Cobb County from 576 on Jan. 12 to 275 on Thursday, according to the Georgia DPH daily status report

The level of community spread also has dropped significantly in Cobb, to a 14-day average of 562 cases per 100,000 people. In January, that figure was over 1,000.

Cobb reported 268 new cases on Thursday and seven deaths, following 11 deaths reported on Wednesday. Since the COVID pandemic began last March, there have been 51,668 cases in Cobb County and 723 deaths.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

Revised ‘JOSH’ conceptual plan based on community feedback

Revised JOSH conceptual plan

A Cobb Planning Commission member on Thursday presented a conceptual site plan for a mixed-use development at Johnson Ferry and Shallowford roads based on feedback from nearby residents.

Tony Waybright, who represents District 2 on the planning board, said that his working plan is not an official proposal.

“It’s just a concept, not the developers’ new site plan,” he said during a virtual town hall organized by Commissioner Jerica Richardson.

(You can watch the town hall in its entirety by clicking here.)

The town hall presenters included Kevin Moore, an attorney for North Point Ministries, which wants to build a church on a portion of a 33-acre tract at the southwest corner of the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford intersection.

North Point’s rezoning case, which has been continued to March, would include 125 townhomes and a small amount of retail, as well as a parking deck for the church.

What’s being proposed as East Cobb Church would include a sanctuary with a capacity for 1,300 people.

More than 400 people logged in online to watch the town hall, and more than 500 offered comments. Many of those opposed to the rezoning are against the townhomes, and especially the number of town homes, saying it’s too dense for an area that includes an adjacent single-family neighborhood.

Others said they welcomed a church coming to the area and for that property to be improved.

(Petitions for and against the rezoning have been created; and we also talked to East Cobb Church Pastor Jamey Dickens earlier this week.)

Waybright has suggested adding some single-family detached residences as a buffer (in green on the map), extending Waterfront Circle (blue line) to address traffic issues and reconfiguring the church building (gold square block) to blend in with design and streetscape guidelines in the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford master plan.

That was approved in 2020 after a two-year process, with a focus on redevelopment of the land at the JOSH intersection. Most of the tracts in the 33-acre property are owned by prominent attorney Fred Hanna and his wife’s non-profit ministry. (See our interview with them here.)

That land was assembled for a 2016 rezoning case for a residential development, but was withdrawn. Moore has said an all-residential use for the land is economically unfeasible.

Most of the parcels contain small, older homes that are occupied by low-income residents served by Lynn Hanna’s True Vine Experience. Some of the lots are empty, including one that included the home of former Gov. Lester Maddox on Johnson Ferry Road.

Community greenspace also would be incorporated into the concept presented by Waybright, who based his map on what he’s heard from the community in recent weeks.

The JOSH master plan, he explained, included “creating a sense of place.”

Moore said in response to questions about the church and the parking lot that both would be built into the topography along Shallowford Road.

“We believe that we can succeed with the community and we will continue with those efforts,” Moore said.

He didn’t say what revisions there might be to the number of townhomes, which would be built by Ashwood Development, an upscale builder with projects in the city of Atlanta and Florida.

North Point would acquire all the property and then sell a portion to the developer. Moore said a starting price point for the townhomes may be in the $500,000 range.

East Cobb Church was created in 2019 and last year became part of North Point, which has several similar non-denominational churches in metro area, although this one would be smaller. Church members have been meeting at Eastside Baptist Church.

During the Q and A session, someone asked about a traffic study. Moore said one has been completed by an independent engineer under the auspices of Cobb DOT and has been submitted for review. (It’s not included in any of the existing filings.)

Moore said the recommendations include turn lanes and other measures designed to improve traffic flow in the busy JOSH intersection, and that what’s being proposed would yield less traffic than a purely residential development.

Dickens said East Cobb Church will have off-duty police guiding traffic on Sundays, and there will not be a pre-school or other activities during the week.

The Cobb zoning staff recommended denial of North Point’s initial application for land-use, traffic, density and stormwater issues.

Waybright said that conclusion is based on a “conservative approach” to evaluating those factors and others.

He also noted that a church was not included in the JOSH Master Plan, which like the land-use plan isn’t law but a guide for planners and decision-makers.

Waybright said the task at hand is to find a balance between the rights of the property owners and the community, and that reflects the land-use plan and master plan.

Planning commissioners and county commissioners do not take public positions on zoning cases before their votes. The planning board is scheduled to hear the case March 2 and Cobb commissioners on March 16.

When asked where she stood on the matter, Richardson said her office is cataloging every e-mail and other message.

“I’m listening, just like you,” she said.

Related stories

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

After 1M COVID vaccines, Georgia faces major supply shortage

Georgia COVID vaccine shortage

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp looked behind him at the COVID-19 vaccination set-up at Jim Miller Park on Wednesday and pointed to a trickle of cars coming through one lane, and another with no traffic at all.

“If we had more supply, that lane that is empty would be full of cars,” Kemp said during a news conference at the site that Cobb and Douglas Public Health has set up for the public to receive vaccines.

“This operation is exemplary, said Dr. Kathleen Toomey, the commissioner of the Georgia Department of Public Health.

The problem is there aren’t many vaccines to distribute, so it’s a venue that isn’t very busy right now.

That’s because of a severe supply shortage of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines that arrived in early January.

The issues aren’t just limited to Cobb and Georgia, but the time being, Cobb and Douglas Public Health isn’t booking new appointments.

This is what the Georgia Department of Public Health is calling Phase 1A+ and those eligible are seniors age 65 and older, first responders, law enforcement personnel and health care workers.

Of the 1 million vaccines distributed by Georgia DPH—or roughly two-thirds of what the state has received from the federal government—502,393 have been first shots for seniors.

While Kemp said he was happy with that progress, it’s far from being enough. He said that Georgia’s weekly allotment of vaccines from the federal government is being pushed up from around 120,000 doses to more than 154,000 doses, starting as soon as next week.

But with 2 million people eligible in Phase 1A+, including 1.3 million seniors, there’s still a long way to go.

“The supply does not meet the demand that we have in our state,” said Kemp, who was joined by Toomey, Cobb and Douglas Public Health director Dr. Janet Memark and Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid.

The additional supplies are welcome, he added, but “it’s not going to change our shortage.”

Cobb and Douglas Public Health had been vaccinating around 700 people a day in Phase 1A+, but stopped taking new appointments last Friday, when it was able to give out only 400 shots.

Memark said the vaccine doses the agency has are being used for those people who had previous appointments. In a previous briefing to Cobb commissioners, she was hopeful that Jim Miller Park could distribute around 1,000 people daily.

Valerie Crow, a spokeswoman for Cobb and Douglas Public Health, could not say when vaccine appointments would resume and said “we don’t know what to expect as far as vaccine supply.”

Those eligible can get a vaccine through a medical provider and other locations like pharmacies, but “their vaccine supply has also been limited.”

Crow said those individuals who have received an initial vaccination will be contacted about booking a second appointment. “We have a team working on this now,” she said.

Citizens in Phase 1A+ don’t have to be vaccinated in their county of residence, and Georgia DPH has set up locator site with information on availability. The only requirement, Crow said, is that they be Georgia residents.

While a new variant of COVID-19 is emerging in the metro Atlanta area, case rates are falling throughout the state.

The seven-day moving average has fallen 46 percent in Georgia from its high of 6,353 on Jan. 11.

In Cobb, that number also has fallen rapidly, from 576 on Jan. 12 to 275 on Thursday, according to the Georgia DPH daily status report.

The level of community spread also has dropped significantly in Cobb, to a 14-day average of 562 cases per 100,000 people. In January, that figure was over 1,000.

Cobb reported 268 new cases on Thursday and seven deaths, following 11 deaths reported on Wednesday. Since the COVID pandemic began last March, there have been 51,668 cases in Cobb County and 723 deaths.

In Georgia there were 6,066 new PCR and antigen tests reported and 141 deaths on Thursday. In the state, a total of 13,048 people have died from COVID since last March.

“We’re still in a deadly race against a very contagious virus,” Kemp said. “This virus is killing too many of our fellow Georgians.”

Kemp and health officials urged the public to remain cautious and practice the 3Ws—washing hands, wearing masks, and practicing social distancing.

“We still have a lot of fighting to do in Cobb County,” Memark said. “We still have a lot of hope that comes with this vaccine.”

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

‘Passion for Pets’ photo contest continues at The Avenue East Cobb

Passion for Pets, The Avenue East Cobb

Submitted information from The Avenue East Cobb:

PASSION FOR PETS PHOTO CONTEST. Show off the one you love! Submit your photos between Feb. 1-12. Visit The Avenue East Cobb to view the photo window display located between Sephora and Simply Mac. The first 25 entries will receive a silver 5×7 picture frame. All entries will be included in an album on THE AVENUE EAST COBB FACEBOOK PAGE for online voting. Gift Card Prizes announced Monday Feb. 15th. SUBMIT PHOTOS to the Management Office (next to Panera) or Email PCHANIN@POAGLLC.COM.

COMPLIMENTARY PROFESSIONAL PET PHOTO SHOOT. Need a new photo of your pet? Book your pet photo shoot on Wednesday, February 10 from 1PM – 4PM. Your photo will automatically be entered into the Photo Contest. RESERVATIONS REQUIRED. To book your pet photo shoot, call the Marketing Coordinator M-F from 9 am – 5 pm in the Management Office at 770-971-9945 X3.

Related content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

Mixed-use rezoning case at Loop-Powers Ferry Road delayed again

Nexus Gardens

A mixed-use project that would turn an older single-family neighborhood into apartments, senior living and restaurant space at the intersection of the South Marietta Loop and Powers Ferry Road is being delayed again.

At its meeting Tuesday night, the Marietta Planning Commission agreed to table the proposal by Nexus Gardens, after the developer’s attorney added new stipulations and other changes the day before.

We first reported in November about Nexus Gardens, which would occupy 17.14 acres that also includes undeveloped land that fronts Interstate 75 at the South Marietta Loop exit.

The initial filing has since been revised (you can read it here) and here are the revised stipulations.

The assemblage includes 17 homes on Meadowbrook Drive and one on Virginia Place that are within the city limits.

Nexus Gardens would include two five-story apartment buildings totalling 280 units served by a three-story parking deck, a five-story senior-living building with 160 units and 39 townhomes.

A commercial building at the center of the project would have a restaurant with outdoor dining. An “alternate” three-story building would contain more restaurant and retail space, event space and a coffee shop. Two smaller retail buildings would line Powers Ferry at Meadowbrook Drive, the lone access point for the development.

The proposal also calls for a variety of amenities in and around the residential buildings as well as a community walking trail, courtyard areas, “gardenesque” landscaping, a dog park and a reflecting pond with water jets.

But plenty of community opposition has mounted since then, including from a nearby neighborhood that’s in unincorporated Cobb. They’ve launched a website, Save Our Marietta.

Among their objections is that Nexus Gardens would have only one access point—on Meadowbrook Lane, which is in unincorporated Cobb.

The Nexus Gardens developers recently commissioned a traffic study (that you can read here) and also submitted into the case filings.

The Save Our Marietta group is claiming the development would bring an additional 800 trips a day through that and other residential streets and is urging the county to ask that the traffic study be reviewed by Cobb and state DOT.

Related stories

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

 

Petitions created to support, oppose East Cobb Church zoning

Johnson Ferry-Shallowford proposal

We got a message Wednesday morning from Rachel Bruce, who lives near the mixed-use project at the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford intersection being proposed by North Point Ministries, which wants to build the East Cobb Church there.

Yesterday we posted our interview with East Cobb Church Pastor Jamey Dickens; Bruce tells us she’s part of a group of more than 200 residents opposed to the project who have been gathering online.

They’ve also started an online petition to oppose Z-72, which includes townhomes and retail, “due to the high density, and not being in line with the JOSH study.”

That’s the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford master plan that was adopted last year, after more than two years of community input, and reflects a desire to keep a single-family residential area that way.

A number of the petition’s signatories have expressed that sentiment.

There’s also a petition that’s been created to support the rezoning, saying the project “will bring a community-centric church” and other amenities to property where “dilapidated homes and property have existed for over a decade.”

Cobb Commissioner Jerica Richardson is holding a virtual town hall Thursday at 5:15 p.m. that will be streamed live on her Facebook page.

She’ll be joined by Cobb Planning Commission member Tony Waybright; and Dickens told us the meeting includes a presentation of the project by Kevin Moore, North Point’s attorney.

The town hall also will take questions from the public, pro, con or undecided.

The zoning case, as we noted yesterday, is being continued to March.

You can sign up for Richardson’s town hall by clicking here. Her office will send out an e-mail prior to the meeting with a link to the event and information on the meeting structure.

Here’s the latest site plan for Z-72 and here’s the initial zoning analysis; as well as traffic analysis. You can look through all the related files by clicking here.

Dickens said in our interview that numerous changes are in the works, and what they’re including thus far will be presented by Moore at Thursday’s town hall.

Related stories

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

East Cobb Church zoning: ‘What we’re doing is ever-evolving’

East Cobb Church rezoning
A rendering of the proposed East Cobb Church at Johnson Ferry and Shallowford roads.

While he’s building a faith community during a pandemic, Rev. Jamey Dickens is also taking a crash course in how the zoning process works in Cobb County.

The pastor of East Cobb Church, the newest addition to the North Point Ministries family of Atlanta-area non-denominational congregations, Dickens lives not far from the proposed church home at the southwest corner of Johnson Ferry and Shallowford roads.

His church’s motto is “to love where you live,” and Dickens said in an interview with East Cobb News on Monday that “we want to listen to our new neighbors.”

Dickens has been poring over site plans and learning the language of planners and developers as the church’s application for a mixed-use development proceeds.

North Point’s request is for more than a new sanctuary and church-related facilities. More than 100 townhomes and some retail space are planned for the 33-acre site that’s at the heart of the “JOSH” community.

North Point’s zoning case, first filed last fall, was to have been heard Tuesday by the Cobb Planning Commission. But that has been continued to March by the Cobb zoning staff, which initially recommended denial for traffic, density and land-use reasons.

Related stories

On Thursday, Cobb Commissioner Jerica Richardson and Planning Commissioner Tony Waybright will be conducting a virtual town hall to get public feedback on the project. Dickens said Kevin Moore, North Point’s zoning attorney, will make a presentation that is being revised from the original plans.

The town hall starts at 5:15 p.m. Thursday and will be streamed live on Richardson’s Facebook page.

You can sign up by clicking here. Richardson’s office will send out an e-mail prior to the meeting with a link to the event and information on the meeting structure.

(Here’s the latest site plan; and here’s the initial zoning analysis; as well as traffic analysis. You can look through all the related files by clicking here.)

“What we’re doing is ever-evolving,” said Dickens, who indicated the number of townhomes may be reduced, among other changes.

Those have been in the works after North Point leaders met with nearby homeowners groups, as well as Richardson, Waybright and others in the community.

Dickens said he understands some of the concerns that have been expressed—especially about traffic from the church as well as the townhomes.

East Cobb Church is planning a facility with a four-story building and sanctuary for up to 1,300 people, as well as a parking deck.

Dickens said the parking deck, which would front Shallowford Road, will be at surface levels, as will all other parking areas.

North Point’s plans are to acquire the entire 33-acre site from prominent attorney Fred Hanna and his wife’s outreach ministry, which they tried to assemble for a residential project in 2016 that was withdrawn.

The church would then sell the portion of the land for the townhomes to a developer that North Point is currently negotiating with.

Jamey Dickens, East Cobb Church
Rev. Jamey Dickens in his role as student pastor at Buckhead Church.

As for church activities, Dickens said only Sunday mornings will pose any traffic issues. Like the other North Point congregations, East Cobb Church will not have a pre-school during the week.

The East Cobb Church sanctuary is smaller than most of the other North Point churches, and Dickens said as is the case at the other locations, this one will have off-duty police who will “prioritize all traffic.

“If our people need to wait, then fine,” Dickens aid.

He said he’s hopeful that Thursday’s town hall will clear up some of the “misconceptions” about North Point’s plans.

“I don’t feel like that on our side it’s a battle,” he said. “I feel confident that we’re going to find a version of this that works.”

The Johnson Ferry-Shallowford site wasn’t something Dickens said he initially thought was the right “fit” for East Cobb Church, which became part of North Point Ministries in late 2019 and had been meeting at Eastside Baptist Church.

After serving as the student pastor at Buckhead Church, Dickens was tapped to lead the new congregation, which grew out of having members from various North Point churches who live in East Cobb, and who wanted to worship closer to home.

“We think we have an incredible message, and we know that people want to be connected to a church where they feel at home,” he said.

East Cobb Church has grown to around 800 people (children excluded), and he estimated that typical in-person attendance was around 600. Services have been continuing online during the pandemic.

North Point was founded in 1995 in Alpharetta by Rev. Andy Stanley, the son of retired First Baptist Church of Atlanta Rev. Charles Stanley. Other North Point churches are located in Woodstock, Cumming, Decatur and Buford.

North Point congregations are known for having mid-week Bible studies in the homes of their members, as well as community outreach.

In October, East Cobb Church raised money for and donated a box truck for Simple Needs GA, which provides furniture and other household goods and everyday items for needy families.

While many of the new church’s members are young families like Dickens’—he and his wife have four children—some of the empty-nesters are among East Cobb Church’s most active volunteers.

He said of Thursday’s meeting that he’s hopeful the North Point presentation “will put some people’s minds at ease.”

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

Cobb schools: ‘Brief lockdown’ lifted after tech malfunction

The Cobb County School District said Tuesday that all schools in the 113-school district were placed on a “brief lockdown” due to a systemwide issue with its AlertPoint emergency alert system.Campbell High School lockdown

In a social media message posted around noon, the district said that the lockdowns were lifted and “there was no threat to students or staff at any time. Teachers are teaching and students are learning.”

The message didn’t indicate how long the lockdowns lasted.

In 2017 Cobb schools began implementing AlertPoint, which allows each employee within a school—including administrators, teachers and other staffers—to activate a device should an emergency occur. This includes fires, active shooters and other intruders, physical altercations and medical emergencies.

When an AlertPoint device is activated, alert information is relayed via computer and mobile devices to school-level administrators and security personnel, as well as at the school district office, within seconds.

The location and identity of the person sending the alert also is transmitted. When a “Code Red” alert is triggered, flashing lights, beeping sounds and voice messages ring out, and the intercom system indicates a lockdown situation is underway.

The AlertPoint system is patterned after existing school fire emergency procedures.

Bells Ferry Elementary School in East Cobb was one of the first schools to use AlertPoint during a proof-of-concept period.

AlertPoint is one component of the district’s CobbShield emergency and safety program that has been developed in recent years.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

COVID-19 variant detected in Cobb, 8 other Georgia counties

Cobb COVID variant
Source: Cobb GIS

The Georgia Department of Public Health on Monday said that 19 cases of a COVID-19 variant first detected in the United Kingdom have been confirmed in the state, including in Cobb County.

The nine counties Georgia DPH identified as having variant cases are in metro Atlanta: Carroll, Cherokee, Clayton, Cobb, DeKalb, Douglas, Fulton, Gwinnett, and Paulding.

The individuals diagnosed with the variant are between the ages of 15 to 61. They include eight males and 11 females, according to a Georgia DPH press release, which added that the agency is “working to identify close contacts of the individuals, and will monitor them closely.”

Georgia DPH didn’t break down the number of cases in each county.

Last week, Cobb and Douglas Public Health director Dr. Janet Memark told county commissioners that a mutation of COVID-19 had been detected in Cobb, but didn’t elaborate.

The variant detected by Georgia DPH is called B.1.1.7, which the U.S. Centers for Disease Control said emerged in the U.K. and was first identified in the United States in December. At least 30 states have reported B.1.1.7 cases.

The CDC said that mutation “may be associated with an increased risk of death compared with other variants” and that it may become the dominant strain in the U.S. by March.

The Georgia DPH release said that Pfizer and Moderna, whose vaccines have been distributed in limited quantities in the state, say those vaccines “appear to work against this variant.”

Georgia DPH urged the public to follow familiar habits to prevent the spread of COVID: Wearing masks, washing hands and practicing social-distancing.

The agency also said that “just because [the variant] has not been identified in a particular city or county does not mean it is not there—individuals could be infected anywhere in the state, or in some cases out of state.”

Georgia DPH reported 2,587 new COVID cases and 44 deaths on Monday. In Cobb, there were 236 new cases and one new death, bringing the county’s cumulative totals from last March to 50,928 and 702.

After a serious spike in cases in early January—Cobb reported a single-day record of 981 on Jan. 8—case rates have been falling, both according to the “date of report,” when a positive COVID case is reported to health authorities, and “date of onset,” or the day someone feels symptoms and gets tested.

Also falling are Cobb’s figures on community spread—as seen in the Cobb GIS graphic above. After surpassing a 14-day average of more than 1,000 cases per 100,000 people, Georgia DPH data on Monday show that number is 611 in Cobb.

That’s well above the “high community spread” threshold of 100 cases, but Memark said in her remarks the drop is an encouraging sign.

What’s not encouraging are efforts to vaccine those at high risk in Georgia. Cobb and Douglas Public Health said Friday it is not taking any new appointments for vaccinations because of limited vaccine supplies, and is using what it has for those already with confirmed first appointments, and those people needing second doses.

The CDPH website has been available for new appointments every Friday at 5 p.m., but it’s unclear whether that will be happening this week. 

The agency distributed only 400 vaccines on Friday, after providing nearly 700 on Monday. Memark said increasing the number of shipments may not happen until March or April.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

Rotary Club of East Cobb distributes face masks and sanitizers

East Cobb Rotary PPE

Submitted information and photo:

This past Wednesday, the East Cobb Rotary club distributed free face masks and hand sanitizers to many of our local charities and service organizations. Rotary club member Guy Gebhardt is seen delivering nearly 2,000 KN95 masks and hand sanitizers to the Cobb Police and Fire precincts on Lower Roswell Road. 

Related content

Send Us Your News!

Let East Cobb News know what your organization is doing, or share news about what people are doing in the community—accomplishments, recognitions, milestones, etc.

Pass along your details to: editor@eastcobbnews.com, and please observe the following guidelines to ensure we get everything properly and can post it promptly.

Send the body of your announcement, calendar item or news release IN TEXT FORM ONLY in the text field of your e-mail template. Reformatting text from PDF, JPG and doc files takes us longer to prepare your message for publication.

We accept PDFs as an accompaniment to your item. Images are fine too, but we prefer those to be JPG files (more than jpeg and png). PLEASE DO NOT send photos inside a PDF or text or any other kind of file. Of course, send us links that are relevant to your message so we can direct people to your website.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

Cobb Chief Magistrate Court judge provides evictions update

Brendan Murphy, Cobb Chief Magistrate Judge

On Friday Brendan Murphy, the Chief Magistrate Court Judge for Cobb County, provided the following update on the evictions process:

You, your case, and everyone’s good health matter to the Magistrate Court!  #MaskUpCobb

This is not intended to be used as legal advice. Please consult an attorney for legal advice about your individual case.

Here’s a summary of what’s new:

(1) The CDC has extended its limited, temporary halt in certain residential evictions until “at least March 31, 2021.”

(2) The Cobb County Board of Commissioners has appropriated CARES Act rental assistance funding to three (3) additional non-profit organizations, bringing the program to five total providers. The Center for Family Resources, MUST Ministries, and Sweetwater Mission join Star-C and HomeFree-USA’s Cobb County HomeSaver for Renters Program.

(3) After pausing all dispossessory hearings since December 11, 2020, the Magistrate Court will resume limited hearings on February 19, 2021. A hearing may be set down on the basis of a written request for emergency reason(s) including but not limited to physical violence, threats, criminal activity, other safety issues, and/or property destruction.  If the landlord has received a CDC Declaration in a residential, nonpayment of rent case, no hearing may be set.

Related Content

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

Cobb and Douglas Public Health ‘pausing’ COVID-19 vaccines

Cobb health director COVID vaccines
Cobb and Douglas Public Health director Dr. Janet Memark.

Due to a shortage of COVID-19 vaccine supplies, Cobb and Douglas Public Health said Friday it is temporarily “pausing” appointments for the public.

Since early January, the health agency had been releasing appointment slots each Friday for the following week, prioritizing health care workers, first responders and people ages 65 and older.

But the latest update, which didn’t specify when vaccinations might resume, indicated that current supplies may not increase until March or April.

In a message on its website, Cobb and Douglas Public Health also said that those who have a previously scheduled appointment for a first or second dose “will not be affected by this change unless you have been contacted.”

The agency said that when more appointments become available, they will be posted on its website and social media accounts.

In its status update on Friday—you can read through it by clicking here—Cobb and Douglas Public Health said it has administered 14,000 doses of the COVID vaccines since early January, including 11,896 at Jim Miller Park in Marietta.

But only 410 doses were given at Jim Miller on Friday, down from nearly 700 that had been distributed on Monday. That figure was provided in a briefing Tuesday to Cobb commissioners by Cobb and Douglas Public Health director Dr. Janet Memark.

In her remarks, Memark said the agency was “prioritizing second doses” and that “if we have some extra we’ll schedule a first dose.”

But as the week continued the available vaccine doses began running out.

The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines are being given by Cobb and Douglas Public Health, which is hopeful that it soon will get supplies of the Astra Zeneca and Johnson and Johnson vaccines. The latter is a single-dose vaccine.

As of Saturday there have been 50,173 confirmed COVID cases in Cobb County from PCR tests and 11,923 more from antigen tests since last March.

A total of 693 have died in Cobb since that time, and 38 have been reported since Monday. Those include 13 deaths reported on Wednesday and 12 on Thursday.

The case rate is starting to drop slightly in Cobb, as are the community spread figures. As of Saturday, the 14-day average of cases per 100,000 people in the county is 661, after surpassing 1,000 earlier this month.

Earlier this week Cobb and metro-Atlanta school board members and superintendents sent letters to Gov. Brian Kemp asking for school staff to be prioritized for vaccines, but on Tuesday his spokesman said that Kemp “has repeatedly stated—as recently as today—that as soon as Georgia begins to receive increased vaccine supply, teachers and school staff will absolutely be included in any expanded criteria.”

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

Cobb schools revise quarantine guidance for close contacts

The Cobb County School District is reducing the quarantine period for asymptomatic staff and students who are considered “close contacts” of those with COVID-19 from 14 to 10 days, effective Monday.Campbell High School lockdown

In a statement issued Friday, the district said the decision was based on guidance from Dr. Janet Memark, the director of Cobb and Douglas Public Health.

What that means is that individuals who show no symptoms after 10 days of isolation and who have not been tested can return to school.

You can read the full statement by clicking here; the district noted that the Centers for Disease Control is still recommending 14-day quarantine period for asymptomatic people exposed to those with COVID-19 “to be safe.”

The district statement said that if an asymptomatic person experiences even one symptom of fever, chills, shortness of breath, coughing or loss of taste and smell and two symptoms from the following conditions: sore throat, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, chills, muscle pain, extreme fatigue, a severe or very bad headache, new nasal congestion or a stuffy or runny nose, they should follow symptomatic guidance.

Cobb schools returned to classes this week after going all-virtual the week before, due to what the district said were high COVID case counts and high numbers of students and staff being out due to quarantine.

Also on Friday the district updated its weekly COVID case totals to include 384 new cases for the past week. Since last July 1 there have been 3,168 confirmed cases of the virus, with the vast majority coming since students returned to campuses in October.

The Cobb school district does not break down the number of students and staff who get COVID, nor does it disclose how many individuals are out due to quarantine.

Earlier this week three Cobb school board members sent a letter to Gov. Brian Kemp asking for teachers to be prioritized for the COVID vaccine, and two days later Cobb superintendent Chris Ragsdale joined other metro Atlanta superintendents in asking for the same.

But Kemp’s spokesman said there aren’t enough vaccines as it is for the current phase, which includes seniors and first responders.

At an emotional Cobb school board meeting last week, following the deaths of three of their colleagues, teachers asked to remain all-remote or to allow teachers with health issues to teach from home.

Since in-person classes resumed in October, teachers have been required to teach from their schools.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

East Cobb food scores: Five Guys; Derek’s Cafe; Karachi Broast

East Cobb Five Guys

The following East Cobb food scores from Jan. 11-29 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Boston Market
2014 Powers Ferry Road
January 20, 2021 Score: 80, Grade: B

Derek’s Cafe
1779 Canton Road
January 12, 2021 Score: 84, Grade: B

Five Guys
4269 Roswell Road, Building 200
January 29, 2021 Score: 95, Grade: A

Judy’s Country Kitchen
2745 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 106
January 29, 2021 Score: 81, Grade: B

Karachi Broast & Grill
1475 Terrell Mill Road, Suite 110
January 25, 2021 Score: 88, Grade: B

Zaxby’s
2080 Lower Roswell Road
January 12, 2021 Score: 91, Grade: A

Waffle House
621 Johnson Ferry Road
January 25, 2021 Score: 82, Grade: B

Related content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

 

 

Wheeler student expanding virtual outreach tutoring program

Wheeler student virtual tutoring program
Wheeler senior Ishaan Chaubey in a tutoring session with a student from India.

Wheeler High School senior Ishaan Chaubey began what he calls the Virtual Outreach Tutoring (VOT) program at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic last spring, and is looking to expand the program to help fellow students on a longer-term basis.

He wrote in to explain how VOT—website link here—developed, who’s been involved, and what’s next for the organization:

In March of 2020, after my school had become fully virtual, I saw that many of my peers were struggling in their academics due to the huge transition from in-person learning to a virtual learning setting. As a tutor for an after-school club before COVID-19, I also wondered how those students, who had struggled in their everyday academics, were coping with this new learning method as well.

One night, in a video call with friends, many of them complained that the mass-cancellation of so much in the community had eliminated any opportunity for their community service requirements. Hence, I decided to create an organization named Virtual Outreach Tutoring (VOT), which would provide free virtual tutoring to all elementary, middle, and high school students in a wide variety of subjects and also give high school students several opportunities for community service.

Currently, the VOT administrative team consists of myself, Jahnvi Bhagat (Senior at Wheeler High School) who is the lead administrator for Wheeler High School tutors, Rohan Mathur (Senior at Campbell High School) who is the lead administrator for Campbell High School tutors, Yasmin Sharifian (Senior at Lassiter High School) who is the lead administrator for tutors from Lassiter and other United States schools, and Jack Turbush (Senior at Wheeler High School) who helps in designing various promotional flyers for VOT. As for the number of tutors in our organization, we have approximately 120 tutors who help students in various subjects.

Today, my service initiative has greatly expanded, and my team and I have been able to help over 150 students across the United States and some from India and Germany. This initiative has also acquired significant recognition that it was recently featured on the Cobb County School District website and made an official tutoring option in the CCSD. In addition, various honor societies such as the Wheeler National Honor Society and the Campbell Mu Alpha Theta Math Honor Society have decided to make our virtual tutoring organization their official tutoring option.

Furthermore, with the help of several nonprofit organizations such as the United Way of Greater Atlanta, this virtual tutoring initiative has also inspired students to join as tutors from different states, such as New York, Texas, Florida, and Virginia, to help their communities. Today, along with providing free virtual tutoring, my team and I have conducted several Group AP Review sessions in the spring of 2020, aided students in SAT/ACT preparation, and produced a virtual musical performance to recognize the hard-work of healthcare workers fighting against COVID-19 for the AG Rhodes Health and Rehab Center in Marietta, Georgia.

For the production of the virtual musical performance, my team consisted of Charles Yu (Editor), Keaton Kotarba (Editor), Joseph Nguyen (Performer- Violin), Hannah Lee (Performer- Violin), and myself (Performer- Piano).

As time progresses, my team and I plan to continue this successful service initiative into college, and we also plan to appoint a new administrative team to lead and manage the tutoring service at the school level after our graduation. Finally, our collective vision for VOT is to remain persistent in helping numerous students by further expanding this initiative across the world and ensuring that each student has the necessary resources to genuinely succeed in their academic endeavor.

Ishaan says students at any level can get tutoring from VOT by going to the website, and that’s where any interested potential tutors can also sign up.

Hannah Lee working with a student in Marietta.
A VOT group review session for AP chemistry.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

Johnson Ferry-Shallowford zoning case subject of town hall

Johnson Ferry-Shallowford proposal

Following up a story we’ve been reporting since the fall, about the proposed mixed-use development at the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford intersection:

Cobb Commissioner Jerica Richardson and Cobb Planning Commission member Tony Waybright are having a virtual town hall next week to hear from the public about Z-72-2020.

The town hall meeting is set for Thursday, Feb. 4 at 7 p.m. and is free for the public to attend.

The February zoning files indicate that Z-72, which was continued from November, will not be heard on Tuesday before the Cobb Planning Commission. The case is being continued again, likely until March.

The development would be anchored by what’s being called East Cobb Church, townhomes and retail on 33 acres. The Cobb Zoning Office has initially recommended denial based on traffic and density concerns.

The church would seat up to 1,300 have four stories and a parking deck, while 125 townhomes are being planned.

The church would be part of the Alpharetta-based North Point Church. Since early last year, East Cobb Church has been formed and is holding services at Eastside Baptist Church.

The land is owned by prominent attorney Fred Hanna and his wife’s outreach ministry, and which they tried to assemble for a residential project in 2016 that was withdrawn.

This will be the first major zoning case in District 2 for Richardson, who succeeded now-retired commissioner Bob Ott this month. Cobb doesn’t hold zoning hearings in January.

If you want to sign up for the town hall you can do so by clicking here. Richardson’s office will send out an e-mail prior to the meeting with a link to the event and information on the meeting structure.

For questions and information contact Allie Korucu, Richardson’s assistant:  aliye.korucu@cobbcounty.org.

Related stories

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

 

East Cobb church issues ‘For Our Teachers’ COVID pledge

East Cobb UMC

An East Cobb church that’s been a site for COVID testing in recent weeks posted a message Wednesday urging support for teachers and efforts to reduce the spread of the virus.

On its social media channels, East Cobb United Methodist Church called for a “For Our Teachers” initiative following the deaths of three Cobb school teachers.

Last Thursday, nearly 100 teachers protested outside Cobb Board of Education meetings to demand all-virtual learning. Last week the district went fully remote but this week returned to face-to-face instruction.

A school employee chided two board members and Cobb County School District Superintendent Chris Ragsdale to wear masks during an emotionally-charged public comment period

The board did not discuss COVID response at those meetings and Ragsdale only briefly mentioned the dead teachers by name during those meetings. Neither he nor board members David Banks and David Chastain of East Cobb put on masks.

Following “the blatant disrespect for teachers’ health and safety at last week’s school board meeting, silence for us is no longer an option,” said the East Cobb UMC message, which continues:

 

For our teachers, we listen.

They are saying this is the “craziest, most difficult, most frustrating school year” of their careers, and they feel “unsupported and unacknowledged” (a direct quote from a long-time county educator).

For our teachers, we pray.

We ask God to grant all educators the strength and perseverance needed during this difficult year.

For our teachers, we give thanks.

Thank you for the endless hours you have spent reworking the curriculum to fit modified and hybrid classrooms. Thank you for the extra time spent scrubbing desks and sanitizing markers. Your care and creativity do not go unnoticed.

For our teachers, we wear a mask.

Not just once-and-awhile, but every time we leave the house. We must #StopTheSpread.

For our teachers, we get the vaccine when we can.

Ultimately, this is the only way the dreadful pandemic will ever end.

For our teachers, we advocate.

We will contact our school board representatives and implore them to take the same actions we pledge to take.

For our teachers, we do better.

After all, our children would not have an education if it was not… For Our Teachers.

Add the “For Our Teachers” frame to your profile picture and join us in solidarity with educators everywhere: https://tinyurl.com/xz1n4lp2

Along with this, we invite you to post a tangible way you will support teachers in your community. You may model ours or create one of your own. #ForOurTeachers

 

In November, East Cobb UMC became a pop-up site for COVID testing by a private company, and that part of the church parking lot has been busy ever since. The public can drive up without an appointment to get a test. There are no out-of-pocket costs and insurance is accepted.

On Monday three Cobb school board members signed a letter sent to Gov. Brian Kemp demanding more safety measures at schools, including prioritizing vaccines for teachers.

On Wednesday, the Cobb school district announced that Ragsdale had signed a similar letter from metro Atlanta superintendents.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

 

Cobb superintendent wants teachers prioritized for COVID vaccine

Cobb school superintendent honored

Two days after three Cobb school board members asked Gov. Brian Kemp for teachers and school staff to be placed in a higher priority group for receiving the COVID-19 vaccine, the Cobb school superintendent has done the same.

Chris Ragsdale signed a letter sent Tuesday by metro Atlanta superintendents to request that teachers and other school employees be added to the 1A category—the highest in the tiered vaccination system being rolled out by the Georgia Department of Public Health.

“The longer we delay in vaccinating our teachers and school staff, the more we risk having to close our doors once again,” the superintendents wrote in the letter, which you can read in full here. “The educators in our districts have given tirelessly in time, effort, and dedication, especially during the pandemic; we ask you to recognize their value and importance to our communities and our state.”

The other superintendents signing the letter include those from the Atlanta, DeKalb, Fulton, Gwinnett and Marietta school districts.

Three teachers in the Cobb school district have died from COVID since Christmas, including two on Thursday. The same day, the Cobb school board met but was silent on the matter, despite hearing emotional pleas from protesting teachers to go to all-remote instruction.

Ragsdale briefly mentioned the dead teachers by name but did not discuss COVID response, and when a board member tried to ask him about it, he was cut off by the chairman.

In a release sent out by the Cobb County School District Wednesday, Ragsdale said that “I, along with other superintendents, have been advocating for our employees with decision-makers for some time now. The letter was simply a culmination of our efforts to get access to the vaccine for educators. We all understand the most extreme hurdle for us to overcome is the quantity of vaccine available to be administered.”

Vaccine recipients in the 1A category include frontline medical and health-care workers and residents of long-term care facilities.

This is the third week that people in the 1A+ category—first responders and citizens age 65 and older—have been able to get vaccinations.

But the supplies have been severely limited and many older people have expressed frustrations with an online appointment booking website that has crashed, or that shows no vaccination slots available.

Cobb and Douglas Public Health is vaccinating around 700 people a day, six days a week and is asking for public patience as they try to get more vaccine supplies.

In Georgia, only 80,000 vaccines are being distributed a week to around 2,000 public and private providers.

On Tuesday, Kemp announced the state will be getting an additional 25,000 vaccine doses a week from the federal government.

Kemp spokesman Cody Hall issued a message via Twitter later Tuesday saying there is “a simple math problem” and said there isn’t enough vaccine for 400,000 teachers.

“These superintendents should explain which currently eligible population should be, in their view, sent to the back of the line for vaccination. Seniors? Healthcare workers? First responders and law enforcement?

“The Governor has repeatedly stated—as recently as today—that as soon as Georgia begins to receive increased vaccine supply, teachers and school staff will absolutely be included in any expanded criteria.”

The Cobb school district release said that the school system “would continue to offer choice for as long as it was feasible.”

Nearly two-thirds of Cobb’s 107,000 enrolled students are attending class in person for the spring semester that began Jan. 6. Last week, students worked remotely due to high COVID case numbers and students and staff being out due to quarantine.

Classes resumed in-person Monday. The district has said there would be another period for parents to choose face-to-face or remote instruction for the rest of the spring semester, but it has not announced when that will be.

Related Content

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

Planning Commission member from East Cobb dies from COVID

Cobb Planning Commission member Judy Williams died Monday from COVID-19, according to Cobb commissioners who announced her death at their meeting on Tuesday.Cobb Planning Commission Chairwoman Judy Williams

Williams was appointed by Commissioner JoAnn Birrell from District 3, which includes Northeast Cobb, and had served as the five-member board chair for two years until last year.

“We lost a great public servant and a true friend,” Birrell said in remarks at the end of Tuesday’s meeting. “She was my rock.”

The commissioners also held a moment of silence for Williams.

Williams was a lifelong Cobb resident who graduated from Marietta High School and was a planner for Cobb County government from 1972 until her retirement in 2000. According to her obituary, one of the first projects she signed off on was the creation of Indian Hills in East Cobb.

Williams later returned to serve on both the planning board and the zoning appeals board.

A memorial service will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday will be limited to family only but can be viewed on the Mayes Ward Dobbins website.

Contributions in Williams’ memory can be made to the Wellstar Foundation.

The Cobb Planning Commission is scheduled to meet Tuesday to hear the first zoning cases in 2021.

Related stories

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!

Golden K Kiwanis members replace flag at Canton Road restaurant

Golden K Kiwanis Club
From L to R: Maz Islam , owner of the Windy City Grill US Flag Canon and Kiwanis Club of Marietta Golden K members Margy Rogers, Jim Farley, Mike Kaplan and Jan Williams.

The Kiwanas Club of Marietta Golden K branch—which is made up of retirees and is based at the Tim D. Lee Senior Center in East Cobb—has had many virtual and Zoom meetings in recent months due to COVID-19.

After one such recent meeting, several of the members met for an outdoor lunch at the Windy City Grill on Canton Road. The group is called the “lunch bunch” and Golden K publicity volunteer John Kone relays what happened next:

While having lunch, Kiwanis Club member Jan Williams noticed that the US flag being flown was in a “rough and tattered” shape. It was old and needed to be replaced. She obtained a new flag from US Flag Maker Inc., which was later presented to Maz Islam, owner of the Windy City Grill.

Jan requested just one thing, “I just want the ‘canon’ from the old one.” The canon is the blue part of the flag with the stars on it. “I am what is known as a ‘star maker’ … I cut out the stars from the old flag and then, the stars are presented to US vererans. The rest of the flag is given to the Scouts for proper disposal”, she added.

So, next time you stop by for something to eat at Windy City Grill, rest assured that the previously flown old “Old Glory” has now been replaced with a new “Old Glory.”

Golden K Kiwanis Club

Golden K Kiwanis Club

Send Us Your News!

Let East Cobb News know what your organization is doing, or share news about what people are doing in the community—accomplishments, recognitions, milestones, etc.

Pass along your details to: editor@eastcobbnews.com, and please observe the following guidelines to ensure we get everything properly and can post it promptly.

Send the body of your announcement, calendar item or news release IN TEXT FORM ONLY in the text field of your e-mail template. Reformatting text from PDF, JPG and doc files takes us longer to prepare your message for publication.

We accept PDFs as an accompaniment to your item. Images are fine too, but we prefer those to be JPG files (more than jpeg and png). PLEASE DO NOT send photos inside a PDF or text or any other kind of file. Of course, send us links that are relevant to your message so we can direct people to your website.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

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!