Cobb police officers take stand against racism, brutality

Cobb police pledge racism brutality

The Cobb Police Department has released a video with officers and Chief Tim Cox reiterating previous statements the department has made condemning racism and police brutality.

Standing on the front steps of department headquarters in Marietta, a number officers also retook their oath of office.

Newly appointed Cobb Public Safety Director Randy Crider also spoke in the video, which is a little more than six minutes long.

Crider said the statements were not forced on the officers by any of their superiors, and Cox said the oath ceremony was even the idea of officers “to show the community the symbolism of how serious they are.”

In prepared remarks, Cox said he recently had a conversation with a pastor who told him that if one part of the body is hurting, then all the body is hurting.

“I think that’s what we’re experiencing in society,” Cox said. “All of society is hurting because one part is hurting.

“Our department will not stand for it, we will not tolerate it in any form,” Cox said, referring to racism and police brutality, “and we will not have it in the ranks of our department.”

On Tuesday, Cobb commissioners will consider a resolution to condemn racism in the county.

Thus far, several peaceful protests have taken place in Cobb to decry the death of George Floyd, a black man who was in Minneapolis police custody.

That incident sparked protests around the country that in many cases turned violent, including the city of Atlanta, which has had a curfew for nearly a week.

On Friday, an interfaith coalition of Atlanta clergy urged Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms to “demilitarize” the law enforcement presence in the city, including removing Georgia National Guard troops ordered by Gov. Brian Kemp.

More protests are taking place over the weekend in Cobb County.

On Saturday, several Marietta churches are holding a “Prayer & Peaceful Protest Rally” at 10 a.m at Zion Baptist Church, 165 Lemon Street, near downtown Marietta.

A group called Cobb County BLM Resources said there will be a rally at 2 p.m. Saturday at Lassiter High School, near the Smoothie King.

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!

SelectCobb to hold small business relief grant webinar

Submitted information:

The Cobb Board of Commissioners, with a 5-0 vote, approved funding for a $50 million Small Business Grant Program designed to help struggling businesses recover from the economic damage caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Funding will come out of the $132 million allocated to Cobb in the federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act.

The agenda item provides $500,000 to the “Select Cobb” division of the Cobb Chamber to administer the grant program. That group will educate, advertise and administer the program with a board comprised of a diverse group of business interests. Only companies with fewer than 101 employees will be able to apply.

The applications will be reviewed by commission district so all areas of the county are equally represented in the number of companies approved for grants. The amount of funding awarded to an individual small business will vary based on business size:

  • One to ten employees – up to $20,000
  • 11 to 50 employees – up to $30,000
  • 51 to 100 employees – up to $40,000

A Cobb Chamber survey recently found that 32% of Cobb businesses worry the COVID-19 situation will put them out of business and 60 percent say they will need some sort of financial assistance to continue.

The process for the application is as follows:

  • The application will be uploaded at 10:00 a.m. on June 8
  • The application portal will be open until June 26 at 5:00 p.m.
  • All grants submitted in that time frame will be evaluated. This is not first come first served.

On Wednesday, June 10 from 10 a.m.-11:30 a.m., join Select Cobb to have your questions answered and to discuss the application and review process for the SelectCobb Small Business Relief Grants. Speakers for the webinar will include:

  • John Loud, President, LOUD Security & 2020 Cobb Chamber Chairman
  • Commissioner Bob Ott, District 2 Commissioner, Cobb County
  • Kevin Greiner, President & CEO, Gas South & SelectCobb Chairman
  • Jason Gaines, Planning and Economic Development Division Manager, Cobb County Community Development Agency
  • Dana Johnson, COO, Cobb Chamber & Executive Director, SelectCobb
  • Sharon Mason, President & CEO, Cobb Chamber

Please note that you do not have to be a member of the Cobb Chamber to apply or receive funding as part of the SelectCobb Small Business Relief Grant Program. No preferential consideration will be given for Cobb Chamber members. For more information on the SelectCobb Small Business Relief Grants, visit selectcobb.com/grants.

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 commissioners to consider resolution condemning racism

Cobb commissioners will be asked Tuesday to consider a resolution to condemn racism.

Lisa Cupid, Cobb Board of Commissioners

Commissioner Lisa Cupid, of South Cobb, and the only black member of the five-member board, admitted on Thursday when she posted the proposed resolution on her Facebook page (see below) that “I have been informed that some think this language is too strong, indicates something of the past, and is not reflective of how people feel today or in all districts of the county.”

“It is imperative that we have our citizens weigh in on this else I fear it could not pass or be worded in such a way that loses its intent and purpose.”

She urged citizens to contact their commissioner and let them know their thoughts.

Cupid said an online meeting she organized on Tuesday, entitled “Cobb Forum: Recent Deaths, Race and Response,” attracted more than 600 people, and she invited a number of elected and law enforcement officials and community leaders to participate.

(You can watch here and listen here.)

The Smyrna and Acworth city councils this week approved similar anti-racism resolutions.

Related content

Cupid, a Democrat who’s running for Cobb Commission Chairman, issued a follow-up message via her campaign e-mail Wednesday night highlighting the discussion, and suggested the following actions:

  • Be compassionate and mindful of others
  • Recognize the challenges some African Americans may have in just showing up, at work and in your organizations
  • Don’t back down from conversations about race and do not ostracize African Americans and others for discussing race and relating race to policy, practices, and outcomes
  • Have a conversation or lunch with someone who does not look like you
  • Reach out to local and state leaders to pass a resolution to support the Hate Crimes Bill
  • Reach out to leaders to pass a resolution denouncing racism or discrimination in your organizations, city and county
  • Support local nonprofit organizations and organizations that address issues of equity and race like the Cobb NAACP, Cobb SCLC, and the Georgia Community Coalition
  • Send an email or letter to school board members letting them know you support them addressing racial disparities in educational outcomes, teaching staff, and school resources
  • Support your African American leaders who are minorities in majority elected bodies

“I think we can only go up from here as I have heard from you and others that this was just a start,” Cupid said.

She is not the sponsor of the proposed resolution, which is listed on the agenda as being an item to be brought by board chairman Mike Boyce and is being presented for consideration by County Manager Jackie McMorris.

Tuesday’s commission meeting begins at 9 a.m. and will be available online only, but citizens are invited to participate in a public comment session via phone at the start of the meeting. You can sign up at this link.

The rest of Tuesday’s meeting agenda can be found here.

Cupid Anti-Racism Resolution

 

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 COBBER parade and festival cancelled due to COVID-19

East Cobber parade
Unicyclists from Mt. Bethel Elementary School are a regular participant in the EAST COBBER parade. (ECN file)

The 25th annual EAST COBBER magazine parade and accompanying festival won’t take place in September due to COVID-19, publisher Cynthia Rozzo said in her June-July issue.

She said after weighing various planning and preparation scenarios, and because of continuing public health restrictions stemming from the virus, calling everything off is “the right thing to do. I hated to do it, it was a very hard choice to make.”

Hundreds of community organizations and businesses march down Johnson Ferry Road before thousands of spectators in mid-September, and after the parade a festival is held at Johnson Ferry Baptist Church.

Large public gatherings and community events in Georgia are still prohibited, even as other restrictions on business and social activity are beginning to be lifted.

“We’re in a situation that nobody has been in before,” Rozzo wrote, “and there’s just too many facets of the parade and festival that have to happen that could not be finalized because of the coronavirus situation.”

Rozzo, who founded the magazine in 1993, also has been affected by the loss of advertising due to business closures as a result of COVID-19. For the first time in her magazine’s history, she suspended an issue in May.

The June-July EAST COBBER issue, which was published Thursday, is 24 pages. Most issues range between 44-52 pages.

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!

 

At East Cobb rally, ‘honking’ support for Black Lives Matter

East Cobb Black Lives Matter rally
East Cobb resident Alice, at left, joins in asking motorists to honk their horns in support of Black Lives Matter. (ECN photos and videos)

At one of East Cobb’s busiest intersections, Alice I. found herself in an unusual situation. A local resident who’s a yoga instructor, she said she’s never gotten involved in politics or any kind of demonstration of any kind.

Until now.

She took part in a mostly-white rally of around 30 to 40 people Wednesday in front of Trader Joe’s.

A few dozen others were positioned at all quadrants of the intersection of Roswell Road and Johnson Ferry Road, asking motorists to honk their horns in support of Black Lives Matter.

A good number of them did.

“I’m doing this because I stand with black people,” said Alice, who declined to give her last name.

Black Lives Matter is the activist group that has staged protests around the country after the death of George Floyd, an unarmed black man, at the hands of Minneapolis police last week.

BLM started several years ago and grew around similar deaths, but the Floyd case has caused sustained shock waves around the country.

The officer seen kneeling on Floyd’s neck for nine minutes has been charged with murder, and three other officers on the scene also have been charged. They were immediately terminated.

But peaceful protests designed to draw attention to police brutality quickly turned violent in Minneapolis, Atlanta and other cities. Many of those incidents are being blamed on outside groups having nothing to do with the initial protestors.

Alice said she abhorred the video she saw of Floyd, who was face-down on the ground and handcuffed in the moments before his death.

“This is about white people no longer being silent,” Alice said. “We have to stand up and say, ‘Enough is enough,’ that we’re coming from a place of love.”

East Cobb Black Lives Matter Rally 2

There have been several protests in Cobb County over the weekend and into the week and expanding into East Cobb.

Alice said she heard from neighbors about Wednesday’s rally and decided to attend. She was also upset that some have confused peaceful protests with looting, burning and property destruction that have prompted arrests and curfews in a number of cities, including Atlanta.

“Everyone’s here wearing a smile, just showing support” for black citizens,” she said, and was hopeful that “African-Americans [will] see how much white people are supporting them.”

Some of the participants Wednesday shouted chants that have been heard frequently at other protests.

“Say his name!” they shouted.

“George Floyd!”

Rallies are scheduled for the same intersection the rest of this week from 5-7 p.m.

Other rallies are taking place from 2-4 p.m. at the intersection of Canton Road and Jamerson Road, and from 7-9 p.m. at the intersection of Sandy Plains Road and East Piedmont Road.

On Saturday morning, several Marietta churches are holding a “Prayer & Peaceful Protest Rally” at 10 a.m at Zion Baptist Church, 165 Lemon Street, near downtown Marietta.

A group called Cobb County BLM Resources said there will be a rally at 2 p.m. Saturday at Lassiter High School, near the Smoothie King.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

 

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!

Candidate spotlight: David Banks, Cobb school board Post 5

Near the end of his third term on the Cobb school board, David Banks said he’s seeking another four years because “I just feel like there’s more to be done.”David Banks, Cobb school board candidate

A retired computer and technology consultant and business owner, Banks has lived in East Cobb for 50 years and has represented Post 5, which represents the Pope and Lassiter clusters, since 2009.

He said that kind of experience is vital during a time in which the Cobb County School District, the second-largest in Georgia with 112,000 students, is undergoing rapid change.

“It takes a few years to get acclimated to how the system works,” said Banks, who’s serving as the school board’s vice chairman this year.

(Banks does not have a campaign website; here’s his school board biography page.)

He ran unopposed four years ago, but Banks has drawn a crowd of opposition in both parties, including Matt Harper and Shelley O’Malley, whom he’ll be facing in next Tuesday’s Republican primary.

O’Malley has been openly critical of Banks (as have Democrats Tammy Andress and Julia Hurtado), saying that “I hope voters recognize that when an incumbent is being challenged by other people there ought to be a reason for that.”

Other Post 5 candidate profiles

To which Banks asks of the others on the ballot: “Why are you running?” He said from what he’s read and learned about his opponents, “it tells me nothing about what they want to do.”

In addition to some of his most impassioned topics—advancing STEM and virtual reality instruction in schools—Banks said he hasn’t heard those trying to unseat him discuss such items as the education SPLOST, which funds construction and maintenance projects.

Nor does he think they’ve said much about how they would address what could be an $80 million Cobb schools budget shortfall due to heavily reduced state funding from COVID-19.

(The board hasn’t yet adopted a fiscal year 2021 budget because the legislative session was disrupted before it finalized education funding.)

“Where’s the meat?” Banks asked about his opponents’ campaign platforms. “What have they proposed that I’m not already doing?”

As for what he would do with a fourth term, Banks said more of the same: Advance more technological learning opportunities for students at every possible level, and broaden Capstone and AP curriculum.

He said he’s proud that more Cobb elementary schools are becoming STEM-certified. He wants to see more virtual reality and robotics options for students at the younger grade levels as well.

Emerging virtual reality fields “can open up a lot of doors for young people,” Banks said. “We’re just getting started with this.”

Among his initiatives would be to set up a test and demonstrate a proof of concept that could be expanded across the district.

Andress and Hurtado have advocated that the Cobb school district hire a chief equity officer to address inequities including race and ethnicity and special needs, but Banks said he is opposed to that (as are Harper and O’Malley).

“We have one of the best special ed programs in the state,” said Banks, who thinks the notion of an equity officer is “a buzzword, something the Democrat party uses a lot. But it doesn’t work.

“What’s it going to accomplish that we’re not doing already?”

He’s also against changing or even revisiting the Cobb schools senior property tax exemption (which he takes), an issue that also has come down along partisan lines.

Democrats, he said, “actually want to get rid of it,” which would require a change in state legislation. “Which representative or senator [in the Cobb delegation] is going to commit political suicide?”

A legislative idea he’s pushed before, and is advocating again in times of economic distress, is a 10-year local education sales tax (LEST), which would be one penny on the dollar to help fund Cobb schools operations.

Banks floated a measure during the recession, and it went nowhere. He says now, as he did several years ago, it would raise more than enough money ($150 million by his count) to overcome budget deficits, and return 30 percent of that funding to taxpayers in the form of a millage rate reduction.

“We need another source of income,” Banks said, admitting “it’s not easy to change a constitutional amendment. But if you can it frame right, and it shows the public benefit of having it, it’s a win-win.”

Should Cobb schools have to make dramatic cuts in teaching positions due to a reduced budget, Banks advocates laying off high school and middle school teachers in elective subjects, then rehiring them as paraprofessionals and have them teach students at multiple schools via teleconferencing.

“I might be an older person,” Banks said, referring to an opponent’s mention of his age, “but I try to find what’s coming and visualize what’s not even there now.”

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!

National Merit scholars include 16 more East Cobb students

The latest round of National Merit Scholarship Corporation awards announced Wednesday include 16 more students from East Cobb high schools.East Cobb National Merit Scholarship Program

(Previous recipients were announced here and here.)

They’re among more than 3,300 winners of National Merit Scholarships financed by U.S. colleges and universities where the students will be attending.  

The award amounts range between $500 and $2,000 annually for up to four years of undergraduate study. More scholarship recipients will be announced in July.

The following East Cobb students are listed in alphabetical order, with their college and probable career field:

  • Jordan Bass, Walton, Northwestern University, Computer Science;
  • Alec Berger, Walton, Emory University, Computer Science;
  • Ada R. Burris, Pope, Samford University, Ministry;
  • Patrick G. Chen, Wheeler, University of Georgia, Medicine;
  • Taylor Chiles, Walton, Wheaton College, Mathematics;
  • Alessa L. Cullinan, Wheeler, University of Georgia, Undecided;
  • Julia Dierker, Walton, Northeastern University, Public Health;
  • Rose Jewel, Wheeler, University of Georgia, Computer Science;
  • Brian Kent, Wheeler, University of Alabama, Mechanical Engineering;
  • Gabrielle P. Levitt, Lassiter, University of Georgia, Public Relations;
  • Emma G. Mason, Wheeler, University of South Carolina, Biochemistry;
  • Reilly S. Misra, Sprayberry, University of Georgia, Dentistry;
  • Anna K. Mitchell, Lassiter, Florida State University, Undecided;
  • Andrew M. Myers, Pope, Vanderbilt University, Economics;
  • Catherine L. Pereira, Lassiter, Florida State University, Statistics;
  • Zaim Zibran, Walton, Emory University, Public Health. 

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 Commission candidates oppose sex shop in East Cobb

East Cobb sex shop

Kevin Nicholas, one of three Republicans running in next week’s primary for District 2 on the Cobb Board of Commissioners, says he’s opposed to a possible sex shop in East Cobb.

In a note written in response to organizers of an online petition against what they claim will be an adult retail store on Johnson Ferry Road, Nicholas said “this is not the business we want in our family-based community.”

The note was sent to Amy White, who’s leading a change.org campaign against what’s being planned at 1290 Johnson Ferry Road, in a former mattress store building.

A business license issued by Cobb County in March states it’s for a clothing store; the individual listed in state incorporation documents for 1290 Clothing Co. LLC is Michael Morrison, who owns the Tokyo Valentino adult retail store chain in metro Atlanta.

Retiring District 2 commissioner Bob Ott has said that since rezoning isn’t required, the county has little recourse as long as the new business meets code requirements. The general commercial zoning status of the land dates back to the 1970s.

Ott said he also is against an adult store coming to the community, and reminded citizens that opposition to a We Buy Gold store several years ago prompted it to close, citing a lack of business.

Nicholas, who’s running to succeed Ott, said he’s “been in lengthy discussion with many neighbors about this and what we need to do” and at the very least thinks the county should review the business license application.

Some opponents of an adult store have claimed that Morrison has misrepresented his business aims as well as his own identity and want the business license invalidated.

Morrison, who’s been ordered to jail for a contempt citation in Brookhaven and is suing the city of Atlanta in legal battles over his businesses in those municipalities, has said he isn’t sure what the East Cobb store will end up being (There’s a Tokyo Valentino store on Marietta, on Cobb Parkway near the Big Chicken).

Nicholas, an East Cobb resident, said he advocates a “check list” for the county that would require applicants to provide more details on a business license application, a review of the county code and “to make amendments that fit the community while preserving good business growth. I reject the notion that there is nothing that can be done.”

East Cobb News contacted the other Republicans in the District 2 race. Andy Smith, who also lives in East Cobb and was Ott’s appointee to the Cobb Planning Commission, referred East Cobb News to Ott’s statement issued on Memorial Day with no additional comment.

UPDATE: On Wednesday Smith issued a videotaped message and a written statement which reads in part:

“The application for this business has been gone through with a fine-tooth comb and found to comply with existing code; this doesn’t surprise me because of the battalion of very well-paid lawyers the applicant has on staff. So let’s put that myth to bed.

“Cobb has had a long history of having one of the strongest adult industry codes and has been the model for most if not all of metro Atlanta. So, as with all things, it is time to look at the current code and update it, and I can assure you that is being done. I am well aware of the research and effort being put forth firsthand, and the all-hands-on deck approach that’s ongoing. Just like the duck swimming across the lake, all looks calm on the surface but we are paddling with all our might underneath. This is just another example of where having a commissioner who understands the code and how to strengthen and enforce it really matters. I have the experience and knowledge to preserve our community and don’t think for one minute I’m not working like that duck to cross the lake.”

 

East Cobb News also has left a message with Fitz Johnson seeking comment.

UPDATE: Here’s what Johnson sent us Wednesday morning:

“My wife and I are appalled at the idea of a sex shop going into our neighborhood. I am firmly opposed if this shop were to open in the old Matress Firm store or anywhere. I will leave no stone unturned as I investigate my powers under the U.S. Constitution to make this right. 

“It is unfortunate we are put in this position by law, but it doesn’t mean we can’t educate ourselves, organize as a community, and fight to keep this from happening. I am against having this type of establishment in our neighborhoods so close to schools and churches. If elected, I will do everything within my U.S. Constitutional powers to discourage these types of establishments.

“We have to be mindful that commissioners do not have the authority under the U.S. Constitution to alter existing zoning or add stipulations. Again I will encourage our citizens and neighbors to organize, and work together to stop this from happening. I absolutely will join in and lend my voice to that cause.”

ORIGINAL STORY CONTINUES:

Dan White, another online campaigner against an adult store, contacted East Cobb News Monday to note that more than 2,700 people have signed a petition.

He also took exception to comments in an East Cobb News commentary over the weekend from citizens imploring opponents to lighten up about a possible adult store. A few noted that for those who’d want to patronize such a store, it would be convenient to have it nearby.

“Having a dump close by would be convenient as well but not in the middle of our community,” he said. “This business will affect crime, the statistics that retail companies use to choose their expansion opportunities and property value.”

White also noted that while Ott has “served this community fairly well over his tenure,” his retirement “makes doing nothing but saying that there is a law from 1975 an easy way out.

“Tell him it’s not OK to give up.”

A signer of the change.org petition said “if this store opens, I’m voting against all my local incumbents who didn’t stop it.”

 

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 releases graduation tribute videos to the Class of 2020

East Cobb seniors caps gowns

As noted on Monday, the Cobb County School District is  making plans, to be announced later this week, for limited in-person graduations.

Last week, members of the Class of 202 got a personalized tribute video, tailored for each high school, with messages from Superintendent Chris Ragsdale and their principal, as well as photos of the senior class in action.

Here are the videos for the six high schools in East Cobb:

Kell High School

 

Lassiter High School

 

Pope High School

 

Sprayberry High School

 

Walton High School

 

Wheeler High School

 

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 Police Chief: ‘No room’ for racism, injustice or brutality

The Cobb Police Department issued the following statement Monday night from Chief Tim Cox:Cobb Police Chief Tim Cox

Over the past several days, metro Atlanta residents have seen civil unrest develop despite good citizens attempting to conduct peaceful protests. Due to such, Cobb County residents have expressed a certain level of anxiety due to the reports of violence from nearby areas. With the continued news coverage and numerous social media posts of civil unrest in the area, we understand the concerns being voiced by our residents and business owners. I’d like to take a moment to speak to our citizens and others in the metro area to help allay some fears or anxiety you may have.

The Cobb County Police Department remains committed to the safety and welfare of ALL the citizens it serves. The basic fundamental rights of each individual are at the core of our departmental values. Our Tenets of Conduct lay the foundation of our dedication to everyone we come into contact with on a daily basis. And at the core of all is that we treat all members of the community with respect. As such we have a very real, firm, and utterly unwavering disdain for all racism, injustice, or brutality. There is no room for such in our daily service to the citizens of Cobb and the many visitors we host.

Hand-in-hand with that dedication to respect all individuals is our commitment to protect our residents, business owners, and visitors. Cobb County Police officers are exceptionally well trained and equipped to safeguard the many wonderful people who choose to live, work, and visit this County. In response to current local events, not only have we implemented increased patrols in certain areas of the county, but we have also been in constant contact with city police departments and other law enforcement agencies within the county (as well as many others outside the county). This constant exchange of information has helped us all respond better to incidents quickly, many times before a serious issue can arise. And should the need arise we are prepared to provide mutual aid, sharing resources and manpower with one another.

We have also been in contact with civic leaders on a consistent basis. Long before any of the recent unrest, we worked hand in hand with local civic and community leaders to better our services to all our communities. We continue to do so now and we remain appreciative of all the support and feedback from the communities throughout Cobb County. The open dialogue we long ago established has continued through the current events and our commitment to continue to improve our relationships and services to Cobb County has not wavered.

We have had peaceful protests over the past few days in the County and adjoining cities. We have had open dialogue with organizers and participants. We respect all individuals and vow to protect them and their rights. We also vow to continue to keep the peace and maintain order in the process. I ask that the lines of communication remain open in both directions. If anyone has emergency information, please call 911 immediately. If you have information that is not an immediate emergency, call 770-499-3911. Be it here in Cobb or elsewhere, the safety of everyone is our top priority.

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!

Cobb leaders to hold online forum on policing and racism Tuesday

Lisa Cupid, Cobb Board of Commissioners
Cobb commissioner Lisa Cupid

Cobb government, business and community leaders and elected officials will be appearing in an online forum Tuesday afternoon to discuss issues of policing and racism in the wake of protests and violence that has broken out around the country in the last week.

The forum is free and is open for the public to view starting at 2 p.m. Tuesday, and you can sign up here.

As you’re registering, you can submit questions for the panelists to answer and discuss.

Related stories

Those participating in the forum include Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce and commissioner Lisa Cupid, Cobb Police Chief Tim Cox, Cobb school board members Charisse Davis, Jaha Howard and Brad Wheeler, Cobb legislative members and mayors and Cobb Chamber of Commerce officials, as well as leaders from the Cobb NAACP and Southern Christian Leadership Conference.

In message she sent out Monday, Cupid, the lone black Cobb commissioner, said “we will discuss protests stemming from the death of George Floyd and ways we can address racism locally.”

Protests began after George Floyd, a black man in Minneapolis, died in police custody, facing the ground and handcuffed, with a white officer seen pushing his knee on his neck.

Demonstrations started out peacefully but turned violent in Minneapolis and other cities, including Atlanta, which has been under a curfew for the last three days, as looting, burning and property destruction has ensued.

On Saturday, the Cobb, Marietta and Smyrna police departments issued a joint statement about protests being planned in the county. On Sunday, peaceful protests took place in Kennesaw and in Marietta, during which protesters marched from Cobb Police headquarters to the Square.

On Sunday night, Howard and Davis participated in a peaceful protest in Smyrna. Another protest is taking place in the city of Marietta on Monday.

 

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 to hold graduation ceremonies for students only

East Cobb seniors caps gowns
Wheeler High School seniors cheer on their classmates at cap-and-gown pickup.

The Cobb County School District announced Monday that it’s in the process of scheduling in-person graduation ceremonies for the Class of 2020, following new COVID-19 health guidance in Georgia.

But those commencement exercises will be for students only, “with strict Department of Public Health protocols in place,” and at only two venues: Wheeler High School in East Cobb and Harrison High School in West Cobb.

The district said in a release Monday afternoon more details will be announced by Friday, and did not indicate when the graduations will take place. Each ceremony will be livestreamed for parents and the public.

The district said 3,000-seat gyms at Wheeler and Harrison “will allow for proper social distance protocols, predictable weather, and technical ability to livestream.”

Health protocols include temperature checks and symptom screening for all students before they’re allowed entry to the gyms. All attendees will be asked to wear masks and there will be multiple hand hygiene stations.

The district postponed physical graduation in late April, and said it was still hoping to have ceremonies depending on health guidance.

Most Cobb high schools had some sort of cap and gown and diploma pick up event over the last couple of weeks.

Cobb schools has held most of its graduation ceremonies at the KSU Convocation Center. Wheeler has been one of the few schools to hold commencement at its own gym, Wildcat Arena.

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 tag offices reopening June 8; non-contact options continue

Cobb tag offices reopening

Cobb County Tax Commissioner Carl Jackson said Monday all tag offices in the county will be reopening next Monday, June 8, at their usual Monday-Friday times from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

That includes the location at the East Cobb Government Service Center (above) at 4400 Lower Roswell Road.

If you choose to renew your tag in person, they’re asking you to check in with your name or mobile number. Instead of staying in the waiting area, you’ll wait in your car and receive a text message notifying you to come in for service:

“For businesses requiring an in-person visit, the office staff will follow recommendations of social distancing for safe interactions and use personal protective equipment. We are also encouraging visitors to wear a face mask for in-office visits.”

June 15 is the extended deadline for vehicle registrations that were due to expire when COVID-19 prompted closures in March, so Jackson warned that wait times are expected to be longer than usual.

Jackson said Cobb processes around 40,000 in-person tag renewals every month, and encourages vehicle owners to use e-services, tag kiosks, drop boxes, and mail.

Call 770-528-8600 weekdays between 8-5 or or tax@cobbtax.org for more information.

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 library due date extended to June 10; curbside service expands

East Cobb Library, Cobb budget cuts

From Cobb County government on Monday morning:

Due date for all checked-out library materials extended to June 10. There are no late fees on materials originally due during the library system’s closure. The due date for all checked-out materials is extended to June 10. Upcoming reopening phases also include curbside services weekdays at seven libraries starting June 10 to enable patrons to pick up reserved holds. The locations are the Mountain View, East Cobb, South Cobb, West Cobb, North Cobb, Sewell Mill and Vinings libraries. You can call our customer service department at (770) 528-2326 or email your question or comments to our customer service department at contactus@cobbcat.org.

This is part of what the Cobb library system is calling Library Express, in which patrons can return materials to outdoor book drops at most branches and place holds for materials online.

Those curbside pickup hours will be from 10-8 Monday and 10-6 Tuesday-Friday, and you’re asked to call at least an hour ahead before coming to pick up materials. You’ll also need to have an ID and your library card once you arrive at your branch.

One other note: If you’re a Gritters Library patron, you can order holds online and pick up those materials at the Mountain View branch.

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 Police issues joint statement about planned protests

The Cobb Police Department issued a statement Saturday night with the Marietta Police Department and the Smyrna Police Department about planned protests in the county stemming from the death of a black man in police custody in Minnesota earlier this week.Northeast Cobb car crash, Cops on Donut Shops

The death of George Floyd, who was shown face down on the ground handcuffed, with a white officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 10 minutes, sparked violent protests in several major cities, including Minneapolis, where the incident took place.

Related stories

Several nights of protests in that city included burning property and police cars, vandalizing stores and storming a police precinct.

Atlanta was the scene of protests Friday night that included vandalizing and looting CNN Center and other businesses in Centennial Olympic Park and in Buckhead.

On Saturday, Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms imposed a curfew that began at 9 p.m. and expires at sunrise Sunday and Georgia National Guard troops have been called in. Similar curfews have been ordered in other cities.

In the joint statement, the three police departments said this about possible protests in Cobb County:

“We have been in contact with a few individuals representing groups that are planning peaceful protests within our jurisdictions. Some of the organizers have expressed concern that outside agitators may try to hijack their plans for a peaceful event. Therefore we recommend anyone else planning protests to communicate and partner with their local law enforcement agencies to maintain the safety of all involved.”

The statement didn’t specify where and when any protests may take place.

East Cobb News has asked Cobb Police if any protests are planned in its jurisdiction and will update that when/if we hear back.

The Cobb police departments said they cannot discuss with the media or the public how they’re preparing for possible violence:

“We have plans in place and we want to remind any who plan to use the peaceful protests as a means to break the law, we will be ready to protect peaceful protestors, residents, and business owners and to arrest and charge any and all who break the law within our respective jurisdictions.”

They urged anyone seeing criminal activity to call 911. “Rest assured, all three departments are and remain passionate about protecting our residents and business owners. Any criminal acts will result in arrest and prosecution according to the law.”

The four Minneapolis officers on the scene at the time of Floyd’s death were terminated, and the officer seen kneeling on the victim was charged with third-degree murder. It’s the latest in a series of deaths of black men by police in recent years that have resulted in protests around the country.

But little has been as violent as what’s taken place this week.

In Brunswick, in south Georgia, three men, including a former investigator with the Glynn County District Attorney’s Office, have been charged with the murder of Ahmaud Arbery, a black man who was jogging in a neighborhood when he was killed in February.

Cobb District Attorney Joyette Holmes has been appointed to take over the prosecution of the case that, like the George Floyd case, took on national importance when video footage emerged.

Among the violent episodes Saturday include police deploying tear gas near the White House to stave off protestors in Washington, D.C., and demonstrators setting City Hall on fire in Nashville. On Friday, two police officers were shot in Oakland, Calif., one of them fatally.

Protestors appeared near the Georgia governor’s mansion in Atlanta Saturday but were dispersed by police before the curfew began.

The Cobb police departments also said this Saturday night:

“For the record, all three of our departments remain strongly opposed to any form of injustice, racism, or brutality. We are deeply concerned and have taken steps to not only protect everyone’s first amendment right to free speech and peaceful protest, but also to protect the life and liberty of our local citizens as well. Our three departments are working in conjunction to make sure the safety of everyone is maintained.”

 

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!

EDITOR’S NOTE: Is East Cobb really uptight about a sex shop?

Tokyo Valentino Marietta

If you were eager to break the tedium of waiting out a public health emergency, it would have been hard to top the rumors of a sex shop possibly lining Johnson Ferry Road—our main thoroughfare here in fair East Cobb—that swirled about over the Memorial Day holiday.

My phone lines, inbox and text and social media messaging apps were on fire just as the exact people you’d need to contact to check out the story were disappearing for the long weekend.

I got what I could from publicly available sources, heard from plenty of East Cobbers who were hopping mad and even got an exasperated “what?” from the individual supposedly in the middle of all this.

On Memorial Day, Commissioner Bob Ott, hounded by what he said were more than 500 messages about the subject, cloaked his response to the Tokyo Valentinto rumors in a “Memorial Day Message” subject line.

He said that as long as the business opened as what it indicated—a clothing store—and met code requirements, there was nothing the county could do.

Nor could it do much if it later opened as an adult store, as happened last December in Sandy Springs. Local governments, he added, can’t come back retroactively and change their zoning codes to stop something like this.

When we broke the story on that holiday, it wasn’t all that I wanted that story to be, but it was more than enough to stoke an even bigger fury from some East Cobb citizens.

But do they speak for the entire community? While many of us come here for safe neighborhoods, good schools and a family-oriented way of life, who’s to say there’s not a market for an adult store?  

When I started checking reader comments to this story—always a good idea when you’re running a family community news site—I found some intriguing views. Including this little exchange on the East Cobb News Facebook page:

“Perhaps if customers of the store had photos of their cars or their photo taken as they exited the store and the photos were posted on social media it might embarrass them and discourage them from shopping there.”

Rebuffed, in a flash:

“Sure—let’s get Amazon to release what they send to your house, mmmkay?”

“Clutch those pearls, ladies! How many of you read 50 Shades of Grey?”

I checked out some other local social media channels, which certainly are dens of trolling. There’s Nextdoor, which is even more unhinged than Facebook, even though users are required to identify their neighborhood. 

An opponent of an adult store asked a simple, age-old question that goes to the classic argument over how to determine community standards:

“What would it add to the community?”

A sampling of the replies:

“Everything!!”

“A great sex life.”

“Bow-chika-bow-wow.”

“Live and let live.”

“Find something better to do with your time.”

“I’m all for it. Why drive all the way down to Fulton and DeKalb county to get your gear? Keep the sales taxes here in Cobb.”

“I might just have to go to the grand opening of this place solely because everyone is acting like this is a 1620s Puritan village whose morals would undoubtedly be destroyed by a store that sells porn and adult toys to adults.”

“It’s a date. I’ll wear my scarlet letter.”

Elations adult store Marietta

What some East Cobbers may not know is that we’ve had a sex shop in our area for quite a few years now, and seemingly without incident. 

No, not the Tokyo Valentino store pictured at the top that opened on Cobb Parkway two years ago, not far from the Big Chicken.

But even closer than that. It’s called Elations, and it’s on Powers Ferry Road near Roswell Road, facing the shopping center where Harry’s Farmers Market once was. It’s also in the city of Marietta and has been there for years. Before that, another adult store was in the same location for a number of years.

Judging by the car traffic when I passed by on Saturday, Elations does a pretty good business. It makes no bones about the adult erotica items it sells, but also prominently promotes CBD items and “smoking accessories,” which as one of my readers pointed out to me, probably keeps it in business.

An East Cobb resident I talked to this week says if something like that comes to Johnson Ferry, it will “spread like the Coronavirus.”

While Elations is in a commercial area that’s been run-down, it’s actually closer to a nearby residential community than 1290 Johnson Ferry Road.

Those homes may not be in the same price range as Princeton Walk, but it’s where people live and are raising families.

Nothing else like Elations has spread in the vicinity. It sits across a parking lot from the Marietta Burger Bar, and Williamson Bros. BBQ and Hoyle’s Kitchen & Bar are nearby. 

Another reader who mentioned Elations chimed in thusly:

“If they don’t shop there; it’ll go OUT of business. Pretty straightforward. Maybe stop making up imaginary crises and focus on real things that need to be dealt with.”

To which he got this response:

“I’m not against these stores, I just don’t like them in my neighborhood. It’s a fair opinion.”

Fair enough.

Tokyo Valentino also sells “smoking accessories” at its Marietta store and five others owned by Atlanta adult retail impresario Michael Morrison. Since 1995 he’s had an adult store on Cheshire Bridge Road and Piedmont Road, and he’s battled the city of Atlanta almost as long.

It’s where video rooms and private bedrooms and massage suites can be rented out—on top of an admission charge of $20 minimum (all of his other stores are strictly retail).

When I reached Morrison last week—as he was hiking in Arizona—about an East Cobb store, he said he had no idea what I was referring to. When I asked him about the 1290 Clothing Store application, he said he knew nothing about it.

He’s said elsewhere that business associates may have been working on a “sub project” without his knowledge, and he doesn’t know what may go in the old Mattress Firm space. 

That story clearly doesn’t sit well with a lot of East Cobbers. Morrison’s name is on the business incorporation documents. The new owner of the old mattress store building is a Miami entrepreneur who has adult retail business interests. Morrison’s past includes prison time for tax evasion.

His Sandy Springs store also was originally going to be for dancers’ clothing, but now is a Tokyo Valentino store.

Cobb commissioners got an earful about this during the public comment session at their regular meeting Tuesday, but none of them responded. Even to allegations that 1290 Clothing may have gotten its business license in dubious fashion.

When I asked Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce this week if it’s possible the county could invalidate the business license, he said “We’re looking into it.”

A factor for the county also would be whether it would want to get entangled with Morrison, who has a continuing lawsuit against the city of Atlanta and disputes with other local governments.

That might be the biggest headache associated with having an adult store in East Cobb. It would be a new jurisdiction for him to test in the courts, as well as a new retail market.

At the East Cobb SNOBs Facebook page, some were trying to put this into perspective, and just have a little social media fun:

“In a world where men are murdered for their skin color, I’m not going to lose any sleep for having to lie to my kid about what ‘adult toys’ are.”

“Hey at least it will be considered an essential business for the next lockdown.”

“Isn’t Johnson Ferry tacky enough?”

At the EAST COBBER, which was kind enough to link to our story that broke this all out into the open:

“This can’t happen in East Cobb!! They should put in a cute little bakery/coffee shop. That is what we need!!”

“Sounds like some of y’all need a sex shop in the area so you can loosen up a little bit.”

“I smell a rat. Funny how this shop wants to move in (in the middle of a pandemic) *just* as there is a push for East Cobb cityhood. Could this be a ploy to get people to support cityhood, ergo stricter zoning?”

“Sex is healthy. I feel for your partners.”

“Not all of us need a sex shop to be happy with our partners. I feel sad for your partner that you need more.”

You get the drift. As I said, social media invites this sort of thing, although I do think it shows that there’s not unanimous condemnation of an adult store.

Morrison has bigger issues, as he was ordered to jail last week by a DeKalb County judge for contempt of court, in a long-running dispute over his store in Brookhaven.

He’s appealing, as East Cobbers promise to keep an eye out for what goes up at 1290 Johnson Ferry—perhaps chattering about it at their favorite cute little bakery and coffee shop.

This week had far too much excitement for some citizens in East Cobb, but it did jolt us out of what has been a dispiriting lockdown.

We return you now to your regularly scheduled pandemic programming. 

East Cobb sex shop

 

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!

Business reopening update: East Cobb Tavern; CycleBar; more

East Cobb Tavern

A few more business reopenings to note, as more restaurants are now serving in their dining rooms, gyms are welcoming back clients for in-person classes and more.

Dan Edmonds, general manager of the East Cobb Tavern (Shallowford Corners) says starting Monday, you can sit down and eat inside, with regular hours back to 11 a.m. to p.m.. They’re also continuing takeout and curbside service, which continues from 3-8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.

Also on Monday, Mezza Luna Pasta & Seafood (Pavilions at East Lake) is reopening its dining room with limited seating and reservations only

The CycleBar East Cobb (Parkaire Landing) reopened over the Memorial Day weekend, and is gradually adding classes and offering summer specials to students and teachers;

At Paradise Grille (Highland Plaza), the indoor dining room is closed, but starting tonight they’re having weekly live music on the patio. South of the Border’s dining room has reopened.

The dining rooms of all 3 East Cobb locations of J. Christopher’s have reopened, for usual breakfast-lunch-brunch service between 7 a.m. and 2 p.m.;

When the pandemic struck McCray’s Tavern was making plans to move into the former Loyal Q space at Parkaire Landing. After several weeks, there’s no specific opening date that’s been announced yet but they’ve been conducting interviews and are saying for now they’re opening soon.

Proprietor Scott McCray also has been busy preparing his new Marietta Square restaurant, Mac’s Chophouse, to open in the former Shilling’s space.

Send Us Your News!

If you have Coronavirus-related event changes, business openings or closings to share with the public, e-mail us: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

Contact us at the same e-mail address for news about efforts to assist those in need, health care workers, first responders and others on the frontlines of combatting Coronavirus in East Cobb.

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!

Candidate spotlight: Ricci Mason, Cobb Commission Chairman

After more than three decades as a police officer in Cobb County, Ricci Mason believes the time for supporting public safety workers has been long overdue.Ricci Mason, Cobb Commission Chairman candidate

After retiring from the Cobb County Police Department last year, Mason has decided to push for that change as a first-time candidate for political office.

A former officer in Precinct 4 in East Cobb, Mason is one of two candidates challenging incumbent Mike Boyce (profile here) in the Republican primary June 9 for Cobb Commission Chairman, along with Larry Savage (profile here).

“There’s a lot of wasteful spending,” Mason said. “But my biggest reason [for running] is public safety. It’s just not been a priority.”

Mason lives in Acworth and is a member of Eastside Baptist Church in East Cobb.

(Here’s Mason’s campaign website.)

During his campaign, he has recited many of the arguments public safety advocates have been making in pushing for support for police officers, firefighters and emergency personnel.

“New officers are leaving in droves,” Masson said in impassioned tones. “Police hadn’t had raise in 10 years. We’ve been taken advantage of.”

The police department is around 100 officers short, “and we’ve failed to fill those positions.”

Salary and benefit packages as well as retention issues have been festering for years, he said, undermining the message on a patch officers wear that’s visible to the public: “We lead, others follow.”

“Right now, that’s being mocked,” said Mason, who also was an officer in the Marietta Police Department.

Cobb commissioners have taken initial steps to address some of those concerns with a one-time bonus and approval of a step-and-grade salary structure for public safety personnel, but Mason isn’t impressed.

He said a Cobb police sergeant he knows said his raise amount to eight cents an hour.

“That’s a slap in the face,” Mason said, adding that step-and-grade is “irrelevant. Until you can give younger officers some motivation to stay, it’s not going to matter.”

Among the public safety concerns is that Cobb, which has a highly-praised police training center, spends a lot of money training officers, then losing them to nearby cities and counties that offer better pay and benefits.

“It costs $80,000 to train an officer, and it ends up costing us more when we lose them,” Mason said.

He said Boyce has had three years to address the problem and thinks he’s coming along too late to do much good.

“You deserve to be protected,” Mason said. “But that promise has dissolved like a dirty rag in water.”

To address the issue, Mason said he would look across the county budget to find more financial resources, and thinks “there are a lot of things that are wants ahead of needs.”

He pointed to things like libraries, which got some expanded hours after the 2018 budget was approved with a millage rate increase.

Mason said he’s not against libraries, but wondered about recent decisions to being reopening libraries “when officers on the street, who are considered essential workers, aren’t getting anything.”

He was referencing a proposal before the commissioners to provide hazard pay for public safety and other county employees on frontline COVID-19 duty. That proposal has been put on hold while the number of workers and the amount of funding is determined.

The county will soon have to deal with the financial impact of much lower tax revenues, making public safety funding even more acute, as Mason sees it. Budgeting figures to become even more painful, but “you have to go across the board and sit down with all of the department heads.

“We are definitely in uncharted waters, but we’ve got to stabilize the cornerstone of the county [meaning public safety] before we can do anything else.”

Addressing county transportation issues is another priority for Mason, especially the condition of county roads.

As a former motorcycle officer, Mason said “I know where all the potholes are” and says “I can’t remember when the roads were really taken care of.”

A referendum on the November ballot to extend the Cobb SPLOST is devoted to road resurfacing projects, but Mason says other road maintenance and transportation issues also aren’t being properly addressed.

On zoning matters, Mason thinks that given current circumstances, “we need to slow down on building” at least for the time being.

“I want people to be safe and healthy and thrive for themselves,” he said. “We need to help people get back on their feet again and show them that they care.”

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!

Candidate spotlight: Larry Savage, Cobb Commission Chairman

When he qualified as a candidate for Cobb County Commission Chairman for the first time in 2010, Larry Savage did so because he saw an incumbent who was unopposed in the Republican primary.Larry Savage, Cobb Commission Chairman candidate

A decade later, Savage, a retired businessman and executive who lives in East Cobb, is running for a fourth time for the same reasons.

Before he jumped in again this year, only incumbent chairman Mike Boyce had qualified.

“The idea that Mike Boyce was heading to a second term without opposition was disappointing,” said Savage, who is one of three GOP candidates in the June 9 primary.

“There are a lot of things he’s done that people don’t like.”

Savage is one of two challengers to Boyce (profile here) in the June 9 primary, along with retired Cobb police officer Ricci Mason.

(Here’s Savage’s campaign website.)

In a 2010 special election, Savage pulled 38 percent of the vote against Lee, who was elected to fill the last two years of former chairman Sam Olens’ term. In a four-man GOP field in 2012, Savage was last with 10 percent, trailing Lee, Boyce and another former chairman Bill Byrne.

In 2016, Savage also got 10 percent, enough to force a runoff between Lee and Boyce.

Savage was especially critical of how Lee handled the Atlanta Braves deal, filing a lawsuit, later dismissed, over the bond financing for what is now Truist Park.

But he thinks Boyce has not been fiscally responsible.

“Paramount is the money part—spending has gone up $100 million since he took office,” Savage said. “Those are big numbers.”

He’s dubbing his campaign “The Savage Truth,” and claims to be the true conservative in the Republican primary.

“He is probably the most politically liberal person on the board,” Savage said, referring to Boyce, and including Lisa Cupid, who will face the Republican nominee for chairman in November.

“If you look at their records, it’s almost indistinguishable,” Savage said. “Both emerged with the idea that government can do things that I don’t think government should do.”

(On his campaign website, Savage has highlighted comments he made to a Cobb Republican caucus meeting in February: “Let’s not run our liberal Republican against their liberal Democrat.”)

More than anything, Savage said Boyce hasn’t handled the financial management of county government very well.

He disputes Boyce’s contention that he came into office with a $30 million deficit, thanks to a millage rate reduction by the board on the day Boyce defeated Lee in the 2016 runoff. “He overspent the budget he had and that created the hole.”

As for the 2018 millage rate increase that Boyce pushed through on a 3-2 vote, Savage said “that wasn’t just a little nudge. I think that that increase could have been smaller or not at all.”

On an initiative that Savage supports, better pay and retention for police officers and firefighters, he said Boyce ended up promising raises to many more employees than he first announced.

“He’s got a problem telling people we’ve got a lot in reserve,” Savage said, adding that situation is more acute now with economic losses due to COVID-19 closures.

“One of the glories of government is that nobody is losing their jobs,” he said. “At the very least, just stop hiring” until a more clarified budget and economic picture emerges.

Savage said if he’s elected he’d also defer purchasing some equipment and halt some non-essential maintenance projects until conducting a thorough budget review.

“You’ve got to look at every department,” he said.

Savage also has been critical of tax abatements issued by the Development Authority of Cobb County. In 2018, he filed suit to stop the issuance of bonds sought by Kroger for a superstore at the MarketPlace Terrell Mill project that’s in progress.

A judge agreed with Savage that the tax breaks for Kroger didn’t meet the authority’s definition of an essential project. But last summer, the Georgia Supreme Court upheld the bonds.

On broader development and zoning issues, Savage thinks the county land use plan isn’t followed like it should be, and he would work to limit high-density projects, including apartments in areas where single-family neighborhoods dominate.

The mixed-use trend that is being seeing in commercial areas like Powers Ferry Road is spreading to areas where he thinks it’s not compatible.

“Some parts of it I like, some I don’t like,” he said. “And when you have to address things like schools and traffic that add complexities to a development, it’s just turned zoning upside down.

“So many things about it contradict the zoning code, and it’s jumped in there all at once, without much of a debate or discussion.”

Savage acknowledged that Cobb is going to continue to attract development, “but what’s it going to be?”

He’s received endorsements from former Georgia GOP chairwoman Sue Everhart, a Cobb resident, and the Cobb County Republican Assembly, a group made up of fiscal and cultural conservatives.

Savage said he’s still running from a grassroots perspective, trying to appeal to those who favor low taxes and small government and are disenchanted with the incumbent.

“I have no natural constituencies, no big church or veterans groups behind me,” Savage said, referring to Boyce, a retired Marine colonel who attends Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church.

“People who got burned by Mike Boyce are backing me.”

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 to reopen pools, more park facilities in June

Mountain View Aquatic Center

Submitted information from Cobb government:

Cobb County PARKS will reopen most of their facilities to residents starting June 1st, including outdoor playgrounds, restroom facilities, and Aquatic Centers. Many of these facilities will have public health restrictions in place that will help maintain recommended social distancing.

Following the Governor’s latest Executive Orders, Cobb PARKS is working with associations and athletic organizations to formulate COVID-19 response plans that will allow organized games to resume when their plans are approved. This could be as early as mid-June.

Parks rentals are still not available, but plans are underway to restart them soon. Night lighting at some facilities may not be immediately available but will be phased-in over the next several weeks.

The number of people using aquatic centers will be limited and swim lessons will not take place due to social distancing guidelines. Lanes will be available to rent for those wishing to secure a time. 

Central Aquatic Center:
June 1st: 15 swimmers (one per lane)

Mountain View Aquatic Center:
June 1st: 25 swimmers (one per lane)

West Cobb Aquatic Center:
June 1st: 10 Swimmers (one per lane and 2 in the deep water)

South Cobb Aquatic Center:
June 1st: 5 swimmers (one per lane and 1 in the lazy river for exercising)

Seven Springs Waterpark:
June 15th: 25% of capacity (125 swimmers per session)

Sewell Park Pool:
June 15th: 20 swimmers (Splash Pad closed)

We will update the web site (www.cobbPARKS.org) and our Social Media Accounts with any changes in the pool hours and available activities. 

Please visit the link below to reserve lap lanes and designated lanes for exercising.
https://secure.rec1.com/GA/cobb-county-ga/catalog

 

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!