Cobb school board candidate spotlight: Matt Harper, Post 5

Three years in the classroom gave Matt Harper a whole new perspective on the value of education.Matt Harper, Cobb school board candidate

It also fueled his desire to do something more than be the typical involved parent.

After serving as a science lab instructor at Murdock Elementary School—where he once was a student and where both of his daughters have attended—Harper felt a stronger desire to make a difference.

That’s why he said he’s running for the Post 5 seat the Cobb Board of Education as a first-time candidate for public office.

(Here’s Harper’s campaign website).

“As a teacher, I saw on a daily basis the grind—and the joys—that teachers go through, and what we ask of them,” said Harper, who also has served on the Murdock School Council.

“Before that, I’d say I fell into the category of clueless dad.”

The former environmental planner-turned information technology consultant is one of three Republican candidates on the June 9 primary ballot, along with Delta pilot Shelley O’Malley and three-term incumbent David Banks.

Post 5 (see map below) includes the Pope and Lassiter attendances zones, and stretches into portions of the Wheeler cluster.

A graduate of Walton High School, Harper and his wife Sharon have daughters who attend Murdock (3rd grade) and Dodgen Middle School (6th grade).

As someone who grew up in East Cobb, Harper is clearly playing up his local ties, as well as his background as an educator.

He said he thought about running four years ago, “but the timing just wasn’t right. I just feel called to serve.”

Providing greater support for teachers in the classroom while maintaining a fiscally conservative approach to taxes and budgeting are among Harper’s priorities, but the COVID-19 crisis that closed Cobb schools since March 13 will prompt some difficult and dramatic decisions.

“Things are going to continue to change,” Harper said, “but things aren’t going to change about how schools work” and the roles they play in their communities. 

When Gov. Brian Kemp closed public schools statewide for the rest of the current school year, the Georgia Department of Education also cancelled standardized testing.

Harper thinks standardized testing should be suspended for the 2020-21 school year as well. 

“Teachers are going to have to be catching students up across the board,” he said. 

Massive business closures also will impact the Cobb County School District’s Education SPLOST (Special Local-Option Sales Tax) collections that fund school construction, maintenance and technology projects.

The district’s pending fiscal year 2021 budget formulation also is in limbo because the Georgia legislative session was suspended before school funding was determined.

Cobb gets roughly half of its $1 billion budget from the state, and Kemp is proposing 14 percent 14 cuts at all departmental levels to address the shortfalls.

Cutting that much from Cobb’s upcoming budget would be around $70 million.

“That would be a big hit,” Harper said.

Cobb BOE Post 5

When, and how, Cobb schools would begin the next school year also factors into future funding issues that the school board will have to wrestle with. 

“The biggest concern that I have is how do we do best with the funding we have while keeping our school staff healthy and bring children back so their parents can go back to work.”

Harper does not favor doing away with the Cobb schools senior tax exemption, which comes to around $100 million a year. It’s an issue that caused some flare-ups on the school board in the last two years, largely along partisan lines, with Republicans opposed to touching it, and Democrats wanting at least to study the matter.

In his teaching work at Murdock, Harper developed an environmental club at the school, and rebuilt its school garden.

He strongly favors a 30-minute recess period in all Cobb elementary schools, something that exists now at the discretion of principals.

Even though he’s a “self-proclaimed digital pack rat,” Harper thinks that recess should be technology-free. “It’s a no-brainer,” he said. 

As for what awaits Cobb school students in the coming months, Harper said that while starting a new school year online-only is a very possible option, “no one wants that to happen.”

The personal connections students make with one another, their teachers and principals and bus drivers is vitally important, he said especially at the grade-school level.

“The stability that the school environment offers students is more than reading, writing arithmetic,” Harper said.

“Those baseline needs of school and community have not changed.”

 

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!

All Cobb outdoor parks to reopen Monday; playgrounds closed

East Cobb Park
East Cobb Park has been locked up since late March. (ECN file)

This just in from Cobb County government:

Cobb PARKS will reopen their outdoor facilities on Monday, May 11th. Trails and passive parks have already been open to the public, so this will reopen the remainder of our outdoor parks. Due to continuing health concerns surrounding the coronavirus, the following restrictions will remain in place:

  • Playgrounds and restrooms at park facilities will remain closed.

  • No organized athletic activities will be allowed.

  • Park Rangers and PARKS personnel will monitor the parks to ensure park patrons maintain proper social distancing. Flagrant violations could result in the closure of part or all of that facility.

  • Indoor facilities, such as aquatic centers and arts centers, will remain closed.

The county initially kept parks open shortly after Commission Chairman Mike Boyce declared a state of emergency. But he ordered parks closed on March 23 after being advised to do so by public health officials in the “interest of public health and to encourage social distancing.”

The entrances to East Cobb Park and other outdoor parks, including Mabry Park in East Cobb, have been locked up ever since.

On April 23, the county reopened some trails, like the Noonday Creek Trail and the Silver Comet Trail, and a few passive parks, including Ebenezer Downs and Hyde Farm in East Cobb.

Cobb PARKS issued further details of the reopenings on Friday:

1. No organized activities will be allowed. This includes team practices, games, get-togethers, etc.
2. All field lights will remain off and park concession stands closed.
3. On diamond fields, dugouts will be locked.
4. All restrooms will remain locked.
5. Playgrounds will remain closed. Part-time PARKS staff will be stationed at these playgrounds from dawn until dusk to ensure that no one violates the closures.
6. Our staff in the parks will also be monitoring other areas of the parks and will be notifying public safety should organized activities be observed.

The decision to reopen the parks comes as some businesses and other public activities are gradually being allowed to reopen in Georgia.

As of noon Wednesday, there were 30,706 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Georgia, with 1,311 deaths, 5,770 hospitalizations and 1,348 intensive-care admissions.

In Cobb County, there are 1,996 confirmed cases of the virus and 102 deaths, with 506 hospitalizations.

When the parks reopen on Monday, beautiful spring weather will be in store, with sunny skies and high temperatures into the 70s and 80s for most of the week.

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 business update: More dining rooms reopening

Cobb Chamber business reopening guidelines

A few more restaurants in East Cobb are opening up their dining rooms, or announcing they will be soon, since we noted a few last week that had opened their doors or would be soon.

On Wednesday, Eggs Up Grill (4401 Shallowford Road) is reopening its dining room for its usual breakfast-lunch hours from 6 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.

The Wing Cafe & Tap House (2145 Roswell Road) is reopening its dining room and starting up takeout/curbside with a limited menu. No specials will be offered for the time being, 770-509-9464;

The Mellow Mushroom on Johnson Ferry is still doing takeout/pickup/delivery for now, but is planning to reopen its dining room next Monday, May 11 with limited seating due to social distancing guidelines.

Previously reopened restaurants

Chicago’s Steak and Seafood, at Shallowford Corners, has resumed dining room service for dinner.

A few doors down, East Cobb Tavern reopened Monday and will be open from 3-8 p.m. for dining room and curbside service.

Last Monday, Suburban Tap reopened its dining room and will allow only 10 patrons per square foot and dining parties of six people or less per table. Salad bar and buffet service are discontinued for the time being.

Among the first East Cobb restaurants to reopen its dining room was Bradley’s Bar & Grill on Lower Roswell Road.

Other business reopenings

East Cobb Family Dentistry (2969 Johnson Ferry Road) reopened on Monday, and is now booking appointments for the week of May 11, 770-913-6800;

The Credit Union of Georgia (1020 Johnson Ferry Road) has reopened its lobby for appointment service only (along with continuing drive-thru service) Monday–Friday from 8 a.m. to 5pm and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.;

The Eurocar auto repair shop (4696 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 100) is open Monday-Thursday from 8 a.m. to 6pm and Friday from 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m., 770-565-7070;

Lenox Chem-Dry (3020 Canton Road, Suite 110) cleans and sanitizes carpet, upholstery and tile, 770-419-1788.

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

East Cobb Government Center gets absentee ballot drop box

East Cobb Government Center, Cobb Police Precinct 4

The East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road) is one of four locations in the county where an absentee ballot drop box has been installed for the 2020 primary elections.

That vote has been pushed back to June 9 from the original May 19 date, and Cobb Elections is encouraging the voting public to cast their ballots absentee.

The other locations are:

  • South Cobb Government Service Center, 4700 Austell Road, Austell
  • North Cobb Regional Library, 3535 Old 41 Highway NW, Kennesaw
  • Elections Main Office, 736 Whitlock Ave., Marietta

The boxes are being monitored by cameras for security purposes.

According to Cobb Elections, “Public health concerns will likely impact in-person voting availability and wait times may increase due to social distancing and sanitation requirements.”

The other standing absentee ballot return options remain the same:

  • Mail to the address on the outer envelope
  • Hand-deliver to an absentee clerk at the Elections Main Office
  • Hand-deliver to the poll manager of any Cobb County advance voting location

Any mailed or dropped off absentee ballots must be done so by 7 p.m. on primary election day, June 9, in order for them to be counted.

Two weeks ago, the Georgia Secretary of State’s office began mailing absentee ballots to voters who filled out an application.

All registered Georgia voters received the applications—which for now just pertain to the primaries and presidential primary, which is also on June 9—and have until June 5 to submit them.

Cobb Elections has set up an Absentee Voting Page with more information.

If you haven’t registered to vote, you now have until May 11 to do so, and can do that here.

If you’d like to view and download a sample ballot (Republican, Democratic or non-partisan) or if you need to change your registration information, you can do that at the My Voter page at the Georgia Secretary of State’s website.

Cobb Absentee Ballot Envelope

One other thing Cobb Elections wants you to note when you get your absentee ballot: It will look and work a little different, with an explanation below:

Instead of creating the usual white inner envelope and an outer envelope printed with an Oath, the vendor created a white paper “sleeve” as the inner envelope. Although the instructions say to enclose and securely seal the voted ballot in the smaller of the two envelopes, the white folded paper sleeve will work just fine.

Please put your voted ballot into the white paper sleeve and then place it into the Oath envelope, sign the Oath and return the ballot. Do not tape or staple the paper sleeve, because the ballot might become damaged as it is removed.

The reason there are two envelopes is to ensure ballot privacy. As staff prepares the ballots for counting, the voted ballot is separated from the outer envelope that identifies the voter’s name. Staff never sees how any person has voted. In this case, Cobb Elections staff will handle this sleeve in the same way as a sealed envelope.

Please email info@cobbelections.org with any further questions.

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 PPE Makers group gives boost to medical workers

East Cobb PPE Makers group

Reader Ariel Starke passes along information and photos about a group of East Cobb residents who’ve quickly formed to make masks and scrub caps for workers at Wellstar Kennestone Hospital and other local medical facilities.

The East Cobb PPE Makers Facebook group scrambled into action after responding to a local nurse who posted on the East Cobb Mom’s Exchange group about needing a scrub cap.

Kim Deuster, who started the PPE Makers, takes the story from there:

“She is a nurse in the emergency department at Kennestone Hospital, and the hospital was requiring their staff to wear the caps as one more barrier to being exposed to COVID-19. When I told her I could do it for her, another nurse sent me a message asking if I could make 100 caps. When I realized the man hours and material needed, I knew I could not do this alone. I reached out to several friends, asking for material donations and sewing volunteers on every board I belong to. Within 3 days I had a basement full of supplies, 20 sewers and multiple volunteers offering to run material and caps all over the East Cobb area. We were able to produce over 300 caps for 7 local healthcare facilities within two weeks.”
East Cobb PPE Makers group

 

 

East Cobb PPE Makers group

 

East Cobb PPE Makers group

 

 

East Cobb PPE Makers group

 

The East Cobb PPE Makers continuing to produce PPE items, as the group’s membership has grown to more than 125.
Maxwell’s husband is a critical care doctor at the Kennestone Pulmonary Group, and posted this video of their PPE items being put to rapid use.

 

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 Chamber releases business reopening guidelines

Cobb Chamber business reopening guidelines

Submitted information:

The Cobb Chamber, in collaboration with health and community leaders, has released a compilation of guidelines to assist businesses in their efforts to safely reopen as the state moves toward economic recovery. The guidelines are available at https://covidsupport.cobbchamber.org/covid-19-resources.  

“We’ve heard from businesses across different industries that this would be helpful for them and we really appreciate the work of our taskforce to put this together,” said Sharon Mason, president & CEO of the Cobb Chamber. “This guide is to provide tips and tools to help businesses be prepared to reopen in a safe way for their employees and customers. Additionally, our recent webinars have and will continue to focus on helping businesses be prepared to reopen safely.”

The guidelines deliver public health protocol for companies to consider as they prepare their own plans for a phased reopening and a reintroduction of staff and customers to their establishment. Topics covered in the guidelines include preparing your workforce and workspace and information on mitigating the spread of the virus. The guidelines take into consideration daily health tests, sanitization, reconfiguring the workspace to allow for social distancing, and a number of other recommendations on how their space could be reimagined to be as safe as possible for employees and visitors.

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!

Kids Care collecting ‘Kindness Cards’ for COVID-19 workers

Kids' Care Kindness Cards

Submitted information from Kids Care, a youth-oriented community service and volunteer organization that’s sending “Kindness Cards,” notes of appreciation to local COVID-19 frontline workers:

To date, 400 Kindness Cards of encouragement and thanks have been collected by KIDS CARE & given to Cobb County Hospital Staff, Fire, EMS, Police & 911 Dispatch Personnel during this challenging time.

Please bring your home-made offerings of “Thanks” to any of the business locations listed on our website as a Kindness Card Drop Off Location. We will be collecting Kindness Cards for a few more weeks.

In addition, email jannd@forartssakeusa.com, your message and a greeting card with your written message will be delivered to a Frontline worker for you.

All details can be found at https://www.kids-care2018.org.

FYI: There is an East Cobb dropoff location, at the entrance to Williams-Sonoma store at The Avenue East Cobb (4475 Roswell Road, Suite 800).

You can drop off cards there from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday-Friday curbside, weather permitting. During inclement weather the box will be placed under the store awning.

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!

Wellstar East Cobb Health Park draws a crowd for flyover

East Cobb flyover

With clear blue skies and temperatures near 80 degrees, quite a few East Cobbers found some some open space at the Wellstar East Cobb Health Park Saturday afternoon to watch the Navy Blue Angels and Air Force Thunderbirds flyover honoring frontline COVID-19 workers.

They began their metro Atlanta excursion flying from Wellstar Kennestone Hospital in Marietta, then down along I-75 before looping back up through Sandy Springs and Roswell, and then on to the city of Atlanta and eventually to Newnan.

East Cobb flyover

East Cobb flyover

The entire flight didn’t take long, and it helped to be very close to the flight path. The planes were barely visible from this point in East Cobb as they reached their turn-around point in Roswell, and only a trace of their booming sounds could be heard.

Roswell resident Robert Davis lives virtually underneath the flight path, and he tagged us on the Instagram video below, taken as the planes screeched overhead:

https://www.instagram.com/p/B_sd3MJB-iF/

While Davis didn’t have to leave home, those at the health park lingered for a while afterwards, enjoying some fresh air—while practicing social distancing—at the end of the seventh week since the Coronavirus crisis shut down so much of daily life.

The nearby East Cobb Park, like many in the county, remains closed—locked up, actually—although a few other passive parks and trails reopened last week.

Another good crowd was also on hand to watch the flyover from the spacious parking lot at Johnson Ferry Baptist Church, the venue for what would have been the Taste of East Cobb today.

That event, like so many others through the spring and summer, was cancelled.

While some businesses are gradually reopening again—there were a good number of cars at shopping centers like Merchant’s Walk—it’s far from being what it would normally be on a splendid spring weekend.

East Cobb flyover

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 festival update: Noshfest postponed to spring 2021

Noshfest

Saturday would have been the Taste of East Cobb festival, but like many special events in the community, it’s among those postponed or cancelled due to COVID-19. 

The latest is the Noshfest, a Jewish food, music and cultural celebration that’s been held on the Labor Day weekend at Temple Kol Emeth.

Earlier this week, Noshfest organizers sent out word that their 10th annual festival will be pushed back to the spring of 2021.

No specific dates were mentioned for now. Last month it was announced Noshfest would be moved up to Aug. 22-23.

The Marietta Greek Festival was to have been held May 15-17 at Holy Transfiguration Greek Orthodox Church, but is being cancelled altogether this year. 

Other spring festival casualties in East Cobb included the Northeast Community Egg Drop at Sprayberry High School, as well as the Cobb Master Gardeners plant sale and expo and spring home garden tour. Both of those were planned for April.

A number of other major spring and summer events around metro Atlanta are being called off or pushed back, including the Peachtree Road Race.

The July 4 event, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary, will now take place on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 26.

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!

Cautious East Cobb businesses ease into gradual reopening

East Cobb businesses reopening
Employees at Frenchie’s Modern Nail Care in East Cobb prepare for a new way of doing business. (ECN photos)

When she opened her nail salon in the Shallowford Falls Shopping Center last August, Rhoda Gunnigle told customers that “We Love Clean.”

That’s the slogan for Frenchie’s Modern Nail Care, and Gunnigle, as a newly-minted franchisee of the national company, earnestly meant to live up to it.

She’s had to stress that message even more, and have her staff take even greater hygiene measures, as her shop reopened Friday after a six-week closure due to the Coronavirus crisis. 

Frenchie’s East Cobb owner Rhoda Gunnigle goes over new safety measures with her staff.

Salons like hers were allowed to open last Friday by Gov. Brian Kemp, but Gunnigle wanted to take extra time to train her staff to meet extensive new requirements.

She also wanted to gauge the willingness of customers to patronize a business in a “personal touch” industry that’s been caught in the crossfire over how much reopening should be allowed as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to take a toll.

“We have some [customers] who have been so supportive,” Gunnigle said Thursday, taking a break from final preparations. “And there are others who are not ready yet, and that’s understandable.”

Georgia’s reopening has been criticized in national media and by public health officials, and Gunnigle said she understands the concerns. 

But she has her own. Like many business owners, she filed right away in March for federal relief under the Paycheck Protection Program, and earlier this week finally got the loan money. Under the PPP, employers must spend at least 75 percent of the money on payroll, or the loan will not be forgiven.

Gunnigle said she’s going to use all of it to pay her employees, while she scrambles to pay her landlord and meet other financial obligations. She got a six-month reprieve on her Small Business Association loan she used to start the business, and that’s helped.

Frenchie’s employees were busy cleaning and disinfecting nearly every surface of the salon before it reopened.

She said she’s glad she waited to reopen at least for a few days, and understands why some people don’t want to get their nails done, or hair cut, for now. 

“But if you wait until it’s too comfortable, it may be too late,” Gunnigle said, speaking from a business owner’s perspective. 

“How can you wait while while expenses pile up? With the rent due, I didn’t feel I had much of a choice.”

Frenchie’s is doing a slow reopening, available for now only on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, and by appointment only.

She’s not allowing walk-ins, and anyone coming through the front door—even the mailman—is asked questions about international travel, possible exposure to the virus, and more.

Gunnigle is acting as the front desk receptionist, using only three staffers at a time, instead of the typical six. They all must wear masks, which are optional for customers. 

Guests must wash their hands and practice social distancing. Clear plastic screens shield customers and employees alike. 

After guests leave following a “touchless checkout,” the area where they sat, including their chairs, is fully disinfected. Disposable items are promptly tossed away. 

Gunnigle said she’s going beyond the state-issued mandates, including those from the Georgia State Board of Cosmetologists and Barbers, which also regulates nail salons. She feels confident that she and her workers are as prepared as they can be. 

She says that “I feel as safe in here as I do at home” and understands that some may think that getting a manicure isn’t the most important thing in the world right now. “But there are people who want to come back the safe way.”

Cobb commissioner Bob Ott stopped by Intrigue Salon, which also has reopened on Johnson Ferry Road (Photo courtesy Intrigue Salon).

Going ‘biotech’ to get cleaner

Intrigue Salon on Johnson Ferry Road also took a few extra days to reopen, for many of the same reasons as Frenchie’s.

Owner Jeff South also was waiting for delivery of Synexis, which is described as a “biodefense technology to mitigate infectious microorganisms.”

It’s similar to the technology used to clean and disinfect schools, hospitals and restaurants. Synexis produces hydrogen peroxide in the same physical state as the oxygen and nitrogen in the air, and the molecule is known as Dry Hydrogen Peroxide (DHP). 

South said his salon is the first in the world to to install Synexis, and that it’s effective against airborne and surface viruses, bacteria and fungi. 

Intrigue also is limiting customers to only those with appointments. Customers must also wear masks, and although gloves are optional their hands must be washed. 

They also will be asked health questions by stylists, who are sanitizing chairs and their work stations after every customer, who will have a clean cape and clean tools. 

Intrigue also is not blow-drying hair for now, but is offering a free serum treatment before guests leave.

Those measures, like those undertaken by other salons, are a blend of hygiene and the pragmatism prompted by social distancing.

While a number of “personal touch” businesses are waiting a while longer, Rhoda Gunnigle of Frenchie’s says “we can’t stay home forever. The economy cannot continue to be shut down.”

Among her first customers this weekend is her mother, who lives in the North Georgia mountains and whom she hasn’t seen for nearly two months because of social distancing.

As a business owner who felt the initial shutdowns nearly cast a fatal blow to her enterprise, Gunnigle said “I’m still not out of the woods.”

Reopening her nail salon—if only for a few days at a time, and far from full operations—”is a risk, but as a business owner you have to take some risks.”

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, MUST to provide student meals through June

New East Cobb Middle School

The joint effort between the Cobb County School District and MUST Ministries to provide student meals to those who need them will continue into the summer.

The district announced Friday that it would extend food distribution of weekday breakfasts and lunches that began in March, when schools were closed due to the Coronavirus crisis.

East Cobb Middle School is one of eight sites in the Cobb district that has been a pickup point for those student meals.

“What most people don’t know about distributing food to students is local taxpayer dollars aren’t spent on food for students, Federal dollars are. These eight sites were selected because they allow us to be reimbursed by the Federal government, many of our schools across Cobb don’t allow for that option,” Cobb schools chief operations officer Marc Smith said in a statement issued by the district.

Pre-K students, rising kindergartners, recent graduates under 18, and new students to the district are eligible to receive the food, which is handed out by MUST volunteers at the designated schools each Monday between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.

The students must be present in order to receive the food.

More than 217,000 meals have been distributed thus far, according to the district, which estimates that another 225,000 meals will be provided the next couple of months.

While the Cobb schools summer vacation goes until Aug. 1, the school district’s fiscal year 2021 budget takes effect July 1.

Normally the district and Cobb school board would be working on the new fiscal year budget in April and May. However, they cannot because the Georgia legislative session was suspended before the state budget, including education funding appropriated to school districts, was finalized.

A date to resume the legislative session hasn’t been announced, but some leading lawmakers are suggesting mid-June at the earliest, when Georgia’s extended public health emergency is due to expire.

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!

More stores at The Avenue East Cobb are reopening

Parisian Nail Salon, The Avenue East Cobb

Most stores, shops and restaurants at The Avenue East Cobb closed completely due to the Coronavirus crisis, (and it was surreal to see an empty parking lot during the day), but a number are reopening or will be soon.

The retail center’s management on Friday released a partial list of its tenants who’ve opened up their doors, with this caveat:

“The well-being, health and safety of you and the community is our #1 priority. We recommend all guest adhere to the CDC and the State of Georgia’s guidelines when visiting. 

“Please note some retailers remain closed at this time while others hours vary. We recommend that you contact your favorite retailer for their current hours and any restrictions they may have in place (curbside pickup, appointment only etc.) prior to visiting.”

The stores that are open now include the following, and they include some that have stayed open:

  • Bravura Fashion
  • Simply Mac
  • Hand & Stone
  • High Country
  • Kale Me Crazy
  • Menchie’s Frozen Yogurt
  • Michael’s
  • Olea Oliva
  • Palm Beach Tan
  • Parisian Nail Salon
  • Pottery Barn (May 4)
  • Smallcakes
  • Tin Lizzy’s
  • Van Michael Salon
  • Versona
  • Williams Sonoma (May 4)

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 COBBER magazine suspends publication of May issue

East Cobber magazine suspends publication

The EAST COBBER magazine has suspended publication of its May issue.

In a note that went out Thursday to “our valued readers and advertisers,” publisher Cynthia Rozzo said she decided to “go dark” due to “the turmoil that COVID-19 has caused over the past few weeks.”

She said that on May 1, “we will then evaluate the situation and determine if a June/July print edition will be viable.” East Cobb News has left a message with Rozzo seeking further comment.

The EAST COBBER, which she founded in 1993, is published 11 times a year, with a combined June-July issue. Each issue typically runs from 44 to 52 pages and includes community news and information and focuses advertising on specific types of businesses, including restaurants, private schools, pets and home and garden.

Most of the magazine’s advertisers are small, local businesses, especially in personal care and home and lifetstyle sectors, as well as financial institutions, dentists and restaurants.

Rozzo wrote in her note Thursday that “we don’t take the health risks of COVID-19 lightly, and you shouldn’t either. But we also recognize the impact that these restrictions are having on our economy.”

Rozzo said her publication will continue to provide “useful and relevant information” on its social media platforms and her weekly newsletter also will continue. “Advertising opportunities are available to those businesses that want to maintain their brand awareness.”

East Cobber parade
The EAST COBBER sponsors a community parade and festival in September.

Across the country local news publications and magazines have been deeply affected by the economic fallout from the Coronavirus crisis.

Depending heavily on advertising and in an industry that’s been in deep decline for nearly two decades, some newspapers have shuttered altogether, and others have laid off and furloughed staff and cut the number of days they publish.

Last month, The Marietta Daily Journal reduced its print edition from seven to five days a week, and is on a Tuesday-Saturday publishing schedule.

“It’s becoming increasingly clear that a larger portion of our audience turns first to our digital products,” the paper announced April 8, writing that ” a new set of circumstances brought on by the coronavirus pandemic hastened a change.”

The MDJ had taken down its paywall after the COVID-19 crisis began, but that went back up Friday. 

Rozzo had planned a Pet Palooza event with the McCleskey-East Cobb Family YMCA May 17 but that has been cancelled.

Rozzo also started the EAST COBBER parade that is held each September along Johnson Ferry Road and includes a community festival at Johnson Ferry Baptist Church. She did not mention the status of that event in her note on Thursday. 

Rozzo, an Ohio native, is a former East Cobb Citizen of the Year and in 2018 was named the first Business Person of the Year by the East Cobb Business Association.

“Let there be no doubt, we will be back, and we look forward to the time when we can share that with each of you,” she said in her note.

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 flyover to launch Blue Angels/Thunderbirds salute

Blue Angels Thunderbirds Cobb flyover

If you look up in the sky early Saturday afternoon you’ll see (and hear) military planes screeching by.

They’re not taking part in formal exercises but instead are the Navy Blue Angels and Air Force Thunderbirds, taking part in a salute to COVID-19 first responders.

It’s the latest in a series of tributes called America Strong, and on Saturday similar flyovers will take place in the Baltimore and Washington, D.C. areas.

Earlier this week, an America Strong event took place over New York City and Philadelphia.

The tentative start time for the Atlanta flyover is 1:35 p.m. Saturday, as the planes begin in Cobb, around Wellstar Kennestone Hospital, and will circle back up over Sandy Springs, Roswell and a sliver of East Cobb before heading down to Atlanta and eventually to the Newnan area.

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!

 

Gov. Kemp lifting shelter-in place order for most Georgians

Kemp lifting shelter-in-place order

The shelter-in-place order Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp extended once already will be expiring right before midnight Friday.

As the clock strikes midnight, and as April gives way to the month of May, most Georgians will be free to roam about their communities a bit more.

In a statement issued Thursday afternoon, Kemp said he’s still urging citizens to stay at home as much as possible and to observe social distancing practices and wear masks when they go out.

Here’s a summary of his new order, which details provisions for businesses that are open, who must remain in shelter-in-place and criteria for currently closed businesses to reopen by May 13.

He thanked citizens for heeding advice to stay home, “affording us time to bolster our health care infrastructure and flatten the curve.

“We were successful in these efforts, but the fight is far from over,” Kemp said.

As of noon Thursday, Georgia had reported 26,155 confirmed cases of the COVID-19 Coronavirus, with 1,120 deaths and 5,156 hospitalizations. Of the latter, there were 1.171 intensive care admissions.

In Cobb County there are 1,599 cases and 91 deaths, with 464 hospitalizations.

Georgia has a population of 10.6 million people but has conducted only 149,000 tests for the virus.

In addition, those businesses allowed to reopen over the last week must continue to follow proscribed safety and sanitation regulations, including social distancing guidelines, through May 13.

That’s when statewide a public health emergency was due to expire. However, Kemp on Thursday said he would extend that order through June 12.

Under that order, elderly citizens (aged 65 and older) and “medically fragile Georgians” must continue to follow shelter-in-place rules.

Kemp said extending the public health emergency is also being done to continue testing for the virus, begin contact tracing and provide for adequate emergency response operations.

Senior living, nursing-home and long-term care facilities will be ordered to follow “enhanced infection control protocols” through June 12.

“My decisions are based on data and advice from health officials,” Kemp said. “I will do what is necessary to protect the lives and livelihoods of our people.”

Kemp’s actions to allow some personal touch businesses and restaurants to reopen in the last week has generated plenty of controversy.

On Thursday, Dr. Karen Landman, an Atlanta-based writer and epidemiologist, wrote in an op-ed piece in The New York Times that Georgia’s reopening, the first by a state in the country, has been mishandled.

She accused the governor of using selected data to guide his decision and said overall numbers are still too high.

“It’s not just about having favorable data, or even enough testing,” she wrote. “It’s about having the right infrastructure to assess it and ensure sustained decreases in cases.”

At The Atlantic, Lassiter High School graduate Amanda Mull made similar points in an article published Wednesday with the headline “Georgia’s Experiment With Human Sacrifice.”

Mull, who now lives in Brooklyn, talked to health experts and small business owners in the state, including Sabra Dupree of Kids Kuts Salon in East Cobb, and concluded that “Georgia’s brash reopening puts much of the state’s working class in an impossible bind: risk death at work, or risk ruining yourself financially at home.”

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!

SCENE IN EAST COBB: Messages of hope on Johnson Ferry Road

Johnson Ferry Road messages of hope

Motorists heading south along Johnson Ferry Road can see a steady stream of signs as they pass the Episcopal Church of St. Peter and St. Paul.

From the church’s driveway at the intersection of Bishop Lake Road to its back parking lot, the intermittent signs read “Don’t Give Up!” (and its Spanish equivalent, “No Te Rindas,”),  “You Are Not Alone,” “One Day at a Time” and “You Got This!”

(In the background of the first and last photo is Mt. Zion United Methodist Church.)

The messages are meant to comfort during the Coronavirus crisis, but they also extend to part of the broader ministry of St. Peter and St. Paul. The church conducts a monthly food box pickup event in conjunction with There’s Hope for the Hungry, a North Georgia ministry that also includes Mt. Zion and Noonday Baptist Church as participating congregations in East Cobb.

Those in need can pick up a free box of food can come to St. Peter and St. Paul (1795 Johnson Ferry Road) on the first Tuesday of each month from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. The next pickup event is this coming Tuesday, May 5.

Tom Martin, head of service ministries at St. Peter and St. Paul, said the food distribution program started in early 2019. When visitors come by, they’ll get a box with enough food to feed a family of four for two weeks.

The church also has provided voluntary spiritual counseling sessions for those needing help getting back on their feet. Martin said that won’t be happening in May because of the COVID-19 situation, and food distribution also will be done in accordance with social distancing guidelines.

On Tuesday, those picking up food are asked to pull into the main driveway and follow signs to the back of the church. Once there, they’ll receive a food voucher and delivery of the food box in their trunks, without having to leave their vehicles.

Send us your news!

Got a story tip, photo or other news item about East Cobb? Send it to us and we’ll share it with the community. E-mail: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

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 openings/closings update 4.30: Restaurants, shops and more

Chicago's Restaurant

With Georgia’s shelter-in-place order expected to expire later today, and as selected businesses are allowed to reopen, we’re updating what’s opening and what’s staying closed for now in East Cobb. 

We’ll be adding to this during the day, so let us know your status. E-mail us: editor@eastcobbnews.com

Williamson Bros BBQ on Roswell Road has been fully closed, but announced this morning it’s open as of today for drive-thru service only, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Call 770-071-3201 to order in advance. They’ve been testing this approach at other locations and the dining room is still closed. 

Chicago’s Steak and Seafood, at Shallowford Corners, had been closed completely but is now resuming dining room service for dinner. Proprietor Mark Zwolak said during the closure the restaurant underwent a full deep cleaning and some renovations and is taking extra safety precautions, including use of “a non-contact infrared thermometer to screen the temperatures of our employees and patrons.”

A few doors down, East Cobb Tavern is reopening Monday and will be open from 3-8 p.m. for dining room and curbside service. It was open only a few weeks after being rebranded from Keegan’s Pub, and has been closed completely since mid-March.

The Eggs Up Grill, also at Shallowford Corners, has been fully closed for a couple of weeks, after trying pickup/takeout/delivery. Management announced Wednesday the dining room is reopening in seven days, after saying over the weekend it would hold off despite the governor’s reopening plans. “We will be adhering to all safety guidelines for social distancing, sanitation etc. We look forward to get back to serving the community we so love! It has been too long!” was Wednesday’s message.

On Monday, Suburban Tap reopened its dining room and will allow only 10 patrons per square foot and dining parties of six people or less per table. Salad bar and buffet service are discontinued for the time being. 

As we noted last week, among the first East Cobb restaurants to reopen its dining room is Bradley’s Bar & Grill on Lower Roswell Road.

Most restaurants in East Cobb that are open are limiting their operations to pickup/takeout/delivery for now, even though they could open their dining rooms on Monday.

Hair and nail salons, barber shops and other “personal touch” businesses were allowed to open on Friday, and a few are doing so (more in-depth on a few of those in another post) very gradually.

Nancy’s Salon on Johnson Ferry Road said Wednesday it would be reopening on May 12. The day before, on May 11, Zeba Hair Salon is reopening at Merchant’s Festival.

Some pet-related businesses have closed and a few will be opening up again soon. Haven, The Dog Spot is aiming for a May 11 “business almost as usual” reopening date, and has detailed its safety protocols.

Likewise at Hot Dogs, Cool Cats at Paper Mill Village, a pet spa and grooming boutique that also is shooting for May 11 to open back up. 

Most of the gyms and fitness centers in East Cobb that also have been allowed to reopen remain closed, at least for now, and are offering virtual classes. 

Some medical offices are starting to reopen. One is East Cobb Foot and Ankle Care, which is requiring all patients to wear masks or a face covering and will be checking temperatures. 

Carwash USA at East Cobb Crossing is reopening on Thursday, but in a limited mode. No more than two customers will be allowed in the indoor waiting room at any given time, although there is outdoor seating as well. 

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 DA’s office seeking support for liveSafe Resources

liveSafe Resources

Submitted information:

Cobb District Attorney Joyette M. Holmes asks community members to help provide hope to Livesafe Resources by stocking the shelves for victims of domestic violence, as part of National Crime Victims’ Rights Week.

While pandemic precautions have strained our community and locked many into violent homes, Marietta-based liveSAFE Resources remains at work, caring for domestic-violence survivors and performing sexual-assault exams.

You can help by purchasing items on Amazon and having them sent directly to liveSAFE’s offices. A wish list can be found at: https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/PPBY3HHZ9MMW…

Monetary donations to liveSAFE can be made here: https://4agc.com/donat…/e4e1e5c5-f1e4-4920-8e40-ee2277d0bfd1

Help is available for anyone suffering abuse in an intimate relationship. liveSAFE Resources’ 24-hour crisis line is 770-427-3390, and they are on the web at www.livesaferesources.org

This ‘Stock the Shelves’ event is hosted by the Cobb DA’s Office as part of National Crime Victims’ Rights Week. Events have been extended and moved online this year as a result of current health guidelines.

First designated by President Ronald Reagan in 1981, National Crime Victims’ Rights Week increases general public awareness of, and knowledge about the wide range of rights and services available to people who have been victimized by crime. The theme for 2020 National Crime Victims’ Rights Week is “Seek Justice, Ensure Victims’ Rights, and Inspire Hope.”

For additional information about 2020 National Crime Victims’ Rights Week activities or about victims’ rights and services in Cobb County, please contact the Victim Witness Unit in the DA’s Office at 770-528-3047 or visit our website at www.cobbda.com.

For information about national efforts to promote 2020 National Crime Victims’ Rights Week, please visit the Office for Victims of Crime website at www.ovc.gov.

The National Association of VOCA Assistance Administrators is a non-profit organization that represents the 56 state agencies that distribute money from the federal Victims of Crime Act (VOCA) Crime Victims Fund to more than 4,000 direct victim assistance service providers. The money in the Crime Victims Fund comes from fines collected from offenders convicted of federal crimes and not from U.S. taxpayers.

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 master plan review period extended

Johnson Ferry-Shallowford master plan

Right before the Coronavirus crisis prompted government, school and business closures, the Cobb Community Development Agency issued its Johnson Ferry-Shallowford master plan recommendations and made them available for public comment for a month.

That month, of course, was dominated by the Coronavirus response, and county government has been in limited operations mode.

Last week the agency sent out another notice that the master plan proposal, and related documents, would be available for public review until May 27. 

There’s also a storymap that’s been put together that runs through all the components of the two-year study, which includes land use, transportation, housing, demographics, stormwater and sense of place. 

JOSH future land use map
The future land use map of the JOSH area, which currently has nearly 27,000 residents. Light areas are low-density residential.

That information was compiled from feedback at town hall meetings and surveys. The agency uses the phrase “small area plan” in reference to this particular project, but the process has been similar to the Johnson Ferry Design Guidelines and the Powers Ferry Master Plan in East Cobb in recent years.

There’s a lot of material to cover in the “JOSH” report (the draft was released last summer), and we’ll highlight below a couple of areas that generated the most interest.

Here’s staff commentary from the land use section:

“Throughout the community engagement process, it was apparent that preservation of the low-density nature of the area was a reoccurring theme. Most of the JOSH study area is built-out, however, there are pockets of large tracts that could potentially be developed in the future. Whether they are CUVA tracts or underdeveloped properties, the community desires that the character of the existing neighborhoods does not change by virtue of what is developed around them.”

As a result, most of the related documents lay out potential future development that’s not much different from what exists now.

Johnson Ferry-Shallowford master plan
Low-density neighborhoods like Chimney Lakes comprise the vast majority of residential development in the “JOSH” area.

The staff also put together several scenarios for public feedback regarding the redevelopment of the area around Maddox Lake, at the southwestern corner of the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford intersection. 

That’s a 30-acre assemblage for rezoning that went before the Cobb Board of Commissioners as a proposed townhome and single-family residential development before the request was withdrawn in early 2017.

The options presented in the JOSH storymap include redevelopment as a community park and stormwater management facility, with multi-family residential and some retail and restaurant space (see the map below).

The transportation recommendations call for improving intersections in a number of places, including Johnson Ferry-Shallowford, Shallowford-Wesley Chapel, Shallowford-Mabry and creating a roundabout at Hembree Road and Lassiter Road. 

The “sense of place” suggestions include design guidelines along Johnson Ferry and Shallowford that would include streetscape amenities including decorative street lights and pedestrian lights, unified landscaped medians, wider sidewalks and street furniture.

The study also suggests the creation of a “community based stakeholder association” that would consider citizen ideas and collaboration on new development and design.

Comments on the JOSH recommendations and storymap can be sent to: comdevplanning@cobbcounty.org or Cobb County Community Development, Planning Division, P.O. Box 649, Marietta, GA 30061-0649.

JOSH Lake Park Concept
 

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 Chamber of Commerce relaunches Coronavirus website

Cobb Chamber of Commerce

Submitted information:

The Cobb Chamber, in partnership with web developer DynamiX, has launched a redesigned COVID-19 resources site for business owners, community leaders and anyone impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Covidsupport.cobbchamber.org includes resources and information on the CARES Act federal stimulus, reopening guidelines, upcoming Cobb Chamber webinars and learning opportunities, a list of companies that are currently hiring, among many other resources. The redesigned site also promotes businesses and initiatives, including the donation-driven Operation Meal Plan, Cobb Shops To Go, Thank a Healthcare Hero, and more. The website also provides up-to-date content as news develops and as needs are realized throughout our community.

“The Cobb Chamber has been focused on providing resources, advocacy and support to help our businesses and community through this difficult time,” said Sharon Mason, Cobb Chamber President & CEO. “With the redesign of our COVID-19 website, we’re able to take our support one step further by helping you quickly find the resources you need. We will continue working with our many partners and our Economic Recovery Taskforce to drive initiatives that will lead to our community’s recovery.”

One of the core tenants of the Cobb Chamber’s mission is to aid entrepreneurs and small businesses—and drive community and economic development. By hosting a wealth of resources on a single lightweight, responsive site, the Chamber can offer a one-stop-shop experience for every sector of the community that has been impacted by COVID-19.

DynamiX, a Kennesaw-based web design company, built out the site free of charge for the Cobb Chamber. Aiming to highlight organizations standing up for their employees, community and other businesses, DynamiX provided covidsupport.cobbchamber.org as a public service to the Cobb Chamber in order to promote positivity and awareness in their community.

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!