Cobb Fire seeks public help in investigating Vinings arsons

Vining arsons

Photo and text below from Nicholas Danz, Public Information Officer, Cobb Fire & Emergency Services:

WHAT: We suspect that 10 intentionally set fires have occurred in and around this location. 3 of those occurred within 12 hours spanning between January 10-11, 2021.

WHEN: From September 2020 – January 2021

WHERE: WestHaven at Vinings, 5900 Suffex Green Ln NW, Atlanta, GA 30339

WHY: We would like your help gathering information related to these incidents. Please contact our Fire Investigations Unit.

HOW: There is a reward up to $10,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of a suspect(s). You can call the Cobb County Fire Investigations Unit at 770-499-3869 or the attached hotline number for the HEAT program sponsored by Georgia Arson Control.

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Pope Band recycling event for Saturday has been cancelled

Pope Band recycling event cancelled

Submitted information:

Out of an abundance of concern for public health, the PBPA Recycling Event scheduled for this Saturday, January 16, has been canceled. 

Numbers and spread in our community at an all-time high, and we could not in good conscience risk the health of our volunteers or our donors.
Thank you so much for your support, and please help spread the word. Looking at the bright side, this just gives us more time to gather a good collection for our March 27 event! Mark your calendars now!
Thank you for supporting the Pope Band and the environment. 

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Cobb public health director: ‘There are just not enough vaccines’

Cobb health director COVID vaccines

The director of Cobb and Douglas Public Health said Tuesday the agency ran out of its allotted COVID-19 vaccines on the first day that people age 65 and older could book an appointment.

The demand was so strong that it overwhelmed a state-run website set up to take appointments for most of Monday.

In remarks Tuesday to the Cobb Board of Commissioners, Dr. Janet Memark apologized for the website crash, but said no new appointments will be released until the agency gets more vaccines.

She said all appointments for the rest of this week are already booked, and that another shipment of vaccines is expected soon to get through the end of next week.

“There are just not enough vaccines for everybody,” said Memark, who didn’t disclose the initial number of vaccines her agency received.

On Monday, 700 vaccines were administered in a drive-thru set-up at Jim Miller Park, and the agency has vaccinated 2,500 people in all. She said the eventual goal is to be able to provide 1,000 vaccines a day in Cobb.

Those 65 and older and their caregivers, and first responders, are eligible for the vaccines in the state’s 1A+ phase.

Even late Tuesday afternoon, the scheduling link for booking an appointment gave a busy server message. Memark said the Georgia Department of Public Health server was running at 210 percent capacity, and that a new server had to be found to handle the demand.

The Cobb and Douglas Public Health website, which was down for most of Monday, is back up and running, and is offering basic information on the vaccine appointments process.

Memark said appointments are necessary—there are no walk-up vaccines being offered—and that those eligible for them can go to another county and get them.

But demand is high everywhere, she said, noting that in a nearby county, a limit of 9,000 appointments were made in six minutes.

She said Georgia DPH is working on a universal scheduling program that should be available soon.

“Please be patient with us,” Memark said, adding that her agency will be releasing more appointment slots when more vaccines are delivered.

“A week at a time,” she said. “As demand ramps up, we pray that production ramps up.”

She said even when improvements are made to the appointment system, “it will probably not be perfect.”

Georgia DPH also has created a COVID vaccination locator page that has details about availability, hours and contact information.

Here’s some updated information sent out by Cobb and Douglas Public Health about scheduling an appointment:

Cobb & Douglas Public Health
Cobb and Douglas County Residents,

If you are a first responder, healthcare worker, or 65 years of age or older, please click on one of the links below to schedule an appointment to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. Appointments are posted one week at a time due to uncertain vaccine availability. Please check back each Friday after 5 p.m. for appointments for the coming Monday-Saturday.

Please Note: COVID-19 appointments for this week (week of 1/11/21) have all been filled.

Cobb: www.cdphcovidvaccineappointments.org
Douglas: www.douglascovidvax.org

Key Points to Remember:

  • Everyone must have an appointment to receive a vaccine. Individuals may come together in the same car if they have appointments for the same day, even if different times.
  • Please be patient as Cobb & Douglas Public Health is adding appointments to the system no more than a week at a time due to uncertain vaccine supply.
  • Approved vaccine providers are being activated daily across the state. Please check this Georgia Department of Public Health vaccine locator for vaccine providers: https://dph.georgia.gov/locations/covid-vaccination-site
  • There are a limited number of appointments each day, so you may not get an appointment right away.
  • Please follow the instructions in your appointment confirmation email.

Memark continued to encourage citizens to wash their hands, socially distance and wear masks in public, but urged people not to go out unless absolutely necessary.

“We are in a very dire situation,” Memark said. “There is no end in sight right now.”

As of Tuesday afternoon, there were 427 new COVID cases reported in Cobb, following a single-day record of 96 last Thursday.

Cobb’s community spread data reached new heights on Tuesday, with a 14-day average of 923 cases per 100,000 people.

Eight more deaths were also reported Tuesday, giving Cobb 589 since last March, the second-highest number in Georgia.

Memark urged school parents to go virtual with their students if they could, as the Cobb school district said Tuesday that five schools will be doing that for the rest of the week.

However, the district has said that Memark has not recommended that the entire district go all-virtual.

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Cobb schools COVID update: 21 active cases at McCleskey MS

There are 21 current active cases of COVID-19 that have been reported at McCleskey Middle School in Northeast Cobb, according to Cobb County School District data.Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

That’s the highest number of active cases at a particular school in the district, which began its spring semester on Thursday.

However, several other schools in East Cobb also have double-digit active case numbers, and the district on Tuesday said several other schools were going to all-virtual instruction for the rest of the week.

The district previously had reported only cumulative case numbers at each school. Now, the active number of cases is included in its weekly update, which is posted every Friday.

In that update are 351 new cases in the Cobb school district, and there have been 1,200 since Dec. 4. Since last July 1, when the Cobb school district began reporting COVID cases, there have been 1,921, but they are not broken down between students and staff.

North Cobb High School has 17 active cases, there are 14 at Awtrey Middle School, 12 at Lassiter High School, 11 at Walton High School and 10 at Kell High School.

In addition, there are 8 active cases each at Bells Ferry Elementary School and Wheeler High School.

The return to classrooms comes after a Cobb school district teacher died of COVID on Christmas Day, and as an online petition was formed to urge Cobb to go online-only, as is the case in other metro Atlanta school districts.

Cobb Board of Education member Jaha Howard posted a message on his Facebook page early Tuesday afternoon that the entire district was moving to all-virtual for the rest of the week.

But that was later corrected to report that Hillgrove High School, Nickajack Elementary School, Clay Harmony Leland Elementary School, Barber Middle School and Lindley Middle School will be going all-remote.

A Cobb school district spokeswoman did not respond to specific questions from East Cobb News about the active case numbers at McCleskey and other schools, and whether they were being considered for possible all-remote instruction. Here’s her statement:

“As part of our ongoing commitment to student and staff safety and based on student, staff, and school needs, the District is making school-by-school closing decisions on an individual basis.

“Despite social media posts to the contrary, the District is NOT transitioning to remote learning and remains committed to face-to-face and remote classroom options for students and parents.

“We are committed to announcing any future closings as soon as decisions are made. Cobb Schools continues to partner with the Cobb & Douglas Public Health Department to make decisions concerning our district’s response to the pandemic. Whether face-to-face or in fully remote classrooms, Cobb teachers will continue to teach, and students will continue to learn, from everywhere.”

At a Tuesday meeting of the Cobb Board of Commissioners, Dr. Janet Memark, director of Cobb and Douglas Public Health, said that parents who are “able to have your children go virtual at this point [if] this is something that if you can do it, it is recommended.”

The Cobb school district spokeswoman said that Memark has not recommended that Cobb schools go all-virtual.

According to the Georgia Department of Public Health, Cobb’s community spread data reached new heights on Tuesday, with a 14-day average of 923 cases per 100,000 people.

Another 427 cases were reported in Cobb on Tuesday, following a single-day record of 96 last Thursday.

The Cobb school district said another “choice window” for parents to choose face-to-face or remote learning options will be announced during mid-semester, but no dates have been announced.

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As Cobb COVID vaccination page crashes, Wellstar vaccines begin

We’ve continued to get messages all day Monday from citizens wishing to book an appointment from Cobb and Douglas Public Health for a COVID-19 vaccine, but that page has crashedas has the entire CDPH website— and it continues to be down.

UPDATED, 10:30 P.M.: Both links appear to be  back online. 

The crash was part of a larger outage system at the Georgia Department of Public Health, whose servers have been overwhelmed by the requests.

As we noted this morning, Monday is the first day those 65 and older and their caregivers could sign up for the vaccines, which are scheduled to be administered starting Tuesday at Jim Miller Park.

How many people have actually gotten through to book an appointment, or at least provide contact information to start the appointment process, we just don’t know right now.

We saw the booking page in a flash on only one occasion, after several attempts we’ve made trying to access that page.

A reader told us late Monday about being able to book an appointment for Wednesday, but only after constant efforts lasting several hours.

We don’t have much more information to share at this time, and we cannot pass along messages to the health agency for you.

We have been inundated with urgent messages wanting to make an appointment, and while we understand your frustrations, we’re a community news site unaffiliated with the health agency or Cobb County government.

Some readers have called in asking about a phone number at CDPH to contact, but there isn’t anything along those lines either.

Late Monday afternoon, Wellstar Health System sent along word that it has scheduled 10,000 appointments for vaccines for its primary care patients who are 65 and older.

Those vaccinations began on Monday, according to a statement released by Wellstar, which also said these vaccines are only for patients who are already in their primary care system and not the general public. All the allotted appointments have been filled “due to significant demand for the COVID-19 vaccine.”

If you are a Wellstar primary care patient 65 and older, you can sign up for additional time slots when they become available through its MyChart scheduling tool.

You’re asked to call 470-956-7000 for a recorded message or visit www.wellstar.org for updated information.

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Cobb and Douglas Public Health COVID vaccination page down

We’ve been getting a lot of calls and messages this morning from people trying to book a COVID vaccination appointment with Cobb and Douglas Public Health.

But that page has crashedas has the entire CDPH website— after what county is saying is a server error “due to an overwhelming response.”

That server is run by the Georgia Department of Public Health, according to a Cobb County statement, and we don’t have an estimated time for now on when it might be back up.

Monday is the first day citizens 65 and older and their caregivers can sign up to get a vaccine, and we’ve been hearing from a good number of them over the last few days, after Cobb and Douglas Public Health announced what it calls the Phase 1A+ of its public vaccination program.

The message the county sent out shortly before 9 Monday morning said state public health officials “are working to bring the servers back online and hope to do so in the coming hours.”

A few readers who’ve called in have said when they were able to get to the site early this morning, before it crashed, they didn’t see many appointment slots available, and they never got a chance to sign up.

When the site does come back up, here’s the link for appointments.

While we appreciate hearing from readers and understand the urgency for those wanting to get a vaccine, we at East Cobb News can’t facilitate anything for you to get an appointment.

We’re not associated with the health agencies or county government, but will be updating information about the vaccine appointments as we get it.

If you have other related questions, send them our way and we’ll try to do our best to get answers.

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2nd round of PPP applications for small businesses underway

Submitted by the Cobb Chamber of Commerce:Cobb Chamber of Commerce

The U.S. Small Business Administration, in consultation with The U.S. Department of the Treasury, announced that the Paycheck Protection Program will re-open the week of January 11 for new borrowers and certain existing PPP borrowers.

To promote access to capital, initially only community financial institutions will be able to make First Draw PPP Loans on Monday, January 11, and Second Draw PPP Loans on Wednesday, January 13. The PPP will open to all participating lenders shortly thereafter. This round of the PPP continues to prioritize millions of Americans employed by small businesses by authorizing up to $284 billion toward job retention and certain other expenses through March 31, 2021, and by allowing certain existing PPP borrowers to apply for a Second Draw PPP Loan.
𝗞𝗲𝘆 𝗣𝗣𝗣 𝘂𝗽𝗱𝗮𝘁𝗲𝘀 𝗶𝗻𝗰𝗹𝘂𝗱𝗲:
  • PPP borrowers can set their PPP loan’s covered period to be any length between 8 and 24 weeks to best meet their business needs;
  • PPP loans will cover additional expenses, including operations expenditures, property damage costs, supplier costs, and worker protection expenditures;
  • The Program’s eligibility is expanded to include 501(c)(6)s, housing cooperatives, direct marketing organizations, among other types of organizations;
  • The PPP provides greater flexibility for seasonal employees;
  • Certain existing PPP borrowers can request to modify their First Draw PPP Loan amount; and
  • Certain existing PPP borrowers are now eligible to apply for a Second Draw PPP Loan.

 

  • 𝗔 𝗯𝗼𝗿𝗿𝗼𝘄𝗲𝗿 𝗶𝘀 𝗴𝗲𝗻𝗲𝗿𝗮𝗹𝗹𝘆 𝗲𝗹𝗶𝗴𝗶𝗯𝗹𝗲 𝗳𝗼𝗿 𝗮 𝗦𝗲𝗰𝗼𝗻𝗱 𝗗𝗿𝗮𝘄 𝗣𝗣𝗣 𝗟𝗼𝗮𝗻 𝗶𝗳 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗯𝗼𝗿𝗿𝗼𝘄𝗲𝗿:
  • Previously received a First Draw PPP Loan and will or has used the full amount only for authorized uses;
  • Has no more than 300 employees; and
  • Can demonstrate at least a 25% reduction in gross receipts between comparable quarters in 2019 and 2020.

You can learn more here: http://ow.ly/d99350D3sT8

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As COVID numbers soar, Cobb prepares for vaccine rollout

Cobb COVID vaccine rollout
Dr. Janet Memark, director of Cobb and Douglas Public Health, administering a vaccine at Jim Miller Park this week.
UPDATED MONDAY, Jan. 11: The Cobb and Douglas Public Health COVID appointment page crashed Monday morning, due to “overwhelming response.” We’ll update when the page comes back online. ORIGINAL POST Ever since our post on Tuesday about the rollout of the COVID-19 vaccine by Cobb and Douglas Public Health, we’ve gotten a lot of messages, comments and questions about booking appointments, etc. On Thursday selected health care and other front line workers began receiving the vaccines at Jim Miller Park, which is the site for the drive-up vaccines that the agency is administering. The next phase that begins on Tuesday—what’s being called Phase 1A+—includes anyone age 65 and older. Appointments can be booked on its website starting Monday. A number of people left comments on that post wanting to book an appointment, leaving urgent messages that they tried getting in touch and haven’t heard back, they have medical issues or are a caregiver for someone who does, and so on. The level of anxiety clearly is increasing, and we had to point out that it won’t be until Monday that you can go to the link, fill out your name and address and start the process for getting an appointment. I want to clarify with readers that leaving a request in our comments section will not get an appointment booked for them. East Cobb News is a news site, not a public health agency. We cannot relay messages to the health agency about your desire to get an appointment. You will have to go to the Cobb and Douglas Public Health website Monday and do that. A reader asked when that link will be activated, but I was told it will still be on Monday, with no specific time. You will not be able to go to Jim Miller Park without an appointment—they’re not accepting any walk-ups, which has been the case with COVID testing. After getting a vaccine in your car, you’ll be asked to stay for a 15-minute observation period. We got back in touch with Cobb and Douglas Public Health Friday to find out more about the upcoming 1A+ phase, but at this point there isn’t a whole lot else to add. We wanted to know how long this phase is scheduled and how many doses will be available for it, but a spokeswoman did not respond to those questions. When we asked her how long it might take for a person who’s booked an appointment to be able to get a vaccine, she said that “we are still working through everything. . . . We will see on Monday.” The case numbers for COVID-19 continue to reach their highest levels in Cobb County and across Georgia. On Friday, the Georgia Department of Public Health reported 940 newly confirmed cases in Cobb County, crushing the previous “date of report” record of 635 on Jan. 1. As we noted in a post right before Christmas, “date of report” means the date tests are reported to the Georgia DPH, not the “date of onset”—or when someone reports having COVID symptoms and gets tested. That metric also has been skyrocketing, with a record 534 cases confirmed on Dec. 21. On Dec. 28, there were 666 cases noted in the “date of onset” category, although that’s still within a 14-day window that is likely to be revised. The rate of community spread continues to grow to its highest levels, with Cobb averaging 792 cases per 100,000 people over a 14-day period. Anything above a two-week average of 100 cases per 100,000 is considered high community spread. As of Friday, there have been 41,077 confirmed COVID cases in Cobb County and 577 deaths. Of those deaths, 87 percent have been among people age 60 and older, and 482 had at least one known comorbidity.

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Drift closes temporarily due to employee positive COVID tests

Drift Fish House and Oyster Bar

Drift Fish House and Oyster Bar at The Avenue East Cobb announced Friday it’s closing temporarily:

“Despite our best efforts and safety protocols to control or prevent the spread of COVID-19, we have seen more than one employee test positive in the past 48 hours. Out of an abundance of caution for the safety of our team and guests, we will be closing for 10 days. We anticipate resuming normal operations for dinner service on Tuesday, January 19th. Thank you for the support you have shown us since the onset of the pandemic. Please stay tuned to our social media channels for updates.”

Drift is one of three restaurants in the Seed Hospitality Group owned by Doug Turbush. It reopened in June after COVID closures in March, then closed temporarily in July for a few days when an employee tested positive for the virus.

Seed Kitchen & Bar and Stem Wine Bar at Merchants Walk remain open.

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How East Cobb voted in the U.S. Senate runoffs, by precinct

East Cobb precinct votes Senate runoffs

With just a few hundred votes left to account for in Cobb County, here are the latest results in Tuesday’s U.S. Senate runoff elections.

On Thursday, Cobb Elections broke down what’s left to be done this way:

  • Absentee Ballots being adjudicated – less than 100
  • Valid Provisional Ballots – up to 682
  • Overseas ballots received by Friday – up to 1089
  • Signature Cures received by Friday – up to 325
  • Those ballots deemed valid will be uploaded to the state system on Saturday.

The statewide results show Democrats Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock with narrow victories over Republican incumbents David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, respectively.

As of 3 p.m. Friday, Ossoff has received 2,252,599 votes statewide, with 2,207,626 for Perdue, or 50.5 to 49.5 percent.

In the other Senate runoff, Warnock has 2,271,672 votes to 2,188,610 for Loeffler, or 50.93 to 49.07 percent.

Neither of those margins is within the 0.5 percent that would allow a recount under Georgia law.

Once the results are certified by the state, the new senators will be sworn into office. For the time being, Loeffler remains Georgia’s only senator, since Perdue’s term expired on Dec. 31.

Ossoff, who will be the youngest member of the Senate at age , will serve a six-year term. Warnock will serve out the remaining two years of the term won in 2016 by retired Sen. Johnny Isakson.

Both of Georgia’s new senators will be making their debuts in public office.

Loeffler conceded defeat on Thursday, and late Friday Perdue did the same. These are unofficial results and have not yet been certified, which must take place by Jan. 22.

In Cobb County, Ossoff and Warnock both won with roughly 56 percent of the vote. The last update was Wednesday.

Ossoff got 200,557 votes to 157,470 for Perdue in Cobb; Warnock has 203,426 votes to 154,531 votes for Loeffler.

Cobb’s results are expected to be certified by next Thursday, Jan. 14.

East Cobb precinct vote Senate runoffs
Click the links for details of Cobb precinct maps (Democrats in turquoise and Republicans in blue): Perdue-Ossoff at left; Loeffler-Warnock at right.

In East Cobb, the Republicans won most of the precincts, but the Democrats picked up 40 percent of the vote or more in most of them, which is a significant gain in what has been a GOP stronghold.

We’ve broken down the precinct vote in East Cobb as shown below, with an asterisk noting the precinct winner.

[wptg_comparison_table id=”31″]

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Enchanted Woodland Trail returns to Chattahoochee Nature Center

CNC Enchanted Woodland Trail

Submitted information and photo:

Nature and whimsy collide this holiday season at the Chattahoochee Nature Center. More than forty Fairy Houses and Gnome Homes will line the woodland trails at CNC to February 28, 2021 as a part of the Enchanted Woodland Trails Special Exhibit. These tiny structures await the curious visitor who will discover them tucked up against the trees and hidden amongst the fallen leaves.

CNC’s mission is to connect people with nature, and Enchanted Woodland Trails provides an opportunity for visitors to make that connection through imagination and a little bit of magic. The fairy houses are built by local artists with an emphasis on the use of natural material in the design. Families and children can study the natural elements incorporated into each house while engaging with the fantastical stories behind each creation.

This year, the exhibit includes a 7-foot fairy and gnome lodge, handmade pottery treehouses, and a twinkling glass fairy ring. Legend has it if you stand exactly in the middle, you will be transported to fairies’ magical realm!

Visitors are invited to slow down, enjoy the outdoors, and notice the little things as they search for these tiny dwellings. If they feel inspired, they can create their own houses in the free play area on CNC’s grounds. Visitors can also purchase fairy-related gifts and wares in the Discovery Center Nature Store during this time.

To ensure a safe and enjoyable experience for our visitors, visitors should purchase admission tickets in advance, which include a date and time to visit the center, and members should make a reservation for their visit to guarantee admission. Walk-ups may be accommodated based on daily visitation. Center-wide policies and procedures have been implemented to offer the best experience possible. Updates can be viewed on the “Plan your Visit” page on the CNC website.<

Free to Chattahoochee Nature Center Members.

General Admission: $10 adults, $7 seniors (65+) and students (13-18), $6 children (3-12)
Children 2 and under are free.

Purchase admission tickets in advance, which include a date and time to visit the center, and members should make a reservation for their visit to guarantee admission. Walk-ups may be accommodated based on daily visitation.

For more information, visit www.chattnaturecenter.org.

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East Cobb food scores: Marietta Fish Market; Pappadeaux; more

Marietta Fish Market, East Cobb food scores

The following East Cobb food scores from Dec. 28-Jan. 9 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Hoagie Bros.
3595 Canton Road, Suite 330
December 29, 2020 Score: 93, Grade: A

Marietta Fish Market
3185 Canton Road
December 29, 2020 Score: 96, Grade: A

Pappadeaux Seafood Kitchen
2830 Windy Hill Road
December 28, 2020 Score: 98, Grade: A

Waffle House
4797 Canton Road
December 29, 2020 Score: 90, Grade: A

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New Cobb Commission Chairwoman Cupid takes oath of office

Lisa Cupid, Cobb Commission Chair candidate

After a long line of speakers—more than two hours’ worth—had come before her, new Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid offered brief remarks Thursday at her official swearing-in ceremony.

“Everything that could be shared has been shared,” Cupid said at the Cobb County Civic Center.

Other elected officials, business and community leaders and members of her family took the podium before her.

Cupid, who for two terms was the sole Democratic commissioner representing District 4 in South Cobb, officially became the head of government on Jan. 1, after defeating former chairman Mike Boyce in November.

“I never thought this would be in the cards for me,” Cupid said of her career in politics and public service. “But I am so grateful and honored and humbled.”

As she was listening to the other speakers, Cupid said, “my heart was filled with love. And anybody who knows me know I never want to let those I love down. I kept hearing all these people who were expressing love and I don’t want to let you or any citizen of Cobb County down.”

During her campaign, she ran on a platform of “moving the county forward” by expanding relationships and partnerships across broader sections of Cobb County.

She will lead an all-female, five-member Cobb Board of Commissioners that will have a black Democratic majority.

Cupid is the first woman and the first African-American to lead the county government. Two of her predecessors, both Republicans, spoke on her behalf.

“The voters couldn’t have made a better choice for a difficult time,” said Bill Byrne, who served as chairman in the 1990s and ran unsuccessfully against then-chairman Tim Lee in 2012.

“Cobb needs her today more than any chairman in the past. She has the focus, the ability and the support to do that.”

Sam Olens, who was the chairman when Cupid was first elected, noted how she’s the latest in a long line of elected officials in Cobb who’ve come from somewhere else.

“Cobb is a community open to new ideas and new leadership,” Olens said. “She desires to make a difference and she will.”

Cupid is a native of Michigan who earned an engineering degree at Georgia Tech, then stayed to attend graduate and law school and is raising two sons she and her husband are home-schooling.

“I’ve always had people supporting me, to help get me on this path,” Cupid said after taking the oath of office.

Let’s all help to remove that burden and weight together,” she said. “Nobody here can shoulder all the work that it’s going to take for us to continue to move this county forward.

“It always has been and always continue to be about teamwork.”

Cupid will preside over her first public meetings as chairwoman next Tuesday during a business meeting that starts at 9 a.m.

You can view the agenda by clicking here.

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Cobb school board swears in members; elects 2021 officers

David Banks, Cobb school board member
David Banks was sworn in for his fourth term representing the Pope and Lassiter clusters on the Cobb Board of Education.

During a brief and unusually uneventful organizational meeting Thursday, the Cobb Board of Education elected officers for 2021 and four newly elected members were sworn in.

The seven-member board also passed its 2021 meeting calendar unanimously.

The board has a 4-3 Republican majority, and that majority voted along partisan lines for third-term member Randy Scamihorn to serve as chairman, and David Banks of East Cobb to serve as vice chairman.

Their duties include presiding over board meetings and representing the board in an official capacity.

Scamihorn, whose Post 1 includes the Allatoona, Kennesaw Mountain and North Cobb high school clusters, was re-elected in November.

Banks, who represents the Pope and Lassiter clusters, is beginning his fourth term and his second year in a row as vice chairman. Banks, Scamihorn, outgoing chairman Brad Wheeler and new member Tre’ Hutchins were sworn in individually before the board elections.

For the third consecutive year, Democrat Charisse Davis of the Walton and Wheeler clusters was nominated for board chair, but failed to gain a majority in a party-line vote.

Hutchins, of South Cobb, was nominated for vice chair, but only gained the votes of his two fellow Democrats. Before graduating from Pebblebrook High School, he attended Brumby Elementary School.

Unlike the two previous years, there were no discussions about the board elections, although Davis and Democrat Jaha Howard asked to give comments. They were turned down by Wheeler.

In November, Howard accused the Republican members of “systemic racism” for voting to abolish a committee to examine school name change policy and to require a board majority for members to place items on meeting agendas.

He and Davis have protested repeatedly in their two years in office that the GOP members are trying to silence them. In 2019, the Republican majority also voted to bar members from making comments during board meetings.

Later Thursday, Davis posted a response on her Facebook page:

“It was pretty obvious that the superintendent didn’t want Brad Wheeler to allow a request I made for chair nominees to make some remarks. Why bother? They already knew they had the votes to make Randy Scamihorn, chair and David Banks, vice chair.

“While this is my 3rd time being nominated and subsequently not receiving the support of the board majority, we nominated our newest board member, Leroy Tre’ Hutchins (a former student of Mr. Wheeler) for vice chair. But the board majority chose Mr. Banks, again. This is just getting silly at this point.

“If I had been allowed to make my remarks, I would have said:

“Cobb is a large and diverse school district and all of our board posts have their own distinct character and needs. Sharing leadership opportunities strengthens our board, and subsequently, the district. I do not believe it best serves the district to recycle leadership opportunities amongst the same couple of people.

“Regarding my experience, I taught for 15 years as both a classroom teacher and media specialist and have a Specialist in Education degree in Media with a focus on Instructional Technology. I have two sons that attend our schools and so have been a very committed school volunteer serving on PTA, parent foundations, and local school councils. I am entering my 3rd year as a board member, and while my experience might be questioned, I will remind everyone again that there have been board members, including Mr. Scamihorn, who became chair in their very first term or served without any experience in education.

“Much of this was included in an email I sent to the entire board before the chair vote in 2020, and I never received a response from any members of the board majority. Keep in mind it’s not a requirement that anyone have any teaching experience or anything when seeking the chair or vice chair positions, but Brad Wheeler told me in 2019, I ‘don’t have the experience.’ “

The board holds its first work session and business meeting of the new year on Jan. 21.

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McBath ‘safe’ after U.S. Capitol attack; Kemp condemns violence

6th District Congresswoman Lucy McBath said Wednesday afternoon that “my staff and I are safe” after supporters of outgoing President Donald Trump stormed the U.S. Capitol in Washington and clashed with police.
U.S. Rep Lucy McBath, gun violence research funding, McBath border-funding vote

The Marietta Democrat, who recently was sworn in for a second term, didn’t indicate in a Facebook message whether she was in the House chamber as members of Congress were going through the process of certifying Electoral College results in the presidential election.

Their deliberations were interrupted as pro-Trump protesters broke into the Capitol, including both the House and Senate chambers.

They had been attending a “Save America” rally to reject the Electoral College results, which gave the Nov. 3 presidential victory to Democratic former vice president Joe Biden.

A group of Republican senators, including Kelly Loeffler of Georgia, were lodging objections, but members of Congress, as well as Vice President Mike Pence, were evacuated.

“The actions of those seeking to overturn the will of the people are dangerous and destructive, but they will not succeed,” McBath said in her statement.

Loeffler, who lost her runoff election Tuesday to Democrat Raphael Warnock, posted a brief message Wednesday evening saying that “violence is abhorrent and I strongly condemn today’s attacks on our Capitol. We must stand united as one nation under God. I’m grateful for our brave men and women of law enforcement.”

Some members of the House were seen hiding as police attempted to barricade protesters from entering, with some law enforcement drawing guns.

Protesters were seen smashing windows attempting to get into the Capitol, and police responded by firing tear gas and pepper spray. The building was eventually placed on lockdown, and a 6 p.m. curfew was ordered by D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser.

News reports said a woman who was shot inside the Capitol later died, but it wasn’t initially known who she was. Several other people were injured, according to news reports, but details are sketchy.

Protesters made themselves at home in the Congressional chambers, and one was seen sitting in a desk in the office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Trump eventually told protesters to go home, but he continued to insist the presidential election was stolen and that he won in a landslide.

On social media he also blasted Pence, who said he didn’t have the authority to reject the electoral votes of states.

“Mike Pence didn’t have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constitution, giving States a chance to certify a corrected set of facts, not the fraudulent or inaccurate ones which they were asked to previously certify,” Trump wrote on his Twitter account. “USA demands the truth!”

In a subsequent message, McBath said she would be requesting Pence invoke the 25th Amendment “and begin the process of removing President Trump from office.

“The eyes of the world are upon us, and the President’s incitement of violence, his inducement of chaos, and his inability to faithfully ‘discharge the powers and duties of his office’ make it clear. The President has refused to protect our democracy and must be removed.”

In Atlanta, Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and some of his elections officials were evacuated from the Georgia Capitol on Wednesday, and Gov. Brian Kemp and other state Republican leaders condemned the violence in Washington.

Both had come under fire from Trump, who demanded they resign for not intervening to overturn Georgia’s presidential election results in favor of Biden.

Kemp said of Wednesday’s violence that “this is absolutely disgraceful and un-American, and must stop immediately. The rule of law matters.”

Trump and his supporters had wanted a special legislative session in Georgia to address the election results. Kemp said Wednesday that “you can now see what that would have looked like.”

State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick, an East Cobb Republican, said “it’s a sad day for our country. There’s no excuse for violence. We are all Americans. In the words of Ronald Reagan, ‘Peace is not the absence of conflict, it is the ability to handle conflict by peaceful means.’ ”

Congress returned to session to take up the Electoral College certification, and Loeffler withdrew her objections.

“I cannot now, in good conscience, object to this certification,” she said on the Senate floor.

In a joint session overnight Thursday, Congress certified Biden’s election by a 306-232 vote, with Pence presiding.

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Election update: Cobb has nearly 6K absentee votes to count

Cobb Absentee Ballot Envelope

Cobb Elections said Wednesday morning that a total of 5,896 absentee ballots are being scanned today that came in by Tuesday’s 7 p.m. deadline.

That activity is taking place at Jim Miller Park.

The results will be posted at the Georgia Secretary of State’s office at this link.

The last Cobb Senate runoff update was at 11:44 p.m. Tuesday. It showed Democrat Jon Ossoff with 195,600 votes in Cobb County to 155,245 votes for Republican Sen. David Perdue, a margin of 55.75-44.25 percent.

In the other runoff, Democrat Raphael Warnock received 198,376 votes in Cobb County to 152,409 for Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler, or 56.55 percent to 43.45 percent.

Most East Cobb precincts went for the Republican candidates.

Another 668 provisional ballots are being investigated in Cobb County, and those determined to be valid will be uploaded by Saturday. Any overseas ballots must be received by Friday.

Other Georgia counties, mostly in metro Atlanta, also are finishing absentee ballot counting, and those figures are expected to benefit the Democratic candidates who have been declaring victory.

As of 12:50 p.m. Wednesday, Ossoff led Perdue by 17,567 votes across the state. Although no news outlet has called that race, Ossoff has declared victory.

Ossoff’s margin for now is 50.2 percent to 49.8 percent for Perdue.

Late Tuesday night, Warnock declared victory over Loeffler. The latest results show him with a lead of 54,729 votes, and 50.6 percent of the vote, to her 49.3 percent.

Neither Perdue nor Loeffler has conceded as of Wednesday afternoon.

A losing candidate can request a recount if the final margin is 0.5 percent or less.

Before the runoffs, Republicans held 50 seats in the Senate and Democrats 48. If current results hold, the Senate would effectively become controlled by Democrats.

That’s because the vice president—the president of the Senate—can vote to break ties, and that will soon be Democrat Kamala Harris.

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Ga. Senate races too close to call; Democrats lead in Cobb

Georgia Senate runoff election day

Real-time updated results

UPDATED, 11:55 P.M.

With 100 percent of Cobb’s election-day voting reported, Democrats Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock received 55 and 56 percent of the county vote, respectively.

Those tallies were added to a statewide total that remains too close to call, with substantial absentee voting to be counted, especially in Democratic-heavy metro Atlanta.

As of now, Republican Sen. David Perdue holds a lead over Ossoff of less than 2,000 votes across Georgia, while Warnock leads Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler by a little more than 35,000 votes.

That’s with 98 percent of election-day, early voting and early absentee votes counted.

Some national media outlets have called the latter election for Warnock, but have not made any such calls on the other.

In East Cobb, the Republican candidates were leading in most precincts, after the Democrats were head early based on strong absentee ballot results.

GOP voters flipped the results with strong turnout on election day, as well as in-person early voting.

Absentee voting will continue into Wednesday in Cobb County. Final results are expected to be announced next week.

UPDATED, 10:20 P.M.:

Perdue and Loeffler hold slight leads statewide, but Ossoff and Warnock lead in Cobb with 55-56 percent of the vote and 44 percent of the votes counted. In East Cobb, the precincts are roughly split for now, and many of them are very close.

The rest of metro Atlanta, like Cobb, has not fully reported, and they strongly favor the Democrats: Gwinnett 60 percent; Fulton 72 percent and DeKalb 80 percent of the vote for the time being.

Across the state, 80 percent of the vote is in, including nearly 130 of Georgia’s 159 counties.

UPDATED, 8:30 P.M.:

With 16 percent of the statewide vote reporting, all three Democrats on the runoff ballot—Ossoff, Warnock and Blackman—lead the Republican incumbents with between 53 and 55 percent of the vote.

Only 30 counties out of 159 and 266 precincts out of 2,656 have fully reported.

Initial results from Cobb County have the Democratic candidates with 65-66 percent, but those are absentee ballots only.

You can also check precinct totals for each of the three races.

ORIGINAL POST, 7:01 P.M.:

The polls have closed in Georgia, and the counting has begun for the runoffs for both U.S. Senate seats and a seat on the Georgia Public Service Commission.

Republican Sen. David Perdue is facing Democrat Jon Ossoff for a six-year term in the U.S. Senate.

Kelly Loeffler, a Republican appointed in 2020 by Gov. Brian Kemp, is being challenged by Democrat Raphael Warnock in a race to fill the final two years of former Sen. Johnny Isakson’s term.

Daniel Blackman is aiming to become the only Democrat on the Georgia PSC in a runoff against longtime Republican incumbent Bubba McDonald.

Voters who were in line by 7 p.m. Tuesday will be able to vote. Absentee ballots must have been received by Cobb Elections—including at designated drop boxes—by 7 p.m.

According to a message from Cobb County Government late Tuesday afternoon, “No major issues or lines were reported today. Some lines formed before the precincts opened, and there were some shorter lines during the lunch hour, but most voters reported little or no waiting.”

Absentee ballots are being processed at the Jim R. Miller Park Event Center, and that work is expected to continue into Wednesday.

The first returns have come in—a combination of early, absentee and election-day voting—and Ossoff leads Perdue 53-46 percent. Perdue has more early and election-day votes, while Ossoff easily has more absentee votes.

Perdue leads in around 30 mostly rural counties, while Ossoff leads in four.

The other senate runoff has similar results, with Warnock leading Loeffler 54-46 percent.

East Cobb News will update this post all evening and into early Wednesday. Certification of results is not expected until next week.

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Cobb COVID-19 vaccinations start Thursday at Jim Miller Park

Cobb coronavirus statement

UPDATED MONDAY, Jan. 11: The Cobb and Douglas Public Health COVID appointment page crashed Monday morning, due to “overwhelming response.” We’ll update when the page comes back online.

ORIGINAL POST

Cobb and Douglas Public Health announced Tuesday that COVID-19 vaccinations will be available for residents according to a priority list starting Thursday at Jim Miller Park.

The vaccinations will be administered by appointment only, and starting Thursday only for those eligible under Phase 1A—healthcare workers on the front lines. Here’s what the health agency is saying about those in that group:

“A vaccination appointment system has been created exclusively for Phase 1A participants and they will receive an email from CDPH on how to register after they complete the enrollment form. Participants in Group 1A will be asked for proof of healthcare personnel status and priority will be given to Cobb and Douglas County residents.”

Starting Tuesday, Jan. 12, those in Phase 1A+ will be able to get vaccinations. Those include public safety workers and any individuals age 65 and older. Cobb and Douglas Public Health said it will open an appointment system on Monday on its website.

For both of those groups, here’s how the vaccinations will take place:

“Participants will be asked to remain on-site for 15 minutes for post-vaccination observation. No walk-up appointments are available—participants must remain in their vehicle to receive the vaccine and be accessible to clinical staff providing the shot.”

Jim Miller Park is located at 2245 Callaway Road, Marietta. It’s been a full-time COVID-19 testing location for Cobb and Douglas Public Health since April and is conducting tests there and at other locations in Cobb; you can sign up to get tested by clicking here.

More vaccine information from CDPH can be found here.

Shortly before Christmas, Cobb and Douglas Public Health workers received the Moderna vaccine as part of an initial shipment of more than 150,000 COVID-19 vaccine doses to Georgia.

Private and other health care providers are also preparing to administer the vaccine starting next week.

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Cobb schools return amid COVID-19 spread, teacher’s death

The Cobb County School District spring semester begins Wednesday with community spread of COVID-19 continuing to grow, along with safety concerns following the death of a teacher over the holidays.Campbell High School lockdown

Wednesday’s start to the new semester will be like other Wednesdays during the current school year—a remote learning day—followed by face-to-face classes starting on Thursday for parents who chose that option for their children.

The final two days of the fall semester ended online-only as the “community spread” metric for COVID-19 in Cobb County reached its highest point—a 14-day average of more than 600 cases per 100,000 people—and has continued to rise since then.

As of Tuesday, that figure was 727 per 100,000, according to the Georgia Department of Public Health. “High community spread” is anything more than an average of 100 cases per 100,000 people over a two-week period.

On Christmas Day, Patrick Keys, a teacher at Hendricks Elementary School in Powder Springs, died after being hospitalized with COVID-19.

In a message sent out to district parents and staff following his death, Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale said that “I am asking for you to maintain your commitment to your students in a very actionable way.”

He said the district “will continue to take every possible step to keep our hallways safe, our classrooms healthy and our schools open both remotely and face-to-face.”

But a group of parents has begun an online petition requesting an all-online return for the start of the spring semester, saying the conditions at schools are not safe for anyone.

That petition has more than 4,000 signatures, including Karin Lefler of East Cobb, who told East Cobb News that going virtual is needed “in order to save lives and teachers’ jobs.”

The community spread figure was one of nine points made in the petition, along with reduced local hospital capacity, risk of transmission from students to staff and the arrival of vaccines.

“Cobb schools are just not safe enough as it relates to Covid,” the petition states.

The Cobb school district has prepared a daily wellbeing checklist for parents regarding symptoms, contacts and other health measures.

A slight majority of Cobb school parents have chosen the face-to-face option for the spring semester, and Ragsdale has said there may be another choice window for parents over the winter.

For the six months from July 1 to Dec. 31, 2020, there were 1,570 confirmed COVID-19 cases in the Cobb school district among students and staff, with 1,283 coming after a phased-in return to face-to-face classes began in October.

Those cases weren’t broken down further, and the district has not provided information on how many more individuals had to undergo quarantine due to exposure or possible exposure to someone with the virus.

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Cobb Chamber to hold free business recovery webinar Thursday

Submitted information:Cobb Chamber of Commerce

The Cobb Chamber is hosting its first business recovery webinar of 2021 on Thursday, Jan. 7 at 10 a.m. covering the $900 billion stimulus package recently signed into law by President Trump. The webinar brings together a panel of experts to provide better understanding of how to navigate the $325 billion in relief for small businesses, including a second round of the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP).

“We’re committed to leading the business recovery efforts for Cobb County,” said Sharon Mason, president and CEO of the Cobb Chamber. “For this next business recovery webinar, our panel of experts will help local business owners and professionals navigate this next round of PPP.”

Guided by business experts and community leaders, the webinar will walk attendees through the stimulus package, the resources available for small businesses, and the Cobb Chamber’s strategy and resources to help businesses recover. In addition, attendees will have an opportunity to ask questions.

Speakers for the webinar include, Jonathan Crumly, Founding Principal of Taylor English Decisions; Jeff Fucito, Partner in Charge at Mauldin & Jenkins; Clark Hungerford, President and Chief Credit Officer at Vinings Bank; Drew Tonsmeire, Area Director of the Georgia Small Business Development Center; John Loud, 2021 Cobb Chamber Chairman and President of LOUD Security Systems; and Sharon Mason, Cobb Chamber President & CEO.

To register for this virtual event, visit https://bit.ly/3bb9zZd. There is no cost for the webinar, and Chamber members and non-members are welcome to attend.

For more information, contact Stephanie Cox at [email protected].

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