East Cobb school board post draws another GOP candidate

Another Republican challenger has emerged as a candidate for the Post 5 seat on the Cobb Board of Education.Shelley O'Malley, Cobb school board candidate

Shelley O’Malley, a Delta Air Lines pilot and U.S. Navy veteran, filed paperwork on Dec. 26 with the Georgia Government and Transparency and Campaign Finance Commission declaring her intent to accept campaign contributions.

She is seeking the seat currently held by third-term GOP incumbent David Banks. Post 5 includes the Pope and Lassiter attendance zones.

O’Malley has been involved as a parent in the Rocky Mount Elementary School, Simpson Middle School and Lassiter High School communities.

Banks has not formally declared whether he’s seeking re-election.

Matt Harper, an IT manager and former Murdock Elementary School teacher, has announced his candidacy as a Republican, as has attorney Rob Madayag, who’s been critical of how the Cobb County School District handles bullying issues.

O’Malley’s community service work includes serving as a vice president of the Cobb Veterans Memorial Foundation, which formed in 2015 to build a memorial to honor veterans in the county.

Her husband Brian is also a Navy veteran and they have three children: Shannon, a former swim captain at the University of Georgia, Lauren, a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, and Luke, a freshman at Lassiter.

O’Malley is a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, where she was the captain of the varsity basketball team and was president of the tennis club while earning a mechanical engineering degree.

She also has volunteered with the Stringrays Swim Team and is a church school co-teacher at Transfiguration Catholic Church.

 

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The Art Place, Sewell Mill winter art classes start soon

The Art Place winter classes, Tween Improv
Registration is underway for winter art classes that start in January at The Art Place (3330 Sandy Plains Road) and the Sewell Mill Cultural Center (2051 Lower Roswell Road). Here’s a sampling of what’s going on at The Art Place:
New This Winter: Tween Improv ($120)
Begins January 11th from 12:30-2pm until February 29th

Students will exercise their sense of play through improv games and warm ups that are the foundation of improvisational comedy. Our teacher will work with these young improvisers to help enhance their ability to communicate with others and develop confidence in their own creativity while working as part of an ensemble. This class is a great way to enhance acting skills, boost confidence, and nail your next audition. Most importantly, this class will be tons of fun! Graduation show in the Black Box theater Saturday, February 29th at 2pm. Course Code #12405

Start Paint 101 with Karl ($136)
Begins January 15th from 7pm-9pm until March 4th

This beginners class offers an introduction to painting and its basic elements. Through demos, direct experience and observation, students will learn the art of mixing paints, using a variety of painting tools and creating satisfying compositions while solving color problems that stump new painters. The last few weeks will be spent applying techniques discussed and demoed during class to reinforce understanding and execution of knowledge. Supply List online at www.artplacemarietta.org .Course Code: 11934

Knitting With Coleen ($124)
Begins January 15th from 2pm-4pm until March 4th

Whether you’re a beginner starting from scratch or a knitter who wants to revisit knitting basics, this class is for you. We will discuss and practice knitting basics as needed and continue on with intermediate and Advanced techniques and stitches the class progresses. Class time includes New Skill, time to discuss problems and concerns, and individual help as needed. Supply list for beginners online. Experienced knitters, bring your projects to class! Course Code 11617

Many more classes are available – please check out our full listing by following this link: https://www.artplacemarietta.org/winter2020adultclasses.

 

At Sewell Mill, winter classes for youths, teens and adults include clay, painting, dance, photgraphy, music, glass mosaic, needle felting with wool, public speaking and more.

For information and to register, click here. More details also are available by going to the front desk at the library during regular opening hours.

 

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Georgia Ensemble Theatre season begins with ‘She Rocks’

Submitted information and graphic:Tara Vaughn's She Rocks

Georgia Ensemble Theatre (GET), the professional North Fulton theatre company, kicks off the new year with SHE ROCKS: Tara Vaughan’s The Women of Rock. This concert experience will run January 2nd – 19th, 2020, Wednesdays through Sundays, at the company’s home in the Roswell Cultural Arts Center. Back in 2016, GET brought in the hugely popular Yesterday and Today: The Interactive Beatles Experience, which is the same band that will back up Tara Vaughan for this phenomenal show. Northside Hospital, long-time partner of GET and supporter of the community, will sponsor the production.

About the Show:

Tara Vaughan is a bona fide superstar. Her soulful vocals and piano techniques are reminiscent of a bygone era, but still have a unique and modern sensibility. In her vocal style, you can hear echoes and influence of legends like Patsy Cline and Sam Cooke. Her abilities on the piano are strongly influenced by rock icons like Carole King and Elton John.

SHE ROCKS celebrates women artists and songwriters of the 1960s – 1980s, woven together with songs and stories. Backed by an all-star band, Tara performs music from artists like Janis Joplin, Linda Ronstadt, Aretha Franklin, Blondie, Heart, and many more. In this unique review, Tara Vaughan masterfully presents an evening of classic rock and roll with the focus on female artists and songwriters.

Ticket prices for SHE ROCKS: Tara Vaughan’s The Women of Rock, start at $33. Book early for best prices. Tickets are on sale now at www.get.org, or by calling the Box Office at 770-641-1260.

 

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Gas prices rise in Georgia for the 2020 New Year

Georgia gas prices New Year

Submitted information:

Georgia gas prices increased slightly at the start of the work week. Georgia motorists are now paying an average price of $2.42 per gallon for regular unleaded gasoline. Monday’s state average is 4 cents more than a week ago, 3 cents less than last month, and 33 cents more than this time last year.

It now costs $36.30 to fill a 15-gallon tank of gasoline. That is $6.30 less than what motorists paid in May of 2018, when pump prices hit their peak of $2.84 per gallon.

“AAA forecasts that 104 million Americans will travel by car – the most on record – for a year-end holiday,” said Montrae Waiters, spokeswoman, AAA – The Auto Club Group. “The substantial number of motorists has caused some state averages to increase heading into the holiday week, but these jumps aren’t big and won’t last long or linger past the holiday season.”

National Average

Today’s national average is $2.57, which is 3 cents more than last week, and 1 cent less than a month ago. While the national gas price average increased marginally, it is noticeably less expensive as compared to last year’s holidays – by nearly 21 cents. This is a welcome relief for motorist hitting the road for end of year travel.

Regional Prices

  • Most expensive Georgia metro markets – Savannah ($2.48), Brunswick ($2.47), and Atlanta-Hinesville-Fort Stewart ($2.43).
  • Least expensive Georgia metro markets – Catoosa-Dade-Walker ($2.35), Rome ($2.36), and Augusta-Aiken ($2.38).

For more Georgia gas prices, click here.

 

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East Cobb News readers favorite stories for 2019, and some photos

East Cobber parade
A juggler from Timber Ridge Elementary School during the East Cobber parade in September.

Last week we rolled out our list of top stories in East Cobb for 2019, based on a mix of news value, what readers liked and impact on the community.

On the very last day of the year, we’re going to link what readers liked the most, and some of those stories are the same.

We’ve also compiled some photos that captured special events or just everyday life in East Cobb during the past year.

We hope you enjoy this retrospective, and we thank you for your readership. Unless there’s major breaking news, we’ll be posting again when it’s 2020.

Happy New Year East Cobb!

Readers’ top stories

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As Isakson retires, U.S. Senate colleagues pay tribute

Video and text submitted by the office of U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson:

In his 45-year public service career spanning from the Georgia general assembly to the U.S. Senate, U.S. Senator Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., has made a lasting impact on countless areas of public policy. As he prepares to leave the Senate on Dec. 31, much of Isakson’s Senate legacy is highlighted in a video released today focusing on his impact on veterans, federal and state business policy, foreign policy and global leadership, education, and health care and how he has served more effectively by living his compassionate, bridge-building conservative values daily.

Isakson holds the distinction of being the only Georgian ever to have been elected to the state House, state Senate, U.S. House and U.S. Senate. In addition, in 2016 he became the first Georgia Republican ever to be elected to a third term in the U.S. Senate.

“Every day since I was first sworn in to the U.S. Senate on Jan. 4, 2005, it has been a privilege to serve Georgia in this role. I’ve done my very best to make sure Georgians’ best interests are reflected in my votes and policy work,” said Isakson. “Traveling our beautiful state and working with Georgians from Rabun Gap to Tybee Light to represent commonsense, conservative values and deliver meaningful results has been a joy, regardless of the political climate or season.

“I thank Georgians who have trusted me and the colleagues who have worked with me from the bottom of my heart. I thank my wife Dianne, and my family, my staff and many friends for their support. Without them, none of this would have been possible.

“I also thank our service members, veterans and their families for protecting the United States. It has been an honor to pay my gratitude through policy and constituent service work, which I hope has improved their lives.

“I look forward to remaining as active as possible in Georgia after my retirement from the U.S. Senate on Dec. 31.”

Veterans

Isakson, a veteran himself, served in the Georgia Air National Guard from 1966-1972. Isakson has been a member of the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs since he joined the Senate in 2005.

Isakson became chairman of the Senate VA Committee in January 2015. From 2015 to 2019, under Isakson’s leadership, the Senate passed 63 pieces of legislation, and 57 of which have become law. These include significant reforms to improve accountability at the VA, expand VA education benefits, modernize the process for veterans’ appeals of benefit determinations, and overhaul the VA’s community care programs.

For a full list of Isakson’s accomplishments for veterans, click here.

Businessman

Applying the lessons learned throughout his 33-year real estate career, Isakson has aided Georgia communities during his 45 years in public service through planned development and by protecting Georgia’s transportation, energy and water interests, as well as job creators and employees.

For a full list of Isakson’s business-related accomplishments, click here.

Values

Isakson has earned a reputation as a compassionate, honest and bridge-building public servant throughout his long political career. Isakson’s faith has guided his entire life. He taught sixth-grade Sunday school at Mount Zion Baptist Church in Marietta, Georgia, for more than 30 years. Isakson has been a regular attendee at the weekly Senate prayer breakfast with Senate Chaplain Barry Black and served as co-chair of the National Prayer Breakfast in 2010.

For additional information about Isakson’s lifetime commitment to his values, click here.

Global Leadership and Foreign Policy

Isakson, who previously served as the top Republican on the Senate Subcommittee on African Affairs, has been a long-term member of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. The U.S. Global Leadership Coalition recently honored Isakson with its Lifetime Achievement Award for his longstanding commitment to advocating for a strong U.S. foreign policy and strengthening America’s development and diplomacy tools across the globe.

For a full list of Isakson’s foreign policy-related accomplishments, click here.

Education

Isakson has served as chairman of the Georgia Board of Education and on the education committees in the Georgia general assembly and in Congress. He has helped write some of the most significant federal education policies in recent history and has always focused on bettering the lives of future generations through quality education.

Once in Congress, Isakson brought his experience to the U.S. House education committee, where he took part in writing the No Child Left Behind Act – comprehensive education reform enacted in 2002 to strengthen America’s public schools. In the Senate, Isakson became a member of the Senate education committee, and more a decade after No Child Left Behind was enacted, Isakson played a key role in the rewrite of the law to bring about much-needed updates to the country’s education policies.

For a full list of Isakson’s education-related accomplishments, click here.

Health Care

Isakson has sought common ground to improve the health of Americans and people throughout the world. Isakson’s efforts come amid his own challenges with Parkinson’s disease – a diagnosis that has not slowed down his commitment to helping others.

Isakson serves on two committees with jurisdiction over Americans’ health care: the Senate Finance Committee and the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions. During his Senate career, Isakson has worked tirelessly on bipartisan legislation to improve health care for veterans and for seniors with chronic conditions, fund research for rare diseases and combat the opioid epidemic – all while fighting his own battle with Parkinson’s disease.

For a full list of Isakson’s health care-related accomplishments, click here.

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Life Grocery and Cafe holding going out of business sale

Life Grocery Cafe going out of business

After more than 40 years in business, Life Grocery and Cafe will be closing shortly after the first of the year.

The organic foods store, located at 1453 Roswell Road in the New London Shopping Center, announced on Dec. 26 that it would be closing in January because of “declining sales due to increased competition and increasing costs” and not being able to make improvements at its facility. The following also was on the store’s Facebook page:

“Additionally, our primary distributor has been unable to consistently provide us with quality products that our customers deserve, as they prioritize fulfilling orders for the bigger stores. It has become clear that with these dynamics, along with changing market conditions and shopping culture, we cannot continue to operate our business profitably.”

The store has begun a going out of business sale that continues all through this week, with a 10 percent discount for all customers and 15 percent for store members. The hours this week are as follows.

  • Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday 10-6;
  • Tuesday 10-5;
  • Wednesday closed;
  • Sunday 12-4.

All sales are final and no checks will be accepted. Life Grocery and Cafe was founded by Life Chiropractic College students in 1976 seeking healthy eating alternatives, long before Whole Foods and other supermarkets began offering organic products.

On Sunday night, Life ownership followed up with this message:

“The kind comments on social media and in the store have been heart-warming. We have received so many stories of how we have impacted lives and even saved lives through the years. One of our sweet customers suggested that we video customers in the store with their stories. We love the idea, but the tears that go with that are just too much to bear. We have already gone through enough boxes of tissues! If you feel so inclined, we’d love you send us a video or audio clip to lifegroceryandcafe@gmail.com and let us know what Life has meant to you.”

The store was able to end its lease two years early and also is selling equipment and fixtures. For inquiries call Ronnie Hudson at 770-977-9583 ext. 124 or email lifegroceryandcafe@gmail.com.

 

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The Battery Atlanta to hold 3rd annual New Year’s Eve bash

Submitted information:The Battery Atlanta New Year's Eve

The Battery Atlanta will celebrate the New Year in style with our third annual New Year’s Eve Bash presented by Xfinity. Braves in-game host & Star 94.1 Atlanta on-air celebrity Mark Owens will emcee the entire evening of free programming.

The early innings, for those wishing to ring in the New Year early, will start at 6 p.m. in the Plaza. The Heavy Hitters and BLOOPER will be on hand as well as David Garibaldi, a performance painter who transforms blank canvas in minutes to music. At 8 p.m., balloon baseballs will drop in celebration of the New Year.

The late innings festivities start at 9 p.m., with the 12 South Band and David Garibaldi providing the entertainment from the Georgia Power Pavilion Stage. The midnight countdown will include pyrotechnics and 2020 will begin with a confetti and aerial fireworks display.

Frequently Asked Questions:
Q. Where can I get tickets / How much are tickets?
A. No tickets required, this is a FREE event.

Q. Can kids attend Late Innings?
A. Absolutely! All events throughout the evening are family friendly.

Q. Is Parking Free?
A. Parking in the public decks (Red, Green, Purple) is free for the event.

Q. What is included?
A. All entertainment listed is free for the public. Food & Beverage is available for purchase at any of our restaurants, and mobile beverage carts will be in the Plaza area.

Q. Where is this taking place?/Where is the Plaza?
A. All of the entertainment will take place in the Plaza, which is the open area in front of SunTrust Park by the Omni/Comcast Building.

 

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Cobb fireworks reminder for New Year’s Eve

Submitted information from Cobb County government:Cobb fireworks New Year's Eve

Cobb County ordinance bans use of fireworks from 9 p.m. to 10 a.m., with several exceptions per Georgia law. The exceptions are January 1, the last Saturday and Sunday in May, July 3, July 4, the first Monday in September, and December 31 of each year. On these dates, consumer fireworks may be discharged until midnight, except on New Year’s Eve, when they may be discharged after midnight until 1 a.m. And always be considerate of your and your neighbors’ pets. Most are not fond of fireworks.

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Top East Cobb stories for 2019: Cityhood proposal unveiled, then stalls

East Cobb city forum
Mindy Seger of the anti-city group East Cobb Alliance debates David Birdwell of the Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb in November. (ECN photo by Wendy Parker)

After finally going public with their plans in early 2019, leaders of the East Cobb cityhood initiative announced in December they would not be pursuing legislation in 2020 that would call for a referendum.

The Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb, Inc. held or appeared at a few town hall meetings in the spring, but then didn’t come back to the public for several months, after a cityhood bill had been introduced in the Georgia legislature and as opposition grew to include a grassroots citizens’ organization.

Even after a group of financial experts reaffirmed the financial viability of the proposed city (with one dissenting view), the cityhood group faced hostile response from opponents who suspected developers’ interests behind the push.

They also contended that tax rates would go up with a new city that would add an unwanted extra layer of government.

That was certainly the sentiment at a town hall meeting at Wheeler High School in November, and at a debate the following day before the East Cobb Business Association.

East Cobb News Cityhood Coverage

By then, other local elected officials, including those serving on the Cobb Board of Commissioners and legislators, said they hadn’t been kept up to date by cityhood leaders, including seeing a revised map of the proposed city.

It was only after the cityhood legislative effort was delayed to 2021 that the cityhood group acknowledged that only an outline of a new map had been produced, and not any revised details.

In explaining the decision to hold off on legislation in the new year, cityhood leader David Birdwell said that “we want to take the time to do this right” and that better efforts to communicate and engage with the community are needed.

“We live in a special place and we’re all passionate about doing the right things for our neighborhoods. Many members of this committee—and all of the members of the Independent Finance Group—started out as skeptics of cityhood. For all of us, an objective look at the facts led to only one conclusion: Cityhood would result in an overwhelming net positive for the people of East Cobb.”

The anti-cityhood East Cobb Alliance said it will continue to maintain opposition and considers the legislation sponsored by State Rep. Matt Dollar of East Cobb active when the General Assembly session begins in January.

After debating Birdwell at the ECBA event, Alliance leader Mindy Seger acknowledged that “there’s kind of been a political awakening” in East Cobb over the cityhood issue.

“It’s gotten people engaged,” Seger said, “and that’s a good thing.”

 

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Cobb libraries to hold kid-friendly ‘Noon Year’s Eve’ parties

Mountain View Regional Library

Submitted information:

Families can celebrate the start of 2020 early with kid-friendly “Noon Year’s Eve” parties on Tuesday at five Cobb County Public Libraries. The free December 31st programs will feature crafts, storytime, dance and music, and more ahead of the countdowns to noon.

The countdown parties start at 11 a.m. Tuesday, except for the official 11:15 a.m. start at Gritters Library. The Cobb library events will occur as the first hours of 2020—and new decade—are celebrated several time zones away.

The countdown events will include:

  • Gritters Library, 880 Shaw Park Road, Marietta, 30066, starts at 11:15 a.m. 770-528-2524.
  • Lewis A. Ray Library, 4500 Oakdale Road, Smyrna 30080. (770) 801-5335
  • Mountain View Regional Library, 3320 Sandy Plains Road, Marietta 30066. 770-509-2725
  • West Cobb Regional Library, 1750 Dennis Kemp Lane, Kennesaw 30152. 770-528-4699
  • Vinings Library, 4290 Paces Ferry Road, Atlanta 30339. 770-801-5330

Cobb County Libraries will close early on December 31st at 5 p.m. and will be closed January 1st. Regular hours resume January 2nd.

For information on upcoming library programs and resources, visit www.cobbcat.org.

 

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Top East Cobb stories for 2019: Homeowner charged with murder

Jake Horne, East Cobb shooting victim, East Cobb man indicted murder
Jake Horne was taken off life support after being shot outside an East Cobb home in March; the homeowner, Larry Epstein, was charged with his murder.

A quiet East Cobb neighborhood became the focus of an intense law enforcement presence one afternoon in early March 2019 after two home contractors were shot in what some residents thought was an active shooter situation.

Cobb Police ordered residents to stay inside as they closed off Wellington Lane, off Johnson Ferry Road, and sent in SWAT officers and a mobile command unit.

A nearby resident told East Cobb News she’d never seen so much police concentrated in the area, a situation drawing heavy metro Atlanta media coverage as well.

A resident of Kensington, the neighborhood in question, told East Cobb News that “they have us pretty blocked in but not giving any info. They are in SWAT gear with guns drawn.”

Read the stories

An hour or so after police came to the scene, the standoff ended peacefully when Larry Epstein, a resident of the Wellington Lane home where the shootings occurred, surrendered.

Two electrical contractors doing work at his home were rushed to WellStar Kennestone Hospital.

One of them, Jake Horne, 21, of Kennesaw, was taken off life support and pronounced dead the following morning after being shot in the head. Gordon Montcalm, 37, of Buchanan, Ga., was listed in serious condition and faced a long recovery.

Epstein, 69, was charged with murder and he remains in the Cobb County Adult Detention Center after being denied bond.

During his probable cause hearing, police said Epstein had accused the workers of killing pet ducks at the home, although there was no evidence of those acts.

The families of the victims were left to scramble to raise funds for medical and funeral expenses, and to comprehend what had happened.

“This is a boy that would give you the shirt off of his back. He had a heart of gold,” said Lisa Godsey, Horne’s aunt, who lives in California. “He thought of everyone else before himself.”

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Top East Cobb stories for 2019: Sprayberry Crossing plans proposed

Revised Sprayberry Crossing proposal

After years of being an eyesore, the Sprayberry Crossing Shopping Center in 2019 became the target of a redevelopment proposal that energized citizens frustrated by inaction regarding the rundown retail center.

In June, those leading the Sprayberry Crossing Action Facebook group said they had been meeting with Atlantic Residential, an Atlanta-based multi-family developer interested in building a mixed-use complex.

It would have some retail but would be largely residential, with apartments and senior-living units taking up most of the property at the southeast corner of East Piedmont Road and Sandy Plains Road.

Read the stories

In August, some of those community representatives met with Atlantic Residential to get more details, and shared them with the public. They also were hopeful of holding a town hall meeting to go over the plans.

But that’s when some opposition began to arise, mostly due to the apartments and the density of the proposal.

By September, the Atlantic Residential revised its plans, calling for nearly 400 residential units (nearly half of them apartments, along with senior living and townhomes), 30,000 square feet of commercial space and other amenities.

Some of those critical of the apartment units started their own Facebook group and contend that kind of development isn’t suitable in an area with single-family homes.

Other opposition arose from those with family members buried in a cemetery at Sprayberry Crossing that was slated to be relocated in the Atlantic Residential proposal.

The developer said in late September the plan would be undergoing “substantial changes” that have not been detailed since then.

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Top East Cobb stories for 2019: Sen. Johnny Isakson retires

After a career of public service spanning more than four decades, U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson announced in 2019 he would be retiring at the end of the year.Isakson farewell speech

The Republican former real estate agency owner from East Cobb suffered continuing health issues during the year. In addition to his battle with Parkinson’s Disease, he fractured ribs during a fall at his Washington apartment.

He underwent rehabilitation at WellStar Kennestone Hospital said in August he could not complete his third term that ends in 2022.

Read the stories

Isakson, the first Georgian to serve in both houses of the state legislature and Congress, made bipartisanship and his role as the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee Chairman his hallmark.

Along the way, he endeared himself to colleagues in both parties, who paid tribute late in the year.

In a moving scene on the floor of the U.S. House, Democratic Congressman John Lewis of Atlanta hailed Isakson, who was sitting nearby in a wheelchair, and the two men warmly embraced.

In his final speech on the Senate floor, Isakson called his 15-year tenure in the U.S. Senate “the most enjoyable thing I’ve ever done in my life.”

He implored his colleagues to “find a way to find common ground.” He said, “America, we have a problem,” but that “we can do anything” by dropping hard party labels. “Bipartisanship will be the way you accomplish things, the way you live.”

Earlier in 2019, Isakson lashed out against President Donald Trump for his criticisms of the late Sen. John McCain, one of Isakson’s closest friends.

Isakson said “I never worry about what I’m doing politically or practically in the Senate as long as I think I’m doing what’s right.”

In June, Isakson led a bipartisan Congressional delegation to France to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the D-Day invasion during World War II.

Gov. Brian Kemp appointed Buckhead businesswoman Kelly Loeffler, a political novice, to succeed Isakson through the elections next November. The winner of a “jungle primary” then would fill the remaining two years of Isakson’s term.

 

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Top East Cobb stories for 2019: Long-awaited Mabry Park opens

Mabry Park Opens

After more than a decade, and some questions of whether it would ever come about, Mabry Park opened in 2019, a long overdue passive park addition in East Cobb.

The ribbon-cutting celebration in May included members of the Mabry family, who sold 26 acres of their historic farmland on Wesley Chapel Road to Cobb County right before the recession.

The economic downturn halted the project at that point, although a master plan was later completed to maintain the future park with a rural feel.

The Friends of Mabry Park persisted with their vision, along with Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell, and many citizens of the nearby Northeast Cobb community.

“We couldn’t have gotten here without the community,” said Peter Hortman, the current president of the Friends of Mabry Park.

Read the stories

In another part of Northeast Cobb, a master plan was unveiled and adopted by the Cobb Board of Commissioners for future development.

Like Mabry Park, nearly 18 acres of land of Ebenezer Road will also feature a lake as its centerpiece, but also is proposed to include recreational fishing.

What’s to be called Ebenezer Downs would still need construction funding by the commissioners, and no timetable has been outlined.

The land purchase in 2018 was made with proceeds from the 2008 Cobb Parks Bond referendum.

That same funding source was tapped for the county to acquire 22 acres of the Tritt property on Roswell Road, envisioned as an extension of adjacent East Cobb Park.

In early December, one of the leaders of the Friends for the East Cobb Park was honored as a recipient of the East Cobb Citizen of the Year Award.

Tom Bills was the park volunteer group’s first treasurer, as it scouted property and then worked to fundraise the purchase, and as the park was built for its 2003 opening.

The former Tritt property is designated as greenspace for now.

Bills is currently is a senior construction project manager for the Cobb Department of Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs, and was involved in the Mabry Park project.

 

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Top East Cobb stories for 2019: Lockdowns at high schools

East Cobb school lockdowns

During the first weeks of the 2019-20 Cobb County School District academic year, two East Cobb high schools went on lockdown, and a student at another school was arrested after threatening violence and attacking a teacher.

Those incidents raised concerns by school safety advocates about the district’s measures to handle such incidents.

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A trespasser was quickly apprehended after walking onto the Sprayberry campus with a gun and a Wheeler student was arrested after other students alerted teachers and staff that he had carried a gun on a school bus.

At Walton High School, a student was arrested for making terroristic threats, saying he would shoot up the school when he was taken from a class for having alcohol in a water bottle. He also was charged with battery for kicking a teacher.

An East Cobb parent who helped form a Cobb schools safety group last year acknowledged that the district is taking more concerted steps to ensure safety and communicate better, but still thinks its approach is largely reactive.

She’d like to see the district invest more in mental health counseling and a “social emotional learning” program other school systems have begun.

The Walton incident wasn’t made public for a week, and then only because of news reports, while the Sprayberry and Wheeler cases were made public the day they occurred.

The district has continued to stress its safety resource effort called Cobb Shield, which contains information about its police force, emergency management procedures and code red drills, which are required each semester at all 16 high schools.

District spokesman John Floresta said Cobb schools was “batting 100 percent in the way each incident [at the East Cobb schools] was handled,” from quick actions by school officials to apprehend those posing a threat, to relaying information to the school community.

“We’re being as proactive as any school district I know,” he said.

 

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Top East Cobb stories for 2019: School board tensions flare

Cobb school board member Charisse Davis

The two new members of the Cobb Board of Education—including one who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters—weren’t bashful about outlining new ideas and initiatives for the Cobb County School District in 2019.

Democrats Charisse Davis and Jaha Howard narrowed the board’s Republican majority to 4-3 when they were sworn in in January, along with re-elected member David Chastain of the Kell and Sprayberry zones, who served as chairman this year.

Those three would ultimately clash in September, when Chastain made a motion to eliminate board member comments at the end of meetings.

Some of Howard’s remarks had strayed from Cobb school business into other political topics, local and national, and during a tense discussion, the Republican majority voted 4-3 to impose the ban.

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That split was evident earlier in the year, when Davis and Howard voiced a desire for the board to consider making some changes, including closing loopholes, in the Cobb school senior tax exemption.

As the board began the budget process, Chastain told an East Cobb audience he was adamant nothing would happen regarding the exemption, eligible for homeowners 62 and older.

School district officials estimate that costs more than $100 million a year. Davis said she doesn’t want to eliminate the exemption, but noted that Cobb is one of only two school districts in metro Atlanta that doesn’t have any conditions to its senior tax exemption.

At a school board retreat in the fall, she and Howard raised the subject again, but it was rejected.

Davis and Howard also have publicly suggested the Cobb school district create a cabinet-level position for equity and diversity in the wake of calls by some parents and school staff in the county for Cobb schools to address what they claim are unaddressed and systemic racial biases.

In May, the board did come to a consensus on another major matter by voting 7-0 to approve the district’s fiscal year 2020 budget of $1.17 billion, which included teacher and staff pay raises between 8 and 12.6 percent, including bus drivers, cafeteria workers, school nurses, paraprofessionals and counselors.

In 2020, four board members will be up for re-election, including David Banks of Post 4. He’s finishing his third term representing the Pope and Lassiter districts, and has drawn two Republican opponents.

 

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EDITOR’S NOTE: Learning to look for the light year ’round

looking for the light

As the final notes of “Silent Night” wafted through the sanctuary, I kept looking at the light.

The candlelight that we all held in one hand as we sang, kneeling, at the end of a lovely Christmas Eve service.

I didn’t want the light to go out, and kept the candle burning during the processional, “Hark the Herald Angels Sing.”

After that, the overhead lights had come on and as I exited the building, I looked back at a beautiful sight. The soft lights that radiated from the building, and the Christmas tree in front, left me in a comfortable glow.

I was filled by the warmth of a festive event, the embrace of new friends and the promise of new birth.

For the second year in a row, I attended the Christmas Eve candlelight service at St. Catherine’s Episcopal Church on Holt Road.

What was different this year is that I’ve been going there for the last few months, after many years of not being religious in any way.

Bit by bit, week by week, a little more of a light that had dimmed for me began to brighten up again.

Earlier this year I lost my mother, and finding my way out of that darkness has been rough. My first Christmas without her was going to be especially difficult.

On Monday, as I scratched off the last few items on my grocery shopping list, that sense of loss overwhelmed me, and I barely made my way out of the store without breaking down.

On the morning of Christmas Eve, that melancholy reappeared, and I wondered if I had the strength to go to church.

It was on Christmas Eve a year ago I learned my mother’s lung cancer had become so advanced, and she had gotten so weak, that she decided to forego any chemotherapy. She lived two more months, and for me that favorite of her holidays has become a bittersweet memory.

After the candlelight service Tuesday night, I drove past our old house, and noticed that the current residents had decorated a Christmas tree in the front yard, with beaming green and red lights. I smiled, knowing my mother would be delighted.

The lights of the holidays always made her happy, but she always knew how to look for the light every day of the year.

She found it, in her faith and her family and her sense of fidelity to friends and strangers,  and really lived it.

It’s a lesson she taught me long ago, and that I’m trying to learn anew. The light is not always visible, and often is buried amid darkness and despair.

But it’s there, if we’re willing to let it shine.

 

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Top East Cobb stories for 2019: Johnson Ferry Baptist’s new pastor

Rev. Clay Smith

The year 2019 marked some dramatic change for several East Cobb faith communities, including one of its best known. Johnson Ferry Baptist Church has a new pastor, only the second its history.

Rev. Clay Smith was called from First Baptist Church in Matthews, N.C., to succeed founding pastor Rev. Bryant Wright.

Wright, who initially ministered to a tiny congregation in vacant office space in the early 1980s, shepherded the church into one with more than 8,000 members, with a sprawling campus on Johnson Ferry Road that now includes a large activities center, ball fields and a K-12 school.

In addition, Wright began the non-denominational Wright From the Heart Ministries, reaching radio and multimedia audiences, and was president of the Southern Baptist Convention as it welcomed historically black congregations.

At the end of 2018 Wright indicated his desire to step away from his Johnson Ferry duties, and will continue with Wright From the Heart.

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Another long-time spiritual leader in East Cobb announced this year he will be retiring in 2020. Steven Lebow of Temple Kol Emeth became the Reform synagogue’s first full-time rabbi in 1986 and took part in community protests against an anti-gay resolution by the Cobb Board of Commissioners in the early 1990s.

Leo Frank Memorial
Rabbi Steven Lebow of Temple Kol Emeth is retiring at the end of June 2020.

Later he took up the cause of working to exonerate Leo Frank, a Jewish factory manager who was lynched near what is now Frey’s Gin Road in 1915. In the wake of 9/11, Lebow started an annual Ecumenical service the week before Thanksgiving, inviting faith leaders and worshippers from around the north metro Atlanta for music, humor and interfaith messages of unity.

Earlier this year, Eastside Baptist Church made the news when the Southern Baptist Convention had listed it for possible “defellowshipping” related to a 2017 sexual abuse case.

Newspapers in Texas had reported on allegations of abuse in the SBC, but Eastside Pastor John Hull was publicly critical of the SBC for the listing, saying the congregation on Lower Roswell Road had addressed the matter promptly.

A former Eastside youth ministry volunteer was convicted of two counts of sexual battery in 2016 and is in prison; the church took actions to improve security, strengthen background checks and increase safety as Hull was coming on board.

The SBC later removed Eastside from the list, saying no further investigation was warranted.

In September, a longtime East Cobb church announced it was closing its doors, due to declining an aging membership and financial issues.

Members of Powers Ferry United Methodist Church gathered in early December for “homecoming” as the 65-year-old congregation prepares for its final service on Dec. 29.

Also as the holidays approached, two East Cobb churches became one. Geneva Orthodox Presbyterian Church, which had been sharing space with Hope Presbyterian Church on Sandy Plains Road, merged with Christ Presbyterian.

The new church is named Christ Orthodox Presbyterian Church and it meets at 495 Terrell Mill Road.

 

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Top East Cobb stories for 2019: Business openings, closings

The Fresh Market East Cobb closing

A good number of retail, restaurant and service businesses opened in East Cobb during 2019, but it was the handful of closures that caught many locals by surprise.

Two of them in particular drew plenty of attention later in the fall. The Fresh Market at Woodlawn Square had a markdown sale as it closed its doors in October, and Egg Harbor Cafe shuttered in December after not being able to work out a new lease.

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Also closing during the past year was the Loyal Q Tavern at Parkaire Landing Shopping Center and Once and Again Books on Shallowford Road.

The year 2019 was a healthy one for new fitness center openings, including Fit Body Boot Camp and SPENGA East Cobb, among others, as well as Explore Chiropractic at Parkaire.

Other new stores include The French Table and Pineapple Porch, home decor outlet, Frenchie’s Modern Nail Care and Code Ninjas, a coding school for kids.

Carwash USA, which had been located at Roswell Road and Old Canton Road, reopened at the former Wells Fargo Bank branch on Johnson Ferry Road at East Cobb Crossing Shopping Center.

Jennifer Cortez, a former manager at the now-closed Kaminsky Jewelry store on Post Oak Tritt Road, opened Jennifer Jewelers in the same spot.

The Credit Union of Georgia opened a branch on Johnson Ferry Road, and The Solana East Cobb, a senior living facility, marked the end of its first full year in business with a grand opening in November.

New restaurants and eateries in East Cobb include Jim ‘Nicks BBQ, the first business at the new Sandy Plains MarketPlace, Clean Juice at Woodlawn Square, Roll On In at Woodlawn Commons and Duck Donuts at Merchants Walk.

Perhaps the most anticipated opening—reopening, really—was the remodeled and expanded Chick-fil-A at Woodlawn Square, which was closed for several months.

Two other restaurant chains relocating to East Cobb won’t be opening until 2020. Mellow Mushroom will be taking the former Common Quarter space at Woodlawn Square, and Flying Biscuit Cafe is coming to Parkaire Landing by next spring.

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