Murder indictment against East Cobb couple’s accused killer thrown out

A South Georgia man indicted for killing an East Cobb couple in 2015 has had the dismissal of his murder indictment upheld by the Georgia Supreme Court.Elrey and June Runion, murdered East Cobb couple

By a 7-2 vote, the state’s high court agreed with a lower-court ruling that a Telfair County grand jury that indicted Ronnie Adrian Towns was unlawfully constituted because “some of the grand jurors were not selected randomly.”

The ruling was announced on Monday.

(You can read the entire court ruling here.)

Towns was charged with the Jan. 2015 murders of Elrey “Bud” Runion, 69, and his wife June, 66, of East Cobb, who had traveled to McRae, Ga., to buy a 1966 Ford Mustang Towns had posted for sale on Craigslist.

After their daughters reported them missing, the bodies of the Runions were found in their car in a pond in Telfair County a few days later. Authorities in that southeast Georgia county said the Runions had both been shot in the head.

Prosecutors alleged that Towns tried to lure the victims with the prospect of buying the car, but intended to rob them.

Towns, who was 28 at the time of the Runions’ deaths, turned himself in, and he was indicted for murder by a grand jury.

According to the Supreme Court ruling, 50 prospective grand jurors were summoned to appear on March 16, 2015, but fewer than 16 showed up on time. The presiding judge ordered some of those who hadn’t appeared to be located by the Telfair sheriff, and asked the court clerk to identify four possible candidates for the grand jury from a list of prospective petit jurors who could show up quickly.

Two of those four reported, and others summoned for the grand jury later also reported, and a grand jury was empaneled on March 16.

That grand jury, with the two originally on the petit juror list, returned a murder indictment against Towns the same day.

Towns filed a motion to dismiss the indictment, alleging the two on the petit juror list were not chosen at random. Towns’ attorney said the clerk telephoned those four individuals, whom she knew personally. In a 2017 ruling, the trial court concurred and dismissed the murder indictment.

Prosecutors appealed that ruling to the Supreme Court. The high court majority concluded that while the petit jurors were selected at random from a master jury list, in selecting the two individuals who eventually served on the grand jury, the clerk:

” . . . relied on her personal knowledge of the prospective petit jurors, her own assessment of the extent to which she had the information necessary to contact them, and her estimate of the likelihood that they would be available to report immediately. Those selections were not ‘random’ in any sense of the word.”

The Oconee Circuit District Attorney, which prosecutes cases in Telfair and six other South Georgia counties, is seeking the death penalty against Towns.

The Runions, who lived in the Wendwood subdivision off Holly Springs Road, were married for 38 years. According to their obituary, in 1991 the Runions founded Forever Greatful Ministries, which helps families in need in the Marietta area. He was retired from AT & T and she was a preschool teacher at Johnson Ferry Christian Academy.

They were longtime members of Mt. Paran Church of God North on Allgood Road.

 

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ARC to hold Cobb open house for long-range regional plan

Submitted information:ARC Cobb open house

Atlanta Regional Commission staff is hosting a open house 5-8 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 24, at the Strand Theatre to share information about the Atlanta Region’s Plan — the region’s plan through the year 2050. Residents will be able to provide their input on a major update to this plan, which is the region’s long range blueprint that details investments needed to ensure metro Atlanta’s future success. The Strand Theatre is located at 117 N. Park Square, Marietta.

At the open house, attendees will have the opportunity to:

  • Explore the Atlanta region’s future through hands-on activities, including an online scenario planning game and a “living infographic” station where residents can give feedback on their biggest desires and concerns for the region.
  • Learn about key regional issues, such as advances in transportation technology and innovative efforts to address the region’s housing affordability challenges.
  • Search an online database to learn about transportation projects that are planned throughout the region over the next 30 years.

The Atlanta Region’s Plan incorporates a range of planning and programmatic elements, including transportation, community development, natural resources, workforce development and aging and independence services. The plan aims to improve mobility, create vibrant, walkable communities, ensure a clean, abundant water supply and meet the needs of the region’s population of older adults and disabled individuals.

For more information, click here.

 

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East Cobb cityhood group schedules town hall for Wheeler HS

East Cobb Cityhood town hall

Wheeler High School will be the venue for a Nov. 11 town hall meeting held by the Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb.

Group spokesman Rob Eble told East Cobb News the event begins at 6:30 p.m. in the B.B. Williams Auditorium at Wheeler (375 Holt Road).

It’s the second town hall the pro-cityhood organization has conducted, following a similar event at Walton High School (above) in May.

Cityhood leaders also spoke at Cobb commissioner Bob Ott’s town hall meeting in March, and at a Powers Ferry Corridor Alliance meeting in May.

The day after the Wheeler town hall, the East Cobb Business Association is having a forum with representatives of groups supporting and opposing cityhood.

The Wheeler town hall comes a couple of months after an independent financial review of the East Cobb cityhood feasibility study concluded such a city is financially viable without raising property taxes above current levels.

A group that opposes cityhood, the East Cobb Alliance, says a new city would add an extra layer of government and disputes the financial analysis of the feasibility study.

State Rep. Matt Dollar of East Cobb has sponsored a cityhood bill that, if passed next year, would call for a cityhood referendum later in 2020.

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KSU economist downplays election-year recession fears

Roger Tutterow of Kennesaw State University said while housing starts are “quite strong,” he’s concerned about an overbuilt stock of new multi-family units. (ECN file)

The U.S. economy has experienced 121 consecutive months of economic expansion, nearly a full decade since the 2008-09 recession began to fade.

That streak, noted Kennesaw State University economist Roger Tutterow, “is the longest of the post-World War II era.”

According to some forecasts, Tutterow said in remarks before the East Cobb Business Association last week, “that means we must be due for a recession.

“I don’t think that’s necessarily true.”

The year 2020 is a presidential election year in the United States, which typically brings with it economic concerns. Some economists are rating the chance of a recession at 50-50 or higher.

Tutterow, an economic forecaster, said that in election years, the risk of a recession is “elevated,” but thinks there could be a one-in-three chance of an American economic backslide.

“Most likely,” Tutterow said, there will be “a continued trajectory of growth” in the U.S. economy.

What bolsters his view is that “consumers are keeping the economy humming on all cylinders.

“It’s confidence in the consumer sector that’s keeping us out of a recession,” Tutterow said.

Roger Tutterow, KSU economist
Roger Tutterow

There are some trouble signs, though, including the manufacturing sector, which Tutterow said “is under a lot of stress.”

The impact of Trump Administration-imposed tariffs on the economy also figures to create some uncertainty, especially as the president will be running for re-election.

Tutterow, who describes himself as a free trader, said Trump “believes he needs to level the playing field that he believes is unfair for American producers.

“That raises the prices for goods you buy from overseas.”

A stronger American dollar also has affected trade; Tutterow said its value has grown by a third since 2011.

“A strong dollar doesn’t help those things that we export,” he said.

As for the housing market, Tutterow  said that it’s “quite strong.” A total of 1.4 million new starts since the recession is “not bad, but we’re nowhere near we were from 2005 to 2007.”

He said the Cobb housing market is maturing, and that the rate of growth for the moment isn’t as much as it has been in the past.

“I am worried that multi-family housing is being overbuilt,” Tutterow said.

Overall in the Atlanta area that’s not true, he said, but locally there’s “too much vertical high-priced housing” that is coming online.

As for the 2020 elections, primaries get underway in February, with the Democratic presidential nominee likely to be determined by the spring.

The presidential campaign, “Tutterow said, “will be a debate about the fundamental direction of the country.”

 

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Pope softball team advances to state finals for 4th straight year

For the fourth year in a row, the Pope softball team has advanced to the Georgia High School Association finals in Columbus.East Cobb sports update

The Greyhounds are the only Cobb County representative in the Class 6A bracket, which starts play on Thursday.

Pope, which sports a school record 19-game winning streak, is slated to face Apalachee at 2 p.m. in the eight-team, double-elimination tournament, which ends on Saturday.

Last year, Pope was state runner-up, losing to Cobb rival Harrison in the finals. This fall, the Greyhounds easily won Region 5 in Class 6A. In the state tournament thus far, they have swept Douglas County and Houston County, scoring 49 runs and giving up only one run in those four games.

Pope coach Chris Turco also earned his 300th career victory at the school during the early playoff round. Pope has won the state title once, in 2014.

In the Class 7A tournament, Lassiter was eliminated by Grayson in the second round. The Trojans won their first game in a best-of-three series, then fell by scores of 11-0 and 5-0.

The Kell softball team defeated Arabia Mountain in the first round of the Class 5A tournament, then was swept by Starr’s Mill 3-1 and 16-0 in the second round.

 

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East Cobb art show to benefit suicide prevention efforts

East Cobb art show, Passionate Artists with a Cause

Thanks to Mary Wyman for asking us to share information about an art show in East Cobb  she’s involved in next weekend that will aid suicide prevention efforts.

The show, called “Passionate Artists With a Cause,” will take place next Sunday, Oct. 27, from 3-6 p.m. at LM Frame + Gallery (formerly Thompson’s Frame Shop).

She’s among the artists, many of them from the Indian Hills area, who will have their artwork on display. A percentage of the sales will be going for suicide prevention work.

Wyman said this is the second year for the art show, which benefitted ALS research in its first year after the death of a golfer in the community.

This year, the decision to assist the American Association for Suicide Prevention came after an “unfortunate death.”

The art show is free to attend and is open to the public.

LM Frame + Gallery is located at the Shops at Woodlawn, 1062 Johnson Ferry Road, next to Big Peach Running Co.

 

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Congregation Etz Chaim food drive continues through October

Congregation Etz Chaim food drive

Thanks to Gina Gory, a preschool teacher at Congregation Etz Chaim, for the information and photos:

Congregation Etz Chaim, along with the Atlanta Community at large is collecting food items between now and the end of October. These items will go the the Atlanta Community Food Bank and the Kosher items will be separated out and given to Jewish Family and Career.

It’s never too early to inspire our youth about the spirit of charity and giving back. The three year old Puppy class and their families donated several food items to help the cause. By participating in this event we are encouraging them to grow up with a healthy sense of compassion and a strong charitable spirit.

Upon depositing items in the collection bins we asked how this act of Tzedakah (charitable giving as a moral obligation) made them feel.

“My heart felt good. I felt happy. I felt better.”

Please consider donating your non-perishable food items to the Etz Chaim Lobby to benefit the Atlanta Community Food Bank.

Congregation Etz Chaim is located at 1190 Indian Hills Parkway.

Congregation Etz Chaim food drive

 

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Update: Mt. Zion UMC Party in the Patch postponed to Sunday

Due to rainy weather on Saturday the Mt. Zion UMC Party in the Patch event has been pushed back a day, to Sunday. Here’s what they’re sharing with the community about what’s taking place a day later:Party in the Patch postponed, Mt. Zion UMC

Bad weather is never fun, and we want our Party in the Patch to be the most fun for everyone who attends!

We are moving Party in the Patch to Sunday evening, October 20! Same time, same place, same bouncy, same pumpkins, same fun!

Festivities begin at 4:30 with our double feature of films beginning at 7:15!! It’s Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown! followed by Spookely the Square Pumpkin! Be sure to bring a chair or a blanket!

All of the events are free to you, but all proceeds from pumpkins sales go directly towards benefiting our Youth Ministry!

Mt. Zion UMC is located at 1770 Johnson Ferry Road.

For other weekend events and our full calendar listings, click here.

More Halloween events in East Cobb can be found here.

 

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Report: Lidl to replace The Fresh Market store in East Cobb

Lidl East Cobb, The Fresh Market East Cobb

Two years after being thwarted in a bid to enter the East Cobb grocery market, Lidl appears headed for the Johnson Ferry Road corridor.

ToNeTo Atlanta is reporting that the German-based discount chain will be coming to the Woodlawn Square Shopping Center, replacing The Fresh Market, which is set to close Nov. 18.

Lidl, which has opened two other locations in Cobb, is slated to open in East Cobb next summer, according to the report.

In 2017, Cobb commissioners turned down Lidl’s rezoning request to convert the Park 12 Cobb theater on Gordy Parkway into a grocery store after heated community opposition.

Nearby residents complained of traffic issues, but an attorney for Lidl noted during the zoning hearing that some “want to keep the movie theater as much as anything.”

The Fresh Market, a gourmet foods chain, has been at Woodlawn Square since 2003 and has been closing some of its stores around the country in the last couple of years.

Lidl, which operates 10,000 stores, mostly in Europe, made its foray in the U.S. in 2017 along the East Coast.

The Cobb stores are on Powder Springs Road, near the East-West Connector, and on Floyd Road in Mableton.

Another Lidl store was recently approved for Whitlock Avenue in Marietta, after the Marietta City Council rejected an initial rezoning request in 2017.

The only other Georgia store for now is in Snellville. ToNeTo has reported that Lidl is planning stores in Brookhaven, Dunwoody, Peachtree Corners, Roswell, Lawrenceville and Suwanee.

Lidl is a rival to Aldi, another German discount grocer, which has a store at the East Lake Shopping Center in East Cobb (2125 Roswell Road, Suite 30).

 

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Cobb animal shelter reopens after strep zoo outbreak

Cobb animal shelter closes

Two weeks after closing due to a strep zoo outbreak, the Cobb animal shelter reopened on Friday.

The shelter was closed Oct. 2 after staff discovered the highly contagious bacterial disease had killed two dogs. The remaining animals were quarantined and given antibiotics and the facility at 1060 Al Bishop Drive was thoroughly cleaned.

The county said Friday there have been no reports of any newly adopted animals becoming ill so the shelter was reopened.

A fall adoption special is continuing, with fees reduced to $20 (typically they’re $115). The shelter is open from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday-Saturday and from 2-5 p.m. Sunday.

 

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East Cobb Weekend Events: Party in the Patch, Sunday Funday and more

Jerry Hightower, East Cobb weekend events
Jerry Hightower of the Chattahoochee NRA will speak to the Cobb Master Gardeners on Saturday at the Wright Enivironmental Education Center.

Now it’s really starting to feel like fall, with very cool temperatures coming in this week and a couple more weeks before Halloween. East Cobb weekend events are ideal for those and other activities of the season.

On Friday, high school football continues with key region games giving East Cobb teams a shot to jockey into playoff position.

At Wheeler, it’s homecoming, as the Wildcats take on East Coweta. Lassiter is also at home to face Roswell, Kell entertains Carrollton and Sprayberry will meet Dalton.

Walton stays on the road to play Etowah. All those games kick off at 7:30 p.m. At 8 p.m., Pope plays at North Atlanta.

The final weekend of CenterStage North’s season finale, “Point of Order, continues at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday at The Art Place (3330 Sandy Plains Road). Tickets are $20 each.

More board-trotting, this on the high school stage, as Pope Theater completes its presentation of “Edward Foote,” a Southern Gothic mystery set in the Depression-era Appalachians, on Friday and Saturday, both at 7 p.m., as well as a 2 p.m. Saturday matinee. The shows take place in the school’s performing arts theater (3001 Hembree Road), and tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for students, as the Pope troupe prepares for next weekend’s Georgia High School Association One Act Regional Competition.

Weekends are ideal for getting the stress out, and on Saturday, you can learn how to handle it at a special Breathing and Meditation Session from 11-12:30 at the Mountain View Regional Library (3320 Sandy Plains Road). Khyati Doshi of The Art of Living Foundation will discuss how you can find your “space” with the simple act of breathing. The session is free but you should dress comfortably to practice some new breathing techniques.

If the rain holds off on Saturday, it should be a great day to explore one of East Cobb’s underrated nature preserves. From 12:30-2:30 p.m., the Cobb Master Gardeners Open Garden features a “walk and talk” at the Wright Environmental Education Center (2663 Johnson Ferry Road), led by Jerry Hightower, Park Ranger at Chattahoochee National Recreation Area. The event is free and parking is available at the adjacent Chestnut Ridge Chistian Church.

If you love high school marching bands, Sprayberry High School is the place to be Saturday for the 36th annual Southern Invitational Music Festival. Bands from around Cobb, metro Atlanta and Georgia will be performing in a judged competition, and the Sprayberry Band of Gold will be giving an exhibition performance at 7:45 p.m. Tickets are $10 adults, $5 students with an ID, and free for kids 6 and under. Everything takes place at Jim Frazier Stadium (2525 Sandy Plains Road).

Halloween events are starting to kick into gear, and one of East Cobb’s longstanding pumpkin fests is the Party in the Patch at Mt. Zion United Methodist Church (1770 Johnson Ferry Road). It’s free family fun starting at 5 p.m., so bring the kids in their costumes and enjoy a pumpkin maze, face painting, jumpy houses, family fun and more. A movie screening begins at 7:30 p.m., and they’ll have pumpkins on sale until 7:30 p.m.

UPDATE: Party in the Patch has been delayed due to rainy weather to Sunday, starting at 4:30 p.m., with a double-feature film starting at 7:15 p.m.

Sunday should be gorgeous, sunny and in the mid 70s, and it’s the last Sunday Funday of the year from 4-6 at East Cobb Park (3322 Roswell Road), presented by WellStar. The McCleskey-East Cobb Family YMCA will have Yoga and Zumba classes, Soccer Clinics, and kids activities. Bring a picnic and enjoy the Loose Shoes Band.

You’ll find more details about those events and can check out more of our calendar listings for this weekend and beyond.

Send your events to us and we’ll post ’em here: calendar@eastcobbnews.com.

 

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East Cobb food scores: Aurelio’s; Chick-fil-A Woodlawn; more

Chick Fil A Woodlawn, East Cobb food scores

The following East Cobb food scores from Oct. 14-18 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing to view details of the inspection:

Aurelio’s Is Pizza
1255 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 22
October 16, 2019 Score: 86, Grade: B

Barista’s
4932 Lower Roswell Road
October 16, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Chick-fil-A Woodlawn
1201 Johnson Ferry Road
October 16, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Firehouse Subs
2745 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 102
October 16, 2019 Score: 92, Grade: A

Pizza Hut
1386 Roswell Road
October 16, 2019 Score: 98, Grade: A

Tritt Elementary School 
4435 Post Oak Tritt Road
October 16, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

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Rep. McBath to hold Passport Day at district office Saturday

Submitted information from U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath, who’s holding a Passport Day from 10-2 Saturday at her district office (5775 Glenridge Dr., Building B, First Floor Conference Room, Sandy Springs :Rep. McBath Passport Day

Representatives from the Atlanta Passport Agency will also be there to answer your questions.

This event is a convenient way to apply for a child’s passport, apply for the first time, or renew passports. Some countries require up to 6 months of validity on your passport when you travel, so now’s the time to renew!

RSVP HERE

No appointment is necessary, but please bring proof of U.S. citizenship, a photocopy of the front and back of your citizenship evidence, valid photo identification, one recent passport photograph (2” x 2”), and a credit card, personal check or money order to pay fees.

You may contact my District Office at (470) 773-6330 anytime.

 

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Lassiter soccer player called into Bosnian Under-19 team camp

Vedad Kovac, a varsity soccer player at Lassiter High School, was called into the team camp for the Bosnia-Herzogovina Under-19 national team in September.Vedad Kovac, Lassiter High School soccer player

Kovac, a senior midfielder, was named to the United Soccer Coaches’ All-Region team as a junior for the Trojans.

As a club player, he competes for the NTH-NASA Elite Clubs National Program in East Cobb. The ECNL program is a three-year-old nationwide development program for high-level youth players, both boys and girls.

The camp Kovac has been participating is in preparation for friendly matches and the Under-19 European Qualifiers in November. Here’s more from ECNL about Kovac:

“The last couple of months have meant a lot to me,” commented Kovac. “I have experienced something I would not trade for anything. This has made my family very happy, which has made me even more excited to participate.”

Born in the United States to a Bosnian mother and father, Kovac has been with NTH-NASA since the age of nine, and has been coached by the club’s Director of Player Development, Todd Gispert, for the last four years, but more recently flew onto the radar of the national team scouts of Bosnia-Herzegovina.

According to Gispert, the call up for Kovac is warranted based upon a host of strengths he brings to the table.

“His technical ability is superb. The way he utilizes his body in tight spaces is fantastic. He also scores goals and that means a lot at any level,” said Gispert.

 

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Walton, Lassiter, Pope lead 2019 Cobb schools ACT scores

Walton High School

 

A total of 13 students from East Cobb schools got perfect scores of 36 on the American College Testing (ACT) exam as the Cobb County School District released 2019 SAT results on Wednesday.

Walton’s overall average on the ACT was 27.4, the best in the 16-high school district, followed by Lassiter with 26, Pope with 25.3 and Wheeler with 24.2.

Ten Walton students from the Class of 2019 got perfect scores on the ACT, as did four Wheeler students and one student each from Kell, Lassiter and Pope.

The ACT composite results are from curriculum-based tests in English, math, reading, and science. According to the CCSD, Cobb’s district-wide composite score of 23 is 1.6 higher than the statewide average and 2.3 points above the national average of 20.7.

CCSD said in a release that three schools had composite average gains of a point or more from 2018, and two were in East Cobb: Kell (1.7) and Lassiter (1.2).

Cobb schools 2019 ACT scores
Graphic: Cobb County School District

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Wheeler Magnet School to hold 20th anniversary celebration

Submitted information:Wheeler Magnet School 20th anniversary

Wheeler Magnet is celebrating 20 years! Come join us on November 2nd to Party Like it’s 1999! Attendees can relive the achievements of the last 20 years and see where students will take us in the future through student showcases and tours!

The Center for Advanced Students at Wheeler High School, Wheeler Magnet, was created in 1999 to provide students with a strong background in Science, Math, and Technology. The magnet program is dynamic. Each year it grows and changes to best serve our students. We
received Georgia STEM Certification in September 2012 and Georgia STEAM Certification in 2017. These prestigious certifications are awarded by the Georgia Department of Education to schools in Georgia who lead the way in STEM and STEAM education. Wheeler has become a model for schools across the state who are interested in starting and developing STEM and STEAM programs.

According to Chris Walstead, the magnet coordinator, “I look forward to celebrating the Wheeler Magnet 20th anniversary and am honored to be a part of the Wheeler Magnet legacy of excellence. Over the past twenty years the magnet program has changed with the times to meet the needs of our extraordinary students in order to prepare them for success after they have left our halls. I am very excited to see what the next twenty years brings.”

The 20th anniversary celebration will take place on November 2nd, from 2:00 to 5:00.

Attendees will enjoy a student led program along with food, music, tours of the facilities, and time to mingle. The celebration will be held in the Performing Arts Center at Wheeler High School (375 Holt Rd NE, Marietta, GA 30068). Click on the link below to RSVP to the event.

Join us in this memorable experience to get to better know your local community and speak with teachers and faculty! The committee leads for this event include Chris Walstead, Stacy Regitsky, Brian Kent, Cheryl Crooks, Tiffany Stark, Faye Lebish, Linda Yu, Tina Soucie, Paul Gillihan, Lisa Casey, and Kelly Feddersen.

Click here to RSVP for this event!! http://evite.me/EeyB3YZqTs.

 

 

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Business group to hold East Cobb cityhood forum in November

East Cobb cityhood forum
Bill Simon, left, a leader of the East Cobb Alliance, which opposes cityhood, talks with David Birdwell of Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb at an April town. (ECN file)

The East Cobb Business Association announced Tuesday it’s holding a forum in mid-November on the East Cobb cityhood issue.

The forum will take place on Tuesday, Nov. 12, during the ECBA’s monthly luncheon from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Olde Towne Athletic Club (4950 Olde Towne Parkway).

According to Rosann Hall, who heads the ECBA’s speakers and program committee, the forum will include representatives of the Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb, which supports incorporation, and the East Cobb Alliance, which opposes cityhood.

“Whether we become a city or whether we don’t, this is going to impact us a lot as business owners and as citizens,” ECBA president Jim Harris said at Tuesday’s luncheon.

Related coverage

The pro-cityhood group held two town hall meetings and spoke at another civic meeting in the spring, after State Rep. Matt Dollar (R-East Cobb) sponsored legislation (read HB 718 here) that, if passed next year, would call for a cityhood referendum, also in 2020.

The cityhood group wants to carve out a portion of unincorporated Cobb, mostly below Sandy Plains Road, and create a city of around 100,000, citing public safety and development reasons.

The proposal has been controversial from the beginning and has generated plenty of skepticism in the community. East Cobb cityhood forum

The East Cobb Alliance was formed recently to launch organized opposition, questioning a financial feasibility study conducted for the pro-cityhood forces and what it calls a lack of transparency by those pushing for a city.

In September, an independent group of finance and legal experts reviewed the feasibility study and concluded it was fiscally sound, but recommended any City of East Cobb not start with police services.

(The review group’s summary and full report).

David Birdwell, a leader of the cityhood committee, said the review confirmed that cityhood is financially viable, and that a new city can provide better services without raising property taxes.

The East Cobb Alliance hasn’t formally responded to the independent review report, but it has examined various portions of the feasibility study, including public safety, franchise fees and inter-governmental agreements.

Most recently, the group posted a graphic on its Facebook page of a hungry-looking raptor with the message that “while the Raptor is fictional….the ‘City of East Cobb’ is a government horror that will slowly eat you alive for years.”

The cityhood group has redirected its original website to one with the domain of communityofeastcobb.com that includes much of the same information it has been discussing in recent months:

  • East Cobb’s Precinct 4 police staffing of 53 patrol officers that is 24 fewer than has been allocated;
  • Claiming property tax rates wouldn’t be higher than they are now in unincorporated Cobb;
  • Promising more prompt road repairs;
  • And “passing zonings without interference of votes from outside the city.”

Rob Eble, another leader of the cityhood group, said it’s looking to have a town hall tentatively on Nov. 11, but a venue has not been confirmed.

East Cobb cityhood forum

 

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East Cobb dentist seeking volunteers for Free Dental Day

East Cobb free dental day

 

For the ninth year, East Cobb dentists Michael and Azita Mansouri will be holding their free dental day event on Nov. 9, and they’re looking for hygienists and dental assistants to help out.

If you’re interested, go to the Mansouris’ website at https://www.naturalsmile.biz/free-dental-day-2019/ and fill out the volunteer form.

Here’s more about the free dental day, which typically serves about 300 or so people in need:

Doors will open at 5:00 am, and patients will be seen on a first-come, first-serve basis. It is recommended that participants arrive early, as lines for this event have started at 10 pm the night before the event in previous years. Before joining the line, participants must reply to the confirmation email or phone call that is sent out. Participants must be at least 18 years old, and they will receive one procedure of their choice: a professional dental cleaning, a dental filling, or an extraction.

This event is made possible by the non-profit organization, Dentistry From the Heart. This organization partners with thousands of dental professionals throughout the year to provide no-cost dental care to those without the means to acquire care.

“This is our favorite day of the year!” boasts Dr. Michael Mansouri. “We have been able to leave our mark on this community by giving back. So many people cannot afford dental treatments and do not have dental insurance. It is our great privilege to offer no-cost dental treatments to those in need.”

The 9th Annual No-Cost Dental Day event will be at Mansouri Dental Care & Associates (4720 Lower Roswell Road). For more information and a chance to win one of 10 guaranteed tickets, please visit us at https://www.naturalsmile.biz/free-dental-day-2019/ and like us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/MansouriDMD.

 

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East Cobb Wine and Vine Market to benefit local charities

East Cobb Wine and Vine Market
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Submitted information:

On October 17th, 2019 at the Olde Towne Athletic Club, the East Cobb Civitans, along with the Georgia District Civitan Foundation and Friends for the East Cobb Park will host our 28 the annual “East Cobb Wine & Vine Market.”

This wine tasing and silent auction features over 100 items to bid on, and over 2 dozen wines to sample. There will be a live raffle drawing and a wine pull.

Your involvement in supporting this event has resulted in over $390,000 being donated to LOCAL charities!

These have included:

  • The East Cobb Park – Over $180,000 in donations for the park’s creation and development
  • Must Ministries: Providing shelter, clothing, food and support for homeless families
  • Center for Family Resources: Intervention & training to prevent and support homeless families
  • The Center for Children and Young Adults: A shelter & home for abused & neglected youth
  • Project Mail Call: Sends boxes of supplies and surprises to our deployed soldiers
  • Opportunity Knocks for Youth: Mentoring for Middle School aged Foster kids
  • Fragile Kids Foundation: Providing resources for the medically fragile
  • The Georgia Ballet’s “Dance Abilities”: Dance classes for special needs students
  • Camp Big Heart – A week long summer camp for developmentally disabled campers
  • Right in the Community: Supporting group homes for the developmentally disabled
  • Great Prospects – A social organization for adults with special needs.

Tickets are $25 each and include heavy appetizers; must be 21 or older to attend.

 

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Mountain View Regional Library to hold Census job sessions

Submitted information: Cobb Census Bureau canvassing, Mountain View Regional Library Census job sessions

U.S. Census Bureau officials will share information on 2020 Census job opportunities and answer questions about applying during job opportunity sessions at Mountain View Regional Library:

  • 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Friday, Oct. 18
  • 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Friday, Oct. 25
  • 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 31

Local positions include assistants, clerks, office operations supervisors and census takers. Pay ranges vary based on location and position. Applicants must be at least 18 years of age, a U.S. citizen, and have a valid Social Security number and email address. The library is located at 3320 Sandy Plains Road, Marietta.
 
For more information on applying for 2020 Census jobs, including application requirements, visit www.2020census.gov/jobs. Potential applicants seeking information and assistance may also call 1-855-JOB-2020 (562-2020) or use the Federal Relay Service at 800-877-8339.

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