East Cobb restaurant scores: Catfish Hox; Drift; Mirko; Moxie Burger; Red Sky; Seed; and more

Mirko Pasta, East Cobb restaurant scores

The following East Cobb restaurant scores from Dec. 13-Jan. 12 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing to view details of the inspection:

Atlanta Country Club 
500 Atlanta Country Club Drive
December 21, 2017 Score: 100, Grade: A

Baskin Robbins 
4811 Lower Roswell Road
December 13, 2017 Score: 100, Grade: A

Bradley’s Bar & Grill/Dogwood Catering 
4961 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 117
December 19, 2017 Score: 91, Grade: A

Catfish Hox 
2595 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 101
December 14, 2017 Score: 100, Grade: A

Cherry On Top Delights 
4665 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 107
December 21, 2017 Score: 96, Grade: A

Delkwood Grill 
2769 Delk Road
December 28, 2017 Score: 85, Grade: B

Delray Diner 
2475 Delk Road
January 9, 2018 Score: 62, Grade: U
January 12, 2018 Score: 79, Grade: C

Derek’s 
1438 Canton Road
January 11, 2018 Score: 92, Grade: A

Drift Fish House & Oyster Bar 
4475 Roswell Road, Suite 1410
December 28, 2017 Score: 91, Grade: A

Frankie’s Italian
3085 Canton Road
January 4, 2018 Score: 88, Grade: B

Fugu Express 
2900 Delk Road, Suite 2000
December 14, 2017 Score: 81, Grade: B

Kumo Hibachi Sushi 
2595 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 103
January 4, 2018 Score: 90, Grade: A

La Carreta 
1252 Roswell Road
December 29, 2017 Score: 82, Grade: B

Longhorn Steakhouse 
4721 Lower Roswell Road
December 21, 2017 Score: 93, Grade: A

Marietta Crawfish & Seafood 
1420 Roswell Road
December 18, 2017 Score: 92, Grade: A

Mazzy’s Sports Bar & Grill 
2217 Roswell Road, Suite A-200
December 19, 2017 Score: 86, Grade: B

McDonald’s 
1291 Bells Ferry Road
January 11, 2018 Score: 89, Grade: B

McDonald’s 
3101 Roswell Road
January 10, 2018 Score: 100, Grade: A

Minas Emporium 
2555 Delk Road, Suite B4
December 15, 2017 Score: 82, Grade: B

Mirko Pasta 
1281 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 120
December 29, 2017 Score: 96, Grade: A

Montana’s Bar & Grill
2995 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 330
December 20, 2017 Score: 82, Grade: B

Moxie Burger 
255 Village Parkway, Suite 110
December 13, 2017 Score: 93, Grade: A

Papa John’s Pizza 
4811 Lower Roswell Road
December 13, 2017 Score: 100, Grade: A

Red Sky Tapas & Bar 
1255 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 16
December 13, 2017 Score: 87, Grade: B

Rocky Mount Elementary School 
2400 Rocky Mountain Road
December 13, 2017 Score: 100, Grade: A

Sabor do Brasil 
2800 Delk Road, Suite E
January 2, 2018 Score: 73, Grade: C

Sam’s BBQ-1
4958 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 108
December 28, 2017 Score: 99, Grade: A

Seed Kitchen & Bar 
1311 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 504
December 21, 2017 Score: 96, Grade: A

Simpson Middle School 
3340 Trickum Road
December 13, 2017 Score: 97, Grade: A

Starbucks (Inside Kroger)
4880 Lower Roswell Road
January 11, 2018 Score: 99, Grade: A

Stem Wine Bar 
1311 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 516
January 12, 2018 Score: 100, Grade: A

Subway 
2561 Windy Hill Road
January 8, 2018 Score: 90, Grade: A

Wendy’s 
2238 Roswell Road
January 5, 2018 Score: 100, Grade: A

Winston’s Food & Spirits
1860 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 101
December 27, 2017 Score: 80, Grade: B

 

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Cobb winter weather forecast: chance of light snow starting Tuesday afternoon

NWS Forecast Map

UPDATED, 5:30 p.m.

The National Weather Service has issued a winter weather advisory for Cobb and most of north Georgia that begins at 4 p.m. Tuesday and continues through 7 a.m. Wednesday.

Cobb and Marietta are included in an area outlined in white in the map below, at right, that could get up to an inch of snow, starting late Tuesday afternoon. In addition, temperatures are expected to fall between five degrees above zero to zero Tuesday night and into Wednesday morning, in what the NWS refers to as wind chill values at “dangerous levels.”

NWS Winter Weather Advisory map

Original report, posted at 1:06 p.m.

In addition to really having to bundle up again—below freezing temperatures are back, along with wind chills that will make it feel like it’s in the single digits—there’s a chance of light snow for Cobb, metro Atlanta and most of northwest Georgia Tuesday afternoon.

The National Weather Service has issued a special weather statement that up to an inch of light snow is possible across an area above a line from LaGrange to Conyers to Commerce
as early as Tuesday afternoon and into Wednesday morning.

While Tuesday’s daytime highs could reach into the 50s, it’s in the late afternoon and evening hours that the precipitation is most likely to occur, and temperatures are expected to plunge into the high teens in metro Atlanta.

Wednesday’s temperatures are not expected to reach freezing, with lows also in the teens. Skies will be sunny, but the wind chill factor will linger at least through Wednesday.

Here’s more from the NWS advisory, which was issued early Monday morning:

Although forecast amounts will mainly be less than 1 inch, temperatures will be well below freezing Tuesday night. Any snow that falls, no matter how light will likely remain on the roads and ground through Thursday morning.

Low temperatures Wednesday morning will range from 12 to 20 degrees with wind chill readings from 10 above to near zero.

Temperatures are expected to drop into into single digits, so any snow that falls will stick.

We will update this forecast if it changes, which the NWS said is likely, including possible school closures.

The weather will get warmer for the weekend, with highs in the 50s and possibly even into the low 60s on Sunday, when a light chance of rain is in the forecast.

 

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East Cobb Biz Notes: Cobb Antique Mall relocates to Canton Road

Cobb Antique Mall

After 15 years on Cobb Parkway at Gresham Road, the Cobb Antique Mall has relocated to Canton Road and is having what it’s terming a “soft” opening on Monday, starting at 10 a.m.

The new address is 2800 Canton Road, at the corner of Piedmont Road, in Suite 900 of the Piedmont Village Shopping Center (where a driver’s license office used to be). The phone number is 770-590-8989. The business received its new occupancy license on Jan. 9.

The Cobb Antique Mall closed at its old location on Dec. 15 to prepare for the move. The new store has 10,000 more square feet and according to management will feature many of the same vendors. Here’s more information for prospective vendors, with a Jan. 31 deadline for a year’s lease that includes either free rent or no commission taken for the year.

The hours for the Cobb Antique Mall are Monday-Saturday 10-7 and Sunday 12-6.

Salata to open Feb. 1

As we noted on Friday, the Salata restaurant at Providence Square (4101 Roswell Road, in the former Uncle Maddio’s spot), is opening on Feb. 1. At The Avenue East Cobb, Smallcakes, a cupcake and ice cream store, opened last week.

Also at The Avenue, J. Crew closed on Sunday as part of a larger reduction of stores for the clothing and apparel chain, and the Justice girls clothing store also will be closing soon.

Aspens halts Sunday brunch

The East Cobb location of Aspens Signature Steaks and Seafood (2942 Shallowford Road), is “taking a break” from serving Sunday brunch, but the announcement didn’t indicate when it might resume. Dinner service continues seven days a week starting at 5 p.m.

New East Cobb businesses

The following businesses are the first in East Cobb to be granted operating licenses in 2018:

  • A Healthy Liquid Seasoning, 2501 E. Piedmont Road, Suite 144 (groceries);
  • Anytime Fitness, 3595 Canton Road, Suite D (fitness center);
  • C.H. McCallum, LLC, 2943 Bentwood Drive (appraiser);
  • Dominican Beauty Salon, 2359 Windy Hill Road, Suite 270 (beauty salon);
  • Earth Clean Concepts, 2265 Roswell Road, Suite 100 (janitorial service);
  • Fay Alterations, 4651 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 108 (alterations);
  • Home Inspection Pros, 2350 Sumter Lake Drive (home inspection service);
  • Marco Silva, 3920 Canton Road, Suite 155 (fitness trainer);
  • Nancy’s Vintage Shop, 1050 E. Piedmont Road, Suite 102 (antique sales);
  • Marietta Technical Solutions, 3000 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 201 (computer service and repair);
  • Raven Microblading, 2627 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 202 (tattoo parlor);
  • Team Rehabilitation, 1401 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 340 (physical therapy);
  • Tyson Mayers, 2993 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 220 (insurance agent).

 

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The East Cobb News weekly newsletter for Jan. 14, 2018 is out!

Ming's Asian Kitchen, East Cobb News Digest newsletter
Our most popular story this week on East Cobb News: The opening of Ming’s Asian Kitchen on Lower Roswell Road.

Catch up with all of the past week’s headlines and take a look at what’s coming up this week with our convenient weekly e-mail newsletter.

The East Cobb News Digest is delivered every Sunday afternoon, and contains so much more, including the best calendar listings anywhere in East Cobb and convenient community information.

Subscribing to the newsletter is free and easy (just click the signup link below). We don’t sell or rent our e-mail listings to anyone.

We know you’re busy, and that you don’t want to miss out on what’s going on around you. Sign up today and be part of East Cobb’s only daily news source, independently operated and with a totally local focus.

We’re enhancing our newsletter—including more top local headlines—due to changes Facebook is making to its News Feed, which that may limit what you see if you follow or like East Cobb News on that social media platform.

The following people have become our first subscribers of 2018 (and the last from 2017):

Amy Ash, Rick Buckalew, Cynthia Lippert, Matthew Linskey, Nat Tinamoff, Sharon Hartley, Pauline Smith, Wanda Becker, Gwendolyn Clark, Dana Peterson, Frank Vineyard, James Murphy, Libby Coppedge, Dennis Fox, Brooke Stanchie, Deborah Flowers, Al Rondon, Sharon Spencer, Christine Waldner, Helen Tilden.

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Leadership Cobb seeking nominations for 2018-19 class

Press release:

Leadership Cobb, the Cobb Chamber of Commerce’s premier leadership development program, is seeking nominations for members of the 2018-2019 class.Cobb Chamber of Commerce

Class members will be selected from business, industry, education, government and other professions, as well as from volunteer, civic and religious organizations. Leadership Cobb develops leadership skills and promotes professional and personal growth through experiential learning opportunities.

Class members are introduced to a variety of viewpoints, illustrating the array of economic, political, educational and social factors at work in Cobb County. Leadership Cobb program days combine lectures and dialogue with speakers, as well as class member interaction with leaders representing all facets of the Cobb community.
           

Nominees should be able to assume increased community responsibilities, as the program demands significant time and effort for 10 consecutive months.

Attendance is mandatory for all regularly scheduled events, which usually are held one day per month, plus two three-day retreats in the fall and spring and periodic evening sessions. The program begins fall 2018 and runs through spring 2019.

The program, which is in its 35th year, provides a learning environment that enhances personal and professional growth to benefit the community and the region.

The deadline for nominations is Monday, Feb. 12, 2018. Fill out a nomination form online at www.cobbchamber.org or email the nominee’s name, title, employer, mailing address, email address and business or mobile telephone number to Michele Howard at mhoward@cobbchamber.org

Tripp Boyer of Wells Fargo Advisors and Christina Martin of Kaiser Permanente will be co-chairs for the 2018-2019 program year. The Yearlong Presenting Sponsor is Kennesaw State University Coles College of Business Executive MBA Programs.

For more information on the Leadership Cobb nomination and selection process, please contact Michele Howard atmhoward@cobbchamber.org.

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East Cobb teachers earn grant money at ‘Cobb Tank’ competition

Hightower Trail teachers, East Cobb teachers, Cobb Tank

Teachers from three East Cobb schools have been awarded grant money for lab ideas pitched at the Cobb County School District’s annual “Cobb Tank” competition.

A total of $71,00 in grant money was handed out to teachers at 10 schools in the district. They include Zakary Jezequel and Amy Morris at Hightower Trail Middle School (above, all photos submitted by CCSD), who will receive $6,595 to develop a project in which students will race toward a healthy lifestyle using spin bikes.

At Kell High School, English teacher Lauren Forbes’ grant of $1,600 is for an “Escape from the Ordinary Classroom” program, as her students will take a true literary escape in their studies.

Lauren Forbes, Kell High School

Dickerson Middle School teacher Lawton Willingham is receiving a Cobb Tank grant worth nearly $11,000 for a music prototyping and programming program.

Lawton Willingham, Dickerson Middle School

The program is modeled after the TV program “Shark Tank.” All recipients pitched their “Cobb Tank” ideas at CCSD headquarters. Per a CCSD release, here’s how the competition went:

Through lively, creative, and effective presentations, many involving their students, the teachers appealed beneath TV camera lights for the sharks to fund their ideas to enhance classroom instruction.

A panel of judges, or “sharks,” included several school district teachers and administrators, including assistant superintendent David Chiprany, a former principal at East Cobb Middle School and Wheeler High School, as well as business and community leaders.

A video presentation of the entire competition will be made available later this month on Cobb edTV, the school district’s cable access channel.

Cobb Tank 2017 contestants

 

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With Facebook changes coming, here’s how to never miss a post from East Cobb News

Earlier this month, East Cobb News turned six months old, as this community-focused news resource strives to cover more events and provide readers with local information they can’t get anywhere else.Wendy Parker, East Cobb News

Most of you find us through search engines like Google, but many of you also have East Cobb News stories delivered to you through social media channels, especially Facebook.

If you get East Cobb News stories mainly through Facebook, what you’ll see from us in your newsfeed will be changing very soon.

In fact, you’ll be getting less and less of what East Cobb News and other publishers share with you, even though you may like and follow our Facebook page and want to get your news this way.

That’s because Facebook this week announced major changes in what users will get in their news feed and will begin limiting the content you see from news organizations like ours.

“As we roll this out, you’ll see less public content like posts from businesses, brands, and media,” Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg wrote on his Facebook account.

Facebook hopes this change will increase the quality of the news in your feed and give users more time to connect with the people most important to them.

Many of you rely on Facebook to see the content we post every day on East Cobb News. As I have learned as publisher and in a previous job covering East Cobb for AOL, many of our most engaged users, active East Cobb citizens, congregate on Facebook to share the latest news with their friends and neighbors.

It’s a shame that Facebook is making this move while upstart, independent local news outlets, like East Cobb News, are fighting to fill the gap left by newspapers and other media organizations. We’re just getting going with East Cobb News, and building an engaged readership, online as well as in the community.

One thing you can do if you follow the East Cobb News Page is to change your News Feed settings to “See First” (as shown at left) instead of “Default.” This prioritizes the pages you want to see, and was introduced a couple years ago by Facebook. Here’s more about See First, and for now, it appears it’s remaining as a user option.

As things change, however, we’re also finding that more and more East Cobb citizens are are signing up every day for our free weekly newsletter, the East Cobb News Digest, which is delivered every Sunday afternoon.

The Digest includes highlighted stories from the previous week and a glimpse of what’s on tap in the coming week, as well as useful community information.

Due to the changes being made by Facebook, I will be including a few more links from stories of the past week in the newsletter. Eventually I may increase the frequency of the newsletter to a couple times a week and send out alerts for major breaking news. East Cobb News does not sell or rent its newsletter subscriber list to anyone.

The simplest way to deal with these changes, if you are a Facebook user and get your news from East Cobb News, is to subscribe to our newsletter. If you haven’t done so, it’s free, and signing up is easy. After clicking the button below, you’ll never miss an important story about what’s going on in East Cobb.

 

Thanks for your readership of East Cobb News, and please let us know what you think. Feel free to contact me anytime at: wendy@eastcobbnews.com or call 404-219-4278.

East Cobb seniors sound off on proposed fee increases at town hall

East Cobb Senior Town Hall meeting
Cobb commission chairman Mike Boyce faced a full house at the East Cobb Senior Center Friday (East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

Before Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce made his case for increasing charges for senior services, including the creation of an annual membership fee, he issued an apology.

Not for the idea of raising fees. As he reiterated several times, often to the derision of some in attendance at a town hall meeting at the East Cobb Senior Center Friday morning, “We’re all in this together” in addressing Cobb’s mounting budget problems.

Rather, Boyce regretted the way the announcement was handled in November, when commissioners voted to impose an annual $60 membership fee to use Cobb senior centers and in some cases charge steep increases in renting rooms for events at those facilities.

Those new charges are set to go into effect on Feb. 1, but because of strong pushback from seniors, Boyce scheduled a series of town hall meetings this month.

The first was at the East Cobb center on Sandy Plains Road, one of the busiest of the five senior centers run by the county, and with a robust schedule of activities and organizations that meet there.

“You’re angry because you feel like we’re shoving this down your throat,” Boyce said to a standing-room only crowd. “That’s why we’re here.”

East Cobb Senior Town Hall

Many were angry about any increases in general, with some citing living on fixed incomes, and wondering how much the new charges would help solve a budget deficit projected to be $30 million or more for fiscal 2019.

“I’m hoping it’s only $30 million,” Boyce said, rattling off a long list of things that the county isn’t buying these days—including public safety and senior services vehicles—due to the budget crunch.

He deflected criticism that the county’s obligation for SunTrust Park is contributing to the budget woes, which were $20 million for fiscal 2018. Cobb pays $8.4 million annually for its share of the new home of the Atlanta Braves.

When an attendee charged that the county is “Mickey Mousing us around” instead of addressing funding for the stadium, Boyce was adamant:

“The Braves didn’t create this hole. All they did was accelerate the inevitable.”

Of the $405 million fiscal year general fund budget for 2018, around $170 million is earmarked for required services under state law: public safety, courts, roads and water.

A longer list of “essential” services includes code enforcement, finance and budget and planning and zoning. That totals another $146 million.

The longest list of all, “desired” services, has the smallest budget sum of the three: $86 million, and it’s where the budgets for popular programs for parks, libraries and seniors all come from.

Each senior center costs around $250,000 a year to operate, but county officials estimate only 6,100 of Cobb’s 165,000 seniors use them at all.

When a senior asked why the elderly are being asked to share the burden this way, Boyce offered his standard response—”because we’re all in this together”—to a chorus of boos and groans.

“You may not like the answer, but if we don’t fill this [budget] hole, we may have to close places,” he said.

East Cobb senior town hall

Boyce faced greater opposition to the room rate increases, which in some cases would be 200 or 300 percent higher than what they are now, as well as class fees.

Currently, the Foxtrotters Dance Club pays $120 for its monthly events, and the Marietta Golden K Kiwanis Club pays the same amount for several meetings a year at the East Cobb center.

Those rentals would go up to $200 an event. Class fees would go up from $48 to $112 and $160 for painting classes and from $30 to $50 for yoga and tai chi sessions.

Some worried that their fellow seniors may drop out of coming to the centers, which have become a vital social hub.

One suggestion Boyce said he definitely would take back to the commissioners is a $5 monthly fee, which may be more affordable for some seniors who can’t pay $60 in advance.

After the town hall meeting, East Cobb senior resident Chris Vail said he appreciated Boyce taking the heat, and for apologizing at the outset.

Vail is member of the Golden K Kiwanis, which has met at the East Cobb Senior Center for 22 years. He’s concerned that higher charges for room rental and other club activities would cost the organization $12,000 a year, about the same amount of money the group raises for various children’s charities every year.

“That would put us out of business,” said Vail, a retired police officer from Albany, Ga., and a former Congressional investigator. “There’s a lot of benefit for us to be here.”

He said a user fee for seniors would be fine with him “as long as it is reasonable.” Vail said while he was glad for the chance to be heard, “I only pray that they will listen to us.”

Additional town hall meetings will take place week at the North Cobb, West Cobb, Freeman Poole and Marietta senior centers. The commissioners will discuss the feedback at a work session later this month before scheduling a vote on the new fees.

East Cobb Senior Town Hall

 

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Salata to open in East Cobb on Feb. 1; Smallcakes opens at The Avenue; J. Crew closing

Salata East Cobb

It’s been a busy week on the new restaurant front in East Cobb. In addition to the opening of Ming’s Asian Kitchen we posted on Wednesday, Salata, the long-awaited salad and healthy foods eatery that’s been preparing space in Providence Square Shopping Center, has announced that it will open for business on Feb. 1.

The announcement came late Thursday on the Salata Twitter feed as well as the company’s Facebook page, although there was no news posted when we went by earlier today.

It’s the third Georgia location for the Houston-based Salata, which is at Atlantic Station and Glenridge Point. Salata has nearly 70 restaurants, mostly in Texas, as well as California, Illinois and Oklahoma.

J. Crew The Avenue
The J. Crew store at The Avenue is one of five to close in Atlanta this month.

The salads can be made with a selection of more than 50 vegetable toppings, 10 dressings, fruits, cheeses, fish, chicken and turkey and egg, croutons, bacon and pasta and protein options. In addition to salad wraps, Salata serves soups, desserts, lemonade and teas.

Here’s the full menu.

The hours of operation will be Monday-Friday from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m., Saturday-Sunday from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.

Salata is located in the freestanding former Uncle Maddio’s space at 4101 Roswell Road, Suite 1100. The phone number is 470-200-0876 and online ordering will be available.

Comings and goings at The Avenue

At The Avenue East Cobb, there’s good news and bad news: Smallcakes, a cupcake and ice cream shop, has opened in Suite 1550, next to the soon-to-be-shuttered Justice, a girls clothing store, and two doors down from Panera Bread.

It’s the second attempt in East Cobb for Smallcakes, which had a location at 2424 Roswell Road. The chain operates around 200 stores in 31 states.

J. Crew, the clothing retailer, is preparing to shut down operations at The Avenue. According to a report at Tomorrow’s News Today, it’s one of five Atlanta-area stores to close this month, and the last day of business is Sunday. When we went by today, however, the store was nearly empty, as packing up was continuing.

 

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EAST COBB WEEKEND EVENTS: St. Catherine’s concert; nutrition workshop; MLK celebration and more

The Summit Trio, St. Catherine's Episcopal Church, East Cobb weekend events
The Summit Trio will be performing Sunday at St. Catherine’s Episcopal Church.

We’ve got a short, but impactful selection of East Cobb weekend events on tap through the extended holiday weekend (and please do check out our full calendar listings for more):

  • On Saturday, you can get your diet, health and nutrition plans in order for the new year at a special presentation by WellStar from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at the East Cobb Library (4880 Lower Roswell Road). A nutrition expert will be on hand providing tips on making dietary changes. The workshop is free but registration is required by calling 770-509-2730;
  • The Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center (2051 Lower Roswell Road) continues its horror movie series from 11-1 Saturday with a screening of “The Girl With All the Gifts,” a  2016 British post-apocalyptic zombie thriller directed by Colm McCarthy. It’s free and you can bring your own food and drink to the black box theater, but the film is for adults only;
  • The concert series at St. Catherine’s Episcopal Church (571 Holt Road) continues Sunday at 4 p.m. with a performance by The Summit Trio, Kennesaw State University faculty members specializing in the piano, violin and cello. The event is free but free-will donations will be accepted;
  • On Monday, school will be out and local government closed in observance of the Martin Luther King Jr. national holiday. The official Cobb County and Cobb NAACP celebration is from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. Monday at Turner Chapel AME Church (492 North Marietta Parkway), with WSB TV’s Fred Blankenship serving as emcee.

Did we miss anything? Do you have a calendar listing to share, for this weekend or beyond? Let us know! E-mail your information to: calendar@eastcobbnews.com and we’ll post it right away. Have a great weekend!

 

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Sandy Plains Softball announces free clinics as spring registration continues

As the new year dawned we posted that several East Cobb youth baseball organizations were continuing spring registration, and that’s also the case on the softball front. The Sandy Plains Softball Association has announced that it will be holding several free fundamentals clinics later this month as the sign-up period continues.Sandy Plains Softball

The dates for those fundamental clinics are from 6-7:30 p.m. on Jan. 23 (Tuesday) and Jan. 25 (Thursday) at Sandy Plains Park, 2977 Gordy Parkway (our calendar listing has more).

After those clinics is a Fun Day on Saturday, Jan. 27, from 12- 2 p.m. at the same venue, and it includes walk-up registration. Evaluations are on Sat. Feb. 3, starting at 10 a.m.

Sandy Plains Softball also is accepting applications for the Allison Beasley Scholarship, which will be awarded to one recreation league (non-travel) team girl during the spring season. The scholarship is named for a former Sandy Plains Softball Player who died at the age of 12 in a car accident in 2015.

The above link has full information to apply, including a required letter from each applicant about “what softball means to me,” and where to send that and the forms. The deadline is March 10 and the winner will be announced shortly after that. The selected girl will wear  jersey No. 10, the same number Beasley wore, in her honor during the season.

Opening Day is March 17.

Online registration for Terrell Mill Girls Softball starts on Saturday and continues through Feb. 25. We’ll post more information about that as we get it.

If you have youth sports news to share, we’ll be glad to post it. This can include photos, awards, registration information, as well as calendar and event listings. Please e-mail: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

 

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Keep Cobb Beautiful recycling grant to expand list of plastics in pilot project

Thanks to a $50,000 grant, selected Cobb County residents will soon be able to recycle some plastic items that now get sent to landfills. Keep Cobb Beautiful

The Hefty EnergyBag program will allow Keep Cobb Beautiful, an agency of Cobb County government, to divert currently non-recyclable plastics—including a variety of basic household items—for recycling.

The grant, awarded by Keep America Beautiful and Dow Packaging and Specialty Plastics, was announced last week, and implementation details are still to come, including a timeline for the start of the program. Cobb County and Boise, Idaho were selected as local governments to receive the grant funding.

KCB will purchase orange Hefty EnergyBags that will be distributed to households participating in the pilot project. Plastics that are now commonly thrown out with general trash—such as chip bags, juice pouches, frozen vegetable bags, pet food bags, candy wrappers and utensils—will be collected in the bags and set aside for curbside pickup with regular trash bags.

Instead of being sent to a landfill, however, the orange bags will be delivered to a WestRock materials facility in Marietta, and recycled plastic items will be converted into renewable energy resources. Other participants in the Cobb program include the hauling company American Disposal and other local groups to be announced later.

The Hefty EnergyBag program was launched by Dow in 2014 and the first full-scale program got underway in Omaha in 2016.

“Keep Cobb Beautiful Inc. is excited about this innovative program and is looking forward to bringing plastic recovery options and technology to Cobb County residents,” Kimberly White, executive director for Keep Cobb Beautiful, said in a statement.

 

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Reminder: East Cobb Senior Center town hall meeting on senior fees is Friday

East Cobb Senior Center

A couple weeks ago we posted the notice that the East Cobb Senior Center is the first venue for several town hall meetings this month on proposed fee increases for senior services in Cobb County.

That first town hall is coming up Friday, from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., and will be hosted by Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce.

The East Cobb Senior Center is located at 3332 Sandy Plains Road, and the town hall meeting is free and open to the public.

Cobb commissioners have approved imposing an annual membership fee for seniors for the first time, at a charge of $60. The non-resident fee is $90, but at a commission meeting in November, a number of seniors, including some who regularly use the East Cobb Senior Center, strongly objected.

Boyce said he wants to collect further feedback before the fee changes, which also would cover spring classes and offerings, go into effect Feb. 1.

 

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I-75 south ramp to South Marietta Parkway closed overnights through Saturday morning

I-75 ramp at South Marietta Parkway

The Georgia Department of Transportation has announced that the I-75 south ramp to South Marietta Parkway will be closed overnight, starting tonight, and for the next two nights, as part of the Northwest Corridor Project.

The closures will begin at 9 p.m. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday and the ramp will reopen on Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 5 a.m.

The map above, provided by Georgia DOT, shows the detour while the ramp is closed. Here are more details from the agency’s release today:

I-75 southbound motorists traveling to South Marietta Parkway will be directed to remain on I-75 and take Exit 261 for Delk Road and turn right. Motorists will then turn right onto Cobb Parkway to resume travel.

ADVISORY: Dates may change due to weather or other factors. Motorists are advised to expect delays, exercise caution, and reduce their speed while traveling through work zones. Before heading out, get real-time information on work status and traffic conditions. Call 511, visit 511ga.org, or download the Georgia 511 app. 
 
Please visit the project website at http://www.dot.ga.gov/DS/GEL/NWC to stay informed, or email northwestcorridor@dot.ga.gov to subscribe to weekly traffic alerts.

 

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East Cobb restaurant update: Ming’s Asian Kitchen has opened on Lower Roswell Road

Ming's Asian Kitchen Opens, East Cobb restaurants

As we noted back in November, a new restaurant was preparing to occupy the space of the former Niecy’s Cafe on Lower Roswell Road, in front of the Stonewood Village Shopping Center. The family-run Ming’s Asian Kitchen has opened for business.

Monday was opening day, bad weather and all.

The owner is a former partner of Hunan Gourmet, which was open in Sandy Springs for 25 years until closing in late November.

Ming’s Asian Kitchen’s menu features Chinese, Korean, Thai, Vietnamese and Indonesian fare, and in addition to entrees serves soups, wraps, noodle dishes, ramen and fried rice items.

They’ve posted a menu on their Facebook page. There’s outdoor seating and a takeout menu. Dessert is limited to Greenwood’s Ice Cream and there is no alcoholic beverage service for now.

Ming’s is open for lunch Monday-Saturday from 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. and for dinner from 4:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Sunday is dinner only, from 4:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.

The address is 4665 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 101, and the phone number is 770-693-9452.

 

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Cobb Schools Foundation Casino Night fundraiser to be held at SunTrust Park

Cobb Schools Foundation Casino Night

Before the holidays we posted about East Cobb teachers receiving grants from the Cobb Schools Foundation to continue classroom innovations and programming.

It’s one of the main projects of the non-profit foundation, which raises private funds to assist the Cobb County School District.

Next Saturday, Jan. 20, the foundation is holding a major fundraiser at SunTrust Park with a “Casino Night” theme, and tickets are still available, as well as sponsorships.

The event lasts from 7-11 p.m., and the attire is black tie optional.

Individual tickets cost $150, and sponsorships run between $1,000 and $10,000. To sign up, click here.

For information call 770-426-3390 or email natalie.rutledge@cobbschoolsfoundation.org.

 

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A spring-like twist to the winter weather in East Cobb

East Cobb weather

From a winter weather advisory one day to mid-60-degree temperatures the next? That’s how this week started out in East Cobb and around metro Atlanta.

The warming trend is expected to continue through the rest of the week, with highs edging into the low 60s through Friday, according to the National Weather Service.

But chilly weather will be back for the weekend, with highs Saturday and Sunday expected to be only in the high 30s.

Lows will dip into the 20s on those nights, and for next week, temperatures are not forecast to get higher than the low 40s. Low temperatures below freezing are also expected.

By next weekend, it may start to get warmer, into the 50s.

But it’s still winter, which means it can often feel a little like spring, fall and winter, sometimes in the span of one week.

 

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Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center hailed as ‘the library of the future’

Sewell Mill Library
Elected officials, appointees and Cobb library and parks and recreation staff officially christen the new Sewell Mill facility. (East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

Tuesday’s ribbon-cutting at the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center came a month after the multi-use facility opened on Lower Roswell Road, next to where its predecessor, the East Marietta Library, once stood for nearly 50 years.

Pieces of the old building were distributed to the dozens of guests and dignitaries who crowded the new facility’s black box theater for presentations, and the honorary ribbon-cutting that followed.

As the long history of the venerable East Marietta building was recounted by several speakers, the vision for what’s replacing it was spelled out in excited detail.

Related coverage

With more than 28,000 square feet, the Sewell Mill branch easily dwarfs East Marietta, which opened with 8,600 square feet in 1967.

But it’s the scope of the offerings at the new facility, and its joint association between the Cobb library and parks and recreation departments, that is novel, reflecting what Cobb commissioner Bob Ott described as the “phenomenal” vision of the staffers who saw the project through over several years.

“This truly is the library of the future,” said Julie Walker, the state librarian of Georgia.

In addition to traditional library space, the Sewell Mill branch includes the black box theater, an outdoor amphitheater and cultural “maker” space with digital audio and video recording equipment.

The theater offers regular film screenings and concerts will be a regular part of the schedule. There’s also a teen room and space for writers and filmmakers meet-ups, and classes in digital photography, podcasting, comics, art and music appreciation.

The entire Cobb Board of Commissioners, State Rep. Sharon Cooper, State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick, former Cobb County Manager Dave Hankerson and appointees to the Cobb library and recreation boards were present for the event, which also included a special presentation to longtime Cobb Library Foundation board members Carol and Jim Ney.

For their financial support, the Neys were honored by having the Sewell Mill branch’s art gallery named after them, as well as an outdoor patio that adjoins the main reading room.

Sewell Mill Library
Jim and Carol Ney honored by Cobb commissioners before the ribbon-cutting.

Cobb commission chairman Mike Boyce and his wife, Judy, also had a study room named in their honor. Boyce said they made a $5,000 donation, but to him, “it was self-evident” to support such a project.

“People are going to have to come see this to appreciate the benefits,” said Boyce. In his ribbon-cutting remarks, he said that “we have gone to great lengths to create a library that I am convinced is revolutionary.”

But its evolution has been a long one, primarily for financial reasons.

The Sewell Mill Library cost $10.6 million to build, with all but $2 million coming out of SPLOST funding (the rest came from state sources). Ott, who was first elected in 2008, said discussions about replacing the East Marietta Library predated his time on the commission.

He recalls hearing his District 2 predecessor, the late Joe Lee Thompson, say to him that a new library was inevitable. “Every year, he told me to be patient,” Ott said. “It’s coming. I don’t know if he thought it would be like this.”

Those plans were put on hold in the wake of the recession. Last fall, as commissioners were haggling over budget details, they temporarily delayed full funding of the Sewell Mill branch, which has additional staff positions.

Commissioner JoAnn Birrell of District 3 in Northeast Cobb also touched off a controversy by suggesting closure of the East Cobb Library due to the expanded Sewell Mill services.

Those positions were funded and the Sewell Mill library opened on Dec. 4. But as a new year beckons, commissioners are facing a projected $30 million shortfall for fiscal 2019. Soon, department heads will be asked to bring forth proposed budget cuts, and libraries and parks are certain to be among them.

What about those who may regard the Sewell Mill concept as an extravagance?

“Only if you consider your children and grandchildren as an extravagance,” said Boyce, who’s beginning his second year in office.

He noted that while those of an older generation may envision libraries in a more traditional, print-focused way, the multi-platform educational, intellectual and cultural options for younger people need to be accommodated.

“This is not the old library,” Boyce said.

The Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center has the same address (2051 Lower Roswell Road) and the same hours as the former East Marietta Library:

  • Monday-Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.;
  • Thursday-Friday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.;
  • Saturday, 1-6 p.m.;
  • Closed Sunday.

 

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Post Oak Tritt-Hembree Road intersection project takes first step

Post Oak Tritt-Hembree Road intersection project
Cobb DOT rendering

The Cobb Board of Commissioners on Tuesday approved spending $13,865 for preliminary engineering work and utility relocation in advance of the Post Oak Tritt-Hembree Road intersection project, which could feature the construction of a roundabout.

The $2.2 million project (here’s the brochure) is included in the Cobb Government 2016 SPLOST. Other aspects of the project include additional street lighting and sidewalk improvements.

The intersection has no traffic signals, and only a stop sign on Hembree and a left turn lane from Post Oak Tritt eastbound onto Hembree offer traffic control.

“This has been a long time coming,” Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell said, noting the intersection’s proximity to Pope High School, further north on Hembree Road, where a roundabout was completed just before the start of the current school year.

The Post Oak Tritt-Hembree Road intersection project is expected to get underway this spring, with an expected completion date in mid-2019.

 

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East Cobb Biz Notes: Hollywood Feed opening soon; Café 33 closes; business assocations kick off new year

Hollywood Feed Woodlawn Square, East Cobb Biz Notes

Coming soon to Woodlawn Square Shopping Center (1205 Johnson Ferry Road): Hollywood Feed, a natural pet food and supply store chain that’s growing in metro Atlanta.

They’re hiring for the East Cobb location, as well as several others in the region. Based in Memphis, Hollywood Feed operates in eight states in the South, and currently has eight stores in Georgia.

The new Hollywood Feed store at Woodlawn Square will take up suites 119 and 121, in space formerly occupied by the Sweet Spirit Christian bookstore.

Café 33 closes in Sprayberry area

In case you missed the story we posted over the weekend: Café 33, a family-homestyle restaurant operated near Sprayberry High School by former Yellow Jackets football player and Shane Clements, closed on New Year’s Eve.

The restaurant specialized in breakfast and lunch fare and also added a dinner menu, but cited a drop in foot traffic and landlord issues for shutting after more than six years.

New venue for ECBA luncheons

The East Cobb Business Association‘s monthly luncheons are moving to the Olde Towne Athletic Club (4950 Olde Towne Parkway) after several years at the Indian Hills Country Club.

The ECBA kicks off its 2018 luncheon slate next Tuesday, Jan. 16, with Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce as the featured speaker. The event lasts from 11-1, starting with networking and the luncheon session starting at 11:30 a.m.

On Jan. 30, Cobb Police Precinct 4 Major Jerry Quan is the guest at the ECBA’s quarterly breakfast at J. Christopher’s East Lake (2100 Roswell Road) from 7:30-8:30 a.m.

The Northeast Cobb Business Association holds its monthly luncheon next Wednesday, Jan. 17, at its usual spot, the Piedmont Church (570 Piedmont Road), from 11:30-1. The guest speaker is Ryan Blythe from the Georgia Trade School in Acworth.

Business women who lunch

The next East Cobb Business Women Networking Lunch is scheduled for next Wednesday, Jan. 17, at Paradise Grille, in the Highland Plaza Shopping Center (3605 Sandy Plains Road) from 11:30-1. The cost to attend is free, you just pay for your own food, bring business cards and network in a supportive environment.

The host is Resonate Marketing, a female-run agency. Luncheons are the third Wednesday of the month.

 

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