Kettle Krush 5K becomes virtual Race in Place broadcast

Kettle Krush 5K

Submitted information:

Due to current coronavirus shelter-in-place restrictions, the Salvation Army Women’s Auxiliary has revised plans for its annual Kettle Krush 5K walk/run fundraiser so the race can go on – just in a different format. 

The event will now be a Race in Place awards event broadcast on Facebook Live (www.Facebook.com/KKAtlanta5K) on May 16 at 9 a.m. that can be viewed from the comfort of everyone’s own homes, according to east Cobb resident Cindy Theiler, the auxiliary’s president and event co-chair. “We decided not to postpone or cancel the event because The Salvation Army needs our financial support more than ever now – particularly during this COVID-19 crisis – to help “krush” poverty, homelessness, and sex trafficking, and support veterans and youth enrichment in the metro Atlanta area, including in Cobb County. 

“Any participant can now win the top race awards in our awards drawing because no running or walking is required,” said Dawn Menear, east Cobb resident and event co-chair. “We will still promote individual and team participation and have a drawing for top male and female runners and top male and female masters runners as well as 16 age groups from 10 & under to 80 & over.” 

In addition, drawings for special giveaways and team awards for the top 2 teams that have the most participants registered (minimum 10) will be provided. Alicia Roberts, CBS46 news anchor, will emcee the event once again this year.

Registration is available at ItsYourRace.com; $30 per participant if received by May 6 and $35 through May 14. Donations can also be made by check payable to The Salvation Army Women’s Auxiliary with “Kettle Krush” on the bottom “for” line of the check and mailed to Kettle Krush c/o Salvation Army, 1000 Center Place, Norcross, GA, 30093. 

The auxiliary, that includes about 40 east Cobb women, annually coordinates the Kettle Krush 5K. Mt. Bethel UMC is the title sponsor for this year’s event. 

Anyone is invited to tune into the broadcast, which will feature the awards drawing for race awards and giveaways as well as information about The Salvation Army’s initiatives, including during COVID-19. 

If you have any questions about Kettle Krush Race in Place, please contact Menear at dgmenear@gmail.com or Theiler at cindy.theiler1@gmail.com

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Center for Family Resources gets COVID-19 emergency funding

Submitted information:Center for Family Resources

The Center for Family Resources (CFR) announced today that it has received funding to provide emergency financial assistance for Cobb County families, including assistance with rent, mortgage and utility payments to ensure housing stability. The CFR is providing access to basic needs for families who currently fall below 200% of the Federal Poverty guidelines. Funding has been provided through grants from Cobb Community Foundation through the Cobb COVID-19 Response Fund, Cobb EMC Foundation, and the Greater Atlanta COVID-19 Recovery and Response Fund.

“Stabilizing families and providing a safety net during challenging times ties directly into our mission,” says Lee Freeman-Smith, Vice President of Operations for the CFR. “This critical funding will immediately impact families in critical need of services throughout Cobb County. With more than 22 million Americans filing for unemployment and lower wage earners disproportionately impacted, the need for financial assistance will be tremendous,” she continued.

Currently, the CFR has over $170,000 in financial assistance available. However, it anticipates the requests for assistance are easily triple that amount. Many of those impacted were already living on a limited income, and any reduction to hours and pay can cause a huge disruption to a family’s budget. The CFR serves over 12,000 people a year and helps more than 700 families with housing and rent assistance. In the past two weeks, they have received over 160 calls for assistance related to COVID-19. Those calls are in addition to the inquiries from individuals who were already in need of services prior to the pandemic.

Melanie Kagan, CEO at the CFR, adds, “Keeping families stably-housed and with access to basic needs is imperative. Our goal is to help families stay as current as possible with rent and mortgage payments. What we don’t want is for these families to be 2-4 months behind in paying these expenses, and have no way of climbing out of that hole. The financial impacts on our community and many others are going to be severe.”

For people seeking assistance, contact the CFR at (770) 428-2601. All inquiries are being taken over the phone, and the agency is not open to walk-ins in an effort to maintain a safe environment for staff and clients. Anyone who would like to donate to the emergency assistance fund at the CFR can make their tax-deductible donation at www.thecfr.org/give

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East Cobb’s Meadowgrove Club to hold MUST food drive

Meadowgrove Club food drive

Thanks to Kirsten “KT” McClellan for the above photo and details about a food drive at the  Meadowgrove Club this weekend to help MUST Ministries feed the needy during the Coronavirus crisis.

The dates are Saturday and Sunday, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day in the club parking lot at 2850 Meadow Grove Way.

That’s in the Grove Meade neighborhood, located off Terrell Mill Road near East Cobb Middle School and Brumby Elementary School.

Kirsten says they’re accepting dry canned and food donations with social distancing and disinfecting protocols in place.

Here’s the list of items they’re collection to be turned over to MUST Ministries, which is continuing its Food Rapid Response drive that began in March with school and business closings.

Also on the first link is a traffic flow map to follow for a safe and expedient collection process.

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Contact us at the same e-mail address for news about efforts to assist those in need, health care workers, first responders and others on the frontlines of combatting Coronavirus in East Cobb.

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Walton student aims to ‘do more’ with homeless non-profit

Walton student homeless non-profit
Walton student Emory Paul (center) delivers daily living supplies to homeless people in Woodruff Park in downtown Atlanta. Photos courtesy of Soul Supplies

During his sophomore year a year ago at Walton High School, Emory Paul was a teenager with a mission to play a role helping homeless people in downtown Atlanta.

He started an organization called Soul Supplies to provide individuals with backpacks of toiletries, hygiene products and other daily living essentials.

Paul and a few others would travel to Woodruff Park and drop off those supplies. Along the way, he said he learned more about those who live on the streets but who remain largely invivisible.

“We want to humanize people,” Paul said. “They become homeless in many ways. Many of them have just fallen on hard times. We shake their hands, ask their names, try to get to know them.”

As a result, he estimates that he and Soul Supplies volunteers have helped more than 150 people, delivering 3,000 items that have been collected through donations, from more than 200 donors thus far.

Soul Supplies
Items collected by Soul Supplies to be distributed in backpacks.

“I’m excited with what we’ve done on a small scale,” Paul said, who got Soul Supplies started through the Giving Point Social Innovators Academy.

As his junior year comes to a close, Paul has been planning the next phase of his project. He just completed paperwork and other tasks to make Soul Supplies a non-profit, enabling it to partner with other organizations and businesses.

“I’ve always had a passion for helping the homeless,” he said. “I want to do more, but I just didn’t know how.”

Each backpack is filled with around $40-$50 in supplies—among other things soap, deodorant, brushes, handwipes, socks, lotion, non-perishable snacks, toothbrushes and toothpaste and water bottles.

Before heading to Woodruff Park, Paul said he researched where the need for such provisions would make sense. Some of those he meets do go to shelters on occasion, but the supplies are designed to be used wherever someone may spend time.

Soul Supplies is accepting donations of items for the backpacks—including the backpacks—as well as financial donations.

He said they’ll be glad to pick up items at your curbside, given the Coronavirus social distancing guidelines.

More information on getting involved can be found here, and a temporary PayPal link can be found here while Soul Supplies awaits its business account.

He’s also gotten involved with an organization called Atlanta Survival Program, which is helping provide food supplies for those affected by COVID-19.

Paul said this year he’d like to reach 1,000 people through Soul Supplies. “The sky’s the limit,” he said, because the need remains significant.

Soul Supplies

 

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Deadline nears for B’nai Brith Enlighten America Essay Contest

B'nai Brith Enlighten America essay contest

Submitted information from the Achim/Gate City Lodge Atlanta chapter of B’nai Brith International:

Enlighten America, our annual Essay Contest for 7th thru 9th-grade students encourages respect and tolerance of our friends’ and neighbors’ diverse religious beliefs and racial/cultural backgrounds. Learn how to enter this contest by reading this document. All entries must be received by Friday, April 10, 2020. Winners will be announced in mid-May, 2020. 

Winners in each grade category will receive the prizes listed below: 

  • First-place winners will be awarded $350. 
  • Second-place winners will be awarded $250. 
  • Third-place winners will be awarded $150. 

The Enlighten America Essay Contest serves as a framework or “model of instruction” designed to support teachers in the implementation of the Reading and Writing Standards for Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects Grades 6-8, Grades 9 and the English Language Arts (ELA) Georgia Standards of Excellence (GSE) (see pages 19 -25 for specific standards) for 7th grade, 8th grade, and 9th grade in the following writing skill areas: 

  • Text Types and Purposes 
  • Production and Distribution of Writing 
  • Research to Build and Present Knowledge 
  • Range of Writing 

We hope that schools, teachers, and students will benefit through the Enlighten America Essay Contest as a teaching and learning activity to promote student success as it relates to the Georgia Performance Standards. 

 

You can get more details by clicking there; the organization also is noting that the awards ceremony has been rescheduled to Aug. 30 due to the Coronavirus.

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Cobb community service organizations continue COVID outreach

We noted previously that the Cobb Community Foundation has begun a Community Response Fund that’s raising funds and issuing grants to a number of community service organizations specifically dealing with the effects of the Coronavirus crisis for vulnerable populations.

They’re also letting donors know that many of those organizations can receive direct support, including the delivery of health care services:Center for Family Resources

For food, especially students who are now out of school for the rest of the year:

Financial assistance for low-income families and individuals:

And for cancer patients and the elderly who are among the more vulnerable groups to contract the virus:

For those dealing with domestic violence and abuse:

And organizations treating those with addictions and who are in recovery:

The Center for Family Resources has received a $10,000 charitable grant to support the financial needs of families impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

It’s part of a larger effort by CFR, now in its 60th year, which has launched a 60 in 60 program to raise $60,000 in 60 days to provide emergency financial assistance.

More about those non-profits and what they do at the Cobb Community Connection.

Also getting $10,000 grants from the CCF are the Cobb Schools Foundation, which has identified 1,000 students and families needing digital devices for distance learning at home, and Ser Familia, that works with the Latino community.

MUST Ministries is continuing its Food Rapid Response initiative to help feed those in need, including students who depend on school-provided breakfast and lunch. Also pitching in that effort are two large East Cobb congregations, Johnson Ferry Baptist Church and Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church.

Some more resources, provided in the bullet points below by the office of Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell:

  • Cobb Senior Services is working hard to help its at-risk clients. As the COVID-19 outbreak continues for the unforeseen future, the list of needed donations has been updated to include toiletries. These seniors have no family or other community support to help them get the necessary items. To view the listed of donation suggestions, click here. Please call Merline Tippens at 770-528-5355 with questions and to make arrangements for your delivery to the Senior Services administrative offices at 1150 Powder Springs St, Marietta.
  • Cobb County Community Services Board (CCCSB), Behavioral Health Crisis Center (BHCC), located at 1758 County Services Parkway, is open 24 hours a day, seven days a week for those experiencing a behavioral health crisis. For more information about Cobb County Community Services Board, please visit www.cobbcsb.com.

Any organizations delivering meals or otherwise providing food should contact Cobb Community Foundation at 770-859-2366 or email CCFTeam@cobbfoundation.org.

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East Cobb Quilters’ Guild donates placemats for Meals on Wheels

East Cobb Quilters' Guild
Pictured from left to right: Pat Smith, East Cobb Quilters’ Guild Community Service Committee, Kristie Naylor, Volunteer Services Coordinator, Cobb County Senior Services, and Lynda Bussolar, East Cobb Quilters’ Guild Community Service Committee member .

Submitted information and photo:

East Cobb Quilters’ Guild has a long history of community service. Members give freely of their time and energy to create great quilts and other items for donation to area charities, including Meals on Wheels. This past year, the East Cobb Quilters’ Guild donated 597 placemats to Meals on Wheels.

March for Meals on Wheels is a nationwide month-long celebration of Meals on Wheels and the millions of seniors who rely on the nutritious meals, friendly visits and safety checks to remain independent at home.

Hundreds of older adults and disabled individuals are served by the Cobb County Meals on Wheels Program staffed by volunteer drivers. Lunch is a lot more fun with a pretty placemat, especially with all of the beautiful designs.  

An additional note: The group delivered 76 placemats in January, 32 in February and 108 total thus far in 2020.

More on the East Cobb Quilters’ Guild can be found here.

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Let us know what you, your neighbors or others you know are doing to help one another and those in need in East Cobb.

Just e-mail us: editor@eastcobbnews.com with text, photos and other relevant information, and we’ll share it with the community.

 

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NW Metro Atlanta Habitat for Humanity donates N95 masks

NW Atlanta Metro Habitat N94 masks

Submitted information and photo:

NW Metro Atlanta Habitat for Humanity found a pallet of more than 1,000 N95 masks used in Habitat house construction in the affiliates’  Smyrna warehouse. Today, they were able to donate and deliver them to Cobb & Douglas Public Health today to help with their shortages!
Pictured is Bonnie Willis, from the affiliate’s construction team.

Send us your news!

Let us know what you, your neighbors or others you know are doing to help one another and those in need as part of the Coronavirus response.

Just e-mail us: editor@eastcobbnews.com with text, photos and other relevant information, and we’ll share it with the community.

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Food drive update: Piedmont Church; Lassiter PTSA; Senior Services

Food drive, Piedmont Church

We’ve noted the student meal services being provided by the Cobb County School District and MUST Ministries, as well as a joint food drive by Mt. Bethel UMC and Johnson Ferry Baptist Church that is ongoing.

MUST reports than in three days its Food Rapid Response served family food boxes to more than 3,500 families.

A few other food drive efforts—including one related to MUST—are noted below. If you know of any other food drive activities going on, let us know and we’ll pass it along. E-mail us: editor@eastcobbnews.com and we’ll share it with the community.

On Tuesday afternoons, you can help MUST Ministries with its Food Rapid Response program. Donations can be dropped off between 3-7 p.m. at Piedmont Church (570 Piedmont Road).

As the flyer notes above, this is a joint project with the church as well as the Sprayberry PTSA and the Sprayberry Foundation, and they’ve listed the foods (all non-perishable) that are most needed, as well as where to drop off your donations.

Food pickup is also at the Piedmont Church between 4-6 p.m. Wednesday.

Lassiter Food Pantry

The Lassiter PTSA says its food bank is empty, and it’s one that serves around 60 families in its cluster—including Davis, Garrison Mill and Rocky Mount elementaries and Mabry Middle School.

They’re asking that anyone who wants to donate food drop those items on the porch at 2124 Lassiter Field Drive—it’s a weekly collection for now. The link to make a donation can be found here.

For questions contact Tammy Andress or Shannon Frank at lassiterptsa@gmail.com.

Cobb Senior Services

The Cobb Senior Services agency also is collecting food. If you want to make a donation, you’re asked to call Merline Tippens at 770-528-5355 to to arrange a delivery. 

They need “shelf stable foods” than can be heated in a microwave or not at all, and include but are not limited to the following:

  • Peanut butter, instant oatmeal/grits, dried fruit, chewy granola bars, breakfast bars, applesauce/fruit cocktail, juice boxes, cereal-small, individual boxes, shelf stable milk, chicken/tuna/other canned meats, microwave rice, crackers, canned Soup, canned vegetables, fruit cups, canned fruit, macaroni and cheese cups, dried mashed potatoes (flakes), Spaghetti-Os/ Ravioli.

Also: 

  • Toilet paper, Baby wipes, travel-size toiletries (soap, shampoo, etc)

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Cobb Community Foundation launches COVID-19 response fund

Cobb Community Foundation response fund

Submitted information:

Cobb Community Foundation (CCF), today announced it is establishing the Cobb COVID-19 Community Response Fund. This charitable fund will provide flexible resources to non-profit organizations serving Cobb and meeting critical needs either arising from or exacerbated by the novel coronavirus. According to President and CEO, Shari Martin, the organization’s previous focus on fundraising for Cobb Community Opportunity Grants, inspired by the results of last year’s Cobb Human Services Needs Assessment commissioned by CCF, is taking a back seat to the current crisis.

“We are all in unchartered territory. We don’t know what’s ahead, but we know that as a community foundation, it’s our role to build and deploy resources to help our community get through this relatively unscathed, or at least as unscathed as possible,” she says.  CCF has shared on its blog, throughout social media, and in its newsletter information about many of the organizations that are at the forefront of caring for Cobb’s most vulnerable populations in the midst of COVID-19. Martin says, “For many in our community, those and many other organizations are that domino that keeps all of the others from falling, and because more of our community will need their help, now more than ever, these organizations will need our help.”

Board member, Kim Gresh, agrees. “There’s no doubt that this is the right thing to do.”  Gresh, owner of S.A. White Oil Company, First Vice Chair of the Foundation’s board and chair of the organization’s Events Committee, says that the Foundation has decided to cancel this year’s Partners in Philanthropy event, opting instead to focus the budgeted money where it will be most needed. “In the environment we are in, it just makes more sense to use that money to help the organizations that are out there helping people in our community stay afloat.” Martin agrees. “The grant checks are much more important to grant recipients than the fanfare.”

Al Martin, Regional External Affairs Manager for Georgia Power Company, serves on the board of Cobb Community Foundation and also chairs its Grants and Scholarships Committee. “Anyone can give to this Fund and know that, other than credit card fees which don’t come to us, 100% of their contribution will be distributed to non-profits meeting critical needs.” According to Mr. Martin, the process to receive a grant is going to be quick and painless. “These organizations have enough to take care of without having to fill out some long application.”

In addition to offering an opportunity to contribute to the Fund, CCF is also urging its own donors to look for opportunities to support local nonprofits currently addressing critical needs, organizations such as Sweetwater Mission, MUST Ministries, Center for Family Resources, Good Samaritan Health Center of Cobb, The Zone, and others, by making direct contributions. General contributions provide the greatest amount of flexibility for non-profits, which is particularly important at a time when needs are rapidly changing.

“Non-profits are not only dealing with more clients with more needs, they are also having to deal with postponed events,” Shari Martin says. “They are having to handle more with much less. The Cobb COVID-19 Response Fund will help to replace those lost revenues, and then some.”

Details on how nonprofits might request and access general operating resources from the Cobb COVID-19 Community Response Fund will be announced in the coming days. For more information and to donate, go to cobbfoundation.org.

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Cobb schools to provide student meals for rest of school year

New East Cobb Middle School

Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale announced Thursday that the Cobb County School District is working with MUST Ministries to provide breakfasts and lunches to any students who need them for the rest of the school year.

During a teleconferenced school board work session, Ragsdale said that students may pick up a week’s worth of those meals each Monday, starting this coming Monday, March 23, at one of eight schools in the district, including East Cobb Middle School.

Only the student will be provided the food, and each student must be present to receive the meals. Ragsdale said students will not have to show their IDs.

The meals will be prepared by the school district’s food services staff, and MUST Ministries volunteers will deliver the food boxes on a drive-through basis in front of the school buildings.

The pickup times are from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday at the following locations:

  • Acworth Elementary School (4220 Cantrell Road, Acworth)
  • Bryant Elementary School (6800 Factory Shoals Road, Mableton)
  • Campbell HS (5265 Ward Street, Smyrna)
  • Compton Elementary School (3450 New Macland Road, Powder Springs)
  • East Cobb Middle School (825 Terrell Mill Road, Marietta)
  • Garrett Middle School (5235 Austell-Powder Springs Road, Austell)
  • Osborne High (2451 Favor Road, Marietta)
  • Riverside Intermediate School (285 South Gordon Road, Mableton)

Those schools have more than 50 percent of their students receiving reduced or free lunches.

Future pickups will continue to take place each Monday at those same locations and during those same hours.

Cobb and other public school districts and universities in Georgia are closed until March 31 at the order of Gov. Brian Kemp.

During Thursday’s work session, there was no discussion about how long the closures may last beyond that.

But Cobb school officials are clearly preparing for it to be much longer.

Later Thursday the school board was being asked to spend $3.4 million from the general fund to pay after-school program and nutritional workers and substitute teachers through the end of May, when the Cobb academic year ends.

As for the upcoming student meal provisions, Ragsdale said Cobb schools food service workers will be in kitchens with 10 or fewer people, per CDC guidelines on social distancing. MUST volunteers will pick up the food at the cafeteria doors, then provide them to students curbside.

Volunteers for the school meal program are needed, and you can sign up here on the MUST Ministries website.

The food service program is a continuation of a partnership between Cobb schools and MUST Ministries, which have set up times for special family food boxes to be picked this week at several locations.

That food comes from 29 school pantries, which were open starting Wednesday.

On Friday, those needing food may come by the following locations in East Cobb between 10 a.m. and 12 p.m.:

  • Brumby ES (815 Terrell Mill Road);
  • Lassiter HS (2601 Shallowford Road);
  • McCleskey MS (4080 Maybreeze Road);
  • Sprayberry HS (2525 Sandy Plains Road);
  • Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church (4385 Lower Roswell Road).

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Johnson Ferry Baptist, Mt. Bethel UMC team up for food drive

With numerous organizations mobilizing to feed needy families during the Coronavirus shutdowns, two large East Cobb churches are joining forces to help out.Johnson Ferry Mt. Bethel food drive

Johnson Ferry Baptist Church and Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church are partnering for a food drive.

Both churches sent out messages today that they’ll begin taking collections starting Wednesday through April 1 (weekdays only) to be distributed to MUST Ministries and Mosaic Church Marietta.

MUST has begun an emergency food drive and will be opening up several food pantries at schools this week (Brumby ES, Lassiter HS, McCleskey MS, Lassiter HS), and and other locations, including Mt. Bethel UMC.

Mosiac is a church and community resource center in Austell that has partnered with Johnson Ferry Baptist on previous ministry projects.

The initiative includes volunteer opportunities to pack and distribute food boxes with Mosiac (you can sign up here).

The collection times for the Johnson Ferry-Mt. Bethel food drive are from 9-5 Monday-Friday, through Friday, April 1. Food items can be dropped off at the portico entrance of Johnson Ferry Baptist (955 Johnson Ferry Road).

Here’s a list of the food items (non-perishable only) they’ll be needing:

  • Boxed macaroni and cheese
  • Dried pasta or rice
  • Boxed potatoes
  • Boxed cereal/oatmeal
  • Jelly (plastic jars)
  • Cornbread mix/meal
  • Beans
  • Small peanut butter
  • Flour/sugar
  • Canned pasta with meat sauce
  • Canned meat (tuna/chicken)
  • Canned Chunky soup/beef stew
  • Canned condensed soup
  • Canned vegetables
  • Canned fruit
  • Canned tomato products
  • Ramen noodles
  • Crackers
  • Tea/coffee

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Cobb Schools and MUST Ministries to open food pantries

New Brumby Elementary School

A total of 29 pantries will open as early as Wednesday at Cobb County School District and other locations, as part of the MUST Ministries Food Rapid Response Program.

That program was put together when the schools closed over the Coronavirus outbreak; CCSD also made food donations to MUST to help get it started.

(MUST and CCSD have been teaming up to open food pantries at a number of schools, including at Brumby Elementary School, which opened in late 2018.)

Since schools will be closed at least through March 31 (per an order issued Monday by Gov. Brian Kemp), this is going to be a long-haul effort, and here’s how the pantry schedule will start out.

In East Cobb, pantries will open on Friday from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. at the following locations:

  • Brumby ES (815 Terrell Mill Road);
  • Lassiter HS (2601 Shallowford Road);
  • McCleskey MS (4080 Maybreeze Road);
  • Sprayberry HS (2525 Sandy Plains Road);
  • Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church (4385 Lower Roswell Road).

The full list can be found here.

Rev. Ike Reighard of Piedmont Church, also the CEO of MUST Minstries, said that “we are grateful to have access to the food in our 29 Cobb County Schools pantries and be able to establish a base for distribution. Hungry families from throughout the county – even if their students attend a school without a pantry – will be welcomed to pick up a food box to last about two weeks.”

He said the food boxes will feed a family for two weeks, and that boxes also can be picked up Friday 10-2 at MUST locations at 1407 Cobb Parkway North in Marietta and 460 Pat Mell Road in Smyrna.

If you’re interested in volunteering for this effort, you can sign up here. If you want to donate financially to MUST, you can do so here.

The Piedmont Church (570 Piedmont Road) also is accepting food donations on Tuesdays, between 3-7 p.m.

The needs are snacks, pasta, cereal, bread, peanut butter, jelly, rice, canned vegetables, oatmeal, spaghetti sauce, water and other non-perishable foods.

The public can bring food boxes from 9-5 Tuesday-Saturday at the MUST Donation Center (1280 Cobb Parkway North), and below is a list of what’s needed the most:

MUST Food Rapid Response

A couple other things passed along by Cobb schools as part of this effort. Its non-profit partner, the Cobb Schools Foundation, is also setting up to help families in need during this period of “social distancing.” Details can be found here.

The CCSD also has set up a page called Resources for Our Families in Need. 

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Cobb schools to make food donations to MUST during closures

MUST Ministries summer lunch program

The Cobb County School District sent out this statement Friday afternoon:

To continue to support Cobb students while schools are closed, the Cobb County School District is pleased to announce that the District is partnering with MUST Ministries to provide food to our students in need. 

By partnering with MUST Ministries, Cobb Schools will be able to extend the support to the entire family, not just those students who attend Cobb Schools.  

“We are thankful for this additional opportunity to partner with MUST Ministries. Partnering to help our Cobb families in need is truly an example of the community coming together,” said Superintendent Chris Ragsdale. “During this unprecedented time, there may be more families in need than just those who receive free and reduced lunches. By partnering with MUST, we will also be able to help those families.”  

The Cobb Schools Food and Nutrition Services kitchens are making large food donations to MUST Ministries, which MUST will use to feed Cobb families.  

“We are always honored to partner with Cobb County Schools year-round when it comes to taking care of at-risk children and their families. Currently, we serve 70 schools through 32 Cobb County school locations called MUST Neighborhood Pantries,” said Dr. Ike Reighard, President, and CEO of MUST Ministries. “With the schools closing and no access to the pantries, we have created the MUST Food Rapid Response effort to continue to meet the needs and expand to other families in need. We anticipate partnering with satellite locations to distribute family food boxes. While this is a work in progress, we hope to have locations and times settled by early next week.” 

Currently, MUST serves 1,500 families a month through Neighborhood Pantries and three main pantry locations. The MUST Food Rapid Response program will expand that reach. 

For more information about the MUST Food Rapid Response program including pick-up locations, times, and other details will be available on the MUST Ministries website next week.  

MUST has put together a list of what it’s going to need in particular while school’s out:

  • Beef stew
  • canned green beans
  • dry milk (carton)
  • pinto or baked beans
  • canned pasta
  • pasta bags
  • canned carrots
  • canned tuna
  • Chunky soup
  • canned corn
  • other beans;
  • canned potatoes
  • canned tomatoes
  • mac & cheese boxes
  • canned mixed vegetables
  • canned peaches and fruit
  • oatmeal bag/rice bag

These non-perishable food donations at 1280 Field Parkway in Marietta; you can also give financially by going to mustministries.com/give-help.

You can also buy food on the MUST list from Amazon by clicking here.

 

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East Cobb Rotary marks fundraising with Giveback Celebration

East Cobb Rotary Dog Days Run
The East Cobb Rotary Dog Days Run is the primary fundraiser for the organization, which handed out more than $80K to community groups in 2019. (ECN file)

The Rotary Club of East Cobb announced this week it surpassed its 2019 fundraising goals for nearly two dozen local charitable organizations and is having a special “Giveback Celebration” event Tuesday evening at the Piedmont Church.

The club raised more than $82,000 (the goal was $80,000), mostly through the Dog Days Run 5K race each August at the McCleskey-East Cobb Family YMCA.

The Rotary started the race in 2005, mostly by members who are running enthusiasts, and it’s grown to more than 900 runners last year.

Among the local beneficiaries and projects are:

  • Boy Scouts of America
  • Camp Kudzu
  • Camp Trach Me Away
  • Center for Family Resources
  • Cobb Library Foundation
  • Davis Direction Foundation
  • East Cobb Robotics
  • Family Promise
  • FODAC – Friends of Disabled Adults & Children
  • Georgia Care Connection Office
  • Good Samaritan Clinic of Cobb
  • Kidz 2 Leaders
  • Lekotek
  • Loving Arms Cancer Outreach
  • MDE School
  • Project Mail Call
  • Public Safety Celebration—Cobb Co. Public Safety
  • Rally Foundation
  • REAP (Reading Is Essential for All People)
  • Revved up kids
  • WellStar Community Hospice
  • McCleskey-East Cobb Family YMCA
  • AVID Wheeler High School

“Although it’s always satisfying to exceed expectations, what’s exciting is the impact this will have on the receiving organizations,” said Tammy Palmgren, East Cobb Rotary president-election and chairwoman of the Dog Day Run and the Giveback Celebration. “Seeing these connections made in real time always makes the Give Back Celebration quite an emotional experience.”

The East Cobb Rotary distributes funding after receiving applications from local organizations, and evaluation by a grant committee.

The club decided to hold its Giveback Celebration in the evening, instead of during its usual 7 a.m. Wednesday breakfast meetings at Indian Hills Country Club, due to larger crowds and to have more time to spend with the organizations it works with.

“I am hopeful everyone at the celebration will come away from the evening with a feeling of being one hundred percent appreciated and acknowledged,” Palmgren said.

 

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East Cobb, NE Cobb YMCA volunteer, teen leader to be honored

Submitted photos and information:

McCleskey-East Cobb and Northeast Cobb YMCA volunteers and teen leaders of the Year will be honored on Feb. 10 at the YMCA of Metro Atlanta’s Celebration of Community Champions: 2020 Vision event at the Cobb Galleria. Ambassador Andrew Young and Dr. Walter Young will be honored with the Bransby Christian Leadership Award.

Molly Khan YMCA volunteer
Molly Khan

McCleskey-East Cobb / Northeast Cobb Family YMCAs

Volunteer of the Year: Molly Toland Khan joined the YMCA with her family in 2012. New to Marietta, Molly found community and friendship at the Y, joining spin class and connecting with other families. She currently serves on the board and community engagement committee with the McCleskey East-Cobb / Northeast Cobb Family YMCAs

Quote about Molly from Y staff member Becky Shipley: “Molly’s time and efforts contribute to strengthening the foundation of the community. She currently serves on our board community engagement committee and oversees the success of our local school food pantry by recruiting volunteers and organizing food pick up day. Molly has grown the pantry’s outreach to serve over 50 families each month.

Quote from Molly: “My path to serve really became clear when I got more involved in our Y community programs which ensure all children have equal access to reaching their full potential. I want to be an example to my children that being a part of a community is about helping and serving others.”

Fatima Gonzalez YMCA volunteer
Fatima Gonzalez

Teen Leader of the Year: Fatima Gonzalez’ first connection with the YMCA was through youth soccer and swim lessons nine years ago. She is currently involved as the Leaders Club president. She has attended YMCA Blue Ridge Leaders School for two summers and has attended three global service leadership trips. After high school graduation, Fatima plans to attend college in Georgia so she can continue her YMCA involvement.

Quote about Fatima from Y Staff Member Rachel Singer: “Fatima embodies teen leadership and commitment to giving back to the community. She makes time to volunteer and takes the opportunity to lead by example. Fatima is someone I can easily say truly believes in the Y and has been grateful for all of the opportunities that have presented themselves because of her commitment.”

Quote from Fatima: “It is crucial to make time to be involved with the Y because it is our duty to serve our community. It is our duty as servant leaders to give back to the community that raised us and leave it better than it was before. I have found that I feel at home at any Y, even in other states or in other countries like Costa Rica or England. The Y has the ability to unite complete strangers and make them family. I don’t know of any organization that is even comparable to the work, service and impact of the YMCA.”

 

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East Cobb resident earns Cobb Chamber’s public service award

Susan Hampton, Cobb Chamber public service award
Susan Hampton with outgoing Cobb Chamber of Commerce president Mitch Rhoden. (Cobb C of C photo)

At its annual gala dinner Saturday, the Cobb Chamber of Commerce presented East Cobb resident Susan Hampton with its Mack Henderson Public Service Award, given to “someone who is outstanding in their commitment and dedication to enhancing the quality of life for the citizens of Cobb County.”

Hampton has organized the East Cobb Business Association’s appreciation events for Cobb Police Precinct 4 officers and Cobb Fire personnel, and is part of the newly formed Cobb County Public Safety Foundation.

Over the last year, she has been outspoken in favor of better pay and benefits for Cobb public safety workers.

In being presented the award Saturday, the Chamber called Hampton a “tireless advocate for Cobb’s public safety personnel. Whether it’s acting as a vocal supporter for higher wages or organizing an appreciation event for local law enforcement, this award winner devotes her volunteer efforts to the community she serves.”

Hampton also is active with the Cobb County Coalition of Business Associations, “working with the coalition’s founders and other committed volunteers continuing the legacy of Barbara Hickey, lending her hand whenever it is needed,” according to the Chamber’s presentation.

The Cobb Chamber also honored former U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson at the gala dinner. The Republican from East Cobb was presented with the Chamber’s Senator Johnny H. Isakson Leadership Award, which has been renamed in his honor.

The Chamber has dedicated the 10th floor of its new offices at 1100 Circle 75 Parkway in Isakson’s name.

Sen. Johnny Isakson, Cobb chamber
Retired U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson speaks at the Cobb Chamber gala dinner Saturday. (Cobb C of C photo)

 

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Cobb Stuff A Bus toy, food collections take place this week

Submitted graphic and information below includes details on East Cobb dropoff spots—at WellStar East Cobb Health Park Tuesday and the WellStar Administration building on Sandy Plains Road and Three 13 Salon on Canton Road on Thursday:

Cobb Christmas partners with Cobb County Department of Transportation and CobbLinc to create the county’s most unique and memorable holiday program, Stuff-A-Bus. Think of Stuff-A-Bus as the opposite of Santa’s sleigh, Santa uses his sleigh to deliver gifts and Cobb Christmas makes a CobbLinc bus our sleigh for collecting gifts.

The week prior to Cobb Christmas’ Annual Distribution, a CobbLinc bus travels through the county to Stuff-A-Bus host sites gathering donations of food and toys. Host sites can be businesses, schools and other entities that have organized toy and food drives.

This program would not be successful without the help of local businesses, schools, and other organizations that serve as host sites for Stuff-A-Bus. Volunteers at these locations organize food and toy drives and begin promoting and collecting in November. A Cobb Christmas representative schedules a date and time for the bus to make a stop at their location to collect the items which have been donated. All donations are stored and transported to IAM Local Lodge 709 —the Cobb Christmas Distribution Site-during distribution week.

Cobb Stuff a Bus

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Coach, park advocate named East Cobb Citizens of the Year

East Cobb citizens of the year
Tom Bills and Mack Cobb (center, with plaques) are joined by, from left, East Cobb Area Council president Dan Byers, Cobb Chamber CEO Sharon Mason and incoming Cobb Chamber president John Loud. (East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

The new recipients of the East Cobb Citizen of the Year award have been revealed, and a long streak of keeping the news a surprise to the winners has been maintained.

At a Tuesday morning breakfast of the East Cobb Area Council of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce, Mack Cobb wore a Pope letter sweater, with a light-blue P against a backdrop of darker blue. He was asked to speak about the youth football programs he’s been involved with for nearly 50 years.

Tom Bills was part of a special presentation about the past, present and future of East Cobb Park, as the organization’s first treasurer.

Both men did that, but as the co-citizens of the year, an honor that’s been shared only once since the award began in 1991.

“I don’t know what to say,” said Cobb, holding up papers with prepared remarks. “I came here to talk about football.”

He’s coached middle-school feeder football programs for Pope, Lassiter and Walton, as well as for the Cobb YMCA.

When asked later about why he’s coached sixth-through-eighth graders for so long, his reply was swift: “They’re kids,” Cobb said, with a spark in his eyes.

A favorite moment came during a practice when a player rushed to Cobb, put something in his hand and asked him to hold onto it. It was a bloody tooth.

“I want to put it under my pillow,” the boy told Cobb.

Mack Cobb, East Cobb Citizen of the Year
Mack Cobb poses with members of the Pope community, including head football coach Tab Griffin (back row, at right), who played for him as a middle-schooler.

One of his former players was in attendance at the event at Indian Hills Country Club. Tab Griffin, who’s been the Pope varsity coach for the past three years, said Cobb’s been one of the more influential figures in his life, far beyond football.

“He always taught you so much about non-football things,” Griffin said. “Hard work. Making good grades. Respecting others. You don’t realize how much you’ve learned from him until you’re out in the real world.”

Griffin said those life lessons came every day in practice and at games, not in any overbearing fashion, but as part of developing trusting relationships with other people. That was the strength of Cobb’s influence.

“Now that I’m a father and a coach, I try to instill them with the things that I learned from him,” Cobb said.

Tom Bill, East Cobb Citizen of the Year
Tom Bills was surprised at being named the East Cobb co-Citizen of the Year, as he is presented his plaque by 1992 recipient Johny Johnson.

Bills was an engineering consultant in private practice when he got involved with efforts nearly two decades ago to buy land to purchase what became East Cobb Park.

He lives in the nearby Mitsy Forest neighborhood, and served as the first treasurer of the Friends for the East Cobb Park.

Over the years, he’s served the non-profit board in various capacities, including president from 2003-05. Now, Bills is a senior construction project manager for the Cobb Department of Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs.

“I always thought that my award was the park,” Bills said.

He got involved in the volunteer group’s work, he said, because a park nearby “would be good for our neighborhood.”

It turned out to be a long-term commitment that included an ambitious fundraising project that continues today.

Before long, Sunny Walker, Mary Karras and Kim Paris—founding members and driving forces of the Friends group—got him fully involved, after initially asking him to evaluate an environmental impact study.

“Mary signed me up for 20 years,” he said.

He said as the organization’s treasurer, every single contribution, no matter the size, was important.

Among them were from kids who turned over big bags of change they solicited from golfers on the Indian Hills driving range.

“That meant as much to us” as the bigger checks, Bills said, “because it showed the support of the community.”

Bills’ other community work includes volunteering with activities at Walton High School, Keep Cobb Beautiful, and the Cobb Veterans Foundation.

 

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John Driskell Hopkins to perform holiday show at Olde Towne

John Driskell Hopkins, Olde Towne holiday concert

Submitted information and photo:

John Driskell Hopkins (founding member of the Zac Brown Band) has released his third holiday album, entitled Our Finest Gifts, this time with  ATL Collective.The new album, with R&B-themed holiday tunes, is available for purchase or download on johndriskellhopkins.com, and is now available for download wherever you get your music — including iTunes, Amazon, Spotify and Pandora. 

WATCH VIDEO FOR “HAPPY SEASON”

ATL Collective is a nonprofit organization dedicated to enriching Atlanta’s music community by connecting artists to professional development, financial support and exposure to audiences. They are known to hand pick the finest musicians in town to collectively recreate the greatest albums ever recorded. 

The new album follows the success of the 2017 holiday album, You Better Watch Out, with The Joe Gransden Big Band; and In the Spirit: A Celebration of the Holidays, released in 2015 with the Atlanta Pops Orchestra (and on vinyl in 2016). 

Recorded at Hopkins’ studio — Brighter Shade Studios — Our Finest Gifts will feature appearances by Trombone Shorty, Ruby Velle, Dionne Farris, David Ryan Harris, Jason Eskridge and Maureen Murphy.

“I can’t begin to express how excited I am to be releasing my third Christmas album,” said Hopkins. ”I am so grateful to ATL Collective and all of these amazing artists who are part of this collaboration. It means so much to share my love of the holidays through music, and I think everyone will enjoy these R&B-themed holiday tunes.”

The new album was recorded at Hopkins’ own Brighter Shade Studios — a stunning and expansive 2500 square feet, includes an oversized, flexible-use main recording space large enough to hold a 30-piece orchestra. The space also boasts a voice-over booth, machine and mixing room, lounge and full-service bar — made of Sapele (from Taylor Guitars) with customized song lyrics carved into the wood. The space is garnished with hallmarks of Hopkins esteemed career, including guitars, awards, photos and mementos from his musical journey.

HOLIDAY CONCERTS
PUDDLES’ PITY PARTY HOLIDAY JUBILEE
Friday, November 29 | 7:30 p.m.
Center Stage
1374 W Peachtree St NW
Atlanta, GA 30309

CAMP TRACH ME AWAY HOLIDAY CONCERT
FEATURING JOHN DRISKELL HOPKINS
Sunday, December 1 | 3:00 p.m.
Heritage Sandy Springs
610 Blue Stone Road
Sandy Springs, GA 30328
Holiday Music featuring John Driskell Hopkins

BALSAM RANGE ART OF MUSIC FESTIVAL
Saturday, December 7 | 7:00 p.m.
Lake Junaluska, North Carolina
John Driskell Hopkins and the Atlanta Pops Orchestra

JOHN DRISKELL HOPKINS’ SOUNDS OF THE SEASON
Saturday, December 14 | 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Olde Towne Athletic Club 
4950 Olde Towne Pkwy
Marietta, GA 30068
John Driskell Hopkins And The Joe Gransden Big Band — both performances will feature an evening benefiting the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.

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