Cobb library system rolling out new mobile device app

Sewell Mill Library opens, Cobb library mobile app

Submitted information:

Cobb County Public Library staff is launching its first official mobile app on Monday, Nov. 25. The app will allow library patrons to search the catalog, place holds, renew items, manage multiple accounts, find a library near them and discover storytimes and other library programs. It will be available for iOS and Android devices.
 
To log in, enter your library card number and PIN when prompted; or click “My Account” then “Sign In.” To add another account, click “My Account,” “Linked Accounts,” “+Add” and add another library card number and PIN… It’s just that simple!
 
For more information, visit cobbcat.org/downloads/apps/.

 

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Cobb housing costs cited as a key concern in ARC survey

Olde Braswell Estates, East Cobb housing
Custom homes at the new Olde Braswell Estates subdivision, where older ranch homes once stood, start at $1.1 million. (ECN photo)

As teardowns of old homes continue in East Cobb and the rest of the county, residents are taking notice.

In a recent survey conducted by the Atlanta Regional Commission, 62 percent of Cobb residents responded that they’ve seen older homes in their areas being leveled by new, bigger and much more expensive homes.

Furthermore, another 44 percent said they could not afford to stay in their communities if they had to move.

The ARC’s 2019 Metro Atlanta Speaks Survey, which was unveiled earlier this month, included the launch of the organization’s Metro Atlanta Housing Strategy, which is meant to help local governments understand their housing challenges.

The study was conducted by the A.L. Burruss Institute of Public Service and Research at Kennesaw State University, and included the responses of more than 5,000 people in 13 counties about quality-of-life issues.

More than two-thirds (68 percent) of the residents surveyed said they’ve seen home “flipping” in which residential properties are remodeled and sold or rented at higher prices.

East Cobb is included in what the ARC describes as a “submarket” of “moderate-to-higher-priced suburban neighborhoods consisting almost entirely of single family homes.” That submarket (see map below), which includes other communities mostly in the north metro area, has a median home age of 26 years and a median home sales price of $298,000.

For that submarket, the ARC suggests, among other things, expanding the housing supply by reducing development costs. That would include increasing residential density “by reducing setbacks and minimum square footage requirements that support smaller lot sizes, duplex-fourplex designs, accessory units, multi-family development and micro-units.”

ARC Submarket 6 map

Although there’s no public transit in East Cobb (except for a CobbLinc bus route along Powers Ferry Road), 48 percent of Cobb residents in the survey said expanded transit is the best option for the Atlanta region’s traffic issues.

Another 30 percent of Cobb residents said transportation is the biggest problem facing the region, followed by 11 percent who cited concerns over crime.

The ARC survey also asked respondents about jobs and careers and the local economy. In 2013, the economy was cited by 24 percent as the biggest problem in metro Atlanta; that figure has fallen to 7 percent.

What wasn’t included in the ARC survey was housing as one of those categories. They included education, health care, taxes, race relations and others.

Here are the questions that were asked on the survey.

 

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Cobb Parks honored by Georgia Recreation and Park Association

Mabry Park Opening
Mabry Park opened this summer on Wesley Chapel Road. (ECN file).

Submitted information:

Cobb County PARKS received the Georgia Recreation and Park Association (GRPA) Agency of the Year Award during the GRPA awards banquet on Wednesday, Nov. 6. The award was presented to five population groups within the state, with Cobb County falling into the largest population category – 150,000 and over.

The GRPA Agency of the Year Award recognizes excellence and leadership in providing quality recreation programs, parks and facilities that enhance the quality of life in communities.

Nominees are judged on staff development, staff involvement in park organizations, park facilities, new and outstanding programs, and major accomplishments over the past year.

The department had a monumental 2018-2019 year. Some of the highlights included opening a new 44,000 square foot event center at Jim R. Miller Park, cutting the ribbon on Mabry Park and adding 406 acres of Cobb PARKS inventory. In late 2018, Cobb became the first Georgia county to establish an Emergency Locator Marker (ELM) Program. The mission of the ELM project is to provide trail markers at every quarter mile on Cobb County’s Trail System.

Cobb PARKS is responsible for 239 buildings and 6045 acres of park land. The department offered a total of 108 new programs this fiscal year and held hundreds of classes, activities and events, including the first annual Cobb International Festival.  

“Cobb County PARKS is very proud to receive the GRPA Agency of the Year Award for the largest population category,” said PARKS Director Jimmy Gisi. “Our staff, with the support of the Board of Commissioners, has worked extremely hard during 2019 to provide quality recreational programs and exceptional facilities. We were in competition with several excellent large agencies from across the state but our year was just a little better.” 

The Georgia Recreation and Park Association was formed in 1945 as a private, non-profit institution to support and promote the recreation and park industries within the state of Georgia.

Related story

 

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Ott critical of Cobb public safety step and grade proposal

Cobb Police Recruiting Graphic
A Cobb Police recruiting graphic drawn up after commissioners approved pay increases for public safety employees for FY 2020. 

After hearing a first draft of a proposed step and grade salary and promotion system for Cobb County public safety employees, commissioner Bob Ott Monday said the plan isn’t any better than what’s in place now.

The proposal calls for a salary increase for police officers, sheriff’s deputies, firefighters and other workers, and in increments with a three-percent raise as they move up in grade.

“I don’t see any difference,” said Ott, who represents District 2, which includes part of East Cobb, at a Monday commissioners’ work session. “There’s just a difference in the numbers.”

Cobb public safety officials worked up the new plan as the next step in a series of salary, retention and promotional incentives after commissioners approved the fiscal year 2020 budget with a seven-percent pay raise for many public safety employees.

They previously received a one-time bonus of $1,450 as a good faith gesture from commissioners during the budget process.

The additional funding came after months of public lobbying from public safety employees and citizens to pay public safety employees better, provide more recruiting incentives, and increase morale. Cobb public safety has significant staffing shortages, especially with police and the Sheriff’s Office.

Cobb Police, which has a shortage of around 80 officers, has been actively sending out recruiting messages on social media, posting signs around the county (including at the entrance to East Cobb Park) and conducting job fairs in north Georgia.

Step and grade is similar to what Cobb County School District employees receive—annual, incremental raises based on a combination of factors, including years of service, promotions and performance reviews.

The Cobb public safety step and grade draft would boost the starting salary for an entry-level police officer from around $41,000 a year to $45,776 annually.

Cobb interim public safety director Randy Crider said under the proposal, an officer making $54,000 at Grade 16 and Step 6 could earn $54,976 instead under a “blue” plan that would take effect in March 2020.

Under an alternate “yellow” plan, that same officer would make $56,818 a year, with the new pay scale starting with the fiscal 2021 budget next fall.

Cobb public safety step and grade

Crider said his numbers were figured with current budgeting numbers in mind, and he told Ott that “this is to give you a structure to approve.”

The problem, as Ott saw it, was that under the draft proposal, raises would come to commissioners each year for approval. “That’s not step and grade,” he said.

Most step and grade plans, including that for Cobb schools, have automatic increases factored into budgets.

Cobb commission chairman Mike Boyce said the current “pay and class” system was meant to be a one-time solution. With step and grade, “the anticipation is that we’ll do this annually.”

He said it was important for the county to “continue to provide incentives” to attract police officers and firefighters for years to come. “This won’t be a one and done.

“We don’t fix this overnight. We fix it over time.”

Ott countered by saying that in a “true step and grade, you get a raise every year. And you get another raise and you get promoted.”

The proposal brought before commissioners, he insisted, means that “each year, it requires the board to make the same decisions we’re making today.”

Public safety officials had scheduled individual meetings with commissioners after Monday’s work session.

Related stories

 

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Cobb 101 Citizens Academy application deadline is Dec. 2

Cobb 101 Citizens Academy

Submitted information from Cobb County government:

We’re taking applications for the 3rd class of “Cobb101.” It is a deep-dive into the workings of your county government. Past participants have come away with a better appreciation of what the various departments in Cobb County do for our residents.
• 30 people in the upcoming class
• Applications accepted through December 2
• Cobb101 Class of 2020 dates: February 27, 2020, through May 7, 2020
• Classes on Thursday nights from 6 pm – 9 pm (nothing Spring Break week)
• 9 classroom sessions and a graduation ceremony

For more information: www.cobbcounty.org/cobb101.

 

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

Submitted information:ARC Cobb open house

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

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

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

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

For more information, click here.

 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

More Halloween events in East Cobb can be found here.

 

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Rep. McBath to hold Passport Day at district office Saturday

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

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

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

RSVP HERE

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

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

 

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Section of Holly Springs Road to get flashing speed signs

Old Canton Road flashing speed signs

If you use the lower portion of Holly Springs Road, some flashing speed signs designed to get you to slow down will be coming to your commute soon.

The Cobb Board of Commissioners on Tuesday approved spending $6,000 to install two signs along Holly Springs Road, one in each direction, between Old Canton Road and Sewell Mill Road, at a time to be determined.

Holly Springs Road flashing sign map
Cobb DOT map; click here for larger version.

The measure was approved on the commissioners’ consent agenda, so there wasn’t any discussion.

In an agenda item information provided ahead of the meeting (read it here), Cobb DOT said the dynamic signs, like the one shown above on Indian Hills Parkway, “have shown some effectiveness for speed reductions.”

Cobb began installing flashing display signs after commissioners approved a Dynamic Speed Display Sign policy in 2016. Roads that have an 85th percentile speed of 10 miles over the posted speed limit and average daily traffic counts of 1,000 vehicles or more a day on local roads and 2,000 trips or more on collector roads qualify for the signs.

The 85th percentile speed is a common guideline used by transportation agencies, and it’s generally described as a speed at which 85 percent of drivers would not exceed in traveling in “free flow conditions.”

As drivers approach the sign, they see the posted speed limit, and a flashing sign indicating their vehicle speed.

The posted speed limit on that hilly, curvy section of Holly Springs, classified as a collector road, is 35 mph. Cobb DOT says traffic speed and volume data shows that stretch of the road has an 85th percentile speed of 46 mph and an average daily traffic of 9,379 vehicles per day.

Cobb DOT said maintenance costs for the signs are expected to be no more than $800 a year.

 

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Cobb Superior Court judges to get 4-percent county pay raise

Tom Charron, Cobb Superior Court Administratpr
Tom Charron

Cobb Superior Court judges will be getting the same four-percent merit pay increase as county employees in the new fiscal year 2020 budget that began on Monday.

The Cobb Board of Commissioners voted Tuesday to approve the raises, despite objections from two commissioners.

Each of the 10 Superior Court judges, the chief judge and new Cobb District Attorney Joyette Holmes will receive the raises, which will increase their county salary supplement by $8,323 a year.

Superior Court judges and the DA serve in elected positions and are state constitutional officers, with most of their salaries paid by the state.

A portion of their compensation comes from county supplements, and funding for the raises is provided in the FY 2020 budget.

Commissioners Bob Ott of East Cobb and Keli Gambrill voted against the measure, which passed 3-2 and goes into effect immediately.

The state portion of the four-percent increase is $62,254 per individual, and the request is based on judges’ full salaries.

Ott said he supports pay raises for the county portion of the judges’ salaries, but not on their full salary.

“To me, that’s a state function,” Ott said.

East Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell said she supported the raises, since the county previously has boosted local compensation for the Cobb sheriff, also an elected state constitutional officer, to match other Cobb law enforcement increases.

The state last raised Superior Court and other state judicial salaries in 2015. When HB 279 was enacted, median Superior Court salaries went from around $186,000 a year (with $120,000 being paid by the state) to nearly $200,000 annually.

Superior Court judges handle major felony cases, including violent crimes, drug-trafficking and serious white-collar offenses.

State Court judges preside over misdemeanor and small-claims cases, including DUI, traffic citations and minor civil disputes.

Their salaries are set by and fully paid for by county governments, and in Cobb, State Court judges have a median salary of around $171,000.

They were included in the four-percent merit increase that went to qualified county employees.

Cobb Superior Court Administrator Tom Charron, who made the request at Tuesday’s commissioners meeting, said that judges “in courts of lesser jurisdiction” could conceivably earn more than their Superior Court counterparts without the merit raises.

He said Superior Court judges did not get salary increases that came with other state employee raises this year.

In 2014 the Georgia legislature passed a law that allowed Cobb Superior Court judges to get raises at the local level without having to go to state lawmakers every year.

Ott said the issue is no different than with what the county faces with Georgia DOT over funding obligations for maintenance and repair.

He cited as an example Roswell Road, also known as Georgia Highway 120. “They will come and cut the median once every 60 days, but they don’t care what it looks like in between,” Ott said. “Their answer to us is, ‘If you want it to look better, you’re going to have to cut it.’ That’s not our job.

“Yes, Superior Court judges should get a raise, but it should be the state should taking the responsibility for a state constitutional officer. They’re passing down to the citizens of Cobb to have to cover the cost because they’re not willing to give the raise.

“The more the county takes on state responsibilities, the less [the state] is going to be responsible for. . . At some point in time it’s got to stop.”

Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce said judges shouldn’t caught in the crossfire of haggling over how their salary increases will be paid for. He did say he will take the issue to the Cobb legislative delegation before next year’s session.

“Cobb is a family and judges are part of the family,” Boyce said. “They carry a significant load. We have the resources to do this and we shouldn’t hold the judges back.”

 

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EDITOR’S NOTE: Tim Lee and the transformation of Cobb County

Tim Lee

I drove past Sun Trust Park a couple weeks ago, hours before the Atlanta Braves would clinch the National League East title.

To say that was a happy occasion was an understatement; I trace my Braves’ fandom to 1969, when I first attended a game at Atlanta Stadium and the year they won the West with Henry Aaron. Their opponents that day were the San Francisco Giants and Willie Mays.

During the years to follow, the Braves struggled to solidify the changing business of baseball in an economically challenged area of downtown Atlanta.

Little did I or many of my Cobb County neighbors have any idea, that after only 20 years at Turner Field, the next home of the Braves would be rather close to our homes.

It’s been six years since it was revealed that the Braves had worked out an agreement with Cobb County to jointly finance a new stadium, in the Cumberland area, on Windy Ridge Parkway and visible from I-75.Tim Lee dies

In that late summer of 2013, Tim Lee became a household name not just in Cobb County, but the metro Atlanta area and the baseball world. As the Cobb Commission Chairman at the time, he was approached by the Braves, and discussions were kept secret for months until the last minute.

Even other commissioners weren’t told until it was clear the word was going to get out. What’s more, they had exactly two weeks before they would be asked to formalize a Memorandum of Understanding that would commit the county to nearly $400 million in public financing.

Lee talked a good game about the money not coming from property taxes. Two of his colleagues, Helen Goreham and JoAnn Birrell, were ecstatic. After some grim years of tax increases and budget cuts due to the recession, here was a big fat piece of economic development, plopped right in Cobb County’s lap.

Anyone who would look this gift horse in the mouth, it was suggested by those doing the rah-rah for the stadium, is a fool.

But two weeks was no time to thoroughly review a 30-year commitment for snags, fine print and other potential issues bound to come up for such a complicated, long-term deal.

It’s not a secret that subsidized sports stadiums and arenas rarely yield the jobs and economic benefits they promise, and quite often come with unexpected costs. But Lee, the Cobb Chamber of Commerce and other civic boosters were undeterred.

Lee rammed the Braves’ stadium deal through with a 4-1 vote, with only Lisa Cupid of South Cobb raising questions about the process, and some of the details of the MOU.

That’s how Lee, who died last week from cancer at the age of 62, got some big things done during his six years as chairman. During the recession, he threatened to close down Cobb library branches, to get commissioners to the table to raise taxes and cut services.

That ploy worked, but I came away with a dim view of how Lee operated. The lack of transparency with the Braves’ deal only confirmed that impression a few years later.

Lee lost his bid for re-election in 2016 to Mike Boyce, an East Cobb resident, who drove home the faulty process of how Cobb got the Braves.

Regardless of how Lee swung the deal, what it has represented since then is a kind of transformation of Cobb County.

As the county went from rural to suburban in the late 1960s and 1970s, Cobb is changing again, to an increasingly urban area in many places, including more pockets of East Cobb.

What county officials like to call the “halo effect” of development stemming from Sun Trust Park and The Battery has spilled over to the nearby Powers Ferry Road corridor.

The tax benefits of the Braves’ relocation to Cobb County look like they’re going to pay off. That’s a good thing.

The high-density residential and commercial development that’s popping up all around the county, even possibly to the Sprayberry area, was likely to come whether a stadium was built or not.

However, Sun Trust stands, not just as the home of our Local Nine, but as a symbol that Cobb County is not just the bedroom community that attracted many of us here. The ranch-style homes once built on big, wooded lots a generation ago are increasingly being plowed under for McMansions on postage stamps and upscale townhomes.

Mixed-use developments are replacing standard strip shopping centers as the retail industry goes through major upheavals. Tax incentives for corporate relocations promising new jobs have become more frequent and controversial.

Some of those trends were already in motion when Lee, seeking his first full term as chairman, won a close Republican runoff in 2012. In that election, he had to fend off a former chairman, Bill Byrne, who raised the idea of a City of East Cobb to get votes.

At his watch party at a hotel near Kennesaw State, Lee breathed a sigh of relief when the voting returns finally went his way. He wiped his brow, thanked his supporters and hugged his wife.

Deep down, he was humble and hard-working, from his involvement with the East Cobb Civic Association, to representing an East Cobb district on the Board of Commissioners and as chairman.

Pragmatism was his hallmark, and as much as I disliked the way the Braves deal went down—ends should never justify the means—Lee never regretted it, even if it cost him his political career.

A few hours after Lee’s memorial service Friday at First United Methodist Church in Marietta, the Braves rallied to win a playoff game against the St. Louis Cardinals at Sun Trust.

It’s a shame he didn’t get to enjoy the renaissance of the team and the area where it now plays. My condolences go out to his family, and in lieu of flowers donations were asked to benefit the Atlanta Braves Foundation.

Lee’s actions helped shape a new evolution for Cobb County, one that may be more dramatic than what has come before.

 

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Cobb billboard agreement includes new Roswell Road LED sign

Cobb billboard agreement, Roswell Road LED sign

Earlier this summer Cobb County worked out an agreement with an outdoor sign company that calls for eight new double-sided LED billboards across the county.

Construction has begun at the only sign to be in East Cobb, at 2245 Roswell Road, between Barnes Mill Road and Sewell Mill Road.

The sign is next to Rocco’s European Garage, and is expected to be operational early next year. Vision Outdoor Media was asking to build 22 signs, but that request was turned down by county staff and the Cobb Board of Zoning Appeals.

Vision alleged Cobb’s billboard ordinance, which added a moratorium last year, was unconstitutional.

According to the county, the digital billboards must be at least 60 feet above road grade and not extend beyond right-of-way lines. Vision will pay a total of $800,000 in impact fees, which will go to the county’s sidewalk fund.

The other sign locations include two on Ernest Barrett Highway and two on Dallas Highway, one on Austell Road, on at South Cobb Drive and the East-West Connector, one on Cumberland Boulevard, one on Cobb Parkway in the Cumberland area, and the other on Highway 92 near Lindsey Way and Surrey Road. 

 

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Former Cobb Commission Chairman Tim Lee dies of cancer

Former Cobb Commission Chairman Tim Lee, who lived in East Cobb and was best known for stadium negotiations to bring the Atlanta Braves to the county, died Sunday after a battle with cancer.Tim Lee dies

He died early Sunday afternoon at the Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville, according to multiple reports.

Lee, who was 62, had been diagnosed with cancer last year. The MDJ reported that the esophageal cancer had returned, and that there was a dinner in Lee’s honor at the Delta Club at SunTrust Park on Monday that included political and Braves luminaries.

The report said Lee had been hospitalized this week but that he hoped to be released.

Current Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce said Sunday that flags at all county government facilities will fly at half-staff this week through Lee’s funeral. Those arrangements have not been announced.

“The county has lost a true leader and statesman who will long be remembered for his accomplishments and love of Cobb County,” Boyce said in a statement issued by the county.

Lee was first elected to the Cobb Board of Commissioners from District 3 in Northeast Cobb in 2002, when Sam Olens left that post to become chairman. In 2010, he stepped down from that post to run for chairman when Olens resigned to campaign for Georgia Attorney General.

Lee won a full four-year term as chairman in 2012, staving off former chairman Bill Byrne in the Republican primary.

It was during the summer and fall of 2014 that Lee became a central figure in the controversial Braves deal.

He announced a partnership with the Braves, contingent upon commission approval of a memorandum of understanding to provide $300 million of public financing.

But commissioners had only two weeks from the time of the announcement before voting, prompting questions about secrecy. The vote to approve the financing passed 4-1, but the Braves deal ultimately led to Lee’s departure from office.

The process over the Braves deal was a leading campaign issue in the 2016 chairman’s race for Boyce, a retired U.S. Marine colonel who lives in East Cobb and who ran for chairman in 2012.

Boyce overcame a lack of name recognition and was outspent, but defeated Lee in the Republican primary.

In 2017, Lee was named executive director of economic development for Habersham County in the North Georgia mountains.

District 2 commissioner Bob Ott of East Cobb had plenty of differences with Lee, including the latter’s push for a property tax increase in 2011, during the recession.

On Sunday, Ott said in the Cobb government statement that “Tim guided Cobb County through some difficult economic times.

“His love for our county was seen from his early days as a commissioner and was even more evident when he became chairman. He always wanted the best for Cobb, and it is a true tragedy his life has been cut short.”

Said current District 3 commissioner JoAnn Birrell, who succeeded Lee: “He was a great leader and visionary for Cobb County. He always had the county’s best interest at heart and served with his entire being.”

 

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Cobb commissioners’ out-of-town retreat relocated to Marietta

Cobb budget
Cobb commissioners Bob Ott and JoAnn Birrell and County Manager Rob Hosack at a June 2018 budget retreat at the Cobb Civic Center. (ECN photo)

What was initially scheduled as three-day retreat for the Cobb Board of Commissioners in the north Georgia mountains next week instead will take place in Marietta.

Cobb government issued a statement early Thursday afternoon that the retreat will take place next Thursday-Saturday, at the Cobb Senior Wellness Center, 1195 Powder Springs Street, with each session starting at 9 a.m.

The change in venue was chalked up to an unspecified “series of schedule conflicts,” according to the Cobb statement.

Commissioners hold retreats annually to discuss funding, budgeting and other priorities. But they’re usually scheduled in the county, such as the Cobb Civic Center and the Threadmill Complex in Austell.

This retreat had been slated for Blairsville, nearly 100 miles away, from Thursday to Saturday.

The agenda, according to county spokesman Ross Cavitt, remains the same: A discussion of “SPLOST issues, 2020 priorities, and other long-term board initiatives.”

The retreat is open to the public.

 

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Cobb seeks grant for Roswell-Johnson Ferry traffic study

Roswell-Johnson Ferry traffic study
Georgia 511 camera photo

Cobb commissioners this week approved grant applications for federal grant funding to study areas of major traffic congestion across the county, including the busy Roswell-Johnson Ferry intersection in East Cobb.

The resolutions, passed at Tuesday’s commissioners meeting, formalize Transportation Improvement Program applications to be submitted to the Atlanta Regional Commission.

What would be called the Roswell Road and Johnson Ferry Intersection Improvement Study would cost $500,000, with $400,000 coming from federal sources under the Surface Transportation Block Grant program. Another $100,000 in local match funding would be provided in the 2016 Cobb SPLOST Transportation Improvement Program, according to Tuesday’s agenda item.

The study would provide a concept design for “a congestion relief and mobility improvement planning project” that’s in the Cobb Comprehensive Transportation Plan 2040 Update:

“The purpose of this project is to conduct a transportation study to assess existing conditions at the intersection of Roswell Road and Johnson Ferry Road for design of a congestion mitigation strategy to reduce vehicular travel delay. The study will include cost effective alternatives to identified capacity improvements and grade separation options.”

Noonday Creek Trail Head
The Noonday Creek Trail Head at Bells Ferry Road (ECN photo).

Another grant application for the East Cobb area includes a possible extension of the Noonday Creek Trail, from the current termination of the trail on Bells Ferry Road northbound to Shallowford Road (see map at right, below).

The grant request is for $320,000 in federal funding, with an $80,000 local match, also earmarked in the Cobb 2016 SPLOST.

Noonday Creek Trail extension Cobb DOT map
Cobb DOT map

Concept design of the proposed Noonday Creek Trail Extension project would include assessing a possible greenway trail along Noonday Creek that would expand pedestrian/bike trails and connect to the Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park.

Funding for the studies is not guaranteed, and “will be competitively selected” by the ARC for the FY 2020-24 periods and are based on “predetermined evaluation,” according to Tuesday’s agenda item.

If TIP funding is approved by the ARC, Cobb commissioners would have to approve proceeding with the studies.

Any funding for projects constructed following those studies would be provided in the future.

 

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KSU economist appointed to Cobb Development Authority after delay

After a two-week delay, the Cobb Board of Commissioners voted 3-1 Tuesday to appoint an economist to the county’s development authority whose nomination had drawn opposition.J.C. Bradbury, Cobb Development Authority appointment

J.C. Bradbury of Kennesaw State University has been a critic of how Cobb financed SunTrust Park and has been skeptical of economic benefit claims since the Atlanta Braves stadium opened in 2017.

He had been selected by new commissioner Keli Gambrill of North Cobb on Sept. 10, but chairman Mike Boyce asked for the delay when he said he had learned two commissioners opposed the choice (previous ECN story here).

Boyce didn’t name the commissioners, but the only vote against Bradbury Tuesday was JoAnn Birrell of East Cobb. Bob Ott, also of East Cobb, was absent from the meeting and did not vote.

Previously, the other commissioner, Lisa Cupid of South Cobb, said she supported Bradbury, and reaffirmed that before the vote.

Birrell did not publicly explain why she voted against Bradbury, saying only that she expressed her concerns privately to Gambrill.

Boyce said after meeting with Bradbury and speaking again with him by phone that Bradbury is “qualified in every respect” and also that he is “now he is a public figure.”

Boyce referenced Tweets Bradbury had posted, and without citing a topic, said that “if you’re going to be on this board we have to be circumspect in our comments. Somebody may want to use it against him.

“[Bradbury] assured me he could make impartial decisions,” Boyce said.

The Development Authority consists of seven individuals appointed by county commissioners who consider economic development incentives, including tax abatements.

That an appointment was put to a vote is unusual, and so were public comments before the vote in support of Bradbury.

They included East Cobb resident Larry Savage, a former chairman candidate who unsuccessfully challenged the Development Authority’s tax abatements for a Kroger superstore that’s part of the MarketPlace Terrell Mill project.

Also speaking for Bradbury was Caroline Holko, who ran against Birrell last year, and Lance Lamberton of the Cobb Taxpayers Association.

He said Bradbury “speaks truth to power” and a board like the development authority needs to have members with an array of perspectives.

Boyce told Lamberton that “you stole my thunder.”

On Wednesday morning, Bradbury Tweeted that “I can confirm that I have been confirmed,” and apologized to his followers for a head shot of him that accompanied a media story he included in his message.

“Sorry to shove my giant melon in your face.”

 

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Commissioners spar over Cobb Development Authority appointment

J.C. Bradbury, Cobb Development Authority appointment
J.C. Bradbury

Cobb commissioners are holding up a vote on an appointment to the county’s Development Authority after a heated discussion that’s rare for such an agenda item.

Newly elected commissioner Keli Gambrill of North Cobb wanted to appoint J.C. Bradbury, a Kennesaw State University economics professor, to the body that considers such things as tax abatements and other economic development incentives.

Commissioners’ appointments are usually routine and for the most part are approved without a hitch. But Gambrill was upset when she said she was told right before Tuesday’s meeting by commission chairman Mike Boyce that he wanted more time to consider Bradbury’s appointment.

Boyce said he understood that two of the five commissioners were against Bradbury’s appointment and that since he was the swing vote, he wanted a delay.

The Development Authority is comprised of seven members appointed by county commissioners. Bradbury would replace Bob Morgan, whose four-year term has expired.

Bradbury has been a critic of Cobb’s publicly-subsidized deal with the Atlanta Braves to build SunTrust Park, and remains openly skeptical of economic impact claims county officials have made since the stadium opened in 2017.

Gambrill said other commissioners’ first-time appointments were easily confirmed, and said the delay over Bradbury is an example of “pure patronage and politics at its worst on this board.”

The Development Authority has come under greater scrutiny in recent months for its votes to provide tax abatements for new commercial projects, including the Kroger superstore that’s part of the MarketPlace Terrell Mill project under construction.

Gambrill said her appointment was being stymied “because [Bradbury] holds a different opinion from some on this board.”

Bradbury—who’s outspoken against tax subsidies in general, including those made to the state’s film industry—would be representing the interests of citizens, Gambrill further stated, “and not the interests of the economic powers” in the county.

She said she sent her colleagues information on Bradbury on Aug. 29 and heard no response until right before Tuesday’s meeting. Boyce said he wasn’t aware of opposition before then and asked her to “walk the halls” to gather support.

“It’s your recommendation but it’s a board appointment,” Boyce responded. “All I’m saying is that there needs to be more time.”

East Cobb commissioner Bob Ott took Boyce’s side, saying commissioners table votes all the time, including a new package of tax incentives they approved on Tuesday for a new hotel complex (see item below).

He also said it was “wrong to make a public accusation against a commissioner who asks for more time.” All of them have an obligation, Ott said, to do their “due diligence.”

Commissioner Lisa Cupid of South Cobb said she supported appointing Bradbury and thought Gambrill’s appointment “is being treated unequally.”

She said “this is less an issue of procedure and more of substance . . . but you still need three out of five” votes to approve an appointment.

In late 2013, Ott and fellow East Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell voted for the nearly $400 million bond issue to help finance what’s now called SunTrust Park, while Cupid was the only vote against.

Boyce defeated then-chairman Tim Lee in 2016, making the way the voting process was conducted a major campaign issue. Since coming into office, Boyce also has boasted of the economic benefits he said the stadium has brought to the county, including The Battery and other new development in the area.

The vote to table consideration of the Bradbury appointment to Sept. 24 was 5-0. In other action Tuesday, the commissioners agreed to development incentives for a planned dual-branded hotel next to the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre in the Cumberland area.

Hilton Garden Inn & Home2 Suites by Hilton Cumberland rendering

 

NF IV-VA ATL Cumberland LLC, which would operate a Hilton Garden Inn and a Home2 Suites by Hilton (rendering above) will get more than $350,000 in permit fee savings and will be allowed to pay sewer development fees in increments.

The two hotels would have a total of 260 rooms and create 70 new jobs. Michael Hughes of the Cobb Community Development Agency said the county government would net an economic benefit of $1.15 million over 10 years and the Cobb County School District $1.46 million in additional tax revenue over that time.

The measure, which passed 4-1 (with Gambrill voting against) had been tabled at Ott’s request because of parking concerns that he had. Ott said all the criteria for meeting the county’s guidelines for getting incentives (more details here) had been satisfied.

 

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Friendly reminder: Cobb property tax bills due Oct. 15

2584 Fieldstone Path, East Cobb Real Estate, Cobb property tax bills

Submitted information:

Tax Commissioner Carla Jackson recently announced that 2019 property tax bills have been mailed. Payments are due by Tuesday, Oct. 15, and payments received or U.S. postmarked after Oct. 15 will incur a 5 percent late penalty plus monthly interest on any unpaid balance.

Ways to pay include:

  • Online via e-check, debit or credit card (processing fees apply)
  • Automated system by phone at 1-866-PAY-COBB (1-866-729-2622) (processing fees applicable depending on payment selection)
  • Mail to P.O. Box 372, 100127, Marietta, GA 30061
  • In-person at any of the following locations: Property Tax Division at 736 Whitlock Avenue, Marietta; East Cobb Office at 4400 Lower Roswell Road, Marietta and the South Cobb Government Service Center at 4700 Austell Road, Austell
  • Drop boxes inside and outside at the Whitlock Avenue location, as well as the South Cobb Government Service Center
  • Drop checks off at any motor vehicle tag office
  • For property owners with escrow accounts, tax information is made available to mortgage companies; however, the property owner is responsible to ensure taxes are paid by the due date. Escrow account holders unsure about who is paying the property tax should contact their mortgage companies directly.

Please visit Understanding Your Tax Bill at www.CobbTax.org for a detailed explanation of our 2019 tax bills and location information.

 

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County: Water from East Cobb treatment plant safe despite odor

Late this afternoon Cobb County government spokesman Ross Cavitt said a “slight” chlorine smell has been detected in water coming from the James E. Quarles Water Treatment Plant on Lower Roswell Road in East Cobb, but it’s safe to drink and use. CCWMA, East Cobb water treatment plant

He passed along the following statement from the Cobb County-Marietta Water Authority:

“This afternoon, a malfunction in dilution of sodium hypochlorite at the Quarles Water Treatment Plant resulted in an overfeed of the disinfectant, with chlorine levels leaving the plant detected at slightly over 4.0 mg/L, a little over twice the normal level. Pumping from the plant was suspended for approximately one hour, and flushing from the major transmission lines leaving the plant is ongoing. As of now, samples collected at the flushing sites have shown chlorine levels only slightly higher than normal. Consumers, particularly in the vicinity of the Quarles Plant, may experience a temporary elevation in chlorine levels (detectable through smell and taste). Water is safe to use for all purposes, but customers may desire to flush their plumbing systems if chlorine levels are unpleasant.

“CCMWA will continue to flush and monitor chlorine levels at several locations until assured that there are no further concerns with water quality, and will notify our wholesale customers if there are any significant changes.”

One suggestion Cavitt added for dissipating the odor if it’s coming through your faucet: leave a cold water tap running.

 

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Cobb to reimburse Friends for the East Cobb Park donation

Friends for the East Cobb Park donation, Tritt property
Friends for the East Cobb Park helped complete Tritt property acquisition last year with a donation from its endowment. (ECN photo)

As noted in a previous post, the Cobb Board of Commissioners on Tuesday voted to approve a $90,213 reimbursement to the Friends for the East Cobb Park, which donated nearly $120,000 last summer to help the county purchase part of the adjoining Tritt property and preserve it for green space.

The vote was unanimous (it was on the board’s consent agenda).

Wylene Tritt sold 22 acres at 3540 Roswell Road to the county for a cost of $8.4 million, but a supplemental parks bond account established in 2017 had only $8.3 million available.

The Friends for the East Cobb Park stepped in to make the donation from its endowment. Shortly after that, the group announced a fundraising campaign to replenish the endowment.

Tritt, who had owned a total of 54 acres on what was once a working farm, had planned to sell her land for $20 million for a senior living development proposed in 2013 by the son and brother of U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson.

But rezoning for the $200 million Isakson Living plan, which was dubbed Tritt Walk, was rejected by Cobb commissioners in 2015 after community opposition. Isakson Living sued, but dropped its legal challenge in 2016 and did not purchase the land.

At that time, Wylene Tritt wrote Cobb commissioner Bob Ott asking that her property be considered for future county acquisition for park purposes.

The funding for the reimbursement will come from the Cobb Parks 2008 bond fund balance.

The Friends group is a private, all-volunteer, non-profit citizens organization that was formed in 1998 and helped acquire land and made improvements to create East Cobb Park, which opened in 2003.

The organization stages events at the park, including concerts and a holiday tree lighting, and helps fund continuing improvements.

The commissioners tabled another action item Tuesday that would have approved spending $168,000 for license plate reader devices at select Cobb County parks, including East Cobb Park, Fullers Park and Terrell Mill Park.

Ott objected to the matter, saying installing the cameras would be an invasion of privacy.

Commissioners also approved a change order to delay completion of ongoing Sandy Plains Road construction work until December.

Commissioner JoAnn Birrell said her office has been communicating that delay—prompted by weather and utility relocation issues—and wanted to make it formal.

She said she’s received a lot of calls from constituents, and understands the frustration over traffic backups, especially with school back in session.

“I don’t want to see another extension on this,” Birrell said.

 

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