Cobb COVID-19 mask mandate, emergency declaration expire

Cobb mask mandate expires
Cobb COVID-19 case rates compiled by the Georgia Department of Public Health. For more details click here.

As of midnight Wednesday there will be no longer a mask mandate in most Cobb County government buildings.

The county announced Tuesday that a COVID-19 emergency declaration issued by Cobb Board of Commissioners Chairwoman Lisa Cupid would expire, along with a mask mandate.

The mandate included all indoor county facilities, including libraries.

However, a mask mandate will still be in place at county courthouse buildings, according to county spokesman Ross Cavitt.

He quoted Cupid in statement saying that “although the transmission levels of COVID-19 are still considered high, Public Health officials say they are declining along with the number of newly reported cases and the test positivity rate. One of my biggest concerns was the effect on our local hospitals, but WellStar reports low levels of COVID cases and they recently transitioned to “green” status, meaning that beds are vacant and visitors are again allowed in the hospital.”

Cobb County Manager Jackie McMorris imposed the mask mandate in August, as the Delta variant of COVID-19 was spreading rapidly.

Cupid declared a 30-day state of emergency in the county shortly after that, then extended it twice, then renewed it twice, with the current order set to expire Nov. 16.

During that time, attendance was limited at public meetings, including commissioners meetings.

As of Tuesday 14-day average of COVID-19 cases per 100,000 people in Cobb County is 112. An average of 100 or higher is considered a high rate of transmission.

The test positivity rate in Cobb County is 4.33 percent, under the 5 percent threshold cited by public health officials as a concern.

Citizens using Cobb County buildings are still encouraged to wear masks, and the county statement said that “The Chairwoman indicated she would remain in contact with Public Health officials who remain concerned that colder weather and the holidays could reignite a surge.”

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Mt. Bethel Church allowed to retain Methodist leader in lawsuit

Keith Boyette, Wesleyan Covenant Association, Mt. Bethel lawsuit
Keith Boyette, Wesleyan Covenant Association

A Cobb Superior Court judge has granted a request by Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church to add a leader of the denomination’s conservative wing to its legal team.

Judge Mary Staley Clark ruled in a motion on Friday that Keith Boyette, head of the Wesleyan Covenant Association and a qualified attorney in Virginia, could work on behalf of Mt. Bethel in a pro hace vice admission.

That’s when an attorney from one state is granted special admission in a court in another state in a specific case.

Attorneys for the North Georgia Conference of the United Methodist Church filed an objection to Mt. Bethel’s request, contending that Boyette was actively involved in the East Cobb congregation’s attempts to disaffiliate, and that one of his “primary goals was to take land and buildings currently used by the United Methodist Church from the United Methodist Church so that they can be used by a newly formed denomination.”

But Staley Clark noted in her motion that the State Bar of Georgia, “having investigated the matter, found that Mr. Boyette has paid the requisite fees for pro hac vice admission.”

It was the first legal disposition in what figures to be lengthy litigation involving the North Georgia Conference, which in September sued Mt. Bethel over assets and property following a months-long dispute.

In April, North Georgia Bishop Sue Haupert-Johnson reassigned Mt. Bethel senior pastor Rev. Dr. Jody Ray to a non-ministerial position.

Mt. Bethel announced it was not accepting a new pastor, and Ray turned in his UMC ministerial credentials. Mt. Bethel has kept him on as CEO and lay pastor, positions, the Conference say violate its Book of Discipline governing protocols.

Mt. Bethel then announced its intent to disaffiliate from the UMC and declined to provide Rev. Dr. Steven Usry, the newly appointed senior pastor, office space or pay him a full salary.

The Conference further ruled that Mt. Bethel was not a church in good standing, and ordered it to turn over its properties and other physical assets. Attempts at mediation fell through over the summer.

Mt. Bethel’s counterclaim to the lawsuit, filed Oct. 8, seeks an accelerated vote on disaffiliation.

Mt. Bethel has nearly 10,000 members and is the largest denomination in the North Georgia Conference.

It’s been grappling for years with doctrinal and other disputes increasing in the UMC, especially over same-sex marriages and lesbian and gay clergy.

Mt. Bethel has been actively involved in the creation of the Wesleyan Covenant Association, which is being tapped as a future destination for conservative Methodist congregations.

Boyette has been a leading figure in what would be called the Global Methodist Church.

But national UMC delegates are not scheduled to vote on allowing congregations to break away until September 2022 at the earliest, due to COVID-19 delays.

The Mt. Bethel Administrative Council scheduled a meeting for members on Monday night.

Mt. Bethel leadership has a special page on its website with its response to the lawsuit and the dispute with the North Georgia Conference.

A group of members upset with the congregation’s leadership, which calls itself Friends of Mt. Bethel, has formed its own website and started a newsletter.

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Wellstar Kennestone Hospital expansion prompts access changes

Kennestone Hospital access changes
For a larger view click here. Map: Wellstar Health System

A construction and expansion project is getting underway at Wellstar Kennestone Hospital, and a number of traffic and access changes have been put in place, effective today.

Wellstar sent out a news release Monday afternoon noting that the Church Street access to the hospital will be closed.

Also, the covered walkway from the Blue parking deck to the main entrance, also will be closed while the construction work continues.

Patients and visitors to the labor and delivery entrance will now use Kennestone Hospital Boulevard, off Tower Road, and follow the signs to the Blue parking deck.

Here’s more from Wellstar about what’s going to be different while the expansion is ongoing:

  • The main lobby entrance will remain open, as will Kennestone Hospital Boulevard, but the covered walkway from the Blue Parking Deck will not be accessible.

  • Visitors who park in the Blue Parking Deck can use the other sidewalk into the lobby or enter the hospital through the Purple Tower.

  • The new Labor & Delivery entrance location is covered, with ample space for curbside drop-off. The area will be open 24 hours a day and fully staffed to welcome and direct patients to their destination.

  • Signs will be posted on the construction barricades, in the parking deck, and in the hospital corridors to guide visitors to their desired location.

  • Traffic directors will be stationed outside the hospital lobby to help visitors navigate the changes.

The $263 million project includes a new patient tower that would replace the Baird Tower, which was built in 1964.

The new seven-story building would house expanded services for women and children and include more campus amenities and private rooms.

The project would be completed by mid-2025, if the Georgia Department of Community Health approves. A decision deadline is expected by Dec. 13.

Last summer, a new $126 million emergency department opened at Kennestone, and that includes a Level II trauma center.

 

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East Cobb resident marks 10th anniversary of marketing agency

Submitted information via press release:Patrick L. Burns Arc 3 Communications

Arc 3 Communications, a public affairs agency located just off the historic downtown square of Marietta, Ga., recently celebrated their 10-year business anniversary. Started by founder and president, Patrick L. Burns, Arc 3 Communications has provided winning content, digital, and advocacy solutions for clients since 2011. For 10 years, Arc 3 has provided quality services to trade associations, businesses, non-profits, and government agencies, helping them achieve their organizational goals in a complex media and public affairs landscape. 

“I am so grateful to our clients from across the country who have entrusted us to serve their content, digital, and advocacy needs,” said company founder and president, Patrick Burns, “I look forward to working with our growing, talented and innovative team to help our clients achieve their public affairs goals for many more years to come.” 

For more information about Arc 3 Communications, visit www.arc3communications.com.

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Temple Kol Emeth to hold Ecumenical Thanksgiving Service virtually

The East Cobb synagogue Temple Kol Emeth is having its 17th annual Ecumenical Thanksgiving Service in virtual form this year.Ecumenical Thanksgiving Service

The service takes place next Thursday, Nov. 18, starting at 6:45 p.m. with music, followed by the service at 7 p.m.,

A livestream will be available at this link.

The service features music and messages from a variety of faiths and faith communities, including Chestnut Ridge Christian Church, Congregation Etz Chaim, the East Cobb Islamic Center, Eastminster Presbyterian Church, Emerison Unitarian Universalist Congregation, St. Catherine’s Episcopal Church, Transfiguration Catholic Church and Unity North Atlanta Church.

The theme of this year’s service is “Rebuilding Hope Together.”

Each year the service collects donations for its Give-A-Gobble program, which purchases Thanksgiving turkeys and food for those in need.

This year’s recipient is East Cobb-based United Military Care, a non-profit that supports veterans in crisis.

Among the speaks is United Military Care founder and president Kim Scofi.

If you’re interested in donating, you can do so by clicking here.

More information on the Ecumenical Thanksgiving Service can be found here.

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Sprayberry PTSA Craft Show returns after 2020 hiatus

Among the many East Cobb area events that didn’t take place in 2020 was the Sprayberry PTSA Craft Show, the organization’s biggest fundraiser that benefits school projects and helps students get volunteer hours.Sprayberry PTSA Craft Show

It’s also among those events that’s back on the schedule for 2021, and it’s taking place this coming weekend, Nov. 20-21.

This is the 39th year for the craft show, which includes more than 200 craft booths and in the past has attracted around 10,000 to do some early holiday shopping over two days.

More information can be found on the flyer at right and by clicking here.

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Let East Cobb News know what your organization is doing, or share news about what people are doing in the community—accomplishments, recognitions, milestones, etc.

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Birrell to speak at East Cobb Area Council Chamber breakfast

Cobb Commissioner JoAnn Birrell is the featured speaker at the East Cobb Area Council breakfast of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce on Thursday, Nov. 18.Commissioner Birrell recognized

The breakfast takes place from 8-9:30 a.m. at Indian Hills Country Club (4001 Clubland Drive).

The event will also include the announcement of the East Cobb Citizen of the Year for 2021.

Birrell, a Republican from District 3 that includes Northeast Cobb, is in her third term on the Cobb Board of Commissioners.

Registration is open until November 15 at https://bit.ly/3ohdAQR. Tickets are $25 for Cobb Chamber members and $30 for general admission.

More information on the event, including COVID-19 protocols, can be found by clicking here.

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East Cobb Cityhood study declares financial feasibility

East Cobb candidates forum cityhood
State Rep. Matt Dollar is co-sponsoring another East Cobb Cityhood bill to be considered during the 2022 legislature.

The Committee for East Cobb Cityhood has released a feasibility study declaring financial viability without imposing new taxes.

The group’s press release can be found here; a link to the full report, which was compiled by researchers at Georgia State University, can be found here.

A major change in the focus of the report is the addition of police and fire services to the financial analysis.

Police and fire services were included in the initial 2019 Cityhood effort, although legislation filed for consideration in 2020 was abandoned.

The proposed city introduced this year would contain a population of 50,406, around half from the 2019 bill.

The new boundaries would include the Johnson Ferry Road corridor, running west to Old Canton Road and including most of the Walton High School attendance zone and some of the area around Pope High School (click here to view map).

Areas of East Cobb closer to the city of Marietta, comprising most of the Wheeler High School zone, were taken out.

The revived Cityhood effort, which was announced in March, included planning and zoning, code enforcement and parks and recreation services. Road maintenance was later added.

The Cityhood committee said Friday that police and fire were added back into the feasibility study based on public feedback and that parks and recreation were pushed back to the appendix to be considered on contingency, along with road maintenance.

Researchers from the GSU Center for State and Local Finance made comparisons to similar-sized cities—Brookhaven, Dunwoody, Johns Creek, Marietta and Smyrna—to help craft their report.

The study estimated annual revenues of $27.7 million and estimated annual expenses of $24.65 million for a budget surplus of $3 million annually (see chart below).

East Cobb Cityhood study financial analysis 2021

The single-largest revenue source would be existing property taxes ($15 million), and public safety services would be the largest expense ($14.3 million).

The existing property taxes would be the 2.86 mills that make up the current Cobb County Fire Fund, and that would be transferred to a new City of East Cobb.

Under the proposed city, that would become the primary revenue source, collecting around $12 million a year.

Other taxes include around $1 million in real property taxes, as well as utility and franchise fees and alcohol taxes.

The City of East Cobb would purchase two existing Cobb County Fire Department stations that are within the proposed city boundaries (they’re not identified in the report but they are No. 20 at the East Cobb Government Service Center on Lower Roswell Road, and No. 15 on Oak Lane near Johnson Ferry Road).

The study did not indicate how big a police force or fire department would be staffed, in terms of number of employees.

EC Cityhood 2021 study revenue estimates

EC Cityhood 2021 study expense estimates

The study estimated around 50 total employees would be on staff citywide, but the report didn’t detail a breakdown.

The Georgia State researchers estimated startup costs of $984,000, and their report indicated no expenses for facility leases.

In fact, there’s no mention of a a City of East Cobb government having a physical location, other than public safety services.

As we noted earlier this week, two other Cityhood efforts in Cobb County—for proposed cities of Vinings and Lost Mountain, in West Cobb, also have commissioned studies concluding that they would be financially viable.

The Lost Mountain proposal does not call for a city government facility to be owned or leased, but for existing community space to be rented for meetings and other public events.

But Lost Mountain and Vinings are not proposing public safety services.

The East Cobb Cityhood study was to have been released this coming Monday.

There will be an information session next Wednesday, Nov. 17, at 5:30 p.m. with state Rep. Matt Dollar, state Rep. Sharon Cooper, co-sponsors of the East Cobb Cityhood legislation to be considered in 2022, and the East Cobb Cityhood Committee.

To sign up: https://register.gotowebinar.com/register/5293479304166286864.

Their bill, if passed by the legislature, would establish a November 2022 referendum for voters in the proposed City of East Cobb to decide whether to incorporate.

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Cobb schools maintain accreditation, put on improvement plan

Cobb school board approves budget

Activities involving the Cobb Board of Education—in particular open conflicts in public meetings, members’ communications with the public and the elected body’s code of ethics—constitute a considerable portion of a special review report compiled by the Cobb County School District’s accrediting agency.

In its report delivered to the district this week, Alpharetta-based Cognia said it was continuing to maintain full accreditation status for the 107,000-student CCSD, the second largest public school district in Georgia.

But it cited several areas for progress over the next year for the district, and especially for the school board, to address.

The district released the report and accompanying documents late Thursday night, after the school board held a previously unannounced executive session.

You can read through them here, here and here.

Cognia, which announced it was doing an unusual “special review” in April at the behest of three Cobb school board members and after receiving nearly 50 complaints from the public, conducted more than 170 interviews during that week-long process in August.

Of the four areas of its focus, Cognia said the Cobb school district met the highest ranking on its 4-grade system on only one of them—educational equity, and that was with some conditions.

The other three—board policy-making, the board’s code of ethics and fiscal responsibility in the school district—were cited as needing improvement.

Cognia is giving the district until December 2022 to meet the requirements of what it calls a “Progress Monitoring Review.”

Among Cognia’s major findings, it concluded that the school board ethics code “is not adhered to with fidelity by most board members.”

The Cobb school district also was found to lack “a consistent and formal process for making resource allocation decisions raised questions about how the Board handles its fiduciary responsibility,” in particular its purchase of equipment related to its COVID-19 pandemic response, and the board’s appointment of a law firm to draw reapportionment maps.

The accrediting agency urged the district to “revise [its] strategic plan to “include measurable goals, initiatives, and budgetary allocations would better ensure the presence of a comprehensive plan to guide the system during its continuous improvement process.”

And fourthly, the report concluded that while standardized assessments show that academic “progress is being made in subgroup performance even though there is still a need for a continuous focus on closing the achievement gaps.”

In a statement accompanying the district’s release, Superintendent Chris Ragsdale said that “as is the case with any feedback we receive, our educators will review Cognia’s process and recommendations closely and consider areas of recommended growth. I am committed to keeping our focus on high-quality teaching and learning and meeting Cobb County’s high expectations for all students.”

He did not specify those areas of improvement, nor did he mention issues regarding school board relations.

A Fractured School Board

Cognia’s report concluded that divisions and “the lack of trust among board members projects a negative light on the district and hinders the Board’s ability to lead the district toward its mission of ‘One Team, One Goal: Student Success.’ ”

Charisse Davis, Cobb Board of Edcucation
Charisse Davis

The current school board is made up of four white Republicans and three black Democrats, and for the last two years sharp partisan divisions have deepened over issues involving race and equity and COVID-19 response, among others.

Those Democrats—including Charisse Davis, whose Post 6 includes the Walton and Wheeler clusters—first went to Cognia, complaining that they were being silenced by their GOP colleagues.

In late 2019, the Republican majority voted to change board policy to ban board member comments at the end of meetings.

That enflamed differences even more, even as the board tried to find consensus on an anti-racism resolution in 2020, but could not.

Late last year, Davis and Howard attempted to question Ragsdale over the district’s purchase of UV disinfecting lights, hand sanitizers and other safety equipment as part of its COVID-19 response.

After the 2020 elections—in which then-chairman Brad Wheeler and vice chairman David Banks—narrowly won re-election to maintain a Republican board majority—the GOP contingent pushed through a policy change to limit how board members can place items on meeting agendas.

While the chairman and superintendent can unilaterally add items, any other board members must now get a majority of his/her colleagues to agree.

For most of 2021, issues that Democratic members have wanted to discuss—including a possible name change for Wheeler High School—have not been aired in meetings, other than from citizens making remarks during public comment.

There also was no discussion on the board regarding a resolution to ban the teaching of Critical Race Theory, a measure that passed by another partisan 4-0 vote, with the Democrats abstaining.

In its report, Cognia said faulted board leadership for not fully communicating with colleagues about what’s on agendas, and not giving them adequate time to review them before a meeting:

“Debate related to the removal of Board Member Comments highlights the Board’s recent lack of transparency and trust and the change in Board dynamics. The discussion also shows that some board members may not be able to fully represent their constituents due to their lack of knowledge of what will be discussed and voted on before the board meeting and in time to study the issues fully.”

The Cognia review also outlined that the district is aware of 113 “potential Board policy violations” by Howard, 41 by Davis, 13 by Tre’ Hutchins (the other board Democrat) and two by Banks, all “through social media, traditional media, or other interactions with the public or the District.”

Wheeler, current chairman Randy Scamihorn and board member David Chastain—all Republicans—were found not to be in apparent violation of any board policies.

The review also found “some inappropriate comments by board members” that violated board policies encouraging them to make comments to the news media that “should be helpful to the District and not harmful.”

Cognia’s directives include having the board find an “external expert” to facilitate a self-assessment process “about best practices in school governance and develop a plan to use findings from the self-assessment to improve the Board’s effectiveness, collegiality, and trust among board members.”

Purchases in Question

Another area of concern were financial matters related to the Cobb school district’s COVID-response.

In December 2020, the board approved a request from Ragsdale to spend $12 million in general fund balance to purchase UV disinfecting lights and hand sanitizing stations that would first be installed at the elementary school level.

Cobb schools COVID safety products
A contract for disinfecting UV lights was abruptly cancelled.

Ragsdale explained at the time he was confident the district would be reimbursed through additional federal CARES Act funding.

But after UV lights malfunctioned at a school, the district cancelled that portion of the contract in March.

While noting that the district has historically excelled in financial reporting, the Cognia report stated that “a review of board meeting work sessions and board meeting videos may demonstrate a lack of clarity about the collection and analysis of data used to assess the impact of resources on meeting identified goals and priorities.”

Among the recommendations are for the Cobb school district to “develop, implement, and monitor board actions regarding fiduciary matters to ensure adherence to adopted policies.”

In the Cobb school district release Thursday, Scamihorn issued a statement saying that the district still hasn’t been provided with all of the “specific allegations” that led to the special review.

The district said it spent $75,000 to prepare for the review. Cognia fully reaccredited Cobb in 2019, through 2024.

In its report, Cognia did not indicate what might happen if the Cobb school district doesn’t meet the directives of its improvement plan.

“It is disappointing the Special Review Team chose not to consider much of the context leading to various Board decisions, and their review of evidence requested from the District appears to be cursory and incomplete,” Scamihorn said. “While I am pleased this review is unlikely to have an immediately negative effect on the District’s students, it did serve as a significant distraction for the staff.”

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Cobb school district receives special review from accreditor

Cobb school district

UPDATED, 10:15 P.M.:

The Cobb school district Thursday night released the Cognia special review report, which does not recommend changing the status of the district’s full accreditation.

The agency did note several areas of improvement for the district to address over the next year, especially involving school board policy-making and ethics and fiscal responsbility.

Our follow-up story to the report below can be found by clicking here.

ORIGINAL REPORT:

The Cobb County School District has received the findings of a special review conducted in August by its accrediting agency, but isn’t commenting on them for now.

Nor is the district immediately releasing the report from Cognia, based in Alpharetta, which was responding to complaints from three members of the Cobb Board of Education and around 50 others from the community.

A Cobb school district spokeswoman told East Cobb News that “the District is in the process of carefully reviewing the report from Cognia in preparation for release in the near future. Cobb Schools remains committed to providing a world-class education and continuing the District’s legacy of student success.”

When asked if the report would be provided to media representatives upon request, the spokeswoman said that request should be directed to the district’s open records officer.

Under the Georgia Open Records Act, public agencies have three business days to respond to open records requests.

Cognia delivered its report to the Cobb County School District on Monday.

During its special review (previous ECN story here), Cognia representatives interviewed school board members, district staff, principals, teachers, parents, students and other stakeholders in its special review in August on a range of board governance matters and concerns over equitable opportunities and student performance.

The district announced in April that Cognia would be conducting the review, expressing concern that determinations made through a Special Review Team can negatively impact college acceptance rates, college scholarships, enrollment, funding, and educator recruitment and retention . . . Impacts can also negatively affect a county’s economy, property values, and bond credit ratings.”

In 2019, Cognia reaccredited the Cobb County School District—the second-largest in Georgia, with more than 107,000 students—through 2024.

But Democratic board members Charisse Davis, Jaha Howard and Tre’ Hutchins went to Cognia after saying they were being ignored by the board’s Republican majority and Superintendent Chris Ragsdale to discuss early literacy, educator and employee support and board governance training topics.

Depending on the findings, a special review—which is a rare occurrence—typically affords school districts time to make recommended changes before a possible loss of accreditation.

In September, Cognia released its findings in a special review of Gwinnett County Public Schools, indicating several areas of improvement. But the accrediting agency did not recommend any change in that school district’s full accreditation status.

At a Cobb school board work session Thursday afternoon, the Cognia report was not on the published agenda, nor was it discussed until the very end, and then only in procedural terms.

(You can view the agendas by clicking here.)

The board heard several presentations about the district’s legislative priorities and its quarterly financial report.

Just as the board was to approve the agenda for the Thursday 7 p.m. business meeting, Howard asked board chairman Randy Scamihorn if an item for discussion of the Cognia review could be added.

“There was some big news that came out, and we haven’t talked about it yet,” Howard said. “I would like the agenda to reflect that urgent matter.”

But Scamihorn said the agenda can be revised for an emergency, and said he didn’t think Howard’s request was “applicable, as the agenda has been developed.”

When Howard appealed to Suzanne Wilcox, the board attorney, she said such an item would could be added if the board determined it was “necessary” and in particular if it was a matter that was “not known about in advance.”

When Howard asked her why she didn’t recommend revising the agenda, she said that state law says an item has to be considered an emergency to be added.

“At this time, I’m not aware of anything that makes it necessary to address,” Wilcox said.

Howard then asked if a Cognia discussion could be added to the board’s December agenda, but Scamihorn said he couldn’t give an “absolute yes or no” since “none of us have seen the report yet. . . . But the chair appreciates your concern.”

This story will be updated.

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Cobb schools mask ruling appealed in federal court

Four parents of medically fragile students in the Cobb County School District are appealing a federal judge’s denial of their request for an injunction over COVID-19 protocols, including the district’s lack of a mask mandate.Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

Attorneys with the Southern Poverty Law Center filed a notice of appeal on Wednesday in the U.S. District Court for Northern Georgia in Atlanta (you can read it here).

On Oct. 15, federal district judge Tim Batten denied their request for an injunction and a temporary restraining order. The parents wanted the court to order stronger COVID-19 measures in the schools, including mandatory masks, saying their children are unable to learn in-person as a result.

The plaintiffs’ attorneys have said the parents have removed their children from in-person learning, which “has had a negative effect on them socially, physically, and emotionally.”

The parents “further allege that unless and until the school board reimplements safety measures, they will be unable to attend school and will continue to suffer irreparable harm.”

The four parents, including Sara Cavorley of East Cobb (previous ECN story here), filed suit on Oct. 1, claiming that the Cobb school district’s policies are denying their children a proper in-person education under the federal Americans With Disabilities Act.

The SPLC issued a press release Wednesday saying that “this case isn’t just about masks, this is about disability discrimination in the Cobb County School District and ensuring that all children have an equal opportunity to access an in-person learning environment.”

Cobb schools have a masks-optional policy this year after mandating them for the 2020-21 school year.

But unlike last year, the 2021-22 school year does not provide virtual learning options that are identical to classroom instruction.

The Cobb school district is making a limited number of virtual options available for the spring semester via a lottery process (the deadline for applying for that has passed).

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East Cobb resident a ‘connecter person’ for female veterans

When she received a medical discharge in 1994 to end her career in the U.S. Navy, Amy Stevens felt like many other military veterans.Amy Stevens

Feeling disconnected after years of structure, routine and a close-knit system of support, she struggled to make the transition to civilian life.

But for Stevens, a current East Cobb resident, her challenges went beyond learning how buy a home and other basics of everyday living that were new to her.

A single mother, she had a special-needs son to raise.

Above all, the invisibility of female veterans was a bracing reminder of the historic limitations placed on them during their time in the service.

“The typical woman veteran—you would not imagine that they served in the military,” said Stevens, who was an educational and training specialist in the Navy for 15 years, rising to the rank of lieutenant.

While many male veterans proudly wear hats and t-shirts signifying their military service, Stevens said women veterans quite often do not.

In fact, she’s noticed that many of her fellow women veterans don’t even mention their military background.

Recognition for women veterans is starting to increase. Last weekend, Cobb County and state and federal veterans services agencies paid tribute to women veterans in an observance at Jim Miller Park.

Stevens is the organizer of a Facebook group, Georgia Military Women, and weather permitting, will appear on Thursday in the Marietta Veterans Day parade on a float for the Disabled American Veterans association.

Amy Stevens
Amy Stevens as a Navy lieutenant.

While she’s proud of those and other broader veterans organizations that she belongs to, Stevens has become an ardent supporter of other females who’ve left the service.

“I’m a connector person,” said Stevens, now 68, who earned master’s and doctorate degrees post-Navy and has been a licensed therapist.

She formerly was a mental health specialist with the Georgia National Guard, a role that launched her volunteerism for women veterans.

When Stevens signed up for Officer Candidate School in 1979, the U.S. armed services were changing for women.

Through the Vietnam War, most women in the military were nurses or served in other strictly support roles.

When they left the military, Stevens said, “they couldn’t just jump into the higher-paid jobs” in the civilian world.

Stevens was an outlier during that time, with a degree in broadcast television, and she served in a variety of communications, education and training positions in the Navy.

By the time she left, she noticed that “there was a different type of woman in the military.” It’s estimated that 20 percent of the nation’s current veterans are women.

The Georgia Military Women Facebook group, which was started in 2012, has more than 4,000 members and is strictly about making connections and referrals.

“We’re not a therapy group,” Stevens said. “We’re a girlfriend group. It’s great just to have friends who know what it’s like to serve.”

Stevens said there are an estimated 93,000 female veterans in Georgia, the fifth-highest total in the U.S., and around 38,000 in metro Atlanta alone.

Of that latter total, she said around 20,000 receive regular services from the Veterans Administration.

The women’s veterans groups she’s a part of tend to be younger than her, many of them with families and careers. But they still face similar challenges as their older mentors.

While many of the women come to the Facebook group seeking mental health help, Stevens said the networking efforts extend to such topics as financial issues and referrals for veterans and other services.

Group members are dispersed across Georgia, but Stevens enjoys the occasions when some of them can get together in person, just to socialize.

“It’s all about helping each other,” Stevens said. “It’s all about friendships, and it’s very rewarding to be a part of a forever family.”

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East Cobb food scores: Tijuana Joe’s; Willy’s; Ege Sushi; more

East Cobb Tijuana Joe's

The following East Cobb food scores for the week of Nov. 8 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

American Deli
2100 Roswell Road, Suite 2194
November 8, 2021 Score: 83, Grade: B

Christos
1255 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 22
November 12, 2021 Score: 82, Grade: B

Ege Sushi & Japanese Cuisine
2100 Roswell Road, Suite 2112
November 8, 2021 Score: 86, Grade: B

El Huarache Veloz
1157 Roswell Road
November 9, 2021 Score: 95, Grade: A

Goldberg’s Bagel Co. & Deli
1062 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite A-110
November 10, 2021 Score: 80, Grade: B

Legacy Ridge at Marietta
840 Lecroy Drive
November 8, 2021 Score: 91, Grade: A

Madras Mantra 
2349 Windy Hill Road, Suite 120
November 9, 2021 Score: 80, Grade: B

Tijuana Joe’s
690 Johnson Ferry Road
November 9, 2021 Score: 87, Grade: B

Wendy’s
1312 Johnson Ferry Road
November 9, 2021 Score: 84, Grade: B

Willy’s Mexicana Grill
4250 Roswell Road, Suite 120
November 8, 2021 Score: 88, Grade: B

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2021 Cobb Education SPLOST results by East Cobb precincts

Cobb SPLOST VI referendum
For more details, click here. Source: Georgia Secretary of State’s office

Following up last week’s Cobb Education SPLOST VI referendum passage with some precinct-by-precinct details and related election tidbits:

  • Turnout was low, just under 10 percent across the county, with most East Cobb precincts in the 10-20 percent range;
  • The highest turnout was in the City of Marietta, which had mayor’s, city council and school board elections.

As we noted then, “yes” votes in the SPLOST referendum won every precinct, and handily.

What follows below is the vote count in East Cobb precincts. These include election day, advance, absentee and provisional totals, as well as the turnout at each polling station.

[wptg_comparison_table id=”33″]

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New East Cobb Crossing Publix store opens

East Cobb Crossing Publix
The doors open for business on Wednesday for the new Publix store at the East Cobb Crossing shopping center (4269 Roswell Road), next to Dick’s Sporting Goods.

The Florida-based grocery chain announced the store would be coming in March 2020, just as the COVID-19 pandemic began.

The doors open at 7 a.m. Wednesday.

The seventh Publix store in East Cobb is smaller than the others, at 37,400 square feet, and will be the third in the Johnson Ferry Road corridor.

Like the others, this Publix will be full-service, with bakery, deli, produce, seafood, meats and floral departments, and a pharmacy.

Operating hours will be from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily.

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East Cobb Cityhood feasibility study to be released next week

East Cobb Park summer end
A proposed City of East Cobb would include parks and recreation in a “city lite” set of services.

A financial feasibility study for the proposed City of East Cobb was to have been completed by Nov. 1, and the group leading the incorporation effort said the report will be made public next week.

Cindy Cooperman, a spokeswoman for the Committee for East Cobb Cityhood, told East Cobb News that the study would be released next Monday, Nov. 15 and will be made available on the group’s website.

The study was commissioned in July by the committee and was conducted by the Center for State and Local Finance at Georgia State University.

GSU researchers also conducted a feasibility study for the first East Cobb cityhood effort, and in late 2018 concluded that it was financially viable.

The initial effort called for police, fire and community development services.

The revived effort, announced in March, drastically reduced the proposed city of East Cobb boundaries and proposed planning and zoning, code enforcement, parks and recreation and roads and transportation services.

State Rep. Matt Dollar, the East Cobb Republican who sponsored both cityhood bills (the 2019 legislation was eventually abandoned), said in an April virtual town hall meeting that the “hope here is to be revenue neutral,” meaning no millage rate would need to be established to provide those services.

That was the conclusion of a feasibility study released last week for the proposed city of Lost Mountain in West Cobb.

That report, prepared by researchers at the University of Georgia, concluded that that city would raise enough revenues from existing taxes and fees to generate a surplus and wouldn’t have to levy property taxes.

West Cobb legislators are sponsoring a Lost Mountain cityhood bill that would create a city of around 70,000.

Like the renewed East Cobb cityhood effort, Lost Mountain supporters are emphasizing planning and zoning and preserving the suburban nature of the community.

Lost Mountain also would provide parks and recreation and sanitation services.

Preservation interests prompted a cityhood effort in Vinings, where a UGA feasibility study released in October concluded that proposed city of 7,000 was financially viable.

Cityhood bills for those three proposed cities as well as a second cityhood bill for a proposed city of Mableton are expected to be taken up in the 2022 Georgia legislature.

If passed, those bills would call for incorporation referendums in November 2022.

Dollar, who is not seeking re-election next year, has a co-sponsor in State Rep. Sharon Cooper, also an East Cobb Republican.

Cityhood bills also require a Senate sponsor. State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick, an East Cobb Republican, told East Cobb News recently she would wait to comment on the new cityhood effort until after the feasibility study is released.

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Cobb commissioners approve new NE Cobb police precinct

Cobb police precinct map
Current Cobb police patrol zones include Precinct 4, located on Lower Roswell Road in East Cobb.

UPDATED:

Commissioners approved the design/construction contract by a 5-0 vote, with District 3 representative JoAnn Birrell saying “this has been a long time coming.”

She said a groundbreaking will take place on Dec. 1 at 11 a.m.

ORIGINAL POST:

Initial design work for a new police station in Northeast Cobb is on the agenda for the Cobb Board of Commissioners Tuesday.

A contract for $723,980 with Batson-Cook Company is being presented to commissioners to design what would eventually become the Cobb Police Department’s Precinct 6.

It’s the first part of a two-phase project that’s been budgeted for $5 million in 2016 Cobb SPLOST funding.

You can read more by clicking here.

The Batson-Cook project work would include “design, project fee, and general conditions costs” for Precinct 6, according to the agenda item.

There was no other information available about the project, including the future precinct patrol area and location and how it would be staffed and funded.

Cobb government spokesman Ross Cavitt told East Cobb News in response to those questions that Precinct 6 would be located next to the Mountain View Aquatic Center (2650 Gordy Parkway).

Initially, the new facility will house the police department’s specialized units “and not have a patrol zone. That could change in the future, but that is the starting point.”

Most of the East Cobb area is currently included in Precinct 4, whose station is located on Lower Roswell Road.

That precinct runs from the Powers Ferry Road area to the east side of Canton Road.

Last month, the Cobb Police Department moved into its new headquarters on Fairground Street, in the former  LGE Community Credit Union building, a project that cost $13.5 million, also from the 2016 SPLOST.

The department had been operating out of overcrowded space on the North Marietta Parkway and Cherokee Street.

The full agenda for Tuesday’s commissioners meeting can be found here; it will start at 9 a.m. and take place in the second floor board room of the Cobb government building (100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta).

COVID-19 protocols are being followed, including mandatory masks and a limit on in-person attendance due to social-distancing.

The hearing also will be live-streamed on the county’s website, cable TV channel (Channel 24 on Comcast) and Youtube page. Visit cobbcounty.org/CobbTV for other streaming options.

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Cobb civic, business leaders to speak at ECBA, NCBA luncheons

John Loud, Cobb Chamber of Commerce
John Loud

Two of Cobb County’s leading business and civic leaders will be speaking to the East Cobb Business Association in November.

John Loud of LOUD Security and Jay Cunningham of Superior Plumbing will be the featured speakers at the ECBA’s Nov. 16 luncheon.

They’ll be speaking about “Short Cuts to Jump-Start Your Business.” They’ll be detailing their rise as owners of local start-up businesses to thriving companies in the Atlanta market.

According to the ECBA, they “will also address how they are dealing with the current worker shortages and supply chain challenges.”

Both are active in many business and civic endeavors. Loud is the current chairman of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce.

The luncheon is from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Nov. 16 at Rich Hart Global Studios (2030 Powers Ferry Road). The cost is $20 for members and $25 for non-members in advance, and $25 for members and $30 for non-members at the door. For information and to register, click here.

On Wednesday, Nov. 17, Cobb Chamber president and CEO Sharon Mason will the featured speaker at the Northeast Cobb Business Association luncheon.

That takes place from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Piedmont Church (570 Piedmont Road). Tickets are $15 for members and $20 for non-members. For information and to register click here.

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Ted’s Montana Grill closing for Thanksgiving and Christmas Eve

Ted's Montana Grill, East Cobb food scores

The Atlanta-based Ted’s Montana Grill restaurant chain, whose 39 locations include Parkaire Landing in East Cobb, announced that it will be giving its employees a day off for Thanksgiving and Christmas Eve for the first time this year.

From a release:

The restaurant wants its valued team members to enjoy well-deserved time to relax and unwind with family and friends.

The two holidays, Thanksgiving and Christmas Eve, are among Ted’s biggest sales days of the year. Ted’s will remain closed Christmas Day, as it has since it opened in 2002.

George McKerrow, CEO and co-founder of Ted’s Montana Grill, recognizes the challenging times in the restaurant industry and appreciates his team. He encourages all restaurants to close on the holidays so employees can enjoy time with loved ones. 

“Workers in the restaurant/hospitality industry have been the most impacted during these challenging times. We are incredibly grateful for our team members who came back to work with a positive, spirited attitude and the genuine hospitality that our guests expect. Our team has helped us thrive by making our guests smile and more importantly, feel like family. Now they deserve to spend quality time with their own families this holiday season. 

I’d also like to encourage everyone in the restaurant industry to close and take a break on the holidays. We should look past the revenue success and realize what truly matters now more than ever – making special holiday memories with the people we love the most.”      

 

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EDITOR’S NOTE: Love the Braves, hate the Cobb stadium deal

Cobb schools SPLOST vote World Series

The Atlanta Braves had not one, but two, parades on Friday, plus a special concert at Truist Park with rap luminaries Ludacris and Big Boi to celebrate their improbable World Series championship.

Tens of thousands of fans lined up in downtown Atlanta and along Cobb Parkway as the Braves’ caravan made its way to the ballpark.

For a moment, the exuberance almost got the best of Cobb County’s finest, as police surrounded a man whom they thought had wandered out from the crowd, but who was actually Braves’ relief pitcher Tyler Matzek.

It was hard not to get caught up in cheering on a team that was devastated by injuries, didn’t have a winning record until late in the season, then knocked off teams predicted to beat them, including last year’s champions, the Los Angeles Dodgers, in the playoffs.

As someone who grew up in metro Atlanta and whose family’s ties to the Braves go back to their days in Milwaukee, this last week truly has been special for me.

My first game as a fan was as an eight-year-old in 1969, when the Braves won their first pennant in town.

In 1995, when the Braves won the World Series at the same venue, I was a sportswriter at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. I don’t remember much about that decisive Game 6 on a Saturday night at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium, as I was coming back from somewhere after covering a college football game.

So it was a real treat to savor the first sports team I had ever followed beat back all the obstacles. This year’s Braves are a testament to determination, resilience, teamwork and optimism, qualities that take on special significance during these abnormal times of a pandemic.

The euphoria was bound to go overboard, of course, as these occasions sometimes do.

On Thursday, in a commentary published in our local daily newspaper, the headline referred to the late Tim Lee, the former county commission chairman who brokered the stadium deal that brought the Braves to Cobb, as the “angel in the outfield.”

Even more tellingly, the narrative glossed over the dubious process by which Lee, the Braves and local business insiders worked in secret for months, until they could keep their secret no more.

The above commentary asserted several times that “Tim did the right thing.” But the glaring lack of transparency, a bevy of investigations and ethics complaints and a rushed timeline without much of a chance to get meaningful feedback from the public are still gnawing.

This coming Thursday will mark the eighth anniversary that Lee announced a proposed 30-year memorandum of understanding with the Atlanta Braves to help construct a stadium in the Cumberland area.

In that agreement, Cobb would commit to a $300 million subsidy—taxpayer money—to help finance the ballpark, as well as to regular capital maintenance, public safety and other costs.

The four district members of the Cobb Board of Commissioners had exactly two weeks to digest a complicated long-term deal. The public had an even smaller window to ask questions of their elected officials at hastily arranged town hall meetings.

I covered these proceedings during my time at Patch, a hyperlocal network founded by AOL a little more than a decade ago.

Bob Ott, the former Cobb commissioner whose District 2 included the area along Windy Ridge Parkway and I-75 where the stadium would be built, was thrust into a sudden, and very glaring, spotlight.

Always accessible, Ott prided himself on holding informative town halls all over his Cumberland-East Cobb district.

But he made himself scarce for most of those two weeks, inundated with messages and calls from constituents and the media like no other issue in his then-two terms in office.

On the night before the vote, Ott held a town hall meeting not in his district, but in the commissioners’ meeting room off the Square in Marietta.

I found that odd, and asked him after it was over if he had made up his mind. He said he would do so when he pushed the button to vote.

Like the other town hall meetings I attended during that intense fortnight, I realized that the Braves stadium deal was a done deal.

Twenty-four hours later, in a cramped board room dominated by pro-stadium forces, the commissioners approved the MOU with a 4-1 vote, with Lisa Cupid, now the chairwoman, voting against.

Like many people who raised questions about the deal, Cupid wasn’t opposed to the Braves coming to Cobb County, or even having a partially publicly financed stadium built.

Like many of those same people, I also wondered about the rushed, secretive proceedings. Citizens groups as disparate as the Tea Party and Common Cause tried to get some answers, but community scrutiny wasn’t well organized.

Lee defended the timeline and process by asserting that if Cobb didn’t act, then the Braves would go elsewhere.

But as longtime Braves executive John Schuerholz admitted not long after the Cobb vote, the team didn’t have another venue in mind after wanting to leave the city of Atlanta after nearly 50 years.

In other words, the Braves played Cobb like Max Fried toyed with the Astros’ lineup on Tuesday, setting down the commissioners in almost perfect order.

The timing of all this is important to remember, as Cobb and much of the nation were starting to come out of the recession.

Commissioners JoAnn Birrell and Helen Goreham were doing verbal cartwheels from the moment the proposed stadium deal was announced, smitten by the catnip of economic development that has tempted elected officials everywhere.

You can love the Braves, as I have for most of my life, and still hate the way that stadium deal came down.

You can be excited about the dining and entertainment options at The Battery Atlanta, which the Braves have financed to the tune of nearly $400 million, and wonder why the franchise still needed the public’s “help” to build a ball park.

The process stunk to high heaven, lacked even a modicum of transparency, gave no thought to a referendum, and was followed by lame excuse-making.

Lee paid the ultimate political price when he was ousted in the 2016 Republican primary by Mike Boyce, and didn’t get to enjoy the ultimate payoff of his stadium efforts. He died two years ago of cancer at the age of 62.

After the stadium opened in 2017, the Cobb Chamber of Commerce commissioned an economic impact study proclaiming a nearly $19 million annual benefit to the county.

One of the more vocal critics of such claims, Kennesaw State University economics professor J.C. Bradbury, noted in an op-ed during the World Series that one can cheer for the Braves and not get caught up in such runaway economic development fever.

Not wanting to rain on a parade, but I feel the same way. The economic “home run” that was promised Cobb citizens still hasn’t been realized, and shouldn’t be conflated with success on the baseball field.

When a public official is hailed for doing something “right” without that individual being examined for how he/she conducted public business, that’s more than blind cheerleading.

The ends never justify the means, especially public officials spending tax dollars and not giving the citizens much of a say.

Holding elected officials—or the legacies of those who are no longer with us or who are out office—to account isn’t just about determining if what they did was the right (or wrong) thing to do.

It’s also scrutinizing how they do it that should matter.

 

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