EAST COBBER magazine to publish bimonthly through 2020

East Cobber magazine suspends publication

After resuming monthly publication in August, the EAST COBBER magazine announced it will be publishing every other month through the end of the year.

Publisher Cynthia Rozzo, who founded the monthly community magazine in 1993, wrote in a note posted Friday that due to the fallout from COVID-19, there will be September/October and November/December issues:

“By January 2021 we hope to go back to our regular monthly print schedule. In the meantime, we’ll continue to keep the East Cobb community inspired with the usual uplifting stories by direct mailing our magazine, publishing weekly E-newsletters and sharing the latest news on our social media platforms.”

For the first time in its history, the EAST COBBER suspended publication in May. The combined June/July issue and the August issue were 24 pages, about half the number of a typical issue. Rozzo is offering print advertisers a “COVID Stimulus Special” that includes placement in her weekly e-mail newsletter.

That blast reaches more than 22,000 subscribers, while the magazine has a press run of around 40,000.

Rozzo announced in June that the EAST COBBER parade and festival, which would have marked its 25th anniversary in September, is being cancelled due to COVID-19 concerns.

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Johnson unofficial winner of Cobb Commission GOP runoff

With corrected provisional and most absentee ballots having been counted, Vinings resident Fitz Johnson is the unofficial winner of the Republican runoff for District 2 on the Cobb Board of Commissioners.Fitz Johnson, Cobb Commission candidate

The Cobb Board of Elections and Registration updated its totals late Friday afternoon for that and several other runoffs, but will not certify the results until Aug. 20.

Johnson ended up with 4,925 votes, while former Cobb Planning Commission member Andy Smith of East Cobb had 4,839 votes.

Johnson captured 50.4 percent of the vote, compared to 49.6 for Smith. A recount can be called if a margin is within one-half of one percentage point.

After Tuesday’s totals, Johnson held an 83-vote lead that inched up to 90 on Wednesday, after most absentee ballots had been counted. The margin of victory—at least for now—is 86 votes for Johnson.

If those results stand, he’ll face Democrat Jerica Richardson in November in the general election, with the winner to succeed retiring commissioner Bob Ott.

District 2 includes most of East Cobb and the Smyrna-Vinings-Cumberland area.

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Sprayberry Crossing project hinges on rare rezoning request

Sprayberry Crossing rezoning

The developer of a proposed mixed-use project at the Sprayberry Crossing Shopping Center is requesting a category for the development that has never been sought before in Cobb County.

Atlantic Residential, an Atlanta-based apartment builder, has filed for what’s called an ROD designation, to go with existing neighborhood shopping and planning shopping district uses.

The request, case number ROD-1, scheduled to be heard in September, has been the subject of intense discussion in the community.

While many residents there have been seeking a solution for years to the blighted retail center that’s there now, others are opposed to apartments, the proposed five-story height of residential buildings seen in renderings by the developer and have expressed traffic concerns.

The Sprayberry Crossing proposal (rezoning filings here) would include 61,500 square feet of office and retail space (30,000 for a major grocer), 178 apartments, 122 senior-living apartments and 50 townhomes on more than 17 acres.

Atlantic Residential also wants to build an open-air entertainment and food hall and incorporate walking trails and greenspace around an existing family cemetery.

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During a virtual town hall meeting Wednesday organized by Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell, county zoning, community development and transportation officials explained more details about ROD and preliminary findings of a traffic study conducted by the developer.

The virtual town hall meeting was informational only, and Birrell and her Cobb Planning Commission appointee, Judy Williams, did not offer comments.

Birrell encouraged citizens to contact planning board and county commission members ahead of next month’s public meetings.

ROD has some other unique components.

Jason Gaines, the Cobb Community Development Agency’s planning director, said ROD projects are pedestrian-oriented and designed for traffic integration to meet the scale and variety of such developments.

They’re also “site plan specific,” meaning that there aren’t minimum lot sizes, setbacks and buffers that are required in most rezoning cases.

Atlantic Residential submitted a revised site plan below in late July that call for 10-foot front sidebacks and 5-foot setbacks to the side and rear of buildings.

To see a larger view, click here. Source: Cobb Zoning Office.

ROD projects also are not to set a precedent for the area surrounding a property that may be zoned that way.

At least 10 percent of the housing units in an ROD must be set aside for residents making no more than 80 percent of an area’s average median income.

Those opposed to apartments have said those are their biggest concerns in an area with classic suburban single-family neighborhoods.

Cobb DOT engineer Amy Diaz said during the presentation that her office received a copy of the developer’s traffic study last week, but showed some slides with preliminary information that’s subject to change.

She said much of the data is based on 2015 numbers. Due to COVID-19 business and school closures, “no doubt there have been traffic impacts” in a busy area at Sandy Plains and East Piedmont Roads that includes Sprayberry High School and other commercial activities.

Diaz said what she’s seen of the traffic study thus far is in line with what’s projected for that part of the Sandy Plains Corridor. “We do know there’s congestion in the area,” she said.

She said senior-living units have reduced traffic rates compared to single-family residential housing.

The traffic study is available by contacting her at [email protected].

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The Cobb zoning office has conducted a preliminary analysis of the Sprayberry Crossing request (you can read it here), which means that it has received the initial filings and is conducting a full review of the proposal.

Once that process is complete, staff offers a recommendation before public hearings begin.

The Sprayberry Crossing case will be heard Sept. 1 by the Cobb Planning Commission, which will make a recommendation. The Cobb Board of Commissioners will hold a zoning hearing Sept. 15.

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Injured hiker rescued from Gold Branch trails with GPS help

Injured hiker rescued Gold Branch Unit
An EMS boat along the Chattahoochee River awaits an injured hiker who was escorted from the Gold Branch Unit trails Friday morning. Source: Cobb Fire & Emergency

Even if you’re trying to get away from the modern world with a hike deep into a nature trail, it helps to have modern technology.

That’s how Cobb Fire and Emergency Services crews were able to locate, rescue and treat a hiker who fell and injured an ankle Friday morning at the Gold Branch Unit of the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area.

The multi-agency response included Cobb Fire Station 21 in East Cobb, Cobb County Police Boat 4 and a Roswell Fire and EMS rescue boat.

Nick Danz, a paramedic with Cobb Fire, said the hiker was helped off the trails by rescue workers and escorted to a Metro Ambulance EMS boat along the Chattahoochee River and was triaged there with what he said were minor injuries.

He said the hiker called 911 from a cell phone, but was too far for rescue vehicles to reach, and could not walk back for treatment.

So Cobb Fire used what’s called “Rapid SOS” technology to get GPS (global positioning system) information from the cell phone.

That area of the Gold Branch Unit doesn’t have electronic markers, Danz said, as is the case with Cobb County parks, which have what’s called ELM (Electronic Locator Map) detectors.

Danz said when the hiker’s cell phone coordinates were determined, that information was relayed to a Cobb Fire battalion Chief, who dispatched crews from Station 21 and contacted the other agencies.

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East Cobb restaurant update: McCray’s Tavern opens at Parkaire

McCray's Tavern East Cobb opens

A “soft” opening of the new McCray’s Tavern in East Cobb has been going on for a couple of weeks, but now the restaurant at Parkaire Landing Shopping Center is making it official after posting a social media message Thursday.

Menus, hours and other details can be found here; when we talked with general manager Andrew McDonough he said a number of measures are being implemented in accordance with COVID-19 protocols, including spacing of tables.

The menu is similar to other McCray’s locations (and is the same for dining in or takeout), a mix of standard tavern fare and chef’s features. The dinner menu includes woodfire grill-cooked meats and fish and there is a drink menu with the promise of “sips and stogies,” with scotch and bourbon and cigar-rolling.

Online ordering and reservations are also available. Phone: 404-800-3553.

Kitchen hours are Sunday-Thursday 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Friday-Saturday 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Bar hours are Monday-Thursday 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. and Friday-Saturday 11 a.m. to 12 a.m.

They’re also in the process of hiring two full-time bartenders. Apply to [email protected] or stop in Tuesday-Thursday 2-4 p.m.

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Cobb school district launches virtual instruction portal

Cobb schools CARES Act funding

With the Cobb County School District starting online-only on Monday, the district has been rolling out new components of its Cobb Teaching and Learning portal this summer.

On Thursday, the CTLS Learn vertical was launched, and that’s where virtual classroom instruction will take place. Students can see class assignments there, and additional learning resources will be provided, including textbooks, along with class communications and moderated class chats.

CTLS Learn enables students to access on-demand digital sessions, assessment and feedback information and messaging with teachers.

Here are more details about CTLS Learn, including login instructions and how it integrates with CTLS overall, and the CTLS Parent portal.

The CTLS Parent portal also includes mobile access; in addition to the iPhone app released late July, an app for Android users also is available.

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East Cobb Election Update: Johnson hanging on, Marbutt wins

Fitz Johnson, Cobb Commission candidate
Fitz Johnson

The Cobb Board of Elections and Registration is still counting some outstanding absentee and privisional ballots, but it looks as though Vinings resident Fitz Johnson has won the Republican Cobb Board of Commissioners District 2 runoff.

UPDATED Friday, 7:20 p.m.: Johnson is the unofficial winner after corrected provisional and most absentee ballots were counted, with an 86-vote margin.

The results will be certified Aug. 20.

Johnson led East Cobb resident Andy Smith by 83 votes after Tuesday’s in-person voting, and additional absentee ballots that have been counted show Johnson has increased his lead by 90 votes.

According to unofficial results from the Georgia Secretary of State’s Office, Johnson has 4,913 votes and Smith 4,823 votes.

Smith, a former member of the Cobb Planning Commission, said in a message to his supporters Thursday morning that “while it looks like we came up short, I have loved this process and enjoyed meeting so many great people who I can now call friends. It was time well spent.

Smith led most of Tuesday evening and won more absentee ballots. Johnson, a retired Army officer and business executive who’s a trustee of the Wellstar Health System, picked up support late, especially in the northernmost East Cobb precincts.

Jason Marbutt, Cobb senior assistant DA
Jason Marbutt

Johnson would face Jerica Richardson, unopposed in the Democratic primary, in the November general election.

Cobb Elections said earlier Wednesday that around 600 absentee ballots were to be counted, and around 50 or so provisional ballots and some out-of-town absentee ballots remained outstanding.

The results will not be certified until next Thursday, Aug. 20.

Tuesday’s runoffs also decided another Cobb commission seat, in District 4 in South Cobb, where Monique Sheffield, a member of the Cobb Board of Zoning Appeals, defeated Shelia Edwards in the Democratic primary.

Sheffield has no Republican opposition in November and will succeed commissioner Lisa Cupid, who is challenging GOP incumbent Mike Boyce for Cobb Commission Chairman.

East Cobb resident Jason Marbutt has been elected to the Cobb Superior Court in a non-partisan runoff. Marbutt, who is is senior assistant Cobb district attorney, defeated attorney Greg Shenton with 55.8 percent of the vote in the race to succeed retiring judge Stephen Schuster.

Marbutt, who serves on the Cobb Elder Abuse Task Force, told supporters that “I will work hard to honor the trust placed in me by the citizens of Cobb County. Judge Schuster leaves an enduring legacy after many years of fine service. I will honor him by continuing his good work as a servant to the public.”

In another non-partisan judicial runoff, Diana Simmons edged Tricia Griffiths with 51.3 percent of the vote for a post on State Court vacating by retiring Toby Prodgers.

Connie Taylor won 62 percent of the vote in a Democratic runoff for Cobb Superior Court Clerk. She will face Republican incumbent Rebecca Keaton in November.

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GHSA could change start of high school football season again

The Georgia High School Association said Wednesday that the start of the high school football season—which has already been delayed by two weeks to early September—could change again.GHSA logo, Walton and Pope volleyball, East Cobb swimmers

The GHSA said while it’s still planning to start play the week of Sept. 4, that date “could change based on COVID-19 data.”

That statement came after GHSA officials met with its sports medicine advisory committee, and after the AJC reported more than 800 positive COVID-19 cases among high school athletes since early June.

The schools were not identified and there wasn’t a specific breakdown among sports. Softball and volleyball seasons have started, and cross country also will be competing as scheduled in the fall.

Some football teams have cancelled or postponed their seasons in Georgia, mostly outside of metro Atlanta. Some school districts, including Clayton County, are delaying starts to fall sports.

Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale has said previously he would follow GHSA guidance for athletics, although other extracurricular activities have been cancelled.

The GHSA didn’t indicate what specific data it was looking at, nor did it detail what its sports medicine advisory board advised.

Georgia still is regarded as having high numbers of new confirmed COVID-19 cases, with 3,660 more reported Wednesday by the Georgia Department of Public Health, and 226,159 overall.

Of those overall cases, a total of 11,763 have occurred between the ages of 10-17.

This is what GHSA also released Wednesday afternoon:

As numbers dictate over the next two weeks, a decision will be forthcoming with regard to the football start date.

  • The GHSA staff has contingency plans to cover all start and restart scenarios.
  • Our goal continues to be to provide sports and activities for our students as soon as possible with safety being the top priority.
  • There is always a possibility of postponement based on the data and advice from our medical professionals.

Last week the GHSA board of trustees cancelled preseason football scrimmages and postponed cheerleading and one-act play competitions, which are conducted indoors during the fall, to the spring.

Five of the six East Cobb football teams are scheduled to play during the weekend of Sept. 4, including the Kell-Walton game in the Corky Kell Classic that day that’s been moved to the Walton campus.

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Wheeler Academic Booster Club continues calculator donation drive

The Wheeler Academic Booster Club has been asking for donations to procure 400 calculators for students with the start of a new school year next week.Wheeler Academic Booster Club

Thus far the club reports they’ve nearly reached the halfway point of their goal, and that if “you are still inclined to help,” here’s what they’re looking for:

TI-36x Pro Calculators (New AND Used) can still be dropped off at Wheeler High School

Or Use Amazon Wish List Link:
https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/PSH64Y9TPIGU?ref_=wl_share
and order online

Calculators can be sent to:
Academic Booster Club
C/O WHEELER HIGH SCHOOL, 375 HOLT RD • MARIETTA, GA 30068

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New Cobb fire chief appointed; is 26-year department veteran

When former Cobb Fire Chief was appointed interim Cobb Public Safety Director last August, one of his deputies, William Johnson, was named interim fire chief.Cobb Fire Chief William Johnson

On Tuesday the Cobb Board of Commissioners voted unanimously to formally appoint Johnson to the position, which oversees fire and emergency services.

Johnson has been in Cobb for more than 26 years, according to his official biography, and started out at the rank of firefighter/paramedic.

He’s worked his way up as an engineer, lieutenant, captain and battalion chief, and in 2016, was appointed deputy chief of preparedness.

Johnson hold a bachelor’s degree from Columbia Southern University in fire science. He is a University of Georgia’s Carl Vinson Institute of Government EXCEL graduate.

Johnson also is part of the 2019 class of Leadership Cobb.

He’s lived in Cobb County all his live, graduating from McEachern High School, and still lives in West Cobb with his wife and two children.

Johnson is a founding committee member of the United Leadership Program and a lifetime Silver Member of the NAACP.

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East Cobb food scores: Mzizi Coffee; Which Which; more

Mzizi Coffee, East Cobb food scores

When restaurants shuttered due to COVID-19 closures in March, health inspections grounded to a halt for months, and there haven’t been many conducted at East Cobb establishments since then.

A handful of restaurants and other eateries have been inspected since late July by Cobb and Douglas Public Health, including the following listed below in East Cobb.

Inspectors have been making their rounds around the county during this time, they just haven’t stopped by many places here. For example, a good chunk of the inspections added to their database recently have been for the many food vendors at Six Flags and White Water.

Typically during the spring and summer, inspectors are busy with similar vendors at Truist Park and restaurants at The Battery, but with no fans allowed at Atlanta Braves games this year, there haven’t been any inspections.

Many restaurants are still operating at far below full dining room capacity due to physical distancing requirements everywhere.

Posting these scores has become a favorite topic for readers, so much so that we went from publishing them weekly, to every other week to weekly.

When we have enough East Cobb scores to report, we will post them as we have as follows. Click the link under each listing for details of the inspection:

A Tasty Touch
2111 Lower Roswell Road
August 7, 2020 Score: 100, Grade: A

Mzizi Coffee Roaster
2995 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 220
July 28, 2020 Score: 72, Grade: C

New China House
1050 E. Piedmont Road, Suite 142
August 12, 2020 Score: 95, Grade: A

Planet Smoothie 
1050 E. Piedmont Road, Building 200
July 27, 2020 Score: 92, Grade: A

Real NY Pizza 
1482 Roswell Road
August 11, 2020 Score: 91, Grade: A

Subway 
4101 Roswell Road, Suite 902
July 27, 2020 Score: 98, Grade: A

Which Wich Superior Sandwiches
1401 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 310
August 7, 2020 Score: 89, Grade: B

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Cobb Commission District 2 GOP runoff: Smith-Johnson cliffhanger

Cobb Commission District 2 race

UPDATED Wednesday, 10:58 pm: The final absentee ballots are still to be counted, with Johnson increasing his lead on Wednesday   from late Tuesday by seven votes to hold a 90-vote lead, 4,913 to 4,823 for Smith.

We will update with a new post by the end of the week. The election will not be certified until Aug. 20.

Check real-time results by clicking here.

UPDATED, 11:59 P.M.:

The Cobb Board of Commissioners District 2 Republican runoff election was separated by fewer than 100 votes late Tuesday.

Candidates Andy Smith (right) and Fitz Johnson both expected this race to go down to the wire, as did the June 9 primary.

According to unofficial results from the Georgia Secretary of State’s office, Johnson had 4,853 votes, or 50.4 percent, to 4,770 votes for Smith, or 49.6 percent, with all 39 precincts reporting.

Still to be counted are absentee mail-in ballots. Both candidates said in interviews with East Cobb News late Tuesday it may be a few days before the results are certified.

Smith was ahead most of the night on the strength of absentee votes and was surprised so many had already come in—those were drop-off ballots that he led, 2,751 to 2,296.

Johnson trimmed Smith’s lead and finally overtook him late with in-person votes in Tuesday’s balloting at precincts, 2,003 to 1,551 at the last count.

Smith, a former member of the Cobb Planning Commission who lives in East Cobb, said he made an effort to reach more potential voters in door-to-door campaigning during the runoff campaign.

“I was just focusing on getting out and meeting more people,” he said. “I’ve been out every day for the last three weeks.”

Johnson, a retired Army officer and business executive from Vinings, said he was emphasizing voters in East Cobb.

“It’s a tough vote,” he said, especially in motivating voters to participate in the runoffs.

As he took the lead, Johnson was closing in on Smith in some East Cobb precincts with heavy turnouts, and had gone ahead in Mt. Bethel 1, Roswell 1, Shallowford Falls 1 and Willeo 1.

Johnson, who was diagnosed with COVID-19 before the primary, said for safety concerns—his own and those of voters—he didn’t knock on doors during the runoff.

“I didn’t feel that was the right thing to do,” he said. “We just did a lot of talking to people on the phone, sent out mailers.”

According to state law, losing candidates can ask for a recount if they come within a half-percentage point of the winner.

Here’s how the precinct map looked at the end of Tuesday’s counting. Smith led in precincts in turquoise, and Johnson was ahead in precincts shaded in blue. For real-time updates and precinct-by-precinct voting, click here:

Cobb BOC D2 GOP runoff map final 8.11.20

UPDATED, 10:45 P.M.:

Partial results in 27 of 39 precincts have been reported, and Smith’s lead has dwindled to 50.6 percent.

He has 4,224 votes to 4,118 for Johnson, with 49.4 percent. Smith led in mail-in absentee balloting, but Johnson has closed the gap in today’s voting at precincts, with 1,268 votes, compared to 1,005 for Smith.

Smith still leads most East Cobb precincts, but Johnson has gone ahead slightly in Sewell Mill 1, Murdock 1, Chestnut Ridge 1 and Hightower 1.

Johnson also holds leads for now in Roswell 1, Shallowford Falls 1 and Willeo 1.

UPDATED, 10:15 P.M.:

Some more in-person voting from today is being added to the totals, with partial results being reported in 12 of 39 precincts.

Smith has 3,535 votes (52.6 percent) and Johnson has 3,184 votes (47.4 percent). Johnson leads in counting from today’s in-person voting 450-440.

While Smith continues to lead most East Cobb precincts, he is enjoying his best margins in Mt. Bethel 3 and 4, Fullers Park 1, Eastside 1 and 2 and Sope Creek 2 and 3, in some cases with between 55 and 60 percent of the vote.

UPDATED, 9:54 P.M.:

Absentee ballots and early voting results have given Andy Smith a slight lead over Fitz Johnson, with today’s in-person tabulations just starting to come in.

As of around 9:30 p.m., Smith had 3,097 votes, or 53 percent, to 2,797 for Johnson, for 47 percent.

Smith led the mail-in absentee ballots 2,751 to 2,296, while Johnson led advance voting 438-344.

The absentee ballots are likely not complete, as voters had until 7 p.m. Tuesday to have them mailed dropped off at various drop-off locations set up by Cobb Elections.

The early precinct map shows Smith ahead in most of the East Cobb precincts, in his home base, and Johnson, who lives in Vinings, is ahead in most of the Vinings-Cumberland-Smyrna polling stations.

ORIGINAL REPORT, 7:02 P.M.:

The polls have closed for the Georgia runoff elections, which include a Republican race for District 2 on the Cobb Board of Commissioners.

Those candidates are Fitz Johnson of Vinings, left, and Andy Smith of East Cobb. While turnout at the polls and during early voting was expected to be light, most of the votes will be coming via absentee ballots, which will be counted last.

You can track results as they come in at this link from the Georgia Secretary of State’s office, and East Cobb News will be updating results from that and other local races here.

When Johnson edged Smith in the June 9 primary, the results were not certified for several days due to a heavy number of absentee ballots.

According to Cobb Elections, nearly 6,000 people voted in-person over the last two weeks, while more than 18,000 absentee ballots were returned for the runoff.

The winner of Tuesday’s District 2 runoff will face Democrat Jerica Richardson in November. A first-time candidate, she was unopposed in the primary.

The winner in the general election will succeed retiring commissioner Bob Ott, a three-term Republican. He appointed Smith to the Cobb Planning Commission but has not made an endorsement.

Also on the countywide ballot Tuesday are two non-partisan judicial runoffs.

One is for Cobb Superior Court Judge between Jason Marbutt of East Cobb, a Cobb senior assistant district attorney, and attorney Greg Shenton.

The other is for Cobb State Court Judge between Trina Griffiths and Diana Simmons.

Another open seat on the commission will be determined Tuesday in a Democratic runoff for District 4, in South Cobb. Incumbent commissioner Lisa Cupid, who is challenging current Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce in November, is endorsing Monique Sheffield, her appointee to the Cobb Board of Zoning Appeals, in a runoff against Shelia Edwards.

There is not a Republican candidate on the ballot in November for that seat.

Other runoffs Tuesday will determine a Democratic nominee for Cobb Superior Court Clerk and a Democratic candidate for State House District 35 in North Cobb,

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Taste of East Cobb postponed for a second time, to May 2021

Taste of East Cobb

When organizers of the Taste of East Cobb delayed their springtime food festival, they were hopeful of pulling it off on Halloween.

But that’s not going to happen in 2020, due to “the continuing impact of the COVID-19 pandemic,” per a message sent out on Wednesday.

Instead, they’ll be aiming for May 2021, the usual month the Walton Band fundraising event has taken place.

Co-chairman David Wilson said the second postponement was made “out of an abundance of caution, and to do our part to keep our community safe.”

As many businesses were closed during the spring, the Taste of East Cobb held a special “takeout” promotion to help local restaurants.

Most late summer-early fall events in East Cobb have been called off or delayed. The Noshfest at Temple Kol Emeth, held on the Labor Day weekend, is being pushed back to the spring.

The EAST COBBER parade and festival, slated for mid-September, was cancelled. Last week, the Rotary Club of East Cobb announced its early August Dog Days Run will be a “No K” event.

Also on Wednesday, officials with the North Georgia State Fair announced the annual late September-early October event at Jim Miller Park was being cancelled.

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East Cobb orthodontist to hold blood drive on Thursday

Dr. Zachary Levin of Levin Orthodontics (1229 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 100) sends word that his practice will be having a Red Cross blood drive Thursday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.East Cobb orthdontist blood drive

He said the anyone in the public is invited and that there will be medical-grade infection control, free parking and refreshments.

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Cobb commissioners won’t take up absentee ballot funding request

After being accused of deciding in secret not to consider a funding request to mail absentee ballot applications to all county registered voters for the November general election, Cobb commissioners did discuss the matter in public at their meeting on Tuesday.Cobb absentee ballot funding request

Then the Republican majority voted against putting the matter on the meeting agenda.

The vote was strictly partisan—4-1—and came after the head of the Cobb Democratic Party blasted what she said was a behind-the-scenes process.

(In order for an item not on a meeting agenda to be added, it must obtain a “super majority” vote of four commissioners.)

The Cobb Board of Elections and Registration had voted unanimously last month to ask commissioners for $222,000 in CARES Act funding to mail absentee ballot applications to all 518,000 registered county voters.

But in discussing whether to put the request on the commissioners’ agenda for consideration, Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce said he declined to do so because he didn’t have the support of the majority of his colleagues.

Commissioner Lisa Cupid, the only Democrat on the board and who is facing Boyce in the chairman’s race in November, said she wasn’t asked about the funding request during the agenda prep process.

She said there was “a lot of concern” that an item that received unanimous approval from the elections board didn’t make it onto the agenda, even for discussion.

She made a motion to discuss placing the item on the agenda at Tuesday’s meeting, and Boyce seconded that motion.

That the elections board request didn’t make it to the agenda, Cupid said, “is a troubling path to take. I do not understand why we’re taking it now.”

In his first public comments on the matter in his role as chairman, Boyce said “there is nothing secret” about the process, and that there was no vote taken.

“My job is to take the pulse of the board,” he added, saying that this is the first time since he took office “where there was generally no support for something.”

Boyce said the elections board never approached him about a funding request, and had opportunities to do so during the recently-completed Cobb fiscal year 2021 budget process.

In remarks at the start of the meeting, Cobb Democratic chairwoman Jackie Bettadapur cited issues with voting during the June 9 primaries, especially in Democratic strongholds in South Cobb, due to staffing shortages, problems with new voting machines and long lines due to social-distancing measures.

Absentee voting, she said. “is the safest way to vote in a pandemic,” and called issues around the primary a “debacle.”

A vast majority of those voting in the primary in Cobb voted via absentee ballot, causing days of delays in certifying those elections. Many more absentee ballots have been returned for runoff elections that conclude Tuesday with in-person voting.

She also reminded Boyce of critical remarks he made about Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensberger in the wake of some of those problems.

Republicans, Bettadapur said, “don’t want people to vote.”

Commissioner Bob Ott of East Cobb said he opposed the funding request because he’s heard from citizens who were confused upon getting primary absentee ballot applications from both the county and the state.

Cupid said in response to Boyce that CARES Act funding was appropriate for absentee balloting because of issues prompted by COVID-19, and thought it was unfair for the elections board request to be singled out when other entities had their requests considered.

(The elections board appointees include one from the commission chairman, two from the county’s legislative delegation and one each from the county Democratic and Republican parties.)

Commissioner Keli Gambrill of North Cobb said that nowhere in the potential agenda item she saw was CARES Act funding ever mentioned, and wondered why absentee ballot applications weren’t asked for Tuesday’s runoff election.

“This runoff election is just as important as November,” she said.

Boyce insisted that “there were other ways to approach this,” and said that there are more requests for what’s left of Cobb’s allotment of CARES Act funding (an original $132 million) than there was money left to distribute.

While voting is important, he said, so are food, rent, public health, schools and other needs that have arisen due to the COVID-19 crisis.

Near the end of the meeting, Cupid thanked Bettadapur for speaking out.

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Three-13 Salon named Cobb Chamber small business of year

Three-13 Salon Cobb Chamber small business of year
Photos taken by Karl L. Moore. Source: Cobb Chamber of the Commerce

Three-13 Salon, Spa & Boutique, located on Canton Road, was named the Cobb Chamber of Commerce’s small business of the year on Monday. After 46 years in business, it was among those that closed completely for several weeks during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Cobb Chamber announced its small business awards honorees at its monthly Marquee Monday event, and here’s what was said about Three-13:

The Marietta-based salon and spa is proud to offer a complete staff of highly-trained service professionals, and complete hair extension and spa departments. Three-13 has built a brand and culture that boasts the qualities of innovation, integrity, and quality—and remain committed to professional services and client satisfaction.

With a motto of “Be Your Best You,” Three-13 welcomes in partners, employees and customers from every imaginable background with open arms. They also host an annual “Angels of Life” event, which has raised awareness and $560,000 over the past nine years for The Georgia Transplant Foundation, an organization near and dear to managing partner Lester Crowell, whose own two heart transplants have given him new life and determination.

Committed to innovation, creating a welcome atmosphere and working closely within their community, partners Lester Crowell Jr., Marian Crowell, and Joseph Tony Lacey are excited for the future of business in Cobb County.

Other businesses among the Chamber’s Top 25 list include the following from East Cobb:

  • Artisan Custom Closets, 600 Wylie Road (home renovation)
  • Deluxe Athletics, 800 Scott Drive (synthetic field turf and lawn manufacturer)
  • InPrime Legal, 1640 Powers Ferry Road (outsourced business legal provider)
  • Janice Overbeck Real Estate Team, 2250 Sewell Mill Road (residential real estate)
  • Southeastern Engineering, 2470 Sandy Plains Road (civil engineering firm)

The Chamber also named 2020 businesses to watch, those have have been open for three years or less and “have already achieved substantial growth.”

They include the The Auto Accident Attorneys Group, located at 1454 Johnson Ferry Road.

Three-13 Salon Cobb Chamber small business of the year
Three-13 owners Lester and Leslie Crowell accept their small business of the year award, with Cobb Chamber president John Loud looking on. Source: Cobb Chamber

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UPDATE: Sewell Mill Library curbside service resumes Thursday

Sewell Mill Library opens

The Sewell Mill Library has been closed since the weekend due to an employee testing positive for COVID-19.

While the interior of the building remains closed and is undergoing a “deep cleaning,” the Cobb Public Library System announced that curbside service for checked-out materials will resume on a limited basis starting Thursday.

That service will be available weekdays from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. until further notice, and here’s what the library staff is asking you to do if you need to use the curbside service, there and at any of the selected branches that have reopened:

Cobb Library patrons are asked to schedule curbside appointments at the libraries offering the service at least one hour in advance on the same day of the planned appointment. A form for scheduling the curbside appointments and more details are available at www.cobbcat.org/libraryexpress.

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Atlanta Braves sprinter ‘The Freeze’ opens gym in East Cobb

Durran Dunn, The Freeze opens East Cobb gym
Durran Dunn competing for the USA in track competition.

You may remember the last two Atlanta Braves seasons—when fans actually came to games—and one lucky fan got to challenge an elite-level sprinter between innings.

That sprinter, Durran Dunn, nicknamed “The Freeze,” would give a fan a lengthy head start in a foot race around the outfield warning track. It was part of a promotion by RaceTrac called “Beat the Freeze.”

On a handful of occasions, the fan would score an upset. Most of the time, however, “The Freeze” turned on his burners down the stretch.

Dunn has turned over a new leaf as as a small business owner in East Cobb.

Dunn, born in Jamaica and who grew up in New York, has competed for the U.S. and his native country in track and field competitions. He also has a business background and is a certified public accountant.

In late June he opened an Anytime Fitness location at Parkaire Landing (4880 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 520, right next to the East Cobb Library) that’s open 24 hours a day.

He says that the facility is following “enhanced and rigorous cleaning and sanitizing procedures” during this time of COVID-19, including sanitizing stations, social-distance measures and the provisions of masks.

Dunn says he’s offering free enrollment through Aug. 31, includes an initial fitness assessment, and a grand opening is coming in September.

For info: 678-909-5095; Facebook and Instagram.

If you want to see what it was like to run against The Freeze, check out this body cam video from the perspective a fan.

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Cobb parents demanding classroom learning to hold 2nd rally

With a new school year starting online in Cobb County next Monday, a group of parents pushing for classroom learning will hold another public rally on Saturday.Let Parents Choose

The group that calls itself Let Parents Choose will gather at the Marietta Square at 10 a.m. Saturday.

They’ve started an online petition drive and created a Facebook group and organized a a similar rally last month the drew several dozen people to the Cobb Civic Center.

They were upset when Cobb County School District superintendent Chris Ragsdale dropped an in-school option in July, citing a high community spread for COVID-19.

Let Parents Choose says that the relatively low COVID-19 case rate for school-aged children needs to be considered, but more importantly, the delivery of education to students, especially those at risk of dropping out, who have special needs.

All students, they say, are feeling the brunt of social isolation and many families were struggling with virtual learning that began in March, when the schools were closed.

Since the group’s first rally, Ragsdale has outlined plans for a return to classrooms but no dates for when that might be. He hasn’t responded to the Let Parents Choose concerns.

Last week, several school districts in Georgia began their school year, with COVID-19 cases prompting the quarantine of a class in Cherokee County. On Monday, North Paulding High School switched to online-only after nine positive COVID-19 cases were reported.

As Cobb teachers and staff reported for preplanning last week, around 100 cases of the virus among staff and students were acknowledged by Cobb and Douglas Public Health, dating back to July 1.

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Cobb Commission GOP nominee to be decided in Tuesday runoff

Cobb Commission District 2 race
Republican voters will choose between Fitz Johnson, left, and Andy Johnson for the District 2 nomination to the Cobb Board of Commissioners.

Tuesday is the last day to cast a ballot in primary runoff campaigns that include the Republican nominee for District 2 on the Cobb Board of Commissioners.

All voting will take place Tuesday at regular voting precincts, but voters who have obtained absentee ballots can deliver them to designated dropoff spots (including the East Cobb Government Center, 4400 Lower Roswell Road), by 7 p.m. Tuesday.

The polling stations will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.

You can check your voting status and view sample ballots by clicking here. The Cobb Board of Elections and Registration is observing social distancing guidelines at the polls and is asking voters to wear masks.

After advance voting ended on Friday, Cobb Elections said 5,835 people voted early in-person, 3,801 in the Democratic primary and only 794 in the Republican primary.

A total of 18,855 absentee ballots were returned, with 9,548 Democratic ballots and 3,356 Republican ballots.

Former Cobb Planning Commission member Andy Smith of East Cobb and business man and civic leader Fitz Johnson of Vinings are vying for the GOP nomination in District 2, with the winner facing Democrat Jerica Richardson in November.

Also on the countywide ballot Tuesday are two non-partisan judicial runoffs.

One is for Cobb Superior Court Judge between Jason Marbutt of East Cobb, a Cobb senior assistant district attorney, and attorney Greg Shenton.

The other is for Cobb State Court Judge between Trina Griffiths and Diana Simmons.

Voters in South Cobb also will be deciding a new county commissioner. Current District 4 commissioner Lisa Cupid is the Democratic nominee for Cobb Commission Chairman, and she’s endorsed Monique Sheffield, her appointee to the Cobb Board of Zoning Appeals, in a runoff against Shelia Edwards.

In the District 2 race, incumbent commissioner Bob Ott, who is retiring after three terms, has not made an endorsement.

Smith was his appointment to the Cobb Planning Commission and they attended high school together in New Jersey. In recent campaign disclosure reports, Johnson has outraised and outspent Smith, and enjoys the support of donors among the county’s business and health care leadership.

Johnson is a trustee of the Wellstar Health System. Smith, the owner of a construction design company, has been active in civic and community projects through his membership at Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church.

Their campaigns have focused on development, traffic and public safety. Johnson said during the primary campaign that he was adamantly opposed to a proposed City of East Cobb; Smith said he wanted to keep an open mind about the issue.

Cityhood leaders said last fall they would not be pursuing a bill sponsored by Rep. Matt Dollar of East Cobb in the Georgia legislature last year. It would have to be reintroduced in a future session to be reconsidered.

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