Lassiter students named winners of 2019 Congressional art competition

Lassiter students Congressional art competition
Left to right: 2nd place winner Sophia Maier, 1st place winner Holly Mostyn, Rep. Lucy McBath, 3rd place winner Emily Marie Phillips.

Submitted information and photos from the office of U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath:

This week, Rep. Lucy McBath (D-Marietta) hosted her first Congressional Art Competition Reception at the Roswell Visual Arts Center for student artists and their parents and teachers. During the exhibit, McBath announced that Holly Mostyn’s photograph, “Splatter” won first place and will be on display in the halls of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. for one year as a part of the nationwide Congressional Art Competition: An Artistic Discovery exhibit. Her artwork will be on display alongside winners from other Congressional Districts across the nation. Holly is a senior at Lassiter High School in Marietta.

Additionally, Sophia Maier’s colored pencil, marker and acrylic piece “BusBOY” won second place and will be on display in McBath’s Washington, D.C. office. Sophia is also a senior at Lassiter High School in Marietta. McBath announced that Emily Marie Phillips won third place for her ink and marker on paper piece, “Silence.” Emily is 16 and attends Cambridge High School in Milton. Her artwork will be displayed in Rep. McBath’s Sandy Springs District Office.

“It was a delight to see all of the art on display from talented young artists in Georgia’s Sixth,” said Rep. McBath. “Congratulations to this year’s winners – Holly, Sophia, and Emily! I look forward to seeing their art on display as I walk through the U.S. Capitol building and in my Sandy Springs and Washington offices.”

This year, the judges serving on the panel to decide the winners included Althea Foster, Laurianne Love, Craig Ford, and Nancy Fairchild.  Ms. Foster is the Curator and Program Director at the Johns Creek Art Center. Ms. Love is the Visual Arts Coordinator for the City of Roswell Department of Recreation, Parks, Historic and Cultural Affairs. Mr. Ford is a painter, graphic artist, and teaches at the Roswell Visual Arts Center. Ms. Fairchild teaches art classes at the Roswell Visual Arts Center.

Each student participant in attendance received a Certificate of Special Congressional Recognition from Rep. Lucy McBath. The Congressional Art Competition began in 1982 to provide an opportunity for Members of Congress to encourage and recognize the artistic talents of their young constituents. Since then, over 650,000 high school students have participated in the nationwide competition.

Below, Rep. McBath and Lassiter student Sophia Maier with her artwork, “BusBOY.”

U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath, LAssiter student Sophia Maier, Congressional art competition

 

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East Cobb cityhood group talks budget, taxes at Powers Ferry civic forum

David Birdwell, East Cobb Cityhood group
“We think we have time to get feedback and do this thing right,” said David Birdwell of East Cobb Cityhood group. (ECN photo)

In their third public appearance, leaders of an East Cobb cityhood group announced Wednesday they had formed a finance committee to put in motion a working budget proposal.

David Birdwell and Rob Eble, the spokesman for the cityhood steering committee, said the panel is made up of financial experts, including corporate CFOs.

They wouldn’t identify those with the financial committee for now, but Eble said after a Powers Ferry Corridor Alliance meeting at Brumby Elementary School that one of the individuals has some public budgeting experience.

The committee also will be scrutinizing a financial feasibility study conducted for the cityhood group by researchers at Georgia State University (read it here).

“They’re going to go line-by-line through that feasibility study,” Eble said, to ensure it’s accurate and “to try and create a budget.”

The feasibility study concluded that a City of East Cobb providing police, fire and community development services (including planning and zoning), and based on a population of 96,000, would have projected revenues of $49.8 million, and expenses totalling $45.6 million (see chart from the study in graphic below).

That’s with a property tax rate levied at 2.96 mills, the same paid by homeowners in unincorporated Cobb now for fire services.

Revising the map?

The feasibility study was requirement for a cityhood bill to be filed in the recent Georgia legislative session, which includes a proposed city charter and a proposed map that is likely to change.

(View the interactive city map here)

The cityhood group also was scheduled to meet Thursday with officials at the state reapportionment office about the possibility of changing the boundary lines.

Birdwell and Eble both characterized the meeting as seeking out “scenarios” for moving the lines beyond the current boundaries, roughly the East Cobb portion of commissioner Bob Ott’s District 2, to include more of the Pope and Lassiter attendance zones.

The proposed city does not include any of the Sprayberry or Kell clusters.

Both said they didn’t know how the final lines might be drawn, as that is a function of the legislature as it considers the cityhood bill next year.

Birdwell did reiterate the cityhood group’s insistence that those living in a City of East Cobb wouldn’t be paying higher tax rates than they are now.

Changing the city lines would mean changing all those financial numbers, and Birdwell said that “if it’s a real material change, we’ll figure out a way to do the feasibility study to satisfy the [legislative] process.”

Skepticism remains

One citizen trying to keep an open mind is Connie Day, a member of the PFCA board who lives near Brumby in the Stratford neighborhood.

Mike Boyce
Mike Boyce

While she said she appreciates the cityhood group for addressing “what’s on peoples’ minds” about the issue, she wonders what the impact will be on taxes.

When asked if she thought the city could be run at or below the current county millage rate, Day laughed for a second, then said, “the skeptic in me says it’s going to be a challenge.”

Day said her property tax assessment has gone up by 20 percent, so she’s already paying more in taxes anyway. That’s not her only question.

“If feels like another layer of government,” she said. “I’m not dissatisfied with the level of services I’m getting now. Right now, I’m not feeling the pain point” that might persuade her to support cityhood (a referendum would take place if the legislature passes the cityhood bill next year).

Also listening to the cityhood group’s presentation Wednesday was Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce, who has noted previously that all six Cobb municipalities have higher tax millage rates than the county.

He said he was encouraged to hear about the budget proposal, so “we can get a real comparison.”

Eble said the budget committee’s work could be done in another 60 days or so.

The cityhood group is planning another town hall in mid-June.

More East Cobb News Cityhood Coverage

 

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Cobb school retirees include long-serving East Cobb teachers, staff

Cobb school retirees

Of the 229 Cobb school retirees honored by the Cobb County School District on Thursday, some of the longest-serving teachers and staff have been at East Cobb schools. They include the following, with their total years of service to the district:

  • Lassiter High School food services manager Jeannie Ledbetter, 39 years;

    Deborah Poss, Cobb school retirees
    Deborah Poss
  • Lassiter High School teacher Donald Slater, 38 years;
  • Walton High School custodian Lawrence Moon, 36 years;
  • Lassiter High School teacher Deborah Poss, 35 years;
  • East Side Elementary School teacher Debra Denise Clackum, 35 years.

“It is the greatest part-time job with benefits that you could ever have. You get summers off. You get to enjoy life,” Ledbetter said.

The luncheon took place at Roswell Street Baptist Church, and Lassiter student Will Cole took part in the festivities by singing the national anthem; he’s pictured below.

The total service logged by the retiring 229 employees comes to 5,009 years.

(Information and photos submitted by Cobb County School District)

 

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East Cobb rape suspect indicted by Cobb grand jury

An East Cobb man charged with raping a woman at her home in the Johnson Ferry Road area in February has been indicted.Cobb County logo, Cobb 2017 elections, East Cobb rape suspect

Kendal Guerin Chaves, 34, of Lerose Court, was indicted by a Cobb grand jury last week on one count of aggravated sodomy, one count of aggravated assault, one count of first degree burglary and one count of battery.

He was charged by Cobb Police on Feb. 10, two days after a woman living on Colony Drive, off Little Willeo Road, said a man knocked on a window in the morning and attacked her after she answered the door.

According to the indictment, Chaves gained unlawful entry into the home, committed anal rape against the victim, choked her and caused bruises to her neck, face and arms.

Chaves was booked into the Cobb County Adult Detention Center without bond, according to jail records.

He also was charged with DUI, a misdemeanor, at the same time. Chaves pleaded guilty in late January to a cocaine possession charge and had been sentenced to three years’ probation, according to court records.

The court records further show that his probation was revoked due to the DUI charge, and on March 26, Chaves was resentenced to serve two years.

According to Cobb jail records, Chaves was released to the custody of the Georgia Department of Corrections on April 11.

 

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Lower Roswell rezoning/annexation request tabled again; mediation looms

A controversial rezoning and annexation request on Lower Roswell Road at the Loop was tabled again on Wednesday by the Marietta City Council.

Cobb County officials delivered a letter to city officials earlier on Wednesday, reiterating their objections under a state law that gives counties that right in high-density cases.

Traton Homes wants to build 37 townhomes and 15 single-family residences on 7.48 acres at the northeast intersection of Lower Roswell and the Loop, a plan that residents in an adjacent neighborhood have opposed.

Many living in Sewell Manor are in the county, and they grew concerned when the Marietta City Attorney suggested Tuesday that a vote could go ahead because Cobb commissioners hadn’t voted on formalizing the objection.

At a town hall meeting elsewhere in East Cobb Wednesday, Cobb commissioner Bob Ott said the council tabled the request, and that he had spoken to Marietta Mayor Thunder Tumlin.

The parties “have agreed to follow the steps of HB 489,” Ott said, referring to the state law in question. That allows counties to enter mediation when there’s such a dispute.

The law kicks in when a city wants to annex unincorporated land that would be zoned for more than four residential units an acre. Traton’s initial request was for more than 11 units an acre, but it’s revised it to 6.5.

That still didn’t set well with Sewell Manor residents who think the project not only remains too dense (their neighborhood density is 1.75 units an acre), but that they also believe will contribute to traffic issues at a clogged intersection.

Ott said the mediation process would include going back to county commissioners, but the possibility looms that the city could annex the land under Georgia home rule provisions.

The property includes three tracts of land already part of the city that front Lower Roswell, and six residential parcels that were once part of Sewell Manor, a community of small homes built in the 1950s.

 

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East Cobb National Merit Scholarship recipients announced

The National Merit Scholarship Corporation on Wednesday announced that around 2,500 high school seniors around the country were recipients of $2,500 National Merit Scholarships for 2019. Eleven of those recipients are from East Cobb schools.

Students are chosen for having “the combination of accomplishments, skills, and potential for success in rigorous college studies. The number of winners named in each state is proportional to the state’s percentage of the nation’s graduating high school seniors.”

EAst Cobb National Merit ScholarsThe recipients were chosen by college admissions officers and high school counselors. The winners also indicated their probable career field (in parenthesis) on their applications:

  • Campbell: Alexander Eaton, who’s from East Cobb (business administration);
  • Lassiter: Dennis G. Goldenberg, with a probable career field in mathematics.
  • Walton: William Ellsworth (computer science), Vineet Gangireddy (business administration), Nicholas Hong (neurobiology), Ryan Li (computer science) and Grace Xu (undecided);
  • Wheeler: Fianko Buckle (computer science), Caden M. Felton (physics), Arya N. Mevada (intellectual property law) and Keshav K. Shenoy (computer science).

The field began with 15,000 applicants, and more than 7,600 students will receive scholarship money totalling $31 million by the end of the school year.

The NMSC also recently awarded corporate scholarships, which are renewable for up to four years and range from $500 to $10,000, that go to the children of company employees, live in the communities those companies serve or who plan to go into career fields the sponsor wishes to encourage.

The following East Cobb students were awarded those scholarships on April 17:

  • Mariah K. Butts, Wheeler (Marsh & McLennan Companies Scholarship), probable career field medicine;
  • Eashan Gandotra, Walton (ADP Henry Taub Memorial Scholarship), mathematics;
  • Tarunnum Lakdawala, Campbell (PWC Charitable Foundation Scholarship), computer science;
  • Zachary Yahn, Wheeler (Georgia-Pacific Foundation Scholarship), electrical engineering.

 

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East Cobb Food Scores: Straight ‘A’ grades for local schools

New Brumby Elementary School

The following East Cobb restaurant scores from April 29-May 10 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing to view details of the inspection:

BB Kabobs
1260 Powers Ferry Road, Suite 115
April 29, 2019 Score: 91, Grade: A

Brumby Elementary School
815 Terrell Mill Road
May 2, 2019 Score: 96, Grade: A

East Cobb Middle School
825 Terrell Mill Road
April 29, 2019 Score: 99, Grade: A

Mzizi Coffee Roaster
2995 Johnson Ferry Road
May 2, 2019 Score: 96, Grade: A

Powers Ferry Elementary School
403 Powers Ferry Road
May 9, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Sope Creek Elementary School 
3320 Paper Mill Road
May 8, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Vespucci’s Pizza & Pasta Tavern
4805 Canton Road, Suite 100
May 7, 2019 Score: 83, Grade: B

Waffle House
621 Johnson Ferry Road
May 1, 2019 Score: 90, Grade: A

Wendy’s
2961 Shallowford Road
May 9, 2019 Score: 95, Grade: A

 

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Georgia ‘heartbeat’ abortion bill signed into law by Gov. Kemp

One of the most controversial bills to come up in the Georgia legislature this year was signed into state law Tuesday

State Rep. Sharon Cooper, Georgia heartbeat abortion bill
State Rep. Sharon Cooper

Gov. Brian Kemp signed HB 481, the Living Infants Fairness and Equality (LIFE) Act, to go into effect next January, amid promises that there would be legal challenges.

(Read the text of the bill here.)

The law bans abortions in Georgia once a doctor can detect a heartbeat, which is usually around six weeks from conception.

The exceptions are for rape and incest, if the life of the mother is endangered and if a doctor determines a fetus is not viable for medical reasons.

Women also must file a police report in the case of rape or incest.

Previous Georgia law, passed in 2012, banned abortions after 20 weeks. HB 481 was sponsored by Rep. Ed Setzler, an Acworth Republican, but two of his fellow GOP colleagues from East Cobb did not support it.

Both State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick and State Rep. Sharon Cooper, who are pro-life Republicans, opposed the bill. Kirkpatrick was out of town attending a funeral when the bill came up for final Senate action and was excused from voting. Cooper, the chairwoman of the House Health and Human Services Committee, voted no on final passage.

They said the bill is unconstitutional, and as retired medical care providers, they opposed provisions to punish OBGYNs, physician assistants and nurses (women and pharmacists also could face criminal charges).

The bill included “personhood” language for fetuses, lets parents claim an embryo as a dependent on their taxes and could order fathers to pay child support for unborn children during pregnancy.

East Cobb’s other Republican state House members, John Carson, Matt Dollar and Don Parsons, voted for the bill. Mary Frances Williams, a Marietta Democrat who represents part of East Cobb, opposed HB 481, as did Democratic senators Jen Jordan and Michael Rhett, who have slivers of East Cobb in their districts.

Georgia is one of several states whose legislatures have enacted abortion legislation in anticipation of possible action regarding Roe v. Wade, the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 1973 that legalized abortion nationwide.

Some of those laws have been struck down by courts.

 

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Cobb library system Summer Reading Program starts May 20

Cobb library system summer reading program

The school year is almost over and the Cobb library system is getting its summer reading program underway just as the last classes dismiss.

The dates are May 20-July 27, and the system notes that the program is for adults too, and not just kids:

The Early Literacy Program is about young children building reading and language skills. Reading to young children, even infants, increases word recognition and vocabulary.

The Children’s Program engages kids in language skills development for success. Students are at risk of losing 2-3 months of reading and math over the summer. The Summer Reading Program is a fun way to keep students learning!

The Teen Program motivates teens to read and talk about literature. Teens who participate in Summer Reading tend to perform better academically and achieve greater academic gains than those who don’t

The Adult Program is about experiencing the joy of reading. Reading relieves stress, strengthens the brain, and builds empathy.

The library supports family bonding time and shared learning experiences. Each program includes activities which have been designed to encourage participation by the whole family because learning doesn’t stop when you leave school.

There’s a kickoff event on Saturday, May 25, from 5-7 p.m. at the Cobb County Civic Center (548 S. Marietta Parkway). Here’s more on “A Universe of Stories,” the theme for this summer’s program:

Calling all Earthlings, astronauts, space adventurers and explorers, Jedi, Doctors, future Mission to Mars scientists, martians, and space robots –

🌟 Suit up in your favorite outer space gear and blast off on our Summer Space Jam dance floor.
🌟 Explore official Cobb County Police vehicles and a Cobb County Fire truck.
🌟 Meet and read to our favorite 4-legged friends from CAREing Paws.
🌟 Get creative with out-of-this-world arts, crafts, and activities.
🌟 Enjoy spaced-theme storytimes.
🌟 We come in peace! Meet our community partners from Communities in Schools, Cobb County School District, Marietta City School, and Cobb PARKS.
🌟 Be on the lookout for stellar special guests including the KSU iTeach Maker Bus and Fernbank Science Center and their portable planetarium!

This family-friendly event is free and open to the public. Bring all your friends – from our galaxy and beyond!

Find more information about Summer Reading at cobbcat.org/srp.

 

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East Cobb cityhood leaders to speak at Powers Ferry community meeting

East Cobb cityhood leaders
The East Cobb cityhood group continues its public appearances on Wednesday. (ECN file)

On Wednesday East Cobb cityhood leaders will address a meeting of the Powers Ferry Corridor Alliance.

The meeting starts at 7 p.m. at Brumby Elementary School (815 Terrell Mill Road). The PFCA, formerly known as the Terrell Mill Community Association, is a civic group, which has occasional community meetings.

Also scheduled to speak are Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce and Cobb Commissioner Bob Ott, with topics including county police staffing issues and a transit update.

Other updates include what’s happening in the Powers Ferry corridor, including the MarketPlace Terrell Mill and Restaurant Row redevelopment projects.

Part of the Powers Ferry corridor would be included in the proposed City of East Cobb, down to around the intersection at Terrell Mill Road.

Below that, the Powers Ferry area is included in the Cumberland Community Improvement District, which is not included in the proposed city limits.

Last week, the cityhood group held a town hall meeting of its own at Walton High School (see links below).

Related stories

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Georgia DRIVES updating title and vehicle registration system in May

Submitted information:

Plan ahead if you are going to to register your car title in May. Georgia will be upgrading its title and vehicle registrations starting May 21, leading to some services being unavailable and reduced office hours until the end of the month.

The system upgrade, called the Georgia Driver Record and Integrated Vehicle Enterprise System, will make online and kiosk services unavailable May 21-27. In preparation for the upgrade, some county tag offices will have reduced hours and fewer services available May 21-23 and May 28-29. All vehicle registration and titling services will be unavailable statewide May 24–27.

For more information, go to the Georgia DRIVES resource page.

 

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East Cobb Jason’s Deli ribbon-cutting slated for May 23

East Cobb Jason's Deli opening, East Cobb food scores

Submitted information:

Jason’s Deli is teaming up with the Cobb Chamber of Commerce to host a ribbon cutting for their Marietta location on May 23, at 11 a.m. The deli is located at 1401 Johnson Ferry Rd.

The East Cobb community is encouraged to stop by the deli and enjoy free samples until 12 p.m. Guests will also be able to order lunch from their diverse menu, such as Reuben THE Great, the California Club, and the Garden Fresh Salad bar that features 50+ ingredients, including select organics.

“We are so excited to be a part of the East Cobb community, and we’re looking forward to celebrating with the Chamber of Commerce and East Cobb community,” said Managing Partner Greg Felter.

More information for the event can be found on the deli’s Facebook page.

 

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Marietta recovery center The Extension holds open house, sign dedication

The Extension Marietta

Submitted information and photos:

On Thursday, May 2nd, Marietta city and county officials, Senator Kay Kirkpatrick, the Cobb Chamber of Commerce, The Extension Board of Directors, staff and friends of The Extension gathered to dedicate The Extension’s new sign and enjoy lunch and  an open house event. The sign dedication ceremony and ribbon cutting ceremony was officiated by Marietta’s Mayor Steve Tumlin. Tyler Driver, The Extension’s Executive Director, spoke about the solution to homelessness and addiction in our community. After the ceremony, the guests enjoyed a catered lunch and tours of the facility.

The Extension, located on the Church Street Extension in Marietta, is a somewhat obscure building. According to Renee McCormick, the Director of Community Relations at The Extension, “People said that they had been passing by our building for years not knowing what it was, they assumed we were part of the County or Must Ministries. We needed a way to set ourselves apart and to make ourselves more visible.” The Extension Board of Directors came together and donated the funds to build a beautiful monument styled sign that accomplished their objectives.

“For us, it is not just about the opioid crisis or focusing on the disease of addiction, it is about focusing on the solution, and giving those who are suffering and their families real hope for recovery and restoration,” says Driver. For over thirty years, The Extension has saved lives and restored families in Cobb County. They are a nonprofit, nine to twelve month, residential treatment program for men and women twenty five and older who are homeless as the result of a drug and/alcohol addiction. They have fifty seven men in their men’s program and twenty four women in their women’s program.

The Extension partners with local businesses, churches and civic organizations to meet the needs of their clients. For more information about The Extension or to make a donation go to their website www.theextension.org or connect with them on Facebook www.facebook.com/The-Extension-Inc-180185961985

The Extension Marietta
From L-R, Marietta Mayor “Thunder” Tumlin, The Extension executive director Tyler Driver and Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce.

 

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East Cobb Race Trac participating in free fuel day for teachers

East Cobb Race Trac free fuel teachers

Submitted information:

In celebration of National Teacher Appreciation Day on Tuesday, May 7, Cobb County based Race Trac invites all Cobb County teachers to fuel up for free as a thank you for fueling the minds of children and all that you do for the community.

You are invited to stop by one of the Race Trac locations in Kennesaw or Marietta from 4:00 – 6:00 p.m. on Tuesday to get a free $20 gift card to fuel up on Race Trac, while supplies last.

WHERE: Two participating locations: 1625 Old Hwy. 41, Kennesaw, 30152 // 3103 Roswell Rd., Marietta, 30062

WHEN: 4:00-6:00 p.m. on Tuesday, May 7, 2019

HOW TO REDEEM THE OFFER:

  1. Choose one of the stores listed above
  2. Park at a gas pump, and visit the marked table at the front of the store
  3. Show your valid Cobb County school ID to receive your $20 gift card
  4. Return to your vehicle to redeem the gift card at the gas pump station
  5. Fuel up, on Race Trac!

Race Trac is proudly based in Atlanta and Cobb County. The company’s mission is making people’s lives simpler and more enjoyable, and Race Trac believes it is important.

to do so through giving back. Race Trac hopes that this free fuel will show you just how much you are appreciated for all that you do.

 

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Mabry Park opening the culmination of ‘imagine a place’ dreams

Mabry Park opening

Thirteen years after the idea of a passive park in Northeast Cobb first came about, Thursday’s Mabry Park opening astonished even those who most avidly worked to make that dream come true.

The Friends of Mabry Park, a group of citizens pushing for a park, have long called their campaign “Imagine a Place.”

Many of them, along with members of the Mabry family, turned out for the ribbon-cutting and opening festivities, and some were blown away by what they saw.

“Wow. Just wow,” said Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell, who has shepherded the Mabry Park idea from the start, and it was one with many stops and starts.

“It was my baby,” she said, her voice breaking a little, “and I’m proud of it today.

“The brilliant tagline, ‘Imagine a Place.’ Here we are. I never it imagined it would look this wonderful, but it is. . . . . I’ve never seen a more beautiful park than Mabry.”

The 26 acres of former Mabry farm land on Wesley Chapel Road, near Sandy Plains Road, still has a rural feel.

The long road leading from Wesley Chapel to the new county park is lined with wooden fencing, as horses graze nearby.

A pond in the middle of the park glistens, with the late-afternoon sun rendering the surface mirror-like.

Kids shout and chatter from swings and the playground. Dogs bark, geese honk and frogs croak.

“Hearing the geese on one side, and the kids on the other, there’s no better serenade to open a park,” said Cobb Commissioner Bob Ott, whose District 2 includes Mabry Park.

Mabry Park Opening

Peter Hortman, the current president of the Friends of Mabry Park, also got choked up talking about what for him has been a 10-year journey to this day.

“We couldn’t have gotten here without the community,” he said, rattling off names of other park advocates and asking for a show of hands from those in the Mabry family (about 20 hands went up).

“To the Mabry family,” Hortman said, “what a legacy.”

Hania Whitfield, a former Friends of Mabry Park board member and a resident of nearby Loch Highland, has regularly visited East Cobb Park and Laurel Park in Marietta. She said when she first moved to the county, she heard from neighbors that there were plenty of parks in Cobb, “but most of them had ballfields.”

Mabry Park, she said, “is more than I ever expected.”

Passive parks have been in greater demand in recent years from citizens, Cobb parks and recreation director Jimmy Gisi noted.

He said when the parks department was formed in the 1960s there was a “tremendous” need for athletic fields, to accommodate the growing legions of youth sports leagues.

“The new emphasis that we’ve heard of loud and clear from across the county is a want and a need for more passive parks.”

The county has conducted public input meetings for parks the last two years, and Gisi said “the one resonating message” is that “people are wanting more trails, more passive parkland.”

Of the six recent green space purchases by the county with proceeds from the 2008 Cobb parks bond, all of them—including 18 acres on Ebenezer Road—will have trails and passive green space as part of their master plans that are in development.

“All these amenities you will have right here, in your own backyard, at Mabry Park,” he said.

Mabry Park Opening

Mabry Park goes beyond that, in keeping with the farm history of the land. In 2004, the state designated Mabry Farm as a “centennial farm,” meaning it had been a working farm for more than 100 years.

Across the road on Wesley Chapel, a new subdivision is going up on another portion of the Mabry Farm, and the 1915 homestead was razed in early 2018 to make way.

To preserve the farm feel of the park, and to protect its natural surroundings, the county has installed modern technologies.

“You will find that the ecofeatures and attention to nature in this park will second to none,” said Cobb County Manager Rob Hosack, noting that Mabry has only a small amount of impervious surfacing at the parking lot. A retention pond was located near the lake to handle stormwater runoff.

Mabry Park cost $2.85 million to build. The county bought the future park land for $4.3 million in 2008, but the recession put a halt to any further construction plans. A master plan was completed in 2011, and final approval was delayed in late 2017 due to issues over funding.

The park construction was paid for with 2016 SPLOST money, but operating costs (around $105,000 a year) come from the county’s general fund.

Like East Cobb Park, the future building out of Mabry Park will come about based on community desires, including treehouses, another bridge over the lake and holding events there.

“The Friends of Mabry Park doesn’t end today,” Hortman said. “It has a life long beyond today. There’s a lot left to be done.”

For now, there’s plenty to enjoy, and savor: a playground, community garden and picnic pavilion, as well as 1.2 miles of trails.

“I can’t wait to come back here this weekend and walk every bit of it,” Whitfield said. “They’ve not only made this park functional, they’ve made it picturesque.”

Mabry Park Opening

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Gov. Kemp signs education bills at Wheeler HS appearance

Gov. Kemp signs education bills
CCSD photo

On Thursday Gov. Brian Kemp and Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan visited Wheeler High School to sign education bills and note the school’s designation as a highly rated STEM program.

One of the bills, SB 108, mandates that middle schools and high schools in Georgia teach basics of computer science.

The other notable bill is SB 48, which requires screening of every kindergartener in the state for dyslexia starting in 2024.  

Here’s more from the Cobb County School District about the signing event, including the comments below from Superintendent Chris Ragsdale:

“Not only was the Cobb County School District an early adopter of STEM curriculum, many of our schools have led the state and the nation in STEM and STEAM certifications. As the #2 STEM program in the nation, Wheeler High School was the ideal backdrop for the signing of Senate Bill 108 and we appreciate Governor Kemp coming to Cobb to sign both of these bills.”

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East Cobb City map: Defining and redrawing the lines

East Cobb City map
The heart of a proposed City of East Cobb hovers around the Roswell-Johnson Ferry Road intersection. Click here for interactive map. 

From the moment East Cobb Cityhood proponents issued a proposed map last December, questions abounded from the public: Who drew this East Cobb city map? Why isn’t my neighborhood in it?

Perhaps the biggest silent question that could have been implied is this one: What does it mean to be in East Cobb?

Advocates for a new city say one of the objectives is to help create a better sense of community identity. That certainly could be a by-product in an area that’s been building out in sprawling, unincorporated suburban fashion for nearly 50 years.

But how the City of East Cobb proposal now before the legislature, and that could go to voters in a referendum next year, finally comes to fruition depends on how those municipal boundaries may ultimately be decided.

The map that’s been drawn up is the East Cobb portion of Bob Ott’s Cobb Commission District 2, at least in unincorporated Cobb and excluding the Cumberland Community Improvement District.

That drew suspicions about Ott’s possible involvement in the cityhood effort (which he denies).

But it’s a city heavy with the Walton and Wheeler attendance zones, a little of Pope and Lassiter and none from Sprayberry and Kell.

How can that be called East Cobb?

The cityhood bill filed near the end of the 2019 legislative session includes that map, and leaders of the group insist that the map, and everything in the bill, including a proposed city charter, is subject to change.

In fact, at a town hall meeting they held Monday, they confirmed that changing the proposed boundaries is in the works, and could cross Sandy Plains Road, out toward Shallowford and Trickum Roads.

“The lines will change,” said David Birdwell, a member of the cityhood group, said at the Walton meeting. “It depends on how far we go.”

East Cobb City map
Some residents of Meadow Drive for now would be in a proposed City of East Cobb, but their neighbors across the street would not. Click here for interactive map.

The feasibility study conducted for the cityhood group according to the present lines would include a population of 96,000, which would make East Cobb the second-largest city in metro Atlanta.

The Cityhood group also released an interactive map this week that lets readers find out whether they’re in the presently proposed boundaries.

(FWIW the coverage area of East Cobb News is most everything east of I-75 and I-575, including most of the ZIP codes of 30062, 30066, 30067, 30068 and the Cobb portion of 30075. That’s a population of around 200,000; view demographic details here.)

Subject to change

Cityhood leaders have said that some boundaries had to be submitted with the bill. The legislation also calls for a six-member city council and specified census blocks and voting precincts.

Those too are a rough draft and are likely to be changed; a few of the voting precincts indicated in the bill are either non-existent or misnumbered.

Five of the six council districts would include some or a good bit of the Walton attendance zone (it’s the third-largest high school in Cobb).

It’s uncertain for now how that school zone dynamic would change in an expanded proposed city.

Birdwell said that an amendment to the feasibility study could be requested if those lines do change, so a new study (and its budgeting and finance assumptions) may not be necessary before the legislature would take up the bill in 2020.

“It’s their discretion to make the final call,” said Karen Hallacy, another member of the cityhood group.

The legislative process

Kay Kirkpatrick, East Cobb city map
State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick

Even though East Cobb cityhood is considered local legislation (lawmakers in the proposed new city have to sponsor it), a bill would be voted on by both houses in the Georgia General Assembly.

State. Rep. Matt Dollar (R-East Cobb) is the House sponsor. State Rep. Sharon Cooper, also of East Cobb, said she hasn’t decided about cityhood and didn’t sign on as a sponsor.

“The meeting was very informative,” she said after the Monday town hall. “This community wants input, and I think it clarifies a lot of misconceptions. I’m like any other citizen, just getting input.”

The bill doesn’t need the support of the Cobb delegation. State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick, an East Cobb Republican, would need to sponsor the bill if it crosses over from the House, but for now she remains non-committal about cityhood.

“I’m trying to keep an open mind until the end of the year,” she said after the town hall. “The bill has a tough road ahead of it,” as any bill does. Some recent cityood bills and referenda also have been defeated.

By time an East Cobb bill might cross over, Kirkpatrick said, “I’ll have a better idea whether East Cobb wants to be a city.

“I’ve gotten a lot of negative feedback, but then people hear about the police and the idea of more local control,” she said. “I’ll bet they [cityhood leaders] picked up some support tonight.”

East Cobb News Cityhood Coverage

 

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East Cobb Weekend Events: Taste of East Cobb; Auto Show; and more

Taste of East Cobb, weekend events

Prepare your taste buds and get ready to savor the Taste of East Cobb! The 10th year of the food festival, benefitting the Walton Bands program, highlights this weekend’s East Cobb Weekend Events calendar.

The Taste of East Cobb lasts from 11-5 Saturday at Johnson Ferry Baptist Church (955 Johnson Ferry Road). Admission is free, with food tickets ranging from $1-$5. This year’s food vendors are familiar to the locals: Seed, Marlow’s Tavern, Righteous Que, Red Sky, Mediterranean Grill and Smallcakes, and newcomer’s Stockyard Burgers and Jason’s Deli.

Other vendors include Camel Car Wash, Springfree Trampoline, Big Frog, Orange Theory Fitness, and more.

Activities include music from the Walton jazz band, a kids’ zone, face painting, a rafle and silent auction and the “Best of Taste of East Cobb” competition.

Visit the Taste of East Cobb website for more.

From 4-10 Saturday is an Indie Music Festival at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church (2922 Sandy Plains Road), which features Kilroy Kobra, Tyson Halford, Indigo Innuendo, Drew Ashworth, Triketra, Liquid Velvet and more. Benefitting Habitat for Humanity and Lighthouse Retreat for Kids with Cancer.

From 3-7 Sunday is the Cinco de Mayo Auto Show at Bradley’s Bar and Grill (4961 Lower Roswell Road). Food, live music, games, prizes and plenty of vintage automobiles to admire will be on hand, with part of the proceeds benefitting United Military Care, which assists veterans.

The final weeks of the Good Mews Animal Foundation’s Second Chance Thrift Market continue from 10-5 Saturday and 12-5 Sunday at Marietta Commercial Plaza (562 Wylie Road, Suite 24). The last day is May 19.

Check our full calendar listings for more things to do in East Cobb this weekend, and beyond.

Did we miss anything? Do you have a calendar item you’d like to share with the community? Send it to us, and we’ll spread the word! E-mail: calendar@eastcobbnews.com, and you can include a photo or flyer if you like.

Whatever you’re doing this weekend, make it a great one! Enjoy!

 

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Simpson MS student named ‘Ultimate Kid Ninja Champion’

Vance Walker, Ultimate Kid Ninja Champion

Last fall we noted that several East Cobb kids were involved in the TV series “American Ninja Warrior Junior” on the Universal Kids outlet.

The season wrapped up on April 27, and one of those kids training out of Ninja Quest on Canton Road, has been named an ultimate kid ninja champion. Congrats to Vance Walker, who attends Simpson Middle School. Submitted information and video explain and show what they all had to do during the competition:

Vance was the winner of the 13-14 age bracket. The competition started with over 200 Junior Ninjas from across the U.S. facing off on head to head courses in three age brackets: 9 & 10, 11 & 12, and 13 & 14-year-old girls and boys. There were three final winners (one per age bracket). “American Ninja Warrior Junior” courses feature iconic Ninja Warrior obstacles, including Sonic Swing, Tic Toc, Spin Cycle, and the Warped Wall. 

 

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How many police officers would a City of East Cobb need?

Jerry Quan, East Cobb cityhood, police officers
Jerry Quan is a former commander of Cobb Police Precinct 4. (East Cobb News photo by Wendy (Parker)

One of the major services cited by East Cobb Cityhood advocates is public safety, and in particular, more police officers on patrol.

At their town hall meeting Monday, Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb representatives were quick to note the ongoing public safety concerns expressed by Cobb police, fire and other law enforcement personnel, as well as citizens.

Before those issues were raised to county commissioners, a feasibility study commissioned by the Cityhood group assumed an East Cobb police force of 142 officers.

That’s nearly the double the currently allocated 77 positions for Cobb Police Precinct 4, which covers more of the proposed City of East Cobb, all the way to Canton Road.

But Precinct 4 has only 53 officers, and is among the most understaffed of the five police precincts in the county.

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Among the complaints in Cobb are lower salary scales for police compared to other cities and counties in metro Atlanta, as well as benefit packages and retention rags that also are lagging.

A questioner asked the cityhood group at the town hall about how a City of East Cobb might achieve “full funding” for police officers.

“I want to see a police department that’s paid what they’re worth,” said Jerry Quan, a retired Cobb Police major who was a commander at Precinct 4, who drew strong applause with that remark.

Now a resource officer at Lassiter High School with the Cobb County School District police department, Quan is a member of the Cityhood group, advising on public safety matters.

“I’ll do what I can to help them but I can’t guarantee anything.”

The cityhood group also was asked that City of East Cobb paying police officers might have  a “ripple effect” on Cobb’s situation.

Cityhood leader Karen Hallacy admitted that it would, but it would be no different than how other local police departments have been able to entice officers from Cobb.

“We’re part of that ripple,” she said.

A City of East Cobb police force likely would be headquartered at the current Precinct 4 location at the East Cobb Government Service Center on Lower Roswell Road.

Public safety would be the largest single expense for a City of East Cobb, according to a $45 million budget assumption included in the feasibility study.

Most of that $19.67 million line item would be for police. After the meeting Quan told East Cobb News that he thought that budgeting for 142 officers “is a little bit high,” and said “we don’t want to have the bare minimum” in terms of services and resources as well as manpower.

The biggest objective, he said, would be to have “more officers out on the streets.”

Quan said he sympathizes with his former Cobb Police colleagues who are pressing for better compensation and resources. Saying that he “loves Cobb County,” Quan insists that in East Cobb, “with the right kind of resources, we can provide better services.

“We like where we live, and we want to keep it that way.”

East Cobb News Cityhood Coverage

 

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