The East Cobb News weekly newsletter for Feb. 11, 2018 is out!

Catch up with all of the past week’s headlines and take a look at what’s coming up this week with the convenient East Cobb News weekly newsletter.

The East Cobb News Digest is delivered to your e-mail every Sunday, and contains so much more, including the best calendar listings anywhere in East Cobb and convenient community information.

Subscribing to the newsletter is free and easy (just click the signup button below). We don’t sell or rent our e-mail listings to anyone, although we do send out out major breaking news alerts to our subscribers.

We know you’re busy, and that you don’t want to miss out on what’s going on around you. Sign up today and be part of East Cobb’s only daily news source, independently operated and with a totally local focus.

This past week, our stories about proposed Cobb library budget cuts and a major redevelopment at Powers Ferry and Terrell Mill roads generated great interest from readers, and gave us our best traffic week yet, as well as many new subscribers.

Welcome, and please stay in touch!

Sally Peter, Warren Ballew, Pam Egan, Jan Barton, Jill Tempest, Doreen Davey, Karen Yanosky, Camille McClellan, Lenny Deutsch, Linda Shilling, Trilby Wood, Tom Cheek, Tim Perkins, Christine Surdyka; Kathleen Atkins, Reginald Davis, Kathleen Mayfield, Barry Abernathy, Jacqueline Hurley, Ann Lane.

Katherine Carlson, Susan Kovach, Paul Amoruso, Sara Wells, Bett Gibson, L. Thomas, Riny Schartman, Emma Dix, Marilyn Norvill, Betty Feehan, Richard Dry, Andrea Pauquette, Jeri Crouse, Bonnie Lantz, Lilia Sadoux, Dave Cunningham, Kes Stadler, Jean Callaghan, Gloria Smith, Jane Kendall.

Cathy Schweers, Jenny Lee, Diane Brim, Leslie Kahrs, Samantha Anderson, Michelle Stone, Joanne Mazor, Candice Jansen, Melissa Gordon, Melissa Rose, Janice Reardon, Phyllis Preston, Ellen Repasky, Wanessa Moore, Louise Clemenger, A.J. Warren, Michael Blackwell, Michael Hake, Tom Stanley, Jane Corby.

Lynn Rutledge, Sharon Godin, Shirley Weaver, Amy Chrz, Christopher Bradley, Susan Edwards, John McFarland, Art Cohen, Eugene Kimball, Pamela Adley, Linda Coleman, Dewey A. Staggs, Ronnie Brake, Carolyn Grubaugh, Johnie Hunsucker, Andrea Zare, Jan Sherwood, Lisa Scheidt, Ellen Crolley.

 

Cobb County flood watch in effect for most of the weekend

Cobb County Flood Watch, National Weather Service

The rain that began Friday night is not expected to let up for most of the weekend, and as a result Cobb County and much of metro Atlanta are under a flood watch.

The watch began at 7 a.m. today and continues through 7 p.m. Sunday, with Cobb possibly getting between 2-4 inches of rain.

The usual areas in East Cobb that are prone to flooding—along the Chattahoochee River and Sope Creek, as well as the Noonday Creek area—are susceptible to this weather pattern, which includes the possibility of thunderstorms.

The National Weather Service issued the watch for most of north and central Georgia, from a line north of Columbus to Griffin to Athens.

In addition to the rain, dense and heavy fog is expected to linger in the watch area throughout this afternoon, and visibility could be reduced between a quarter to a half-mile.

The chance of rain in East Cobb is 50 percent today and 80 percent tonight, with rain and patchy fog returning overnight. Highs are expected in the low 60s, with lows in the same range.

On Sunday, the chance of rain is 90 percent, with fog returning during the day and temperatures reaching the high 60s. The lows Sunday are expected to be in the high 50s as a high chance of rain continues.

The chance of rain continues into the start of the week, but a rainy and overcast week is expected as warm temperatures continue.

 

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EAST COBB WEEKEND EVENTS: Walton Raider Chase; Lassiter Band fundraiser; library events and more

It’s supposed to be a bit soggy, but not enough to dampen a spirited weekend of events in East Cobb:

  • Tonight and Saturday are the final showings of “The Savannah Disputation” at The Art Place-Mountain View (3330 Sandy Plains Road), presented by CenterStage North and the Mountain View Arts Alliance. It’s a Southern theological comedy (there is such a thing!) involving two elderly sisters and a door-to-door evangelist caught up in a crisis of faith. Tickets are $16 and the curtains lift at 8 p.m. both nights;
  • Also tonight, at the nearby Mountain View Regional Library (3320 Sandy Plains Road) historical novelists Lauren Willig and Deanna Raybourn will be discussing their books from 6:30-8 p.m. The event is free, and copies of their books will be sold and available for signing;
  • The 38th annual Walton Raider Chase 5K gets underway at 8 a.m. Saturday at Raider Valley (1590 Bill Murdock Road). The event is a fundraiser for the Walton track and cross country teams. A 1-mile fun run starts at 9:30 a.m., and walk-up registration is available for both races;
  • From 10-5 on Saturday, the Lassiter High School Band is holding a mattress sale fundraiser for its 2019 trip to the Tournament of Roses Parade in the band room (2601 Shallowford Road). Name-brand items will be sold at a discount, and you can arrange for delivery;
  • The enticing aromas of Essential Oils will discussed and diffused during a special presentation from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Saturday at the East Cobb Library (4880 Lower Roswell Road). The guide is Heather Seeley of Young Living, who will demonstrate the health and cosmetic benefits of such substances. Registration is required by calling 770-509-2730;
  • Also on Saturday, a Local Lens film screening will take place from 4-5:30 p.m. at the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center (2051 Lower Roswell Road). Local filmmaker Bill Pacer will show “Meatfactory,” a music video, and take questions after.

Did we miss anything? Do you have a calendar listing to share with the East Cobb community? Let us know! E-mail calendar@eastcobbnews.com with your information. Check out more things to do, this weekend and beyond in East Cobb’s most comprehensive events guide! Have a great weekend!

 

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Mabry Farm homestead building razed on Wesley Chapel Road subdivsion site

Mabry Farm homestead

When we passed by the old Mabry Farm homestead building on a nice Sunday afternoon drive, the photo we snapped would turn out to be one of the last to be taken of the historic farmhouse.

On Monday, an East Cobb News reader noted that the structure has been demolished. We swung by there again this afternoon and saw that construction indeed has begun on an 18-home subdivision that was approved for rezoning last year.

Mabry Farm homestead building

The homestead building, which was once part of the Mabry Farm spread (history here), was built in 1915. It’s located on Wesley Chapel Road, just south of Sandy Plains Road, and right across from what will be Mabry Park.

The construction work for that park, also on former farmland owned by the Mabry family, is just getting underway after Cobb commissioners finally approved funding in November.

CSP Development, LLC is putting up 3,000-square-foot homes, or about two per acre, on the nine acres of gentle rolling hillside.

Mabry Farm was established in 1904 and ultimately spanned 220 acres. In a blog post from 2016, local nature artist Ed Cahill—whom we met last summer at the first East Cobb Garden Tour at MacFarlane Nature Park—wrote about his impressions of the Mabry Farm, and his paintings of the surroundings.

In addition to the horses, he noted the flowering trees that dotted the landscape, as well as a tomato barn and other structures that served the many uses of the farm.

Because of the historic nature of the building, the developer was required in a stipulation as part of the rezoning to pay a mitigation fee for historic preservation efforts in Cobb County. Acceptance of that $7,500 payment from CSP Development is on the Cobb Board of Commissioners agenda Tuesday.

Just beyond the construction sites on either side of Wesley Chapel Road are homes and subdivisions similar to what’s going up now, on a vanishing slice of East Cobb’s not-so-distant past.

Mabry Park construction site

 

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East Cobb Library proposed for closure due to county budget cuts

East Cobb Library, Cobb budget cuts

What East Cobb Library advocates have feared for months has come to pass: Their branch, the second busiest in the Cobb County Public Library System, has been formally recommended for closure due to Cobb County government budget cuts.

UPDATE: Cobb chairman proposes revised budget, keeping parks and libraries open

Several months after Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell suggested closing the East Cobb Library, the branch is included on a proposed list of eight library closings or consolidations from the library system to the commissioners.

The Cobb library system has set up an “I Love My Library” page on its website with information about the draft budget proposal, submitted by library director Helen Poyer.

The other library branches that would be closed under the proposal include Kemp Memorial in West Cobb, Lewis A. Ray and Windy Hill in Smyrna, Sweetwater Valley in Austell and Sibley in Marietta. In addition, the Acworth and Kennesaw branches would be consolidated.

The proposed budget cuts also include the elimination of all part-time staff positions, and hours would be cut nearly in half, from the current 780 hours a week throughout the system to 424.

The proposed library cuts would total nearly $3 million, or about 25 percent of the system’s current fiscal year operating budget of $12 million.

Cobb County officials say they’re facing a fiscal year 2019 deficit of at least $30 million, and have been directing department heads to recommend cuts in services to balance the budget.

“We need to really fight, now that we’ve seen it in black and white,” said Rachel Slomovitz, who calls the East Cobb Library her “second home” and who has been a vocal library proponent.

The East Cobb Library got a reprieve for fiscal year 2018, but that came just as the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center was set to open on Lower Roswell Road. Commissioners temporarily delayed full funding of that expanded branch—formerly the East Marietta Library—until after the start of the fiscal year 2018 in October.

In December, Slomovitz started an online petition, seeking the support of 1,000 people for raising the millage rate to avoid library budget cuts. Thus far, that petition has more than 750 signatures.

In her petition, Slomovitz estimated that what she called a “minor” millage increase would result in a $25 a year increase in property taxes to fund libraries. Last week, she started a closed Facebook group called “Save Cobb Libraries” to provide information and urge other citizens to contact their elected officials.

The East Cobb Library costs around $770,000 in staffing and for other operations every year, but that doesn’t include an additional $263,000 in annual rental expenses.

The branch opened at the Parkaire Landing Shopping Center in 2010, after operating as the Merchants Walk Library. The cost of moving and relocating the branch was borne by the developers of Merchants Walk when that retail center was redeveloped.

“I always feared that East Cobb would be on the list” because the branch is leased, Slomovitz said, but she added that the situation is an opportunity for citizens to reinforce to commissioners what’s important to them.

She said she noticed that during recent town hall meetings on senior center fees that funding for the Atlanta Braves’ SunTrust Park was included on a “required” list, while libraries are on a “desired” list, along with senior services and parks and recreation.

“Why can’t the libraries be regarded as just as worthy?” Slomovitz said.

In early 2011, then-chairman Tim Lee proposed closing 13 of the 17 branches as the county faced deep budget cuts due to the recession.

It was a ploy to get commissioners to come to the cutting table and it worked, but also generated heated opposition from library patrons who packed the commissioners meeting chambers.

No branches were closed, but library hours were cut from 1,089.5 hours a week to the current 780 hours, and some programs and services were also reduced.

The new proposed closures come less than a month after county officials, including all five commissioners, participated in ribbon-cutting ceremonies at the new Sewell Mill branch, which has been declared “the library of the future.”

Current Cobb commission chairman Mike Boyce has wanted to get an early start on the FY 19 budget, which doesn’t go into effect until October. Budget adoption is in July.

But just as he heard from Cobb seniors about rising costs and a membership fee to use county senior centers, Boyce and commissioners are bracing for an earful from library supporters.

In addition to the Sewell Mill Library, the East Cobb area is served by the Mountain View Regional Library on Sandy Plains Road and Gritters Library, located near Canton Road and Piedmont Road.

The “I Love My Library” page reminds readers that the proposals are not final, and that there will be public comment periods at commission meetings to offer citizens a chance to have their say about the libraries, and the budget. The page also includes scheduled meeting dates over the next few months.

“We’ve saved the libraries before,” said Slomovitz, who admits she’s “scared” by the prospect of the East Cobb Library closing its doors for good. “If we did it once, we can do it again.”

 

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Cobb included in hazardous weather outlook for most of Wednesday

The thunderstorms that have moved through western Georgia this morning were spreading into metro Atlanta, and Cobb County is included in a hazardous weather outlook that will be in effect for most of today.

At 10:30 a.m. the National Weather Service office in Peachtree City issued the outlook, which includes most of metro Atlanta and a good portion of north and central Georgia.

The outlook includes information about potential severe weather, including thunderstorms and the possibility of tornadoes.

Tornado watches and warnings have been in effect in various areas of Georgia this morning. High winds and storms have been reported in Bremen, as that weather system headed east toward metro Atlanta.

The NWS said that in the outlook area, an isolated severe storm is possible, as are high winds and isolated tornadoes.

Between an inch and two inches of rain also is expected to fall, causing the possibility of flooding in some areas.

Thursday and Friday will see sunshine, but a rainy weekend is in the forecast.

This week is Weather Preparedness Month in Georgia. A scheduled statewide tornado drill scheduled for close to noon today has been postponed to Friday because of the current weather conditions.

 

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Proposed self-storage facility at former Mountain View Elementary School site clears first hurdle

Over the objections of nearby residents, the Cobb Planning Commission Tuesday recommended approval of a climate-controlled self-storage facility at the former Mountain View Elementary School site (previous East Cobb News post here).

The vote was 4-1, with planning commissioner Thea Powell opposed.

The 105,340-square foot building has been added to a mixed-use development approved in October that would call for “high-end” restaurants, shops and other retail uses.

A special land-use permit must be obtained for self-storage facilities (agenda item information here).

Residents living in the Cutters Gap neighborhood accused the developer, Brooks Chadwick Capital, of a “bait and switch” in proposing a three-story building at the southwest corner of the 14-acre parcel at 3448 Sandy Plains Road.

Others said they feared the building, which one called “a monster,” would tower over their neighborhood, and suggested a two-story limit.

Kevin Moore, an attorney for Brooks Chadwick, said among the stipulations included with the request would be a 45-foot height limit on the self-storage building, which would include 13 parking spaces.

“It’s the quietest possible use there could be in this location,” Moore said.

The planning commission recommended denial of another East Cobb rezoning request to convert empty office space into a mixed-use development at Johnson Ferry Road and Lassiter Road.

Dr. Robert Licata, a pediatrician who’s long had a practice at 3000 Johnson Ferry Road, wants to move his office to 2863 Johnson Ferry Road and get an acre currently zoned for low-rise office (LRO) to neighborhood retail commercial (NRC).

The request included the possible use for a restaurant and gym as well as other shops. Two empty buildings have sat vacant at that property, but residents in the nearby Lassiter Walk neighborhood are opposed (agenda item information here).

Planning commission chairman Mike Terry said “there are issues that are problematic,” including 37 parking spaces (the county zoning staff is recommending at least 52) and the lack of loading access behind the buildings.

Licata later deleted the restaurant from the rezoning request, but the planning board voted 5-0 to recommend denial.

The Cobb Board of Commissioners will decide on both cases on Feb. 20.

 

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Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill Road development gets OK from Cobb Planning Commission, with changes

Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill Road development
The Cobb Planning Commission is recommending a height reduction of apartments at the MarketPlace Terrell Mill development (in back, center) to three stories.

The Cobb Planning Commission is recommending approval of a Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill Road development that’s been held up for months, but made some changes Tuesday before sending it along for formal action later this month.

By a 4-1 vote the planning board approved rezoning a 23.9-acre tract at the northwest corner of Powers Ferry and Terrell Mill to community retail commercial (CRC) and multifamily residential (RM-16).

It’s slated to become what its developer, Eden Rock Real Estate Partners, is calling the MarketPlace at Terrell Mill, anchored by a Kroger superstore, and to include restaurants, retail shops, and an apartment building and a self-storage facility.

Eden Rock was requesting a Planned Village Community (PVC) designation after the commission held the application in December. Eden Rock initially sought CRC and urban condominium (UC), but sought a new category that would reduce proposed variances from 21 to 10 and made other changes.

Those changes weren’t enough to sway some planning commissioners and residents of the Salem Ridge condominiums, which are adjacent to the proposed apartments and self-storage building.

After a lengthy discussion, the planning commission included a set of stipulations in its recommendation that would reduce the height of the apartment building to three stories from four, and a maximum of around 220 units in all. The latest site plan had cut that number from 350 to 298.

“I don’t think this is too intense at all,” said planning commission Mike Terry, who represents District 2, which includes the Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill area.

His motion to approve PVC rezoning was voted down before planning commissioner Judy Williams moved to delete that category and replace it with CRC and RM-16.

As he has stated often during the long-delayed application process, Terry said that the Eden Rock proposal—an assemblage of property that includes the current site of Brumby Elementary School—is a key to reviving the Powers Ferry area, especially with the nearby relocation of the Atlanta Braves having provided a spark.

“This is vital to revitalize this whole corridor,” he said. “If this collapses, we’ll have a hodgepodge [of potential future development] . . . and would have the same thing we’ve got now.

“I want this community to be revitalized, and this is the first bite of the apple we’ve had.”

The development has been supported by the Powers Ferry Corridor Alliance, a civic group. But Salem Ridge residents echoed their concerns about density, traffic and potential noise from the complex, including an outdoor swimming pool planned for the roof of a parking deck next to the apartment building.

They also objected to the PVC request, which mandates a 50-acre minimum.

“This request just doesn’t fit,” said Salem Ridge resident Amy Patricio. “It’s too dense, and it doesn’t fit the code or the master plan.”

Planning commissioner Thea Powell, the lone dissenting vote, agreed, even after previously saying that “this not a PVC case.”

The Eden Rock proposal has been more than three years in the making. Partner Brandon Ashkouri said the site plan that was heard Tuesday was the 61st version of the project.

The Cobb Board of Commissioners will make the final decision on the application on Feb. 20.

 

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Lassiter Band holding mattress sale fundraiser for Tournament of Roses trip

Lassiter Band, Tournament of Roses Parade
The Lassiter High School band at the 2017 Cherry Blossom Parade in Washington, D.C. (submitted photo)

On Saturday, the Lassiter Band wants to sell you a mattress to help raise money for its participation in the 2019 Tournament of Roses Parade (previous East Cobb News post here).

The mattress sale takes place from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the band room at Lassiter (2601 Shallowford Road). They’ll be selling name-brand mattresses at a discount and will deliver. For details text the word “Lassiter” to 678-999-7278.

This will be the 130th Tournament of Roses parade and the fifth appearance for the Lassiter Band, which is sending 250 students, educators and others to Pasadena, Calif. for the New Year’s Day event.

Here’s more about related fundraising efforts for the trip, sent to us by Lassiter Band mom Sharon Renaud, who also submitted the photo above:

The Lassiter Band also is selling raffle tickets for chances to win a 2018 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sport 4×4. The drawing will be held Nov. 17. More information is available by emailing JeepRaffle@lbba.org. As a 501(c)(3) organization, the band also accepts tax-deductible donations which may be mailed to LBBA, P.O. Box 670253, Marietta, GA 30066.

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East Cobb Biz Notes: Okko Ramen Asian Kitchen open on Gordy Parkway

Okko Ramen Asian Kitchen

We noted this a few weeks back, but it’s now open: Okko Ramen Asian Kitchen, in the same building as the New Lucky China restaurant in the Sandy Plains-Shallowford Road area.

To be specific, the address is 3045 Gordy Parkway, Suite 108. Okko opened its doors in mid-January, and the menu features several Ramen entrees and other Japanese specialties, starters and sides.

Okko is open seven days a week; phone is 770-988-5000.

Challise & Co. honored

Challise & Company, a hair-skin-body salon located at 3534 Canton Road, has been recognized by Salon Today 200, a leading business for salon owners.

The Salon Today 200 list includes businesses nominated by the publication’s readers, and who meet various criteria for best business practices.

Challise & Company is owned by Challise Copeland, who took over the former Studio 5 Salon in 2003, and Carrie Cox. They’re active in the Northeast Cobb Business Association and the Cobb Women’s Business Association as well as Small Business Saturday (previous East Cobb News post here).

Other openings in East Cobb

The following East Cobb businesses have been granted licenses over the last couple of weeks:

  • Body Face Image Solutions, 1475 Terrell Mill Road, Suite 108 (esthetician);
  • Brazilian Bakery Cafe, 1260 Powers Ferry Road, Suite 115 (bakery);
  • Callis Counseling & Consultation, 2993 Sandy Plains Road (family & individual counseling);
  • Celia Webb Counseling Solutions, 1640 Powers Ferry Road (family & individual counseling);
  • Deirdre Foley, 3417 Canton Road (massage practitioner);
  • G Tree, 2915 Davis Road (tree trimming service);
  • Healthy Smiles of East Cobb, 1505 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 100 (dentist);
  • Inside AT Training, 4048 River Ridge Trace (fitness trainer);
  • Insur D Benefits Benefits Deposit USA, 2550 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 365 (insurance company);
  • Livingston and Associates, 2827 Gracewood Drive (legal services);
  • Marietta Dental Professionals, 2551 Roswell Road, Suite 101 (dentist)
  • Maxham Farms Landscape and Lawn Care, 280 Robin Lane (landscaping contractor);
  • Merchants Walk Cinema, 1301 Johnson Ferry Road (restaurant);
  • Miella Wellness, 2440 Sandy Plains Road (health spa);
  • Novo Psychotherapy, 1225 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 170 (counseling);
  • Nubesec, 2704 Stillwater Lake Lane (computer consultant);
  • Salata, 4101 Roswell Road, Suite 1100 (restaurant);
  • Sherry Goins, 2145 Roswell Road, Suite 200 (beautician);
  • Styles by Isaac, 4101 Roswell Road (beauty salon);
  • Superior Dental of East Cobb, 2745 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 118 (dentist);
  • Ushak Rug Gallery, 1762 Shady Hill Road (carpet sales);
  • Wood Family Chiropractic, 3417 Canton Road (chiropractor).

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The East Cobb News weekly newsletter for Feb. 4, 2018 is out!

Catch up with all of the past week’s headlines and take a look at what’s coming up this week with the convenient East Cobb News weekly newsletter.

The East Cobb News Digest is delivered to your e-mail every Sunday afternoon, and contains so much more, including the best calendar listings anywhere in East Cobb and convenient community information.

Subscribing to the newsletter is free and easy (just click the signup button below). We don’t sell or rent our e-mail listings to anyone, although we do send out out major breaking news alerts to our subscribers.

We know you’re busy, and that you don’t want to miss out on what’s going on around you. Sign up today and be part of East Cobb’s only daily news source, independently operated and with a totally local focus.

We’re enhancing our newsletter—including more top local headlines—due to changes Facebook is making to its News Feed, which that may limit what you see if you follow or like East Cobb News on that social media platform.

Welcome to our newest subscribers!

Terri Po, Bev Bergman, Elizabeth Wells, John Michelitch, Richard Hartigan, Lawrence Bourne, Matt Simpson, Charles Terry, Rajnikant Patel, Victoria Leonhardt, KImberly Miller, Kathy Slough, Donna Schacher, Patricia Butrym, Kyle Sumner, Ron Walker, Marilyn Crawford, Renee Winberg, Aaron Woody.

 

East Cobb sports update: Pope girls swimming team wins 1st state championship

For the first time in school history, the Pope girls swimming team has won a state championship.

Pope girls swimming team

The Greyhounds edged Johns Creek, 349 points to 338 points, to win the Georgia High School Association Class 6A title at Georgia Tech on Saturday.

Pope swimmer Sarah Sorensen won individual state crowns in the 100-yard freestyle and 100-yard backstroke, and her teammate Mady Bragg won the girls 200-yard freestyle.

Sorensen, Bragg, Julia Keith and Anna Prestel took the 6A championship in the 400-yard freestyle relay event.

The Walton girls were attempting a second consecutive state championship in Class 7A, but placed third with 282 points, behind Brookwood and Lambert. The Lassiter girls were sixth, with 213 points.

The Raiders’ 200-yard freestyle relay team of Jasmin Hoffman, Abby Belinski, Jami Williams and Melissa Cox won the 7A state title. Hoffman and Cox finished 1-2 in the 50-yard freestyle finals and they were 2-3, respectively, in the 100-yard freestyle.

Williams was second in the 100-yard backstroke, and Walton diver Mackenna Buchanan won the 1-meter springboard event.

In the boys competition, Lassiter finished second in the Class 7A team results with 304.5 points, which Brookwood won easily with 404 points. The Pope boys were fourth in Class 6A with 283 points.

Sprayberry’s Ananda Lin won the state championship in the Class 6A 100-yard freestyle event with a time of 44.66. He also was second in the 200-yard finals. Other top finishers from East Cobb schools in their respective classifications:

  • Boys 200-yard medley relay: Pope, 2nd (Mitchell Hunt, Langston Weddington, Ben Prestel, Gabe Lacasella);
  • Boys 1-meter diving: Casey Harrison, Pope, 2nd;
  • Boys 200-yard freestyle: Parker Ciaramella, Lassiter, 3rd;
  • Boys 50-yard freestyle: Jordan Dunn, Lassiter, 3rd;
  • Girls 100-yard butterfly: Sophie Taylor, Lassiter, 2nd;
  • Boys 100-yard freestyle: Brendan Hausdorf, Lassiter, 2nd;
  • Girls 200-yard freestyle relay: Pope, 2nd (Rachel Geller, Britheny Joassaint, Julia Keith, Mady Bragg);
  • Boys 100-yard backstroke: Zach Franklin, Lassiter, 3rd;
  • Girls 200-yard individual medley: Anna Prestel, Pope, 2nd;
  • Boys 100-yard breastsroke: Jordan Dunn, Lassiter, 3rd;
  • Girls 100-yard breaststroke: Bailey Dopfel, Pope, 3rd;
  • Girls 400-yard freestyle relay: Walton, 2nd (Melissa Cox, Caroline Current, Abby Belinski, Jasmin Hoffman).

 

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Developers of proposed Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill Road project seek new zoning category

MarketPlace Terrell Mill rendering, Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill Road project
A new rendering of the MarketPlace Terrell Mill project, which goes before the Cobb Planning Commission Tuesday.

In December the Cobb Planning Commission decided to hold a zoning application for a major Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill Road project that was opposed by some nearby condominium dwellers.

When the case goes back before the planning board Tuesday, the proposed redevelopment will come with a request for a new zoning category and will bear a new name.

What had been tentatively called the Terrell Mill Towne Center is now being dubbed MarketPlace Terrell Mill.

Related coverage

The proposed mixed-used project still covers nearly 24 acres at the northwest intersection of Powers Ferry and Terrell Mill roads, and includes the site of the soon-to-be-vacated Brumby Elementary School.

It would still be anchored by a Kroger superstore, along with restaurants, retail shops, as well a high-density apartment complex and self-storage building that have been opposed by residents of the adjacent Salem Ridge condominiums.

Instead of seeking community retail commercial (CRC) and urban condominium (UC) rezoning, the developers are now asking for the designation of planned village community (PVC), a rare category in use in Cobb County.

The attorney for the applicant, SSP Blue Ridge LLC, said a “huge amount of changes” also include settling on Colonial-style architecture throughout the development, and “tilting” the singular apartment building 180 degrees from the original proposal to alleviate concerns by nearby residents.

Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill Road project
The rendering from Terrell Mill Road, with the proposed self-storage building in the front of a 298-unit apartment building. The Salem Ridge condominiums are to the left.

Instead of more than 20 variances in the initial request, the PVC would reduce those variances to around 10 or so, according to Garvis Sams, who represents the applicant.

Some Salem Ridge residents who opposed the rezoning in December think the new request is improved, but are still worried about traffic and density issues.

“It’s a step in the right direction, but I don’t think this is it,” said Salem Ridge resident Robert Thompson, who spoke against the proposal at the planning commission hearing in December.

While he understands the need to redevelop the Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill intersection, and that “a lot of wheels are in motion,” he thinks the developers haven’t come far enough in addressing his concerns.

The number of apartment units have been reduced from 350 to 298, and the building has been reduced from five to four stories. The adjacent self-storage facility would be three stories, also with the same architecture (see revised site plan below).

MarketPlace Terrell Mill site plan

The Powers Ferry Corridor Alliance, a civic group formerly named the Terrell Mill Community Association, has supported the project all along, and urged members to attend Tuesday’s hearing “to help show that the PFCA has a role in supporting positive change in the community!”

One of the variances is significant. To get PVC zoning, a piece of property must be at least 50 acres. The Powers Ferry-Terrell Mill land isn’t half that.

Sams said a waiver request from that minimum acreage is included in a stipulation letter sent Jan. 23 to the Cobb zoning staff, which is recommending approval of the rezoning.

Noting the geographical reality of the property, Sams said the most recent PVC rezoning in Cobb—the West Village Smyrna project approved 13 years ago—also comes in under 50 acres.

Here’s a PDF of the stipulation letter submitted to the Cobb zoning staff that includes the revised site plan.

The Planning Commission meeting begins at 9 a.m. Tuesday in the second floor board room of the Cobb Government Building, 100 Cherokee St., in downtown Marietta.

The planning board’s recommendation is advisory; the final decision is up to the Cobb Board of Commissioners on Feb. 20.

 

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Sprayberry Crossing Shopping Center subject of March public meeting

Sprayberry Crossing Shopping Center

A citizens group that’s been trying to address the decaying Sprayberry Crossing Shopping Center is organizing a public meeting next month to bring more attention to the issue.

Joe Glancy of the Sprayberry Crossing Action Facebook group said Friday the meeting is scheduled for March 21 at 6 p.m. at the theater of Sprayberry High School (2525 Sandy Plains Road).

He said plans are to invite county and state officials, but didn’t have any other details.

Located on 13 acres on Sandy Plains Road at East Piedmont Road, Sprayberry Crossing Shopping Center was built 40 years ago, in 1978, with more than 140,000 square feet of space and with contemporary cedar trim design. The anchor stores were supermarkets—first an Ogletree’s and then a Bruno’s—and a bowling alley also operated there.

Today, it houses only a few businesses and organizations in run-down buildings that have been in that state since the 1990s. The parking lot is bumpy and riddled with potholes, and nearby residents have long complained about it being a community eyesore.

One of those residents is Glancy, who oversees the group’s Facebook page that has nearly 3,800 members.

Last month, he conducted a survey of group members to decide how to move forward. Glancy said most of the respondents preferred a public meeting. He wrote on the group’s page:

“This year, it is time to hold people accountable and make our voices heard. Don’t let your county representatives tell you how much they care about this issue – it’s time they showed you.

“As for the ownership, it’s probably time the community organized a communications initiative to make sure the owners are made aware of the level of our frustration.”

There’s a long, drawn-out back story to the Sprayberry Crossing Shopping Center, complicated by the location of a private cemetery and other issues as detailed last summer by the Cobb County Courier.

 

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East Cobb crime statistics: Car break-ins, thefts on rise since 2012

East Cobb crime statistics
Cobb Police Precinct 4 officers say parking lots at gyms and fitness centers remain among the leading venues for car break-ins. (East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

Before doing a deep dive into East Cobb crime statistics, a Cobb Police captain reminded local business leaders this week of a simple preventive measure that’s not being taken enough to address a spike in one of the community’s recurring crime issues.

“People aren’t locking their doors.”

Not just their car doors, but also garage doors and residential entrances, leading to easy opportunities for burglary, theft and other offenses, according to Capt. Everett Cebula, the deputy commander of Precinct 4 in East Cobb.

On Tuesday, Cebula told attendees at an East Cobb Business Association breakfast that car break-ins—referred to on crime reports as “entering auto”—have gone up quite a bit in Precinct 4 since 2012, in residential communities, commercial areas and public venues like parks.

In 2012, there were 392 reported car break-ins in Precinct 4. That number jumped to 597 in 2016 and fell slightly slightly last year to 567 (see table at bottom).

Cebula said gym and fitness center parking lots are prime territory for thieves looking to plunder goods from vehicles, since patrons often leave valuables inside the car and in open view while they’re working out.

In a refrain to messages police routinely give during the holiday shopping season, he urged gym-goers to secure items even before they pull up into the parking lot.

“Take those items and put them in the trunk before you go into the gym,” he said.

Thefts also have gone up in Precinct 4 in the 2012-2017 reporting period. Burglaries—both residential and non-residential—also have gradually dropped since 2012, and more violent crimes, such as murder, rape, aggravated assault and robbery, are fairly low in East Cobb compared to the rest of the county.

East Cobb crime statistics, Precinct 4
From left, Cobb Precinct 4 Capt. Everett Cebula, Lt. Brian Kitchens and Maj. Brian Batterton, the incoming commander. (East Cobb News photo by Wendy Parker)

One measure police have been taking in recent years to crack down on car break-ins is the use of racketeering laws. That’s because they’ve noticed that these incidents are more frequently connected to larger criminal rings, or repeated activity by solo criminals.

If police can establish a criminal enterprise, they can go outside the county and track down break-in suspects and bring their activity into one case.

Lt. Brian Kitchens, the head of Precinct 4’s criminal investigations, said that last summer his unit was able to use what’s known as the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations law—or RICO—to pull together more than a dozen cases for landscaping theft. The suspect in those incidents, he said, is still in jail.

He said “RICO goes a step further” and enables the judicial system to toughen punishments for repeated crimes.

He said another suspect was getting probation for car break-ins committed in various jurisdictions, but the use of RICO revealed that he had 55 such arrests, and a few more cases have been added. That suspect, Kitchens said, was offered a 20-year sentence, with 13 to serve.

Kitchens, who headed up the creation of a car break-in task force by Cobb Police in 2015, said RICO can be used to address other crimes.

He said police are getting more reports of break-ins at businesses like eyeglass stores, women’s clothing boutiques and specialty shops.

“We can expand this to protecting your business,” Kitchens told the ECBA attendees.

The table below has been compiled from Cobb Police data. The first figure in each box is for Precinct 4, and figures in parenthesis are from all of Cobb County.

Precinct 4 includes most of East Cobb, ranging from the eastern side of Canton Road to the Windy Hill Road area in the Powers Ferry corridor.

Part 1 crimes are the most serious and violent offenses against people and property, according to federal Uniform Crime Reports guidelines. They include homicide, rape, aggravated assault, robbery, burglary, theft, auto theft and arson.

2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Part 1 Crimes 1306 (8800) 1335 (8506) 1196 (8261) 1245 (8695) 1281 (8615) 1264 (8204)
Crimes Against Persons 78 (581) 59 (526) 72 (535) 102 (658) 99 (718) 74 (638)
Crimes Against Property 1228 (8219) 1276 (7980) 1124 (7726) 1143 (8037) 1182 (7897) 1190 (7566)
Homicide 2 (14) 4 (20) 3 (16) 3 (17) 2 (17) 2 (24)
Rape 19 (142) 14 (114) 16 (108) 23 (140) 21 (132) 20 (137)
Robbery 39 (405) 31 (409) 43 (392) 50 (428) 40 (449) 35 (397)
Agg. Assault 57 (425) 41 (392) 53 (411) 76 (501) 76 (569) 52 (480)
Res. Burglary 325 (2334) 365 (1992) 237 (1708) 209 (1694) 240 (1438) 226 (1176)
Non-Res. Burglary 127 (733) 113 (652) 105 (692) 118 (732) 87 (764) 90 (685)
Entering Auto 392 (2512) 422 (2723) 477 (3059) 279 (4062) 597 (3864) 567 (4070)
Theft 647 (3950) 665 (4100) 652 (3992) 659 (4216) 696 (4276) 730 (4359)
Vehicle Theft 90 (797) 102 (827) 87 (942) 107 967) 119 (970) 109 (949)

 

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Self-storage facility proposed on former Mountain View Elementary School site

MVES Self Storage rendering

Last fall the former Mountain View Elementary School site was rezoned for a major mixed-use development (previous East Cobb News post here) that is to include restaurants, shops and other small businesses.

Now, the developers are coming back through the rezoning process to request that a self-storage facility be allowed on the nearly 14-acre tract at 3448 Sandy Plains Road.

Brooks Chadwick Capital, LLC is seeking a special land use permit to construct a three-story facility that would be located at the southwest corner of the property and adjacent to the East Cobb Senior Center and the The Art Place-Mountain View.

The application will be heard Tuesday by the Cobb Planning Commission, which meets at 9 a.m. in the second floor board room of the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta.

Brooks Chadwick has submitted a revised site plan and renderings for the facility (agenda item packet here), which would contain 105,340 square feet of space and 13 parking spaces.

The above rendering, which features a brick Colonial style to the exterior of the building, was worked out between the developer and nearby residents and was submitted in December.

The Cobb zoning staff is recommending approval of the application with several conditions, including final architectural and landscaping plan approval coming from the district commissioner, and continuing existing stipulations that were part of the rezoning case last year.

The planning commission is an advisory board appointed by members of the Cobb Board of Commissioners, which will decide this and other rezoning, land use permit and related business on Feb. 20.

The rest of the February zoning schedule can be found here.

 

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Police seeking suspect in Delk Road traffic accident

A motorist has been hospitalized after a collision at Delk Road and Franklin Gateway Wednesday afternoon, and police are searching for the driver they say caused the accident.

The victim’s name has not been released by Marietta Police, who said that a male driver slammed into two vehicles at the intersection around 12:45 p.m. after being pursued in a traffic stop. Marietta Police, Delk Road motel shooting

Police said a gray 1997 Mercury Cougar was heading north on Franklin Gateway when a uniform officer noticed the car wasn’t displaying a proper license plate.

When the officer tried to initiate the traffic stop, the Cougar turned left into a filling station, then sped away and ran a red light at the intersection, hitting two vehicles, police said.

The driver of the first vehicle that was hit was trapped inside and later taken to WellStar Kennestone Hospital, according to police, who did not indicate the victim’s condition.

Police said the suspect fled on foot. He is described as a black male, with a medium skin tone and dreadlocks. He was last seen wearing a striped shirt, blue jeans and khaki colored boots.

Anyone with information about the accident is asked to contact Officer Parker at the Marietta Police Department. The main number is 770-794-5300.

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Windy Hill Road southbound ramp at Interstate 75 closed overnight Tuesday and Wednesday

Northwest Corridor Project

Some midweek overnight bridge work on the Windy Hill Road southbound ramp to Interstate 75 is being done on the continuing Northwest Corridor Project tonight and Wednesday night that may affect some East Cobb motorists.

From 11 p.m. to 5 a.m. both nights, it’s a multiple-lane closure: A double-left-lane closure starts at 11 p.m., then shifts to a triple-left-lane closure beginning at midnight until 5 a.m.

This closure extends—again, only in the southbound direction—from north of Windy Hill Road to Windy Ridge Parkway.

More on the Northwest Corridor project can be found here.

 

 

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New Cobb Police Precinct 4 commander is Maj. Brian Batterton

Maj. Brian Batterton, Cobb Police Precinct 4
Maj. Brian Batterton visits with Rosan Hall at the East Cobb Business Association breakfast Tuesday. (East Cobb News photo by Wendy Parker)

Maj. Brian Batterton, who began his career with the Cobb County Police Department in Precinct 4, is returning to become commander of the East Cobb-based unit.

Batterton, who succeeds Maj. Jerry Quan, is currently the commander of Cobb Police Precinct 5, which is in West Cobb.

His new appointment is another homecoming for Batterton, who still resides in East Cobb, in the Sprayberry High School area.

Batterton has been with Cobb Police since 1995, serving as a patrol officer, a criminal investigations supervisor and as a training center commander.

He made one of his first public appearances Tuesday at an East Cobb Business Association breakfast at the J. Christopher’s at East Lake Pavilions. Batterton will start his new duties Feb. 11.

In the interim, assistant commander Capt. Everett Cebula will be in charge of Precinct 4, which has around 70 officers and staff.

Batterton earned a bachelor’s degree from Georgia State University and a juris doctor degree from John Marshall Law School. He also has served in the National Guard in Georgia and Alabama.

Quan retired on Friday after nearly 30 years with Cobb Police, and began work on Monday with the Cobb County School District Police Department.

In 2014, Quan was named East Cobb Citizen of the Year by the East Cobb Area Council of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce.

 

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Cobb Police Coffee with a Cop scheduled for Wednesday at Chick-fil-A Woodlawn Square

Last week we noted that Cobb Police were having a “coffee with a cop” session as part of its community policing efforts. On Wednesday, they’re inviting you to join them again to express your concerns about crime and public safety issues in East Cobb.Cobb Police, Coffee with a Cop

From 8-10 a.m., Officer Nathalie Jegg will be available at the Chick-fil-A at Woodlawn Square, 1201 Johnson Ferry Road. She’s the Cobb Police Precinct 4 community officer (all five precincts have such an officer).

Here’s how Cobb Police is explaining this initiative, which is an ongoing function of its new community affairs unit:

“Community policing and trust building is one of the most important aspects of community-based policing. We, as police, need to create the situations where those things can occur, but it is often difficult and we don’t always reach our intended audience with town hall meetings alone. Coffee with a Cop is the perfect answer to the question of how to better engage our community and show our officers in a true and human light. The Cobb County Police Department welcomes you to pull up a chair and talk.”

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