New Ga. Congressional lines likely to prompt legal challenge

The proposed 11th District would include all of East Cobb and Marietta as well as the Town Center area and I-75 corridor north of Smyrna.

The Georgia legislature completed a special session Thursday by adopting Congressional maps that would place all of East Cobb in the 11th U.S. House District.

But Cobb Democratic commissioner Jerica Richardson, who has announced for the 6th Congressional District that was substantially redrawn, said she doesn’t think the maps will “hold up.”

They don’t pass “the smell test,” she said in an interview Thursday on the Politically Georgia podcast, before the maps were passed.

The Republican-majority legislature was called into a special session following a federal judge’s order to redraw legislative and Congressional lines for violations of the U.S. Voting Rights Act.

Specifically, lawmakers were ordered to create a new majority-black Congressional district in metro Atlanta. That appears to be the new 6th District, which includes most of South Cobb and covers an area represented by longtime Democratic incumbent David Scott.

In a posting on her campaign Facebook page, Richardson said Thursday night that “the maps that Republicans drew are in clear violation of a federal court order to add a new majority-minority district. We fully expect a legal challenge to this map, and there’s a high likelihood that it can succeed.”

Richardson said she hasn’t decided which district she may decide to run in—candidates do not have to live in their Congressional districts—but ruled out competing against any Democratic incumbent.

“We will evaluate where the need is and decide whether my message will resonate with the communities in that district,” she said in the Politically Georgia interview.

While she was asked if she may take on current 6th District Republican incumbent Rich McCormick in the new 7th District, Richardson didn’t mention the prospect of running in the new 11th District.

That seat is held by Republican Barry Loudermilk, and the new lines would include some of Cherokee County, as well as all of Bartow, Pickens and Gordon counties.

She continued in her social media message that “while the battles play out in court over the next few weeks, I remain committed to running a grassroots campaign on the same issues that have driven me from the start: connecting all communities to power and ensuring they have a voice in government, protecting our fundamental rights, expanding access to healthcare, improving infrastructure and transit, and enhancing economic empowerment.”

Richardson, who was drawn out of her Cobb Commission District 2 home in East Cobb by the legislature last year, has been holding meetings and events in the current 6th—which stretches from East Cobb up through North Fulton, Forsyth and Dawson counties—since she announced her Congressional ambitions this summer.

Richardson and her two Democratic colleagues on the commission invoked home rule over reapportionment, which critics say violates the state constitution.

A Cobb Superior Court judge is expected to rule this month on that legal dispute.

“At every roadblock, there has been an incredible outpouring of community support,” she said on the podcast. “I don’t expect this to be any different.

“At the end of the day, people just want people to represent them. If we can keep the focus, we’ll all be okay.”

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Cobb school district subject of federal civil rights probe

The U.S. Department of Education this week launched an investigation into the Cobb County School District after receiving a complaint of what it calls “shared ancestry” discrimination.Campbell High School lockdown

Cobb joins a growing list of K-12 school districts and universities being probed since the Israel-Hamas conflict began in October.

The education department’s Office of Civil Rights is investigating the complaints under Title VI of the U.S. Civil Rights Act of 1964, which bars schools receiving federal funds from discriminating based on race, color and national origin.

Those complaints can also include harassment based on a person’s shared ancestry or ethnic characteristics.

The OCR, which has been stepping up probes since mid-October at the behest of the Biden Administration, did not specify the nature of the Cobb school district investigation, which was launched on Tuesday.

East Cobb News has not received a copy of the complaint and contacted the Cobb school district seeking information.

A district spokeswoman said in a statement Thursday evening that “despite social media posts made by familiar political activists which are simply not accurate, there is no antisemitism OCR complaint against the District. We are aware of a single complaint, at a single school, that isn’t related to antisemitism. All students in Cobb should feel safe and welcomed, we do not tolerate hate of any kind.”

The Cobb school district was the subject of public complaints by Muslim and Palestinian parents shortly after the Middle East conflict began for a message that went out informing school families of an “international threat” by Hamas.

The message said that “while there is no reason to believe this threat has anything to do with our schools, parents can expect both law enforcement and school staff to take every step to keep your children safe.”

Nazia Khanzada, mother of a Cobb fifth-grader, told the Cobb school board at its Oct. 20 meeting that the school district’s message “has directly resulted in hate, harassment and bullying threats directed at Cobb’s Arabic and Muslim students and their families, including myself.”

At the same meeting, Cobb superintendent Chris Ragsdale replied to the criticism by saying that “the information we received required us to let the entire district and parents know we were taking the threats seriously” and that “bullying and hate of any type will not be tolerated in the Cobb County School District.”

A Jewish Campbell High School student told the Cobb school board Thursday—the first night of Hanukkah—that she’s experienced several instances of anti-Semitism and doesn’t feel safe on campus.

A Palestinian high school student also complained that she and those like her are being silenced and demanded that the district provide more resources to increase diversity and inclusivity.

The district has come under fire in recent years for how it has treated anti-Semitic acts at schools, including swastika graffiti at Pope and Lassiter high schools in East Cobb.

A number of parents and citizens have asked the district to bring back a “No Place for Hate” educational program produced for schools by the Anti-Defamation League.

The OCR also launched Title VI investigations Tuesday at Montana State University, Union College in New York, the University of Cincinnati and Tulane University in New Orleans.

A number of other notable educational institutions, including the New York City Department of Education and Harvard University, also are being probed for complaints of anti-Semitic treatment since the start of the Middle East conflict.

If the Cobb school district is found to have violated Title VI, it could be asked to submit a plan for compliance or OCR could conduct its own enforcement.

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East Cobb restaurant update: Kouzina Christos to close

Kouzina Christos, East Cobb food scores

After reopening in the East Cobb area in 2021, longstanding Greek restaurant Kouzina Christos will be closing for good in January.

Owner Christos Giannes announced on Thursday that the last day of business will be Jan. 15, but he didn’t disclose a reason.

On the restaurant’s Facebook page, Giannes wrote:

“Before we take our final bow, we ask you to join us once more. Let’s fill our dining room with the sound of clinking glasses, the aroma of favorite meals, and the warmth of shared stories. Come, be part of the grand finale of a place that’s touched lives and fostered a spirit of togetherness.

“Here’s to the traditions, the bonds, and the simple joy of a meal shared. Christos is not just saying farewell; we’re commemorating the indelible mark we’ve made in each other’s lives. Let’s make these last days glow with the essence of what we’ve built together.”

The Giannes family opened their first restaurant at Terrell Mill Junction in 1979, then moved it to the Delk Spectrum shopping center.

The renamed Kouzina Christos opened in the revived Terrell Mill Village shopping center in 2012, but closed it in December 2020 following COVID-19 closures that Giannes said were crippling to mom and pop restaurants like his.

That’s across the street from the MarketPlace Terrell Mill redevelopment, and Giannes wrote at the time that “chains are happy to see the mass failure of independents, expanding the labor pool, increasing competition and increasing downward pressure on hourly wages. Corporate greed and avarice…supporting the Chinese economy.”

Giannes moved Kouzina Christos to the former Aurelio’s Pizza spot at the Market Plaza Shopping Center on Johnson Ferry Road in March 2021.

Om Thursday, Giannes said that “Christos is not just saying farewell; we’re commemorating the indelible mark we’ve made in each other’s lives. Let’s make these last days glow with the essence of what we’ve built together.”

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East Cobb Weekend Events: Christmas concerts; Menorah Lighting; more

Menorah Lighting The Avenue East Cobb
Chabad of East Cobb is hosting a Menorah Lighting event Sunday at Avenue East Cobb to kick off Chanukah.

There’s plenty of music in the air this weekend across East Cobb, as the Christmas and Hanukkah seasons overlap.

Two East Cobb congregation choirs are joining together for what they’re calling “There’s A Song in the Air” concerts at each respective church.

The first is Friday from 7-8 p.m. at Grace Resurrection Methodist Church (1200 Indian Hills Parkway) and then on Sunday from 5-6 p.m. at East Cobb United Methodist Church (2325 Roswell Road).

The public is invited to these free events.

Likewise, east and west Cobb churches and the Georgia Festival Chorus are combining for “Handel’s Messiah Sing-Along” concerts in two parts. The first is Saturday at 6 p.m. at Due West Methodist Church (3956 Due West Road) for Part I, followed on Sunday at 4 p.m. at Eastminster Presbyterian Church (3125 Sewell Mill Road).

The concerts are free and open to the public.

The annual Christmas at Johnson Ferry festivities this year are dubbed “Sounds of the Season,” featuring a Christmas concert in the sanctuary, with the Johnson Ferry Baptist Church choir, orchestra, sing team, students and children in performance, followed by what we’re told are very, very snowy family activities in a winter wonderland setting.

The free events are Saturday-Sunday from 5-730 p.m. at the church (955 Johnson Ferry Road).

The last two shows of CenterStage North Theatre’s “A Dickens’ Christmas Carol” are set for Thursday-Friday starting at 7 p.m. at The Art Place (3330 Sandy Plains Road).

The Styckes Upon Thump Repertory Company embarks on its fifteenth annual tour of the Dickens classic, subtitled “A Traveling Travesty in Two Tumultuous Acts.”

Tickets are $15-$27.

The weather on Saturday should be pleasant enough for another Hyde Farm Walking Tour. Cobb PARKS leads tours at 10 a.m. and 11 a.m. to explore the 1840s-era working farm, as well as fields, pastures an orchard and more natural wonders near the banks of the Chattahoochee River.

The tours are free and participants should gather near the red gate at the end of the parking lot. Call 770-528-8840 for information.

The Hanukkah season is getting underway, and once again the Chabad of Cobb synagogue will lead the celebrations with a Menorah Lighting at Avenue East Cobb on Sunday.

The free family-friendly activities begin at 5:30 p.m. with music and treats, including the Gelt Drop, with chocolates falling out of the sky, thanks to Cobb Fire Ladder 20.

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East Cobb restaurant update: Press Waffle Co. opening delayed

Press Waffle opening Dec. 15

Following last week’s post about a Dec. 15-17 grand opening weekend at Press Waffle Co., owners Keith and Niki Ginel told East Cobb News Thursday that’s been put on hold indefinitely.

They said that “due to unforeseen delays in the construction and permitting process with East Cobb County, we are being forced to postpone the grand opening event.”

The Belgian-style waffle eatery is set to occupy one of the new “jewel box” spaces at Avenue East Cobb, a key component of the retail center’s overhaul under North American Properties.

Grand opening festivities were to include live music from local schools and churches, discounts and more.

The announcement comes a day after Press Waffle formerly sent out word of its opening. Keith Ginel told us that a new opening date hasn’t been set and that “our contractor is working on an updated schedule for us now.”

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East Cobb Food Scores: Mezza Luna; China Dynasty; more

Mezza Luna, East Cobb food scores

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

Captain D’s
2811 Canton Road
December 6, 2023 Score: 99, Grade: A

China Dynasty 
3605 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 105
December 5, 2023 Score: 90, Grade: A

Completos Burger
2852 Delk Road, Suite 215
December 4, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

Domino’s Pizza
2323 Shallowford Road
December 5, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

Jacobs Java Cafe
1350 Terrell Mill Road
December 5, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

Mezza Luna Pasta and Seafood
2100 Roswell Road, Suite 2198
December 4, 2023 Score: 95, Grade: A

Movie Tavern
4651 Woodstock Road, Suite 430
December 8, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

Paradise Smoothie Juice Bar
3595 Canton Road, Suite 318
December 6, 2023 Score: 96, Grade: A

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East Cobb fitness businesses holding holiday toy and gift drives

Simple Needs GA

A couple of new fitness centers in East Cobb are collecting gifts and toys for children in need this holiday season.

The Strongvibe studio at Paper Mill Village (147 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 4110) is having a holiday party on Saturday starting at 11 a.m. and is asking attendees to bring a gift for Cobb students who are experiencing homelessnesss.

Owner Erica Manning has started a wishlist spreadsheet (you can read it here) where you’re asked to indicate what items (and how many) you’ll be bringing.

The items include clothing, shoes, pajamas, coats and gift cards. Just sign up accordingly and you can bring your items during regular studio hours through the holiday party.

RSVP at erica@strongvibefit.com or 770-573-4010.

Stretch Zone East Cobb is pairing with East Cobb-based Simple Needs GA to collect holiday toys in a drive that continues through Dec. 15.

The studio (4371 Roswell Road, East Cobb Crossing Shopping Center) is accepting a variety of unwrapped toys for children of all ages. Stretch Zone will offer donors a free stretch session (up to two per customer) with a new or existing contract.

“Many of the families referred to us by school social workers and others have missed out on other local holiday programs because of unforeseen circumstances,” Simple Needs GA founder Brenda Rhodes said. “We want them to experience the spirit of Christmas just the same. In 2022, SNGA supplied Christmas gifts to about 300 Cobb County kids from over 100 families.”

Requested items include gift cards, Bath & Body Works products, art supplies, African-American baby dolls and accessories, Legos, VTech and Leapfrog educational toys, bike helmets, Fisher-Price play sets, board and card games, and gloves, mittens, hats and scarves in adult and older teen sizes.

For information email eastcobb@stretchzone.com or call 770-282-7941.

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East Cobb Guthrie’s Chicken proposal gets initial approval

Guthrie's Chicken files for rezoning for East Cobb restaurant

The Cobb Planning Commission voted Tuesday to recommend approval of a proposed Guthries’ Chicken drive-through restaurant in East Cobb.

After continuing the application for a month, the board placed the application on the consent agenda by a 4-0 vote when no opposition arose.

The initial request to convert 3.17 acres at the southwest intersection of Lower Roswell Road and Johnson Ferry Road from planned shopping center (PSC) to neighborhood retail commercial (NRC) was on consent.

East Cobb Guthries LLC wants to convert an empty medical building for a two-lane drive-through only restaurant and purchased the property last year.

But the East Cobb Civic Association objected to some of the variances and was concerned about the lack of a detailed site plan and asked for more time to review the request.

Guthrie’s hired noted zoning attorney Kevin Moore, who submitted a stipulation letter dated Nov, 27 that addressed some of those issues and included a site plan (you can read it here).

The 1,500-square-foot building will be remodeled and the property will include 10 parking spaces, down from an original range between 22-25 spaces. The operating hours will be daily from 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. and access will be on Lower Roswell only.

The stipulation letter indicates that Guthries “will utilize outdoor employee order service . . . during expected, heavier volume times.”

Traffic concerns also came up during the initial hearing in November. Cobb DOT revised a traffic study and requested that Guthrie’s donate right-of-way to complete the project and for an upcoming improvement project along Lower Roswell.

District 2 Planning Commission member David Anderson included in his motion to place the application on the consent agenda a stipulation that Guthrie’s conduct a traffic study.

The Cobb Board of Commissioners is scheduled to hear the case on Dec. 19.

East Cobb Guthrie's site plan

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Peachtree Immediate Care to open East Cobb clinic

Peachtree Immediate Care to open East Cobb clinic

Peachtree Immediate Care, an urgent care facility with more than 50 locations in metro Atlanta and North Georgia, will be opening a clinic in East Cobb this week.

A ribbon-cutting is scheduled for Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the clinic at Woodlawn Point Shopping Center )1100 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 510). It’s part of an open house event slated from 12-2 p.m.

Peachtree Immediate Care is part of the Emory Healthcare Network, and provides comprehensive urgent care services.

The clinic is open 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. seven days a week and offers urgent and family care services, treats minor illnesses and injuries, conducts sports physicals and X-rays, practices occupational medicine and has on-site labs.

Appointments are not required and both insurance and self-pay options are available. Patients can also check-in online and receive referrals to specialists.

Website: https://www.peachtreemed.com/location/east-cobb/

Phone: 943-888-9006

Email: eastcobb@peachtreemed.com

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East Cobb residential real estate sales, Nov. 13-17, 2023

Providence Corners, East Cobb real estate sales
Providence Corners

The following East Cobb residential real estate sales were compiled from agency reports. They include the subdivision name and high school attendance zone in parenthesis:

Nov. 13

884 Edgewater Circle, 30062 (Barnes Mill Lake, Wheeler): $339,000

1701 Old Canton Road, 30062 (Pope): $1.1 million

2674 Piedmont Oak Drive, 30066 (Oaks on Piedmont, Sprayberry): $432,000

3229 Belford Drive, 30066 (Chaucer Place, Sprayberry): $585,000

1494 East Bank Drive, 30068 (Jacksons Creek, Walton): $921,000

Nov. 14

3237 Sweet Buckeye Drive, 30066 (North Chestnut Grove, Sprayberry): $540,000

4405 Rosemary Court, 30066 (Hampton Ridge, Lassiter): $550,000

Nov. 15

1644 Roanoke Place, 30067 (Bentley Ridge, Wheeler): $250,000

1512 Monarch Drive, 30062 (Glen Crest, Sprayberry): $599,000

941 Alexis Way, 30066 (Carrington Place, Sprayberry): $395,000

4941 Tremont Drive, 30066 (Tremont, Kell): $400,000

Nov. 16

4105 Avid Park, 30062 (East Haven, Walton): $847,000

1670 Holly Springs Road, 30062 (Walton): $345,000

2200 Haverhill Court, 30067 (Covered Bridge, Wheeler): $205,000

2540 Stoney Brook Lane, 30062 (Holly Springs North, Sprayberry): $415,000

Nov. 17

3790 Canvasback Court, 30062 (Providence Corners, Walton): $625,000

3627 Edenbourgh Place, 30066 (Highland Terrace, Lassiter): $525,000

3255 Devaughn Drive, 30066 (Village of North Crossing, Lassiter): $515,000

4760 Township Walk, 30066 (Jefferson Township, Lassiter): $997,000

2017 Winsted Way, 30062 (East Hampton—The Estates, Walton): $1.14 million

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Walton HS football team reaches state championship game

The Walton football team will end the 2023 season in the same place where it started—Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta.Walton High School logo, East Cobb high school football

The powerful Raiders clinched a berth in the Georgia High School Association’s Class 7A state championship game with a 41-25 win over Camden County on Friday.

Senior quarterback Jeremy Hecklinski threw for 325 yards and six touchdowns in his final game at Raider Valley, as Walton remained undefeated at 14-0.

This will be the second trip to the finals for Walton, which lost to Grayson in the 2011 championship game.

On Dec. 13, the Raiders will face Milton, which downed Grayson 45-35 in the other semifinal.

Walton’s high-powered offense, which has averaged more than 46 points a game, got off to a fast start, as the Raiders led 21-0.

But Camden County—coached by former Walton and Wheeler coach Jeff Herron—scored the first 10 points of the second half, as its Wing-T offense began to get momentum.

The touchdown was scored on an interception return for a touchdown, but Hecklinski—who is headed to Wake Forest—guided a long drive that led to a touchdown for a 28-17 Walton lead.

And the Raiders’ defense shut down Camden after that, allowing only another touchdown later in the game.

After the game, Walton coach Daniel Brunner told Georgia Public Broadcasting that he thinks Hecklinski is the best quarterback in the state.

“There’s no doubt about it. Look at the stats, look at the numbers. Best quarterback in the state. Bar none.”

Hecklinski has thrown for 3,708 yards and 48 touchdowns during the season, and running backs Makari Bodiford and Austin Williams are approaching 1,000-yard seasons.

They could surpass that in the state finals against Milton. The game will be played on Wednesday, Dec. 13, at 7 p.m. at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, where Walton opened the season with a 49-27 win over Grayson in the Corky Kell Classic.

But more importantly, Walton has a chance to become the first school from East Cobb to win a football state championship.

Walton lost to Grayson 24-0 in the 2011 state finals under former coach Rocky Hidalgo.

In 1973, Wheeler reached the Class 3A state championship game but lost to Thomasville.

Brunner, who was named head coach at Walton in 2017, has taken the Raiders to the state playoffs each year and has a record of 66-22.

 

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Proposed Congressional map would redraw East Cobb lines

Proposed Congressional map would redraw East Cobb lines
You can look at the full map by clicking here.

Two years after carving up East Cobb into two Congressional districts, the Georgia legislature could be dramatically tearing up those lines again.

During a special legislative session that got underway earlier this week, Senate Reapportionment and Redistricting Committee Chairwoman Shelly Echols submitted a map that would put most of East Cobb in the 11th Congressional district.

Lawmakers were called to a special session after a decision by a federal judge in Atlanta to throw out the maps the legislature adopted in 2021, saying they diluted minority voting strength under the federal Voting Rights Act.

The legislature has until Dec. 8 to finish reapportionment work under the court order.

The 11th District been represented since 2016 by Cassville Republican Barry Loudermilk, and currently includes some of East Cobb.

The proposed 11th district would include some of Cherokee County and all of Bartow, Pickens and Gordon counties.

The map, proposed on Friday, would take the 6th District out of East Cobb completely. Some of the area is currently in the 6th and is represented by first-term Republican Rich McCormick.

Instead, the 7th District would include much of what is now in the 6th—North Fulton, Forsyth and Dawson c0unties, plus some of Hall and Lumpkin counties.

The proposed 11th District would include all of East Cobb and Marietta as well as the Town Center area and I-75 corridor north of Smyrna.

That would likely make the 11th an even stronger Republican district than the 6th. Cobb Democratic commissioner Jerica Richardson has announced her candidacy in the 6th, and she has appeared at events in more conservative reaches of the district.

Richardson was drawn out of her East Cobb home when the legislature reapportioned seats on the Cobb Board of Commissioners in 2021. Richardson and her two Democratic colleagues voted to invoke home rule and honor maps drawn by the Cobb delegation, an action that’s currently before a Cobb Superior Court judge.

In a social media message Friday, Richardson issued a statement saying that “these maps are an affront to the idea of fair representation and fly in the face of the judge’s order to the state.”

She referenced a similar action in Alabama, where Republican lawmakers under a court order created a second black-majority district in that state.

“My hope is they will see the error of their ways and fix these maps again before the judge’s Dec. 8 deadline,” Richardson said of the Georgia GOP lawmakers.

“If they do not, then I would support further legal challenges until the core message of the judge’s order is fulfilled.”

Nine of Georgia’s 14 Congressional districts are represented by Republicans, and eight seats are majority-white.

The judge ordered that a majority-black Congressional district in the western part of metro Atlanta be created. But the map proposed Friday would not do that.

Instead, it would add a minority-white district, keep the number of majority-black districts at four and leave one district that doesn’t have a racial majority.

That’s the current 7th District represented by Democrat Lucy McBath, who left the 6th District after 2021 reapportionment. It would have a strong Republican majority under the proposed map, and would take out all of Gwinnett County that she now represents.

The legislature also was ordered to create several majority-black legislative districts in the Atlanta and Macon areas.

The Georgia General Assembly has had Republican majorities since 2005. Currently the GOP has a 102-78 advantage in the House, and a 33-23 majority in the Senate.

Maps enacted in 2021 split East Cobb into the 6th and 11th districts.

The House on Friday voted out a House map along partisan lines proposed by Republican leaders in that chamber, and it will be sent to the Senate.

GOP State Reps. Sharon Cooper, John Carson and Don Parsons, who have East Cobb constituencies, voted in favor.

Voting against was State Rep. Solomon Adesanya, a first-term Democrat who represents District 43 in East Cobb.

Three redrawn districts in the House would pit Democratic incumbents against one another, including current Cobb delegation Chairwoman Teri Anulewicz and Doug Stoner.

Adesanya said in a social media message that “rather than doing the right thing, this time, they targeted our White Democrats, coupling members in three different House seats, which, essentially under their map, three Democrats will have to go, and three Democrats will remain. The Republicans in the Georgia House of Representatives must know their time as a majority is nearing the end. They are desperate to cling on to power.”

Senate Republicans on Friday also passed a map that would add two majority-black districts, and that will go on to the House.

Committee meetings are scheduled for Monday for the Congressional maps.

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East Cobb restaurant update: Press Waffle to open Dec. 15

Press Waffle opening Dec. 15

Workers are still putting some of the finishing touches on windows and the exterior as we’re a couple weeks away from the official opening of Press Waffle Co. at Avenue East Cobb.

It’s occupying one of the new “jewel box” buildings that’s a key part of the retail center’s overhaul. Owner Keith Ginel told East Cobb News this week that the first day of business is Friday, Dec. 15, kicking off a weekend of special events, discounts and entertainment.

A ribbon-cutting takes place at 9 a.m. Friday, with the first 100 customers receiving free swag bags. Live Christmas music takes place on the patio from 4-7 and all day there will be photo booth “post and tag” opportunities for special discounts.

That latter promotion continues all weekend. On Saturday, Johnson Ferry Baptist Church musicians will perform live music on the patio from 12-1, and from 4-7 Walton HS will do the honors in the same place.

Sunday’s musicians are from Pope HS and will be featured from 2-3 p.m.

Press Waffle Co., which began as a food truck venture in St. Louis in 2016 and vaulted into fame via the television show “Shark Tank,” has seven locations in Missouri, Arkansas, Texas and Colorado.

The 1,200-square-foot space at the jewel box is the company’s first venue in Georgia. Gitel and his wife Niki are East Cobb residents and franchisees. Press Waffle, which features Belgian-style “Liège” waffles handmade (from dough, not batter) on-site.

There are a variety of sweet and savory options (including chicken and waffles, customizable toppings and a waffle ice cream sandwich), along with locally roasted coffee and espresso.

Press Waffle is partnering with Marietta-based Cool Beans Coffee Roasters and Rock House Farm & Creamery in Newton County.

Updates are being posted at the restaurant’s Facebook and Instagram pages.

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East Cobb’s Fox Family holiday lights display returns through Jan. 7

East Cobb home holiday decorations 2022

Starting Friday and continuing into the new year is one of East Cobb’s most notable neighborhood holiday lights displays.

The Fox Family of the Clary Lakes subdivision in Northeast Cobb will be turning on a dazzling array of lights, accompanied and synchronized by music and even an animated skating pond.

The display, which takes about a month to put together and test, runs through Jan. 7, which is the Orthodox Christmas (resident Karen Fox is Greek Orthodox).

The hours are from 6-11 p.m. at the Fox home at 2994 Clary Hill Court (accessible via McPherson Road, just north of Post Oak Tritt Road; see map below).

This is the 16th year for the display, and Fox said that Santa will make visits on Friday and/or Saturday evenings beginning Dec. 10, weather permitting.

The weather could be an issue as the display gets underway, with a wet weekend in store. Fox said on a social media posting Thursday that “we are hoping to be at about 90 percent ready [Friday] evening, weather permitting. We will not put out any of our vintage items that can’t get wet if it is raining.”

She said a Facebook page dedicated to the display is providing weather and scheduling updates, including a playlist of the music that visitors can listen to in their cars on 88.3FM. Here’s what you’ll hear this year:

1. Amazing Grace-Yule
2. Christmas Canon-Trans-Siberian Orchestra
3. Christmas Eve Sarajevo-Trans-Siberian Orchestra
4. Deck the Halls-Mannheim Steamroller
5. Let It Snow-Dean Martin
6. Light of Christmas-Owl City
7. Little Drummer Boy-King and Country
8. Mad Russian Christmas – Trans-Siberian Orchestra
9. Miracle on 34th Street Overture-Bruce Broughton
10. Linus and Lucy-Vince Guaraldi
11. Queen of the Winter Night-Trans-Siberian Orchestra
12. Sleigh Ride-The Ronettes
13. Wizard in Winter-Trans-Siberian Orchestra
14. Candy Cane Lane-Sia
15. Merry Christmas-Ed Sheehan & Elton John

The Fox display has been nominated in the current Home Holiday Hunt competition through Dec. 27.

Fox Family Christmas Light Display

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East Cobb Food Scores: Ruby Tuesday; Clubhouse ATL; ACC; more

Ruby Tuesday Delk Road, East Cobb food scores

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

A Tasty Touch
2111 Lower Roswell Road
November 29, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

Atlanta Country Club
500 Atlanta Country Club Drive
November 28, 2023 Score: 96, Grade: A

Clubhouse ATL
2852 Delk Road, Suite 205
November 29, 2023 Score: 93, Grade: A

Davis Elementary School
2433 Jamerson Road
November 29, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

Domino’s Pizza
3545 Canton Road
November 21, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

Domino’s Pizza
4724 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 101
November 28, 2023 Score: 91, Grade: A

Garrison Mill Elementary School
4111 Wesley Chapel Road
November 28, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

Goianao Restaurant and Catering
1475 Terrell Mill Road, Suite 103
December 1, 2023 Score: 96, Grade: A

Ruby Tuesday
2435 Delk Road
November 30, 2023 Score: 94, Grade: A

Starbucks 
4648 Woodstock Road, Suite 100
November 22, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

Starbucks
31 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite A
November 27, 2023 Score: 100, Grade: A

Touchdown Wings
2856 Delk Road, Suite 301
November 30, 2023 Score: 98, Grade: A

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East Cobb Weekend Events: Apple Annie; Holiday Lights; more

2022 East Cobb Park Holiday Lights
Santa and Mrs. Claus will be back at East Cobb Park Sunday for Holiday Lights.

With the start of December comes a busy slate of holiday festivities in the East Cobb area, leading off on Friday with the return of the Apple Annie Arts and Crafts Show.

More than 100 vendors will be selling their wares from 9-6 Friday and 9-2 Saturday at the Catholic Church of St. Ann (4905 Roswell Road), along with food from an on-site café and treats at the bake sale.

There also will be the Artisan Gift and Handmade Quilt raffles and plenty of holiday music. Admission is $5 and proceeds benefit local charities.

Overflow parking is at The Episcopal Church of St. Peter and St. Paul (1795 Johnson Ferry Road), with free shuttle service.

Friday marks the first of a five-show holiday performance of an unusual twist on “A Dickens’ Christmas Carol” at CenterStage North Theatre/The Art Place.

Subtitled “A Traveling Travesty in Two Tumultuous Acts,” this the 15th annual tour by the Styckes Upon Thump Repertory Company.

Shows are Friday and Saturday night, as well as Dec. 8 and 9, with a matinee at 2 p.m. this Sunday only.

On Saturday, holiday fun for the whole family is in store at tbe Sewell Mill Cultural Center’s Winter Festival.

It takes place from 10-3 at the library and cultural center (2051 Lower Roswell Road) amid the facility’s 12 Days of Christmas market, and will include holiday arts and crafts workshops, gift-wrapping, kids’ storytime and photos with Cobb PARKS. The event is free, but registrations is required for the photo sessions.

If you want holiday music to enjoy, the Cobb New Horizons Symphony is holding its annual Sounds of the Seasons Concert from 2-4 p.m. Saturday at the Lassiter Concert Hall (2601 Shallowford Road). Admission is free.

An East Cobb tradition since 1992 returns Saturday, Sunday and Monday evenings. It’s the Bethlehem Walk display at Mountain View Church (2300 Jamerson Road), and the interactive event takes place from 7-9 p.m. each night.

Visitors walk through the streets of Bethlehem to recapture the atmosphere leading up to Christ’s birth, followed by treats and hot apple cider.

Putting a festive bow on the weekend will be the presentation of Holiday Lights at East Cobb Park as it turns dark on Sunday.

There will be music from local school children and a DJ and hot chocolates and other treats before the park’s trees are lighted and Santa Claus arrives on his sleigh. Kids can have their photos taken with St. Nick.

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Cobb School District announces 2024 commencement schedule

Tadiwa Zinyongo, inspiring Cobb senior

The Cobb County School District on Wednesday announced its schedule for 2024 commencement exercises.

All but two of the district’s 17 high schools will have graduation ceremonies at the Kennesaw State University Convocation Center from Monday, May 20 through Saturday, May 25.

Here are the graduation dates and times for the six high schools in East Cobb, all at KSU:

  • Wheeler: Tuesday, May 21, 7:30 p.m.
  • Pope: Wednesday, May 22, 7:30 p.m.
  • Kell: Thursday, May 23, 2:30 p.m.
  • Lassiter: Friday, May 24, 10 a.m.
  • Walton: Friday, May 24, 2:30 p.m.
  • Sprayberry: Saturday, May 25, 7:30 p.m.

More graduation information can be found here; the Cobb school district said it will update that link with more details about each school’s commencement and venue information, as well as links to live-streaming and ordering videos, in the spring.

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Cobb commissioners presented with stormwater fee options

More than half of all current Cobb residential customers would fall into a stormwater fee tier charging between $2.12 and $2.17 a month.

A number of options to collect stormwater fees from Cobb homeowners, businesses and institutions was presented to the Cobb Board of Commissioners on Tuesday.

Cobb doesn’t collect a stormwater fee, but for more than a year, the Cobb County Water System has been researching potential options to maintain and upgrade a stormwater system that officials say is under severe strain.

During a work session Tuesday, water system director Judy Jones presented a detailed set of options that include imposing an average monthly fee ranging between $2.12 to $5, based on the amount of impervious surface on a property.

That would amount to a smaller fee for homeowners and a larger bill for commercial and institutional properties.

Cobb water and sewer customers are currently billed according to usage, ranging from $2.14 for 5,000 gallons or less a month for residences to $7.06 for heavy commercial users (15,000 gallons or more) for combined services.

That proposal is less than what nearby jurisdictions charge for stormwater fees, including some of Cobb’s cities.

Basing a fee on impervious surface, Jones said, would “create dedicated funding” for stormwater repairs.

Since 1994, Cobb has funded stormwater maintenance from water and sewer fees, and it’s been nearly two decades since a consultant recommended the county impose a stormwater fee.

The county has admitted it lacks staffing and resources to adequately handle demands on the system, which include older and failing pipes and maintenance of several hundred detention ponds.

Those concerns were accelerated following floods in East Cobb and elsewhere in the county in 2021, and prompted commissioners to explore the possibility of stormwater fees.

The Cobb water system currently spends $8.4 million a year on stormwater costs, including capital improvement projects. Jones presented nine options for expanded services that would increase that total to $19 million annually if they were all approved, by collecting $5.01 a month in stormwater fees from individual customers.

That would include hiring several positions to conduct repairs, provide engineering and inspection services and update the system’s map of detention ponds it maintains.

Jones said her staff is still trying to determine how many detention ponds the county is responsible for, including mowing and landscaping, but the best estimate is around 300.

When Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid said “that’s not sustainable,” from a time as well as financial context, Jones said that “we’re not maintaining them the way they need to be.”

Jones presented slides showing such things as a sample bill including a stormwater fee, with the charge for a Tier 2 residence (around 2,000 gallons a month) going up by only 3 cents, from $71.10 to $71.13, using the impervious surface formula.

Cobb Water System director Judy Jones said county water customers “still have the lowest rates” in metro Atlanta.

However, the monthly bill for a “big box” commercial customer would go up by more than $217, from $1,777 to $1,808.

Jones said special lower formulas could be worked out for non-commercial institutions, such as schools and churches, which have a lot of impervious surfaces.

The two Republicans on the commission have said previously they oppose a stormwater fee, calling it a tax.

GOP Commissioner JoAnn Birrell of District 3 in East Cobb asked Tuesday if there there would be town halls or public meetings ahead of any vote on whether to charge a stormwater fee.

She has been opposed as long as a portion of Cobb Water System revenues are transferred every year to the county’s general fund budget.

This year that figure is 6 percent, after commissioners voted along party lines to raise water rates by nearly 8 percent.

County attorney Bill Rowling said public hearings would be required for any changes to the county code regarding stormwater fees.

Cupid added that “anything you can do to educate the public would be generous,” and she referenced recent meetings about the proposed Cobb Mobility SPLOST.

“I think we can err on the side of being generous,” she said.

Jones said she would make her presentation available on the county website. Commissioners didn’t discuss a timetable for any possible action, but hearings and public feedback are expected to continue into the middle of 2024.

A few other related slides from Jones’ presentation Tuesday are included below, along with a replay of the work session. It lasts an hour and 17 minutes.

 

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Ga. special legislative reapportionment session to start

Ga. special legislative reapportionment session to start
Proposed maps by Senate Republicans, left, and the Democratic caucus, at right, would carve up East Cobb representation in sharply different ways.

The Georgia General Assembly will begin a special session on Wednesday to redraw Congressional and legislative districts.

An initial hearing of the House Reapportionment and Redistricting Committee takes place at 1 p.m. at the Georgia Capitol.

The session was prompted following a decision by a federal judge in Atlanta to throw out the maps the legislature adopted in 2022, saying they diluted minority voting strength.

The Georgia legislature has had Republican majorities since 2005. Currently the GOP has a 102-78 advantage in the House, and a 33-23 majority in the Senate.

Party control isn’t expected to change, but the judge ordered that a majority-black Congressional district in the western part of metro Atlanta be created, as well as several majority-black legislative districts in the Atlanta and Macon areas.

None of them are in the East Cobb area, but map proposals released earlier this week show some dramatically different lines.

A map proposed by Senate Republicans would remove District 6, currently represented by Democrat Jason Esteves of Atlanta, out of East Cobb completely.

Instead, District 33, represented by West Cobb Democrat Doc Rhett, would sweep across the county, taking in a sizable portion of East Cobb.

A map proposed by the Senate Democratic Caucus would expand District 6 further into East Cobb.

Both maps would include much of the East Cobb area currently represented by Republicans Kay Kirkpatrick (District 32) and John Albers (District 56). Proposed State House Maps (Cmte Chair)

The House Republican leadership has proposed a House map (at right) that would make some minor changes to East Cobb representation in that body, retaining most of the current areas of Districts 37, 43, 44, 45 and 46. House Democrats have not yet filed a map.

The legislature also will have to redraw all 14 of Georgia’s Congressional districts, which could affect East Cobb representation. Nine of those seats are held by Republicans.

In 2022, the General Assembly drew Congressional maps that included portions of District 6 and District 11 in East Cobb.

Those are currently represented by Republicans Rich McCormick and Barry Loudermilk, respectively.

District 6 had included most of East Cobb and for three terms was represented by Democrat Lucy McBath. But she moved to the Democratic-leaning 7th District in Gwinnett after the 6th was redrawn to include North Fulton and GOP strongholds in Forsyth and Dawson counties.

No proposed maps have been submitted as of yet.

Democratic Cobb commissioner Jerica Richardson, who was drawn out of her District 2 by the legislature that is the subject of a current legal dispute, is running for 6th District Congress and has held several fundraising and other events.

The legislature, which has until Dec. 8 to redraw the maps, also is conducting other limited business during the special session.

You can track the session and watch live feeds by clicking here.

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Woman seriously injured in crash at Canton-Jamerson roads

Cobb Police said Tuesday a Woodstock woman sustained life-threatening injuries in a single-car crash in Northeast Cobb.Northeast Cobb car crash, Cops on Donut Shops

Officer Aaron Wilson said Christy Rowan, 51, was driving a white 2018 Toyota Rav4 southbound on Canton Road at 6:45 a.m. Tuesday when the vehicle struck a mailbox.

The vehicle then went back onto Canton Road, struck a curb near Jamerson Road and collided with “various obstacles” before hitting a raised maintenance hole, he said.

Police said the Rav4 went airborne briefly, then hit a fire hydrant and traffic signal pole.

Wilson said that Rowan was rushed to Wellstar Kennestone Hospital.

The crash investigation is continuing and anyone with information is asked to contact the Cobb County Police Department S.T.E.P. Unit at 770-499-3987.

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