Delta Credit Union seeks entries for philanthropic grants

Delta Community Credit Union philanthropic grants

Submitted information:

Delta Community Credit Union, Georgia’s largest credit union with $9 billion in assets, will begin accepting applications for its 2024 Philanthropic Fund grant program on July 1, 2023. Throughout 2024, the program will distribute a total of $150,000 to 20 nonprofit organizations committed to the health and well-being of young people as well as financial literacy and education programs focused on instruction in science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics (STEM/STEAM).

“We always look forward to opening the application process for Delta Community’s Philanthropic Fund as the program is central to our practice of good corporate citizenship,” said Hank Halter, Delta Community CEO. “Over the years, we have seen the positive impact grant recipients make in the lives of metro Atlanta children and families. We welcome new opportunities to invest in organizations that share our mission and values to improve the communities where we are privileged to serve.”

The application window closes Aug. 31, 2023 at 5 p.m. ET. Applications must be submitted via the online portal at www.DeltaCommunityCU.com/PhilanthropicFund.

Since launching in 2013, the Philanthropic Fund has invested more than $1 million in 208 organizations that offer educational opportunities, job and career training, and medical and human services support to people in need. In addition to its Philanthropic Fund, Delta Community invests in local communities by partnering with schools, awarding scholarships and supporting chambers of commerce, industry partners and civic organizations.

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East Side Baseball to join new Braves Country programs

Fullers Park, East Cobb parks and recreational facilities
Fields at Fullers Park, where the East Side Baseball Association plays. (East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

After many years of being involved with Georgia Dizzy Dean Baseball, East Side Baseball of East Cobb is joining a new youth sports organization.

It’s called Braves County Baseball and Softball, and is open to boys and girls ages 5-12, starting in March 2024.

The sponsor is the Atlanta Braves, and the spring competitions will include league and all-star play at the local, state and national levels, leading to championship rounds in June.

In a message to member families on Thursday, East Side Baseball president Majd Saboura said that “joining the new Braves Country Baseball League is the right path forward for our program and children. We believe that this league will provide all of East Side children and member organizations with a lot more opportunity and offer a lot more opportunity for our all star, hybrid and rec teams a chance to play competitive baseball and in our own backyard!”

East Side Baseball, based at Fullers Park, is one of 16 youth baseball/softball organizations that’s becoming part of the Braves County circuit in metro Atlanta.

Those include Oregon Park in West Cobb, Acworth Baseball and Powder Springs Youth Baseball.

The change doesn’t affect the fall season, which begins in September.

East Side Baseball, which formed in 1970, offers a variety of baseball options for youths ages 4-18.

 

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Cobb libraries offer mail checkout for homebound patrons

Sewell Mill Library opens, Cobb library mobile app

Cobb County Public Library System patrons who are homebound can check out books and other materials via a new book-by-mail service.

It’s eligible for library cardholders who have a temporary or permanent disability or who have transportation issues that prevent or limit them from coming to their local branch.

Patrons can check up to four books, CDs and DVDs that are then delivered through the U.S. Postal Service for up to nine weeks, and they will be offered pre-paid postage at no cost to them to return to the materials.

Only one batch of materials at a time can be checked out by any given patron who requests them.

For more information, and to fill out an application form to sign up for the program, click here or call 770-528-2343

Cobb commissioners earlier this year approved spending $21,600 in American Rescue Plan Act for the book-by-mail outreach program.

 

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Seven Cobb firefighters disciplined for cheating on exam

The Cobb Fire and Emergency Services Department said Wednesday that it has disciplined seven firefighters who were found to have “collaborated on answers in a proctored-exam situation.”

Cobb Fire Chief William Johnson
Cobb Fire and Emergency Services Chief Bill Johnson

A release issued by the Cobb Communications Office said that following an internal investigation, four of the firefighters were demoted from lieutenant to engineer, and three others—two engineers and a firefighter—were suspended without pay.

“We are extremely disappointed by the poor judgment of these firefighters,” Fire Chief William Johnson said in the release.  “We launched an investigation as soon as we learned of the accusation. Those involved cooperated with us and realized they had made a huge mistake. The punishment is severe but should send a message that this department will not tolerate any breach of ethical behavior.”

The release said the exam was a state-administered certification for becoming instructors on “specific fire apparatus operations.”

He said the seven individuals otherwise had “spotless records. The discipline rendered hopefully reinforced all the values that the department embraces. It is regrettable, but it shows we will handle these situations appropriately, knowing the department’s reputation is on the line.”

Johnson said the department will review how the courses in question are handled in Cobb County and will work “with the state to make any changes necessary.”

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East Cobb Food Scores: WZ Tavern; Hoboken Bread; more

East Cobb Food Scores; WZ Tavern

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

876 Nyam Minz
1475 Terrell Mill Road, Suite 106
July 31, 2023 Score: 93, Grade: A

Hoboken Bread & Bagel Co.
1033 Sandy Plains Road, Suite G
July 31, 2023 Score: 91, Grade: A

Marco’s Pizza
2424 Roswell Road, Suite 150
July 31, 2023 Score: 91, Grade: A

WZ Tavern East Cobb
3052 Shallowford Road, Suite 104
July 31, 2023 Score: 88, Grade: B

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PHOTOS: MarketPlace Terrell Mill Kroger ‘Superstore’ opens

PHOTOS: MarketPlace Terrell Mill Kroger 'Superstore' opens
Elected officials and Kroger representatives christened the new store on Powers Ferry Road Wednesday morning. ECN photos and video

After years of anticipation, a Kroger “SuperStore” opened at the MarketPlace Terrell Mill development in East Cobb Wednesday with an early-morning celebration.

Before they headed off to school, cheerleaders and a pep band from Wheeler High School set the tone for the festivities, which included a special dedication to the supermarket chain’s partnership with local schools.

After elected officials and Kroger executives spoke, they cut the ceremonial ribbon, then ushered onlookers inside to have a first look at the 90,000-square-foot store, Kroger’s first locally of such an expanded concept.

The store, which also includes a gas station, is the centerpiece of the redevelopment that includes apartments, fast-casual restaurants and small retail, and touted as a catalyst for improvements along the Powers Ferry Road corridor.

Victor Smith, Kroger’s Atlanta division president, thanked former Commissioner Bob Ott and Powers Ferry Corridor Alliance president Patti Rice, among others, “for helping to make this happen.”

MarketPlace Terrell Mill Kroger ‘Superstore’ opens

He said Kroger is investing $38 million in the project, which has expanded “everything” from its recently closed store just down Powers Ferry Road.

Ott, who lives nearby and who served three terms as District 2 commissioner until 2021, said “it’s been a long time coming.”

The nearly 24 acres at Powers Ferry and Terrell Mill Road previously housed some office, retail and restaurant space that was aging. The Kroger at 1311 Powers Ferry Road sits on the former site of Brumby Elementary School, which relocated to Terrell Mill Road in 2018.

“We started talking about [redevelopment] during the economic downturn,” he said. “For a while I wasn’t sure it was going to happen.”

Commissioners rezoned the land in early 2018, with plenty of community support. The $120 million project was developed by Eden Rock Real Estate Partners, with two restaurants set to open soon that will fill up all the space at MarketPlace Terrell Mill.

The Development Authority of Cobb County approved issuing $35 million in revenue bonds for the part of the project containing the Kroger store, because it was listed on the county’s roster of redevelopment properties.

East Cobb resident and former Cobb Commission Chairman candidate Larry Savage challenged the tax breaks, which were initially invalidated in Cobb Superior Court.

While the case was on appeal, Kroger said it might not go ahead with the MarketPlace Terrell Mill store if it lost in court.

But in June 2019, the Georgia Supreme Court upheld the tax breaks, which exempt Kroger completely in the store’s first year of operation. Kroger will gradually pay an assessed tax value phased in over a 10-year period, rising by 10 percent each year.

(According to Cobb tax records, the Development Authority is listed as the owner of the 10.8 acres on which the Kroger project sits, and it has an appraised value of nearly $12 million).

For a time, supporters of the project worried their aspirations may not be realized.

“Never!” Rice said when asked if she thought this day would come. “I’m just so happy. They said it would be the last thing to go in. It’s beautiful.”

“It’s fresh. It’s new. It’s got a lot of product,” Ott said.

MarketPlace Terrell Mill Kroger ‘Superstore’ opens

MarketPlace Terrell Mill Kroger ‘Superstore’ opens

MarketPlace Terrell Mill Kroger ‘Superstore’ opens

Customers pass by a specially-designed mural of local landmarks at the entrance, leading into a cornucopia of fresh-cut flowers, an abundance of produce offerings and fully stocked sushi, delicatessen, bakery and meat and seafood counters.

There’s also a location of Murray’s Cheese Shop, which has 42 spots in metro Atlanta, including Kroger stores at Parkaire Landing and the Pavilions at East Lake in East Cobb.

Aisle after aisle after aisle are loaded name-brand foods, frozen goods, personal care and household products, toiletries and pet food. (The store is still waiting for a retail beer and wine sales license.)

Kroger officials handed checks to organizations that help to feed those in need, including its own Zero Hunger, Zero Waste Foundation.

Smith said that’s part of Kroger’s “unwavering commitment to our purpose—to help feed the human spirit.”

The vacated Kroger store at Powers Ferry and Delk Road that served the community for 42 years had been proposed for apartments earlier this year.

The Marietta City Council approved rezoning for 322 units in April, but Mayor Steve Tumlin vetoed the project.

Ott said he’s confident that that property will be redeveloped eventually, and “it will become something great.”

The MarketPlace, he said, has inspired other improvements in the area, including the redevelopment of Restaurant Row, with the Rose and Crown Tavern relocating back there soon.

Tasty China Restaurant is also moving from the Franklin Gateway to property that once housed the La Frontera Restaurant on Powers Ferry Road.

Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid said that “renewal does something. It energizes community and inspires confidence.”

MarketPlace Terrell Mill Kroger ‘Superstore’ opens

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Conservative group opposed to Cobb transit tax referendum

A Cobb County political organization with ties to the Tea Party is urging the Cobb Board of Commissioners to vote against holding a transit tax referendum in 2024.Franklin Roundtable, Conversative group opposed to Cobb transit tax referendum

The Franklin Roundtable, which labels itself “a non-partisan advocacy group based in Marietta,” said its board of directors has voted unanimously to oppose the proposed tax.

Cobb commissioners are expected to decide later this whether to call for a transit tax referendum after voting along party-lines in March to hire a consultant to plan for such a referendum.

Jim Jess, chairman of Franklin Roundtable, said in release that “the transit tax is nothing but a boondoggle. We need serious traffic solutions. But what do we get from our commissioners? Empty buses on Cobb County streets. Multimillion dollar transportation studies that make consultants rich. And transit proposals that won’t improve traffic flow. Who is being served by this? It’s certainly not the citizens of Cobb County.”

The three Democrats on the board voted to hire the consultant, Kimley-Horn & Associates, to prepare for what’s being called the Cobb Mobility SPLOST.

It’s a one-percent, special-purpose local-option sales tax that Democratic Chairwoman Lisa Cupid has proposed to be collected for 30 years for a variety of transportation purposes, including mass transit as well as traditional transportation options, including resurfacing.

The two Republicans voted against hiring the consultant, and have said they’re opposed to such a long tax-collection period.

GOP commissioner JoAnn Birrell of East Cobb has publicly supported a five-year tax for road transportation projects.

The Franklin Roundtable, named after Benjamin Franklin, is a non-profit that supports limited government, free markets and fiscal responsibility. Its website states that since 2018, it has been the “official public name” of the Georgia Tea Party Inc.

“Most of our current commissioners are not serious about real traffic solutions, and they are not fiscally responsible,” Jess said. “They are more concerned about serving the economic development lobby and the consultant lobby. County spending reflects this year after year.”

Much of the group’s statement focused on mass transit, which it called “an idea best left in the previous century.”

Instead, the Franklin Roundtable suggested in one example that the county contract with Uber or Lyft to help those needing transportation to work.

The group also suggested building flyover lanes or access roads to bypass busy intersections, and the purchase of vans that are “smaller and can move through traffic more quickly” than more expensive buses.

Jess said that “solutions like the ones we are talking about are simply common sense. We need our commissioners to make some better decisions, beginning with dropping the idea of a transit tax. It really doesn’t make sense for our situation in Cobb County.”

The Franklin Roundtable release said that should there be a referendum, it will work with “a coalition of likeminded citizens and organizations to defeat this wasteful, ineffective and unnecessary tax.”

Cobb DOT officials told commissioners in March that part of the consultant’s work was to conduct further outreach, following an objection to a 30-year tax from the mayor of Cobb’s cities.

Cobb DOT has not yet released a detailed project list of what might be used with tax revenues.

Department head Drew Raessler said this spring more input is being is being sought from citizens and in cities and community improvement projects to hear “what type of projects they would like to see.”

He has said that more transit solutions need to be provided to Cobb citizens so the county can continue to grow economically.

Cupid said at the same March meeting to hire the consultant that “I think we have a significant opportunity to invest in our future, at least just to ask the citizens the questions, to flesh out with the mayors what the options are.”

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Cobb Planning Commission OK’s Paper Mill Village Starbucks plans

Nearly a year after being proposed, a rebuild of the Starbucks at Paper Mill Village finally got a vote on Tuesday.

After months of delays, what had been first designed as a two-story standalone building went before the Cobb Planning Commission as a one-story coffee shop on the site of the present Starbucks location.

The matter was on the consent agenda, which was passed by a 4-0 vote.

The applicant, S&B Investments, Inc., wanted to rezone 0.73 acres at 31 Johnson Ferry Road, at the intersection of Paper Mill Road, from future commercial and low-density residential (R-80) to neighborhood retail commercial.

The expanded coffee shop would have had 2,500 square feet, 25 parking places and drive-thru service and would be open daily from 5:30 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Those dimensions were sharply reduced in March after the initial plans were filed for two stories, 5,000 square feet and 23 parking places.

The Cobb Zoning Staff analysis said that wasn’t enough parking, and local civic groups also got involved in what turned to be months of discussions and revisions.

In a July 20 stipulation letter, S&B attorney Parks Huff said his client was withdrawing its site plan and keeping the building’s present configuration and footprint.

The letter also said there would be no drive-thru and any changes would go before county commissioners.

The present building would follow the “village” architectural style of Paper Mill Village and conform to the Johnson Ferry Design Standards in building the new structure.

(You can read that letter by clicking here.)

The Planning Commission’s recommendation for approval goes to the Cobb Board of Commissioners, which will conduct its next zoning hearing on Aug. 15.

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Chick-Fil-A Sprayberry closed temporarily for rebuild

CFA Sprayberry temporarily closed renovations

The latest Chick-Fil-A location in the East Cobb area to undergo major renovations will be temporarily closed for some time.

The Chick-Fil-A Sprayberry (2530 Sandy Plains Road) closed after business hours Thursday and is expected to stay that way for 4-5 months, according to a sign in the window, “to build a brand-new store.”

UPDATE:

The old building was demolished a couple days after we posted this.

ORIGINAL REPORT:

A message on the store’s Facebook page encouraged customers to go to the Chick-Fil-A Lassiter (3046 Shallowford Road).

That location was closed for a while earlier this year to expand drive-thru service.

Chick-Fil-A restaurants on Johnson Ferry Road and Roswell Road in East Cobb were closed for several months in recent years to build new standalone locations.

In the case of the former, at Woodlawn Square, the closure was nearly 10 months from mid-2018 to the spring of 2019, delayed by bad winter weather.

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East Cobb Civitan Club names 2023 ‘Servant’s Heart’ winner

East Cobb Civitan 2023 Servant's Heart Award
Lou Alvarado (in wheelchair), board chairman of Friends of Disabled Adults and Children, with CEO Chris Brand

Submitted information and photo:

The East Cobb Civitan Club is pleased to announce the 2023 Civitan International “Servant’s Heart Award” has been bestowed on Chris Brand who, since 2003, has served as the President and CEO of Friends of Disabled Adults and Children (FODAC). FODAC is the nation’s largest provider of low cost, or free refurbished home medical equipment such as wheelchairs, walkers and other durable medical goods.  Over the years FODAC has provided thousands of disabled individuals with improved mobility. Brand has personally made a great impact during his tenure by adding opportunities to increase the distribution of durable medical goods in Cobb and surrounding communities.

The Servant’s Heart Award, a program of Civitan International, seeks to recognize and honor those “unsung heroes” from the nonprofit, local government, public education and other sectors who have dedicated their lives in service to individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities.

Other 2023 finalists nominated for this year’s Award are Jim Hamm, founder of Special Populations Tennis and Renate’ Elliott, Accessibility Services Supervisor for the Cobb County Public Library System.

Civitan International is a global organization impacting lives at the grass roots level through local service clubs. Members of Civitan share a Servant’s Heart and a desire to create positive change for people with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities. There are currently 40 clubs in Georgia, including Camp Big Heart, a service club dedicated to providing inclusive overnight camping for those with developmental and intellectual disabilities.

Interested new members are always welcome at upcoming Civitan meetings.  For more information about Civitans International and local clubs, please contact Carolyn Polakowski, East Cobb Civitans at 770.722.7075 or Carolyn@caycommunications.com

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ArtsBridge Foundation to hold gala at Cobb Energy Centre

ArtsBridge Foundation 2023 gala
Photo: Chris Savas via ArtsBridge Foundation

Submitted information and photo:

ArtsBridge Foundation is counting down to its biggest annual fundraiser with tickets and sponsorships available for the 2023 Overture Gala on Aug. 5.

Charlie and Erin Chesnutt confirmed as the event’s chairpersons, while Allen Devlin of Atlanta News First will be the master of ceremonies. Mr. Chesnutt is a senior vice president and treasurer/special advisor to the CFO with Atlanta-based Genuine Parts Company while Ms. Chesnut is a marketing and communications executive contributing writing to Alabama-based TPI Publications/Tallapoosa Publishers Inc. Devlin is weekday anchor for ANF’s afternoon and evening broadcasts.

Themed “A Night at the Cabaret” the Gala celebrates ArtsBridge Foundation’s year-round mission impacting the lives of thousands of Georgia K-12 students through arts education and financial aid subsidy programs.

The Gala will feature a cabaret cocktail hour, a sumptuous gourmet three-course meal prepared by Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre Executive Chef Nick Alvarez, theater-in-the-round style entertainment by winners of the 2023 Georgia High School Musical Theatre Awards (a.k.a. “The Georgia Dozen”), a live auction featuring stellar packages and big-ticket bidding encouraged by Auction Horizon, and an after-party featuring a live band in the Kessel D. Stelling Jr. Ballroom.

Alvarez’s cabaret-themed menu for the occasion includes a baby romaine salad featuring heirloom tomatoes, shaved parmesan, frico and sherry Caesar dressing, followed by a duo of grilled New York steak and Chilean sea bass accompanied by confit fingerling potatoes, crusted baby fennel, Swiss chard, soubise and Périgueux. The evening’s vegetarian main course option features spiced baby eggplant, fennel, fingerling potatoes and quinoa almond crumble with skordalia. Dessert features a peach ricotta cheesecake, gluten free shortbread, bruléed marshmallow and almond crumble.

“We greatly appreciate the generosity of our longtime sponsors and supporters of ArtsBridge Foundation who already stepped up to support ‘A Night at the Cabaret,’” said Jennifer D. Dobbs, executive director. “As we countdown to the big event, we are looking for additional community businesses and leaders to join us in support of youth arts education through any of our Gala sponsorship levels.”

The Gala fundraising goal is $150,000 to support the organization’s Title I Adopt-A-School Financial Aid Subsidy Program, which subsidizes admission and bus transportation for thousands of deserving children throughout the state. Gala sponsor levels include Supporting Cast Member ($1,000), Spotlight Sponsor ($3,500), Showstopper ($5,000), Headliner ($10,000) and Premier ($25,000). Additional details for each level of support, including individual tickets ($350), may be found at https://bit.ly/ArtsBridge2023OvertureGala or by contacting Dobbs at 770-916-2803.

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Update: East Cobb man recovering after son donates kidney

A couple weeks ago we brought you the story of Charlie Porter, an East Cobb resident who was preparing for a kidney transplant, along with his son Teddy, who was his donor.

That procedure took place last Tuesday in Nashville, and this morning we got the following information and photo above from Charlie:

“I have been in a bit of a bubble since surgery but now that my head is clearing, I wanted to let you know that the transplant was a huge success. Teddy did great and he is now back home being taken care of by his mother and girlfriend. I’ll remain in Nashville for another six weeks or so.

“The surgical staff, nurses etc are all very happy with how everything went.”

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East Cobb residential real estate sales, July 10-14, 2023

East Cobb real estate sales, Wyngrove
Wyngrove

The following East Cobb residential real estate sales between July 10-14, 2023, were compiled from agency reports. They include the subdivision name and high school attendance zone in parenthesis:

July 10

4655 Andrea Pointe, 30062 (Hadley Walk, Pope): $1.05 million

2081 Reverie Ridge, 30068 (Reverie, Walton): $3.35 million

1055 Della Street, 30068 (Brighton Park, Wheeler): $467,500

641 Willow Ridge Drive, 30068 (Willow Ridge, Wheeler): $475,000

4270 Fairgreen Drive, 30068 (Indian Hills, Walton): $1.1 million

1583 Lancaster Drive, 30066 (Huntington Woods, Sprayberry): $299,000

3636 Blakeford Way, 30062 (Blake Ford, Pope): $714,000

4016 Tritt Homestead Drive, 30062 (The Park at Lost Forest, Pope): $690,000

4804 Creekstone Way, 30062 (Heritage Trace, Walton): $380,000

July 11

3008 Balearic Drive, 30067 (Valencia Hills, Wheeler): $277,000

590 St. James Walk, 30067 (Salem Woods, Wheeler): $315,000

2227 Sumter Lake Drive, 30062 (Sumter Lake, Pope): $622,227

2401 Mark Hall Court, 30062 (Saddle Ridge Downs, Pope): $475,000

July 12

2400 Crockett Drive, 30067 (Red Oak Park, Wheeler): $455,000

1881 Hazelwood Drive, 30067 (Hamby Acres, Wheeler): $280,000

3815 Clubland Trail, 30068 (Indian Hills, Walton): $805,000

1184 Wonder Lane, 30062 (Crafton Heights, Walton): $605,000

2166 Carlyle Drive, 30062 (Cedar Hill Estates, Pope): $585,000

3191 Tina Lane, 30066 (Russell Plantation Estates, Sprayberry): $408,000

4479 Chattahoochee Plantation Drive, 30067 (Chattahoochee Plantation, Walton): $840,000

July 13

1307 Murdock Road, 30062 (Roswell Downs, Walton): $590,000

552 Duke Drive, 30066 (Kings Wood Estates, Sprayberry): $382,500

2321 Post Creek Court, 30062 (Robyn Valley, Sprayberry): $390,000

3210 Ebenezer Road, 30066 Shadowood, Sprayberry): $397,000

3705 Running Fox Drive, 30062 (Raintree Forest, Lassiter): $540,000

July 14

4855 Mulberry Drive, 30068 (Wyngrove, Walton): $1.753 million

926 Bobcat Court, 30067 (The Village, Wheeler): $350,000

43 Peppertree Court, 30068 (Pepper Mill, Wheeler): $800,000

2290 Old Orchard Drive, 30068 (Weatherstone, Wheeler): $580,000

3979 Tall Pine Drive, 30062 (Tall Pines, Walton): $535,000

1334 Eastbrooke Trace, 30066 (Eastbrooke, Sprayberry): $480,000

1749 Macby Drive, 30066 (Caribou Hills, Sprayberry): $450,000

3206 Rimrock Drive, 30066 (Mulberry Street, Sprayberry): $355,000

3021 Hacienda Court, 30066 (Rio Montana, Sprayberry): $320,000

3270 Plains Way, 30066 (Plains Estates, Sprayberry): $421,111

944 Blackwell Trail, 30066 (Blackwell Road, Sprayberry): $385,000

1323 Blackwell Road, 30066 (Sprayberry): $1.15 million

3638 Jefferson Township Parkway, 30066 (Jefferson Township, Lassiter): $675,000

4671 Jefferson Township Place, 30066 (Jefferson Township, Lassiter): $713,706

2061 Bishop Creek Drive, 30062 (Heritage Trace, Walton): $451,000

4646 Meharris Place, 30062 (East Hampton, Walton): $912,500

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An East Cobb back-to-school backpack-n-swag celebration

East Cobb back-to-school celebration

As he was planning another back-t0-school extravaganza earlier this summer, D.A. Layne lost his mother.

She was so much more than a parent, as he told friends and participants at his 5th annual In The Layne Backpack-N-Swag event Saturday in East Cobb.

She was his inspiration for so many things beyond the successful basketball career he enjoyed at Wheeler High School and the University of Georgia.

She taught him to give back to the community, and helped him start the event that provides free backpacks and school supplies for students in need at the start of the school year.

“What she wanted for me was what she wanted for all of us,” Layne said as a small group of friends and families honored her memory with a balloon release at the basketball courts at Grace Church Marietta on Holt Road.

Earlier in the afternoon, families turned out to enjoy food, live music, bouncy houses and the backpack giveaways.

While there was plenty of labor and goodies donated—including the box lunches from Zaxby’s—Layne said his foundation pays for the backpacks and school supplies.

Nearly 500 people signed up in advance, and Layne said they had to cut off registration after that.

“We want to reach everybody we can,” he said, adding that those turning out come from beyond the East Cobb community to include other parts of metro Atlanta. “Thousands even.”

He began In the Layne Hoops to help children through basketball, but his community work has gone beyond the court.

During the Christmas holiday season, he works with sponsors to hold a toy drive for children who otherwise wouldn’t get gifts.

It’s part of what he said his mother stressed to him from a very young age, and it’s an influence he hopes to continue spreading.

“We’re still grieving here,” he said. “But we have to keep it going.”

East Cobb back-to-school celebration

East Cobb back-to-school celebration
Layne and his family observe a moment of silence for his mother before a balloon release in her honor.

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Editor’s Note: East Cobb businesses and community-building CD

East Cobb businesses and community building
Butch Carter, his wife Kimberly Shea-Carter and MUST Ministries CEO Ike Reighard at the July ECBA luncheon.

Shortly after launching East Cobb News six years ago, I joined the East Cobb Business Association.

It made common sense as a first-time business owner to meet others for networking, referrals, and doing some business.

What I didn’t know was the extent to which many of these small-business owners go to serve their communities.

As in really serving their communities.

After a corporate sales career, ECBA member Butch Carter in 2013 became the owner of Honest-1 Auto Care in East Cobb and Johns Creek, and where I’ve happily had my vehicles serviced over the years.

But like many business owners I’ve come to know through ECBA and elsewhere, that’s only the start of what Carter means for the community.

He’s also the current president of the Rotary Club of East Cobb, which next weekend will stage its biggest fundraiser, the Dog Days Run.

The Rotary Club is involved in charitable work in this community and beyond to an amazing degree, and has set a goal of raising $100,000 from that event that it will give out to more than 20 non-profit organizations.

Carter touched on this effort earlier this month at the ECBA regular business luncheon, which was themed around the ideas of business and community building.

“We’re typical of a lot of small businesses in East Cobb in that we give back to the community,” Carter said.

He calls what he advocates “cause marketing” and at the luncheon representatives of other Cobb non-profits spoke, including Shelly Owen of the Cobb Community Foundation, which she says connects “donors who care with causes they like.

“We’re not the fixer of the problem, but we’re the convener of those who can.”

She said the CCF last did an extensive human needs assessment in 2019, right before the COVID-19 pandemic, and will be conducting another one this fall.

CCF helps connect major and corporate donors with its Corporate Community Champions program.

“It’s an awesome way to connect with others in the community,” Owen said.

On a small-business scale, Honest-1 is involved in efforts to raise awareness for breast cancer that started by selling pink wiper-blades.

He urged his fellow business owners to think creatively about how they can help, by donating items or products or services from their businesses, as well as expertise.

An Air Force veteran, Carter has has held cookouts for veterans at his shop on East Cobb Drive and has supported the work of United Military Care, an East Cobb non-profit that assists veterans and next weekend will have its We CARE Vet Fair at the Cobb Civic Center.

It’s a place for veterans who need services, help navigating the Veterans Administration bureaucracy, and basic assistance with food, housing and medical care.

Leenie Ruben, a retired marketing professional who does community outreach for United Military Care, has found the value of associating with the ECBA, and attends many events.

She said at the luncheon that the work of UMC continues to grow, with the ranks of veterans in Cobb County swelling to more than 44,000.

Another longtime ECBA member, Susan Hampton, has spearheaded the organization’s sponsorship of an appreciation dinner for Cobb Police Precinct 4 staff and the entire Cobb Fire and Emergency Services Department.

She’s expanded that advocacy into a role with the Cobb County Public Safety Foundation, a non-profit that supports local public safety professionals.

Next Saturday, that group also will have a benefit event, the First Responder 5K Run/Walk, at The Battery Atlanta.

East Cobb businesses and community-building
ECBA member Susan Hampton is also involved with the Cobb Public Safety Foundation and the East Cobb Lions Club.

Hampton, a former East Cobb Citizen of the Year, also is involved with the East Cobb Lions Club, which conducts 15,000 eye screenings a year for children in need.

These are all examples of what MUST Ministries CEO Dr. Ike Reighard offered to urge business owners and leaders to start “kicking your buts.”

“I would like to help, but . . . ” is the common refrain that Reighard, also the senior pastor of Piedmont Church in East Cobb, said he has heard in many years of community advocacy.

He picked up on the theme of cause marketing by explaining that “people look for companies and organizations that are oriented that way.”

He rattled off many things that “volunteering does for you,” including making new friends and staying connected with people close, instead of resorting to screen companionship.

“You get surrounded by people who have the same values that you have,” Reighard said. “And you’re building friendships along the way. It makes you happier.”

Volunteering “also gets you out of your comfort zone. The day your memories are greater than your dreams, you’re dead in the water. It gives you a sense of purpose.”

Carter said the work of blending business and serving community is an easy “win-win” for both.

“Our goal is to help build a better community.”

If you’d to get involved in any of these organizations financially and/or as a volunteer—and you don’t have to be a business owner—here are their links:

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East Cobb schools hold steady in 2023 Milestones test scores

Mt. Bethel ES, Cobb CCRPI scores
95 percent of Mt. Bethel ES third-graders were reading above grade levels in the 2022-23 academic year.

For the second year in a row, students at some East Cobb schools turned in some of the best results in the Georgia Milestones testing for the 2022-23 school year.

And students at other schools in East Cobb continued to struggle, reflecting slightly changed results overall from 2022, according to Georgia Department of Education data released Friday.

Georgia Milestones test students in grades 3-8 in English Language Arts and math, in grades 5-8 in those subjects plus science, and those areas plus social studies in grade 8. High school students are tested in American Literature, algebra, biology and U.S. history.

Students are categorized in one of four levels, based on those test scores: Level 1 is Beginning Learner, Level 2 is a Developing Learner, Level 3 is a Proficient Learner and Level 4 is Distinguished Learner.

Educators across the state and in Cobb County have been emphasizing ways to address learning loss due to COVID-19 disruptions, especially in third-grade reading, a key benchmark of early literacy.

Georgia has adopted new standards for teaching English after only a third of third-graders were regarded as proficient or better in Milestones ELA results in 2022.

Across the state, ELA Milestones scores among third-graders in 2023 rose three percentage points and the percentage of third-graders reading at or above grade-level was up slightly, from 64 to 66 percent.

In ELA, 78.9 percent of Cobb students were rated as developing learners or above, and 78.7 percent met the same threshold in all subjects.

The Cobb County School District said in a release Friday that those scores were among those that led metro Atlanta.

Across the board, 73.8 percent of Cobb students were reading at or above grade level, trailing only Fulton County.

In several East Cobb schools, third-grade reading achievements were high, with Timber Ridge (96.7 percent), Mt. Bethel (95), Tritt (94.9), Shallowford Falls (93.1), Murdock (92.2), Mountain View (91.6) and Sope Creek (90.1) leading the way with students at or above grade-level.

In the ELA results, 50.7 percent of Tritt third-graders (138 students testing) were distinguished learners.

Those figures were similar to 2022 Milestones scores at those schools.

Conversely, students at other East Cobb elementary schools struggled, with those scores under 70 percent among third-graders at the following schools: Keheley (67.9), Powers Ferry (67.2), Bells Ferry (62.7) and Brumby (55.1).

More than half of the 158 third-grade students who tested at Brumby (51.3) were considered only beginning learners in ELA.

Four East Cobb elementary schools were among the Top 10 in Georgia fifth-graders reading at or above grade level: Timber Ridge (98.8 percent), Mt. Bethel (97,4) and Rocky Mount and Sope Creek (94.6).

Several East Cobb middle schools turned in high marks for percentage of proficient learners.

In ELA, those schools were Dickerson (82.6), Dodgen (76.5), Hightower Trail (76.0), Mabry (74,4) and Simpson (71.2). In eighth-grade math, Dickerson (87.8), Dodgen (80.7) and Hightower Trail (80.2) also led Cobb schools.

At the high school level, full-year End of Course test results were similar to 2022. The Cobb school district percentage of students at or above grade-level in reading was 77.3.

Grade-level or above reading status was tops at Lassiter (96.1), Pope (94.4), Walton (92.6), followed by Kell (81.9), Sprayberry (75.6) and Wheeler (73.8).

Walton students had the highest full-year EOC percentages of proficiency learners or above in Cobb in all four testing areas: American Literature (84,3), Algebra I (69.8), Biology (89.2) and U.S. History (83.2).

Lassiter and Pope students weren’t far behind in those categories, while Wheeler students had the lowest proficiency or above learners across the board, including 36.1 percent in Algebra I and 47.7 percent in U.S. History.

Here’s more of a breakdown on the Milestones assessments from the Georgia DOE, including state, school system and school level scores from both last winter semester and the past spring semester.

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Cristadoro campaign gets new endorsements from Cobb leaders

Cristadoro campaign gets new endorsements from Cobb leaders
Jay Cunningham

Cobb Board of Education candidate John Cristadoro said Friday that a number of prominent business, community, educational and political leaders have endorsed his campaign for the East Cobb-based Post 5 seat.

They include former Cobb commissioner and Georgia Public Service commissioner Stan Wise, Superior Plumbing CEO Jay Cunningham and former Cobb Republican Party chairs Scott Johnson and Rose Wing.

Cristadoro is a Republican with two children in the Walton attendance zone who is seeking the seat currently held by GOP school board vice chairman David Banks, who has not said said if he will be seeking a fifth term next year.

The Post 5 seat includes the Walton, Wheeler and Pope attendance zones. Democrat Laura Judge, also a parent in the Walton zone, has announced her candidacy.

Cristadoro is a first-time candidate but has compiled a lengthy list of influential supporters he’s calling his “campaign leadership team.”

They include John Loud, CEO of Loud Security Systems and a former chairman of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce and Scott Sweeney, a former school board member from East Cobb who’s the current chairman of the Georgia Board of Education.

Cunningham is one of four current members of the Cobb County School District’s Finance and Technology Committee that conducts oversight of the education SPLOST to endorse Cristadoro.

The others are Shane Spink, a community leader in the Sprayberry High School area and Wayne Brown, an engineer, both appointed by Post 4 Republican school board member David Chastain.

Lesley Litt, business executive, was appointed by Republican Brad Wheeler and Cunningham by Republican Randy Scamihorn.

The seats held by Banks, Wheeler, Scamihorn and Democrat Tre’ Hutchins will be up for election in 2024.

As East Cobb News first reported earlier this month, Cristadoro has raised nearly $30,000—loaning his campaign $10,000—for what’s expected to be an expensive campaign. Judge has raised nearly $9,000.

In his release Friday, Cristadoro said of his new supporters that “I am very honored these known leaders have chosen to join our campaign team. They will be very beneficial in assisting our campaign goal to keep the Cobb County School District strong and a recognized leader in academics.”

  • Stan Wise—Former Ga. Public Commissioner, Cobb County Commissioner
  • Jay Cunningham—CEO of Superior Plumbing, CCSD F & T Committee
  • Scott Johnson—Served on Georgia Board of Education; previous Chairman of Cobb GOP
  • Shane Spink—F & T Committee Member for CCSD and businessman
  • Alice Stouder—Former Cobb school district assistant superintendent
  • Wayne Brown—Member of CCSD F & T Committee
  • Lawson Kirkland—Senior V.P. in the banking industry
  • Peter Heinzleman—Former CEO of Cobb EMC and current business owner
  • Lesley Litt—Immediate Past Chair of CCSD F & T Committee and CEO of CrystalFlex
  • Hilda Wilkins—Retired Cobb school principal and Director of Accreditation for Cobb Schools
  • Dan Joy—Principal with Rule Joy Tramell & Rule Architecture Design
  • Dan Payrow—President of R.S. Andrews
  • Rose Wing—Attorney and former Cobb assistant district attorney and previous Cobb GOP Chair
  • Tracy Cullo—Chair of East Cobb Republican Women’s Club
  • Simone Thomas—East Cobb Community resident and community activist
  • Irey Sanders—Regional V.P of Brasfield & Gorrie
  • Pam & Tom Reardon—Cobb Republican activists
  • Bob Kilinski—Regional Operating Partner Keller Williams International
  • Jeff Chassner—Chief Sales Officer at New Realm
  • Lewis Lampley—Senior Clinical Research at Boston Scientific
  • Stephanie Joseph—East Cobb Resident and community activist.
  • Ryan Casey—Owner of Paper Connexion
  • Michael Trent—CEO of Trent Consulting and youth baseball coach

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New steeple raised into place at Sandy Plains Baptist Church

New Sandy Plains Baptist Church steeple
Workers were completing finals tasks after a new steeple was raised at Sandy Plains Baptist Church Wednesday. ECN photo

It’s been nearly three years since the steeple at Sandy Plains Baptist Church (2825 Sandy Plains Road) was destroyed during a storm.

So at long last—and after numerous delays—the new steeple was ready to be put into place on Wednesday, and the congregation decided to make an event out of it.

News media were contacted, church members set up tents to cool off while they and the public watched, and the proceedings were live-streamed for nearly six hours (see video link below).

A large crane lifted up the base, which was fastened into place by two workers, and then the steeple was lifted up and fastened above that, finished off by the installation of thecross

It was a painstaking process to replace the destroyed steeple that went up in the 1990s, when the church had to be rebuilt due to a fire.

The initial delays were prompted by COVID-19. Later, the replacement steeple exceeded county height restrictions and had to be redesigned.

The first services with the new steeple take place on Sunday.

Sandy Plains Baptist Church steeple
Sandy Plains Baptist Church photos and livestream.

Sandy Plains Baptist Church steeple

Sandy Plains Baptist Church steeple

Sandy Plains Baptist Church steeple

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Home buyers ’empowerment’ seminar set for Cobb Civic Center

Cobb Home Buyers' Empowerment Seminar

Cobb commissioner Jerica Richardson announced this week that there will be what she’s calling a “Home Buyer’s Empowerment Seminar” Sunday from 2-5 p.m. at the Cobb Civic Center (548 South Marietta Parkway SE).

It’s aimed at first-time home buyers who need assistance in getting started, including finance how-tos.

There will be speakers, an overview of the mortgage process and a look at the local market, affordable housing, preparing for homeownership and a Q and A with housing professionals.

The seminar is free and you’re asked to register by clicking here.

For more information contact housing_zoning@d2cobb.com or call 770-824-9227.

 

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Cobb commissioners adopt FY 2024 budget with no millage cuts

Cobb commissioners adopt FY 2024 budget with no millage cuts
Commissioner JoAnn Birrell said she didn’t offer a substitute motion to reduce the general fund millage rate by 0.21 mills because she couldn’t get any support.

Cobb’s two Republican commissioners wanted to reduce the general fund millage rate Tuesday before adopting the fiscal year 2024 county budget, but couldn’t get their Democratic colleagues to agree.

Even after more than two dozen citizens pleaded for a cut in the wake of rising property assessments, commissioners voted along party lines to preserve the 8.46 general fund millage rate.

The vote to set the millage rate was 3-2, with the Democrats voting in favor and the Republicans against.

That came after a substitute motion by Republican commissioner Keli Gambrill to roll back the general fund millage rate to 7.168, which would match current FY 2023 revenues.

That motion failed, with Gambrill and fellow Republican JoAnn Birrell voting in favor, and the Democrats opposed.

The vote to adopt the $1.2 billion spending plan, which takes effect on Oct. 1, went along the same 3-2 split.

“I can’t support this budget,” said Birrell, who at a town hall meeting last week said she was working to find a way to cut the general fund rate.

But during a nearly three-hour discussion on the budget Tuesday, she didn’t offer a proposal, saying she couldn’t generate any support from commissioners.

That apparently included Gambrill, whose motion to cut the general fund rate even further took Birrell by surprise.

The difference between the 7.168 and 8.46 mills is 18 percent, according to Cobb Chief Financial Officer Bill Volckmann, and that represents a dollar difference of $54.4 million.

The millage rate action also moved the Cobb fire fund up slightly to 2.99 mills; the rollback rate for that is 2.64 mills.

Residents from around the county spoke during the final public hearing on the millage rate and budget to say that much higher tax bills they’ll pay in October compound their struggles to pay for rising costs for housing, food and utilities.

Some said they or people they know may be priced out of their homes.

Since she moved into her current East Cobb home four years ago, Robin Moody told commissioners her tax bill has gone from $1,900 to $3.500.

“On behalf of Cobb County, we can’t afford this right now,” she said.

Others said that renters will be hurt because their property owners can’t claim homestead exemptions.

A few spoke on behalf of the proposed budget, including Jackie Bettadapur of East Cobb, the former Cobb Democratic Party chairwoman, who asked that the millage rate not be lowered.

She said that Cobb homeowners have been “insulated” with a floating homestead exemption and an exemption from school taxes for homeowners 62 and over, and that the demand for county services is growing, and getting more expensive.

“None of this is free and all of this is subject to inflationary pressures,” she said.

The new budget includes $19 million more in spending than the current FY 2023 budget.

Birrell repeated concerns she expressed at the town hall, saying that while she supports some of the additional spending—especially for public safety salaries and benefits—”these things have to be sustainable.”

She was against the creation of 34 new jobs across county government, and said that her proposed 0.21 mills reduction would take out $8.1 million in spending.

“It’s not much but it’s something,” she said, adding that the only way to stop “overspending” is to roll back millage rate to 7.168.

“Cobb has always been a county that other counties look up to,” Birrell said. “But we’re going in a downward spiral that needs to stop.”

But Democratic commissioner Monique Sheffield of South Cobb said the county has an obligation “as the Good Book tells us” to help and share with others, especially those in need.

She also reminded citizens that for most of them, their school taxes represent the biggest portions of their tax bills—in some cases more than 60 percent—and noted that some of those complaining to the county don’t go to school board meetings.

Last week the Cobb Board of Education lowered its millage rate by 0.2 mills but also adopted a $1.4 billion FY 2024 budget that is higher than last year.

“I urge you to be more vocal at the school board meetings because that’s where the majority of your tax increase is coming from,” Sheffield said.

Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid said the county simply can’t curtail the millage rate because of growing obligations for services, and said that would have “drastic repercussions” because the county staffing levels haven’t fully recovered from recession years.

She referenced a 2016 rollback pushed through by then-Chairman Tim Lee and supported by Birrell that resulted in a $30 million budget deficit.

His successor, Republican Mike Boyce, got a millage rate increase passed in 2018 that Cupid support but Birrell opposed.

“What we’d be essentially doing is going back and not doing what our citizens expect of us,” Cupid said of a rollback.

“This is not easy for anyone, but if we don’t make decisions today we will have even more dire decisions to make tomorrow.”

Commissioners also voted 5-0 to ratify the school board’s millage rate adoption, as it is required to do so by law. When asked if commissioners had any discretion to do otherwise, County Attorney Bill Rowling said such an action would likely lead to litigation.

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