Two East Cobb precinct changes made for Tuesday’s elections

A couple of notes as we wrap up our preview material for Tuesday’s voting:

There have been two East Cobb precinct changes to keep in mind.East Cobb precinct changes, Catholic Church of St. Ann

The Bells Ferry 3 precinct that had been located at Noonday Baptist Church on Canton Road has moved right across the road, to the church’s East campus, located at 4120 Canton Road.

The Timber Ridge polling station has moved away from Timber Ridge Elementary School and is now at the Catholic Church of St. Ann, seen at right (4905 Roswell Road), for what Cobb Elections said were due to security concerns at the school.

Classes are not in session on Tuesday because of the elections. It will be a staff learning day instead.

If you’re not sure where your precinct is located, you can check at the Georgia Secretary of State website here.

All precincts will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday. There is no early voting on Monday.

Cobb Elections also has issued sample ballots to see what names and ballot issues will be awaiting you when you head to the polls. Here’s the consolidated ballot for all voters in the county, and here’s a link to get the names you’ll be seeing on your personalized ballot.

As we noted yesterday, early voting that ended Friday was up dramatically from the 2014 midterms, with nearly 112,000 ballots already cast in Cobb in person. Nearly 23,000 more voters have cast absentee ballots.

In addition to a close Georgia governor’s race, local voters will have full slates on most of their ballots. That includes East Cobb, where 10 races are being contested, including 6th District Congress, District 3 of the Cobb Board of Commissioners, two Cobb school board seats, a State Senate seat and five State House seats.

Please visit our East Cobb Elections Guide link below for full previews of those races and other voting information.

If we missed anything or you spot a correction that needs to be made, e-mail us: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

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Georgia governor’s race makes closing flourish in Cobb battleground

Georgia governor's race, Stacey Abrams, Brian Kemp

Once the bastion of Southern Sunbelt Republicanism, Cobb County has become hotly contested turf in major elections. The Georgia governor’s race is the latest example.

In 2016, a majority of Cobb voters preferred a Democratic presidential candidate over a Republican for the first time since Jimmy Carter.

Hillary Clinton’s 48-46 margin over Donald Trump revealed some gradual demographic changes in the Cobb electorate which could factor in many state and local elections that will conclude on Tuesday.

The major-party nominees for Georgia governor both visited Cobb this week, and one with very notable company. Democrat Stacey Abrams, a former minority leader of the Georgia House, had a town hall meeting Thursday at the Cobb Civic Center with Oprah Winfrey.

That Oprah Winfrey. On Friday, former President Barack Obama stumped on behalf of Abrams in Atlanta.

Vice President Mike Pence was in the state this week at the same time, campaigning for Republican nominee Brian Kemp, the Georgia Secretary of State. On Monday, President Trump will be coming to Macon to campaign for Kemp, whom he endorsed in a runoff.

Abrams would be the first black and female governor in Georgia, and the first black female governor in any state.

Kemp also was in Cobb County this week, and had an event at Williamson Bros. BBQ in East Marietta.

Georgia voters also will be choosing a whole slate of statewide offices, including lieutenant governor, secretary of state, attorney general, two public service commissioners as well as labor, agriculture and insurance commissioners.

Some polls have the governor’s race too close to call. A runoff is possible but is not considered likely, with Libertarian candidate Ted Metz polling under 2 percent.

Early voting ended in Cobb on Friday, and Cobb Elections is reporting that more than 92,000 people voted in person through Thursday. Another 21,000 Cobb voters cast absentee ballots.

According to Ryan Anderson, creator of the independent site Georgia Votes, more than 2 million early votes have been cast across the state, an increase of 120 percent from early voting during the 2014 midterm elections.

East Cobb voters will have a full slate of races on their ballots, which is a rare thing. There is a Democrat in every race in an area that has all Republican incumbent office holders.

We’ll have more later this weekend and on Monday as the campaigning comes to a close, and final balloting takes place on Tuesday.

 

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East Cobb Elections Preview: District 37 Georgia House

District 37 Georgia House, Sam Teasley, Mary Frances Williams

The District 37 Georgia House seat that includes portions of Northeast Cobb will feature a three-term incumbent against a first-time candidate.

Republican State Rep. Sam Teasley did not have primary opposition in May. Mary Frances Williams won a three-way Democratic primary without a runoff.

He is a realtor and the vice chairman of the House Republican Caucus. She is a social worker and lobbyist, and the daughter of the late Marietta mayor and state representative Howard Atherton.

District 37 also includes portions of the city of the Marietta and West Cobb.

Candidate websites

Sam Teasley | Mary Frances Williams | District 37 map

Teasley has advocated conservative positions on fiscal and cultural issues during his time in the legislature.

He is the sponsor of the Direct Primary Care Act, which he says will expand “healthcare freedom” for families by declaring that direct care agreements are not considered insurance.

Teasley also voted this year to reduce corporate and individual income tax rates and supports a state constitutional amendment that would require a super-majority vote in the legislature for any tax increase.

He also has been a sponsor of legislation to raise the cap on state tax credits for private schools.

He has been endorsed by the Family Policy Alliance, which is a public policy arm of the conservative Christian organization Focus on the Family.

Williams has been an advocate for full funding of Quality Basic Education in Georgia. Her top priority is working for better access to health care. As a lobbyist she advocated for the Family Care Act, which became law last year. It allows for employees to use sick leave to care for ailing family members.

On transit matters, she favors what she calls a “a proactive statewide transportation policy” that includes Cobb County.

Williams said she is running now, after working as a lobbyist for 30 years at the State Capitol, because “I’ve become increasingly frustrated by the lack of movement on issues that matter.”

She has received endorsements and backing from the AFL-CIO, Georgia Sierra Club, Planned Parenthood Southeast and Georgia WINS, which supports Democratic candidates.

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East Cobb Elections Preview: District 46 Georgia House

District 46 Georgia House, John Carson, Karin Sandiford

Since winning a special election in 2011, State Rep. John Carson has had few tests to his incumbency in the District 46 Georgia House seat that covers some of Northeast Cobb and southern Cherokee.

The Republican Carson was unopposed in the May primary, and hasn’t had a Democratic challenger since 2012. In the general election, he faces first-time candidate Karín Sandiford, who was the only Democrat to qualify.

Carson is a CPA and commercial banker with SunTrust Bank. Sandiford, a native of Brazil, has a background corporate leadership and is a managing partner of Latam Innovation LLC, a technology consulting firm.

Candidate websites

Carson was the chief sponsor of a new hands-free driving law that took effect in Georgia this summer.

This year he also voted to reduce corporate and personal income tax rates and supports the elimination of corporate taxes. He is opposed to any extension of Obamacare in Georgia, saying it will add $500 million a year to the state budget and “will kill jobs, destroy our healthcare system, and hurt our families.”

He also is a sponsor of state legislation in 2018 that will increase private school tuition tax credits. Currently there is a $58 million cap on what the state can provide.

HB 217, which passed the legislature and was signed by Gov. Nathan Deal, will raise the cap to $100 million a year.

Like many Democrats running in nearby East Cobb legislative races, Sandiford supports expanding Medicaid in Georgia. She also is in favor of making technical colleges tuition-free for Georgia residents. Sandiford is against campus carry laws.

Her other priorities include work- and career-related matters. She advocates a pay inquiry law that would prohibit employers from asking job candidates about past income.

Sandiford, a single mother to four children, also wants to offer companies a tax incentive with Work From Home programs, saying technology “offers us the capabilities and conveniences to work from home, so family time, or your personal time, should never be robbed because of traffic.”

 

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East Cobb Elections Preview: District 44 Georgia House

District 44 Georgia House, Chinita Allen, Don Parsons

East Cobb’s longest serving legislator has some rare general election competition this year. Republican Don Parsons was first elected to serve the District 44 Georgia House seat in 1994.

His Democratic opponent is Chinita Allen, who like many in her party campaigning for legislative seats in East Cobb, is a first-time candidate.

She is a teacher at Chalker Elementary School and is the mother of children in the Lassiter High School cluster. Parsons worked for many years for BellSouth and is a consultant in the telecommunications field.

Allen did not have a primary opponent. Parsons easily defeated Homer Crothers in the Republican primary in May.

Candidate websites

Allen’s focus is on economic development, education, health and civil rights.

She supports increased education spending for K-12. The Georgia Science Teachers Association’s District 3 Science Director (which includes Cobb, Marietta and Douglas schools) and the Georgia STEM Laureate, Allen wants the state to establish more “science, STEM and career pathways.”

Parsons supports expanding 5G wireless technology across the state. He also has supported cutting personal and business income tax rates, additional funding for public K-12 education in Georgia and a proposed constitutional amendment on the November general election ballot for victims’ rights.

More recently, he has cited the addition of 700,000 new private sector jobs, the preservation of HOPE Scholarships and full funding of K-12 education under Republican leadership in state government since 2010.

“We can’t go back!” he said earlier this week.

Allen has stressed her grassroots campaign against a better-financed opponent and has noted that she’s among 191 women in both parties running for state office in Georgia (and several others in East Cobb as well).

“We need women running and winning at every level,” she said recently. “What we have seen is the result of the absence of more women in elected office.”

 

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East Cobb Elections Preview: District 45 Georgia House

District 45 Georgia House, Matt Dollar, Essence Johnson

An East Cobb legislator who’s had little opposition in recent years is like his fellow incumbents in the area. Republican Matt Dollar, who has held the District 45 Georgia House seat since 2003, is facing a Democrat who’s a first-time candidate.

She’s Essence Johnson, a human resources and management professional. Dollar is a real estate broker who graduated from Pope High School. They were unopposed in the May primaries. District 45 is mostly in East Cobb and includes some of Sandy Springs.

Johnson has identified three priorities in her campaign: education, health care and economic development. She supports expanding the HOPE Scholarship program, full funding for Quality Basic Education and increased funding for pre-K and technical college programs.

Her health care objectives include an expansion of state Medicaid and greater insurance provider choice. Medicaid expansion, she says, would bring billions of federal funding to Georgia that would help those with lesser incomes: “Health care should not be wealth care.”

Johnson, whose husband is a small business owner, also has said she will push for access to capital, tax incentives, and technical support for entrepreneurs.

Candidate websites

Dollar also cites education in his platform, along with economic growth and tax issues.

He has supported full funding of QBE, which happened for the first time in the 2018 legislative session. He also has worked to increase funding for school safety initiatives.

On taxes, Dollar voted for cuts to the state personal and business tax rates this year, and says that “I have never, and will never, vote for a tax increase.”

Dollar has not had any Democratic opposition since 2010. He has high ratings from the National Rifle Association, the American Conservative Union and the Georgia Chamber of Commerce.

Johnson was inspired to run for office after participating in the Women’s March in Atlanta in Jan. 2017. She has been endorsed by Georgia’s WIN List, which supports pro-choice Democratic women candidates.

 

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East Cobb Elections Preview: District 43 Georgia House

District 43 Georgia House, Sharon Cooper, Luisa Wakeman

One of the most powerful leaders in the state legislature is being challenged by a first-time candidate in the District 43 Georgia House race.

State Rep. Sharon Cooper (pictured at left), a Republican who is the chairwoman of the House Health and Human Services Committee, has held the East Cobb-based seat since 1997, and has had little opposition in recent years.

Her opponent is Democrat Luisa Wakeman (right), a nurse who also has a background in the financial services industry.

Wakeman was unopposed in the primary; Cooper’s only Republican opponent disqualified for owing back taxes right before the primary.

A retired nurse and former nursing educator whose late husband was a physician, Cooper has long based her platform around health care issues. More recently, Cooper has pointed to efforts to make it easier for first-responders to to administer Naloxone to those suffering from opioid overdoses.

She also has cited her work to address hospital and trauma-care needs in rural parts of the state, and her advocacy with the Cobb Elder Abuse Task Force. Cooper sponsored a bill that was passed in 2018 that allows local communities to create task forces to investigate allegations of elder abuse among at-risk seniors.

Wakeman supports expansion of Medicaid in Georgia and has been critical of what she said is Georgia’s “unwillingness to address their 300,000-person coverage gap through previous legislation” that has reduced the network of insurance providers.

Candidates websites

Sharon Cooper | Luisa Wakeman | District 43 map

Wakeman also wants full funding for public schools in Georgia and is in favor of ballot initiatives that would address special education needs and teacher compensation.

Cooper has said that while the current funding formula for public education in Georgia needs to be changed, “we must make certain that any change in the school funding formula reduces, not raises, the amount Cobb is required to give.”

In 2016, Cooper voted in favor of HB 757, the so-called Religious Liberty bill, that would strengthen legal protections for those who oppose same-sex marriage. That bill was vetoed by Gov. Nathan Deal, and since then Cooper has said a federal solution may be the best option.

Wakeman, the mother of a daughter in the LGBT community, said such laws are discriminatory. She also opposes campus carry laws.

Her other main campaign issue is advocating changes to state financial priorities. Wakeman said recent changes in the federal tax code could mean Georgians may have to pay $3.6 billion in state taxes over the next five years.

Cooper hasn’t had general election opposition since 2010, when she won with nearly 67 percent of the vote.

 

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East Cobb advance voting takes place this week at 3 locations

East Cobb Government Center, Cobb Police Precinct 4, East Cobb advance voting

This is the week for East Cobb advance voting, and you’ll have more than one place to cast your ballot in person before the Nov. 6 election day.

As we noted last week, Cobb Elections is opening additional venues for advance voting due to high turnout.

In addition to the usual location at the East Cobb Government Service Center (above, 4400 Lower Roswell Road), you’ll also be able to vote at Noonday Baptist Church (4120 Canton Road), and the East Cobb Senior Center (3332 Sandy Plains Road).

Advance voting hours are Monday-Friday from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. There will be no voting on Saturday, Nov. 4.

You can check estimated wait times at advance polling stations here; Cobb government says it’s updating them four times a day.

According to Cobb Elections, more than 26,000 people voted early in person, and more than 16,000 absentee ballots have been received. Those numbers don’t include those who voted yesterday.

We’re continuing our coverage of East Cobb races with our voters guide. It includes previews of all races in the community, from Congress to Cobb Commission to Cobb school board and Georgia State Senate.

In the coming week, we’ll have profiles of candidates running for the Georgia House and take a look at state and local ballot issues.

East Cobb Election Guide

Elections Previews

 

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East Cobb Elections Preview: District 32 Georgia State Senate

District 32 Georgia State Senate, Kay Kirkpatrick, Christine Triebsch

The District 32 Georgia State Senate race is a rematch from last year’s special election.

Kay Kirkpatrick (pictured at left), a Republican retired orthopedic surgeon who won that election to succeed Judson Hill, is once again facing family law attorney Chrstine Triebsch, a Democrat (pictured at right).

Kirkpatrick won a runoff against Triebsch by 57-43 percent for the seat that covers most of East Cobb and some of Sandy Springs.

Neither of them faced primary opposition in May. They were part of a candidates forum in early October sponsored by the League of Women Voters of Cobb-Marietta.

They discussed health care, taxes, public safety and other issues on a panel with candidates in other Cobb senate races.

Triebsch said that in the Republican-dominated Georgia state government, “we need a two-party system.” She said her platform is comprised of “common sense and compassion” and fresh approaches for jobs, health care, education and the environment.”

Kirkpatrick said her objective has been to “bring a voice of reason to state government” and has focused on improving health insurance options, public safety and services for military veterans.

Candidate websites

At the League of Women Voters forum, they differed on tax issues. Kirkpatrick voted for a state tax cut for individuals and businesses and said “I would like to look for more savings [in places such as state agencies] and cut taxes further.

Triebsch said that before cutting taxes, new sources of revenue must be found. She’s also against eliminating the state income tax.

On health care issues, Triebsch supports expanding Medicaid in Georgia and preserving the Affordable Health Care Act, or Obamacare.

A member of the Senate Health and Human Services Committee, Kirkpatrick said she hears more from constituents about health insurance issues than just about anything else, especially the costs of premiums on the individual market.

“There’s a lot we can do to rein in the big carriers,” she said.

As for Medicaid expansion, Kirkpatrick said a problem bigger than expansion is that “we have to fix a system that is broken.”

On education matters, Triebsch advocates a new funding formula to replace the Quality Basic Education Act, which is more than 30 years old. She opposes vouchers for private schools.

School choice, she said, “is not a choice if the choice is not a public school.”

Triebsch says she supports better pay for teachers and efforts to reduce class size.

Kirkpatrick said she wants to “support teachers in a different way” with funding also being directed to address social issues, including more support for counselors. She also is stressing school safety and has been appointed to a special Senate study committee on the subject.

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East Cobb Elections Preview: Georgia 6th Congressional District

Georgia 6th Congressional District, Karen Handel, Lucy McBath

A year after the most expensive U.S. House race in American history was waged in the Georgia 6th Congressional District, the seat could be closely contested again.

U.S. Rep. Karen Handel (left), a Roswell Republican, fended off Democrat Jon Ossoff in a special election despite being outspent in a race that raised more than $30 million.

This year, she’s being opposed by first-time candidate Lucy McBath (right), a nationally known gun-control advocate.

The 6th Congressional District, which includes most of East Cobb, North Fulton and north and central DeKalb, has been in Republican hands since former House Speaker Newt Gingrich first won in 1978.

6th District maps

But Handel, a former Georgia Secretary of State, won only after Ossoff, a political novice, barely avoided a runoff following a “jungle primary” in which she finished second. In the runoff, she got some of her strongest margins in East Cobb and was actively supported by commissioners Bob Ott and JoAnn Birrell.

Handel was unopposed in the Republican primary in May. McBath earned the Democratic nomination in a runoff.

A poll released Tuesday shows Handel with a four-point lead, which is within the margin of error.

The National Republican Campaign Committee has purchased $1.4 million in Atlanta TV air time for pro-Handel commercials that began this week.

Candidate websites

President Donald Trump won the 6th District with just 51 percent of the vote in 2016. Since succeeding former Rep. Tom Price, Handel has touted her vote for Trump’s tax cuts, but she opposes his steel and aluminum tariffs. (The 6th District includes the U.S. headquarters of Mercedes-Benz.)

McBath is a former Delta Air Lines flight attendant who lives in East Cobb. Her son, a Marietta High School graduate, was shot and killed in 2012 in Florida by an angry motorist for playing loud car music at a gas station.

Since then, she’s been an outspoken advocate for gun-control and other traditional liberal positions.

She wants to preserve the Affordable Health Care Act (referred to as “Obamacare”) with some changes, as well as expand Medicaid in Georgia. McBath has been critical of what she calls the “Trump-Handel Tax Scam” and supports citizenship for the “Dreamers,” the children of undocumented immigrants who have grown up in the United States.

Handel has advocated “repealing and replacing” Obamacare with a market-based alternative, as well as building a wall along the southern border of the U.S. to prevent illegal immigration.

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McBath has been endorsed by EMILY’s list, a political action committee that supports pro-choice Democrats. Handel has the endorsement of the Susan B. Anthony List, which supports pro-life candidates.

During the campaign, Handel has raised questions of McBath’s East Cobb residency pertaining to her claiming homestead exemptions.

McBath noted that Handel, a former Georgia Secretary of State and candidate for the U.S. Senate and Georgia Governor, is only now running for re-election for the first time and that the incumbent “will do or say anything” to remain in power.

McBath made those remarks Tuesday in a debate with Handel that was conducted by the Atlanta Press Club. The video below is about a half an hour, and includes a heated exchange about gun-control, background checks for arms purchases and the National Rifle Association.

 

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East Cobb Elections Preview: District 3 Cobb Board of Commissioners

District 3 Cobb Commission, District 3 Cobb Board of Commissioners
From L-R: Republican incumbent JoAnn Birrell; Democratic challenger Caroline Holko

The District 3 Cobb Board of Commissioners race gives voters a distinct choice.

Republican commissioner JoAnn Birrell, first elected in 2010, is a conservative from Northeast Cobb who has cited her votes against tax increases, her work to improve blighted properties in the Canton Road corridor and her push to build Mabry Park.

Democrat Caroline Holko, a first-time candidate, is an admitted “progressive” liberal who favors expanding transit options in Cobb, has been critical of the county’s Atlanta Braves stadium deal and supports more hours for services like libraries.

Birrell, a former lobbyist and consultant, said she brings “a wealth of knowledge and experience to the table.”

Holko, whose family moved to Cobb from New Orleans and who home-schools her children, said “it’s time to do things differently.”

District 3 includes much of Northeast Cobb and portions of the city of Marietta and the area around Kennesaw State University.

Birrell and Holko easily won their respective primaries in May.

Candidates homepages

Birrell and Holko met recently at a forum sponsored by the League of Women Voters of Cobb-Marietta, and discussed the above issues and others. Joseph Pond, who ran against Birrell in the 2014 Republican primary, and who is running as an independent write-in candidate, was not invited.

Birrell, who supported the Braves stadium financing in 2013, said she understands why people are still upset by that vote, “but I can’t say I regret the decision.”

She cited a recent Cobb Chamber of Commerce fiscal impact study claiming an $18.9 million annual revenue benefit for the county.

Joseph Pond
Write-in candidate Joseph Pond

Holko noted a recent vote by the commissioners to settle a dispute with the Braves over infrastructure costs.

“I would like to see the entire contract laid bare to the public so we don’t get surprises like this,” she said.

Birrell responded that the Braves-Cobb contract “is an open record” and includes a provision for disputes like this one that go to mediation.

Pond, an East Cobb resident who has clashed with the county over his backyard chickens, is a plumber and organizer of the Backyard Chickens Alliance.

He thinks commissioner seats should be non-partisan and wants to reduce county building code that’s now around 1,400 pages long. Pond also is critical of “corporate welfare,” specifically tax breaks for companies that move to Cobb.

At the League of Women Voters forum, Birrell and Holko supported the acquisition of more green space.

Holko is an unabashed supporter of more transit options. Birrell said that “we need to look at everything,” especially with a county transit study being completed by the end of the year that “will give input to where transit is needed,” followed by a referendum.

Birrell supports the creation of a special tax district to fund Cobb Police operations, similar to what is done for fire and emergency services. Holko said she supports better salaries for public safety employees.

Cobb BOC District 3 mapHolko also said she is in favor of opening libraries seven days a week, as recently was begun at regional libraries, and she prefers a neighborhood branch concept to a regional branch concept.

Birrell said the regional library concept “has been around for a long time.” She also said she wouldn’t support closing smaller branches that aren’t close to a regional library.

Holko said she’s proud to be a liberal Democrat, and that “one thing I would be on the board is [provide] a little bit of balance.”

Birrell touted her record of keeping taxes low while preserving “our quality of life . . . If you’re asking for someone who can get things done, my record speaks for itself. I do get results.”

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Cobb advance voting expands to Jim Miller Park this week

We’ve been getting some inquiries about Cobb advance voting details, and when people will be able to do that in East Cobb, since there were some long lines last week.cobb advance voting, Cobb voter registration deadline, Walton and Dickerson PTSA candidates forum

As we noted earlier, there will be three locations in East Cobb next week only for those who want to vote early in person.

This week, you can vote at the Cobb Elections office (736 Whitlock Ave.) and also the Jim Miller Park Event Center (2245 Callaway Road), from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday-Friday.

Those venues also will be open this coming Saturday, Oct. 27, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Some lines at the Cobb Elections office last week were reported to be more than three hours long.

According to Cobb Elections, the unofficial early voting totals have topped 20,000. That includes absentee ballots, but the number is higher since absentee ballots from Saturday have not been added.

Next Monday through Friday, from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., you’ll be able to vote at the following locations in East Cobb:

  • East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road);
  • Noonday Baptist Church (4120 Canton Road);
  • East Cobb Senior Center (3332 Sandy Plains Road).

There will be no advance voting on Saturday, Nov. 3, or Monday, Nov. 6.

East Cobb Election Guide

 

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East Cobb election previews start Monday; visit our voters guide page

Our East Cobb election previews that begin next week will provide key information on candidates, races, ballot questions, voting details and more.

cobb advance voting, Cobb voter registration deadline, East Cobb election preview

For the first time in a long time, local ballots are competitive from top to bottom, with the Nov. 6 general elections being contested at the federal, state and local levels.

On Monday, we will take a look at the key local races you’ll be voting on, starting with the District 3 Cobb Board of Commissioners candidates.

The previews will continue with Cobb Board of Education races for Post 4 and Post 6, as well as races for State Senate District 32, and State House Districts 37, 43, 44, 45 and 46.

The U.S. House District 6 race, statewide races, including governor and other constitutional officers, and state and local ballot issues also will be previewed.

You can follow our coverage here, or more conveniently, by checking the East Cobb Elections Guide. This page will have all of those previews, voting information and more, and will be continuously updated with election-night results on Nov. 6.

Disclaimer: East Cobb News does not endorse candidates or take a position on ballot issues.

In addition, East Cobb News editor and publisher Wendy Parker does not vote in local elections and local ballot issues she covers.

In 2018, that will include 6th District Congress, 43rd District State House and Cobb Sunday Brunch Alcohol Sales.

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Cobb advance voting locations include two additions in East Cobb

East Cobb Senior Center

Advance voting starts on Monday in Cobb County, with the main Cobb Elections office (736 Whitlock Ave.) and Jim Miller Park Event Center (2245 Callaway Road) open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday-Friday, through Nov. 2.

You can also vote there on Saturday, Oct. 20, and Saturday, Oct. 27, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The week before the Nov. 6 general election, early voting expands to several venues in the county, including three in East Cobb.

In addition to the previously announced location at the East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road), advance voting also will take place at Noonday Baptist Church (4120 Canton Road) and the East Cobb Senior Center (3332 Sandy Plains Road, pictured above).

The dates are Oct. 29-Nov. 2, from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. There’s no advance voting on Saturday, Nov. 3, or Monday, Nov. 6.

Cobb Elections is looking for poll workers for the Nov. 6 general election. Visit the website for more information.

 

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Cobb school board candidates discuss academics, safety and more at forum

Cobb school board candidates, Scott Sweeney, Charisse Davis

What was billed as a meet-and-greet turned into something of a debate. The Cobb school board candidates vying for the Post 6 seat met at Mt. Bethel Elementary School Tuesday night, and offered differing views on how they would tackle challenging issues facing the Cobb County School District.

Organized by the Mt. Bethel PTA, the forum, which took place in the school’s media center, drew a couple dozen citizens. They asked some occasionally pointed questions after the candidates made their opening statements.

Scott Sweeney, a two-term Republican incumbent, said he wants to continue the progress he said the district has made in the eight years he’s served.

His challenger, Democrat Charisse Davis, is a first-time candidate, mom, former teacher and librarian who said voices like hers are needed on the seven-member Cobb school board.

Davis, a proponent of more Pre-K offerings in Cobb schools, said she was prompted to run because she’s heard from parents that the school district, over the last eight years, “is becoming less competitive for some people.”Charisse Davis

She said after a school board meeting she talked to one mother who withdrew her child’s enrollment from the district out of frustration. Davis also thinks the board and district could be more transparent.

“They feel like no one is listening to them,” said Davis, whose children attend Teasley Elementary School and Campbell Middle School. She works at the Wolf Creek Branch of the Atlanta-Fulton Library System.

Post 6 includes mostly the Walton and Wheeler clusters. Sweeney, whose sons now attend Walton and Dickerson Middle School, took issue with Davis’ contention, and said Cobb is considered one of the best public school districts in the state and the country.

Sweeney also said transparency isn’t an issue: each Cobb school board meeting is televised and available on a live stream, and discussions conducted in executive session are voted in public meetings.

He also touted the tens of millions of dollars in capital improvements the district has invested during his time in office, including rebuilds of Walton, Wheeler, East Cobb Middle School and Brumby Elementary School, and future improvements scheduled at other Post 6 schools.

Davis noted that the Cobb school board could become all-male in January, since Susan Thayer, the only female currently serving, is not running for re-election. In another East Cobb race, Post 4 incumbent David Chastain is being opposed by Cynthia Parr.

“Representation matters,” Davis said.

“Well, I’m a dad,” said Sweeney, a financial executive with InPrime Legal Services of East Cobb. “The fact that I’m a male doesn’t disqualify me.”

(The Fulton County Board of Education, which also has seven members, is all-female.)

Candidate websites:

The candidates had different views on the school walkouts that took place at several Cobb schools earlier this year, including at some East Cobb high schools, in response to school shootings.

Scott Sweeney Davis said the Cobb school district, which didn’t endorse the walkouts and threatened punitive action for unexcused absences, missed a “teaching moment” that took place in other metro school systems.

Students who walked out were typically given a one-day in-school suspension, and later some of them lashed out during the public comment session at a school board meeting.

” ‘Please help us to be safe,’ that’s all they were saying,” Davis said in support of the suspended students.

Sweeney said while he supported students’ free expression rights, sometimes those actions have consequences, and that the school district shouldn’t get involved in political debates.

“The school district isn’t the place for that,” he said.

Both candidates said they oppose arming teachers. Sweeney said Cobb has one of the best-staffed and trained school police forces in the state, with armed officers at every high school and middle school and some elementary schools.

Davis said she thought the district could do better than to be mostly reactive: “What are we doing to make sure something like this doesn’t happen again?”

As for making academic success a more variable thing, Davis said she wants Cobb to create a career and college academy similar to what’s been done in other metro school districts. The pressures some students feel, even at good schools, to live up mainly to test scores can be overwhelming, and make them feel left out.

While schools in East Cobb are among the best in the state, she asked if “we are meeting the needs of all our students?” Test scores alone, she said, is “not what makes a great school. A family feeling is better than any rating.”

Sweeney said he supports the reduction of what he called “the burden of standardized testing.”

Cobb is among those districts in Georgia that has applied to the state for create alternatives to some currently required tests, including the Milestones, which are released during the summer.

Here’s more on the Cobb Metrics program, which was announced earlier this week.

The candidates are scheduled for at least one more forum before the Nov. 6 elections, at an event next Monday in Vinings at the Cochise Club (3795 Cochise Drive), that starts at 6:30 p.m.

(East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

 

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Cobb school board candidates event slated for Mt. Bethel ES

After last week’s last-minute cancellation of a Cobb school board candidates forum, the Mt. Bethel Elementary School PTA has sent word that it has organized an event with the Post 6 competitors on Tuesday.Charisse Davis

That will be held from 6:15 p.m. to 7:15 p.m. in the media center of Mt. Bethel ES (1210 Johnson Ferry Road).

The candidates are Scott Sweeney, a Republican incumbent from East Cobb who is completing his second term in office, and Democrat Charisse Davis, a first-time candidate from the Smyrna-Vinings area.

More about them, including links to their campaign websites, in a previous post hereScott Sweeney, Cobb school calendars

The Wheeler PTSA event that was to have taken place Thursday was called off due to a previously scheduled orchestral concert at East Cobb Middle School. Thursday also was Wheeler’s homecoming parade.

Post 6 includes all of the Walton and Wheeler high school attendance zones as well as some of the Campbell area.

The Mt. Bethel ES PTA is calling this a “meet and greet” event and not a formal forum. Light refreshments will be provided.

 

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Kavanaugh confirmed to U.S. Supreme Court as Isakson, Perdue vote ‘aye’

Kavanaugh confirmed

The U.S. Senate voted 50-48 Saturday to confirm Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court, as Georgia’s Senators voted, as expected, with the Republican majority.

Sen. David Perdue issued this statement afterward:

I just voted to confirm Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the United States Supreme Court. This has proven to be a very tumultuous time in Washington. Despite the partisan attempts to assassinate Judge Kavanaugh’s character, I’m encouraged that the U.S. Senate acted decisively about the future of America’s highest court.

The presumption of innocence is still a fundamental cornerstone of our democracy. The Senate’s Constitutional role is to offer advice and consent, and this is something I take seriously.

There is no doubt in my mind that Judge Kavanaugh is going to do exactly what he said he’d do in his testimony: “Preserve the Constitution of the United States and the American rule of law.” Judge Kavanaugh has served America well for 12 years on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, and I’m confident he will continued to do so on the United States Supreme Court.

Sen. Johnny Isakson of East Cobb did not speak from the Senate floor or comment after the vote, but issued this statement on Thursday about his intention to vote for Kavanaugh.

Neither Georgia senator is up for re-election this year. Republicans currently have a 51-49 majority.

Outgoing Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal said this after the vote Saturday:

Brett Kavanaugh is one of our nation’s finest legal minds and he will serve on the U.S. Supreme Court with distinction.

Republican Sen. Steve Daines of Montana was absent and did not vote Saturday, giving away his daughter at her wedding. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, a Republican swing vote, opposed Kavanaugh’s nomination and voted present as a courtesy to Daines.

Kavanaugh, the subject of intense Senate and national debate after allegations of sexual misconduct were made public, was confirmed in the closest vote since Clarence Thomas in 1991.

That confirmation also followed dramatic hearings about alleged sexual harassment from Anita Hill. The Georgia-born Thomas is now the longest-serving justice on the court.

Kavanaugh, who succeeds retiring Justice Anthony Kennedy, was sworn in late Saturday afternoon by Chief Justice John Roberts.

 

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Cobb Elections seeking poll workers for Nov. 6 general election date

From Cobb County Government:

Cobb Elections needs additional poll workers, especially in the East Cobb area, to work the election on Nov. 6. Please apply now.

A poll worker must be a U.S. Citizen, Cobb County resident, at least 16 years old, able to read, write, and speak English, and not have any felony conviction in the last 10 years. Poll workers attend at least one training class before working at the poll.

Workers must arrive at 6 a.m. on Election Day and stay until approximately one hour after polls close at 7 p.m.

You must provide your own transportation to your scheduled class and to the poll on Election Day.

To obtain information regarding pay rates or to complete an application, please download a brochure at www.cobbelections.org/pdf/PollWorkerBrochure.pdf

Related story

 

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Isakson to vote for Brett Kavanaugh confirmation to U.S. Supreme Court

This just in from the office of Georgia Sen. Johnny Isakson, a Republican from East Cobb who has not said much publicly about the Brett Kavanaugh confirmation process for the U.S. Supreme Court:

U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson, CHIP reathorization
U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson

“The Senate Judiciary Committee, led by Chairman Chuck Grassley, did a remarkable job conducting the confirmation process to consider the nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court.

After reviewing the proceedings, including more than 30 hours of testimony from Judge Kavanaugh, and reviewing all witness testimony along with the rest of the record that has been presented throughout the course of Judge Kavanaugh’s confirmation process, I will support his nomination.

“Any judge on the nation’s highest court should be one who understands and applies the law based on the U.S. Constitution, and I have confidence that Judge Kavanaugh will fulfill these duties accordingly. I’ve based my decision on the totality of the information provided during the confirmation process.

Judge Kavanaugh is a talented and experienced jurist, and I am confident he will bring a strong commitment to the Constitution and the rule of law to the Supreme Court. I look forward to voting to confirm Judge Brett Kavanaugh to serve as associate justice on the Supreme Court.”

Republican Sen. David Perdue, Georgia’s junior senator, has been a a vocal supporter of Kavanaugh and on Wednesday issued some harsh words from the Senate floor about his Democratic colleagues who have opposed the nomination, accusing them of inciting extremism.

“This is America, but these are the tactics of the brownshirts in Germany in the 1930s,” Perdue said.

Perdue has been confronted by anti-Kavanaugh protestors in recent days, including some who cornered him in a restroom at Reagan National Airport in Washington.

On Thursday, senators were viewing a supplemental report compiled the FBI to look into accusations of sexual misconduct against Kavanaugh when he was a teenager, and that formed the basis of a tense hearing last week before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

A Senate vote on confirmation has been scheduled for Saturday. Republicans hold a 51-49 edge in the Senate.

 

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Update: Cobb school board candidates forum at East Cobb MS cancelled

Following up a story we posted last week about the Post 6 Cobb school board candidates forum at East Cobb Middle School, that was scheduled for Thursday:

It’s been called off.Cobb school board candidates forum

No reason has been given by the Wheeler PTSA, which had organized the event.

The candidates are Republican incumbent Scott Sweeney, who told us yesterday he’d been notified via text message, and Democratic challenger Charisse Davis, who’s been informing her supporters of the cancellation as well.

Sweeney also told us there is no other scheduled event for the candidates in that race before the Nov. 6 election.

Post 6 includes the Walton, Wheeler and part of the Campbell attendance zones.

On Thursday the League of Women Voters of Marietta/Cobb is holding a candidates forum for District 3 Cobb Commission candidates and those running for state senate, including District 32 in East Cobb.

 

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