Cobb approves $7M Lower Roswell Road construction contract

Cobb approves $7M Lower Roswell Road construction contract
Outgoing Cobb commissioner Jerica Richardson said “we’ve found as many compromises as possible” for the long-planned Lower Roswell Road traffic project.

Despite community pleas in opposition and a local district commissioner saying it’s not needed, the Cobb Board of Commissioners voted along party lines Tuesday to start on the long-planned Lower Roswell Road traffic project.

The 3-2 vote for a $7 million contract also was matched by similar votes to begin condemnation proceedings with two property owners and to begin preliminary utility relocation work.

Nearly $11 million has been budgeted in 2011 Cobb SPLOST funds for the project, which would add turn lanes, install a multi-use trail and make other changes along Lower Roswell between Woodlawn Drive and Davidson Road.

It’s been delayed for more than a decade, including in February, when a first vote was tabled by commissioners following community opposition.

The project would take two years to complete, and business owners told commissioners in February the median remains “a bad idea.”

Cobb commissioners approved a conceptual plan in 2022. Further public feedback prompted DOT later in 2022 to redesign the project, including removal of a planned bike path and expanding a multi-use trail.

DOT officials said the project is necessary primarily to reduce crashes in the area.

The board’s three Democrats, including Jerica Richardson of District 2 in East Cobb, voted in favor on all three matters, while the two Republicans voted against.

One of them, JoAnn Birrell of District 3 in East Cobb, said there’s a reason one of her former colleagues—now-retired District 2 Commissioner Bob Ott—never brought the Lower Roswell Road project to a vote.

She said feedback she’s received against the project is “overwhelming,” estimating that to be 10-1 from messages, open houses and at meetings.

“I can’t support this,” Birrell said, “especially putting businesses out. It’s taken 14 years to come back.”

There have been numerous delays and redesigns, and objections from business owners to a median on Lower Roswell between Johnson Ferry and Davidson.

Keli Gambrill, a Republican from District 1 in North Cobb, said she doubted there’s enough funding left from a SPLOST 13 years ago to complete the Lower Roswell Road project.

She held up the proposed Cobb Mobility SPLOST project list, noting that the estimated costs totaled on that list exceed the estimated $11.2 billion that would be collected if the referendum passes in November.

Among the bus routes that would be added would be one along Johnson Ferry Road between Merchants Walk and the Dunwoody MARTA Station.

“This whole project flies in the face of promises made‚yes by a previous board to the business owners in that area,”   Gambrill said. “I don’t think the county is being honest with the citizens  . . . not knowing what the M-SPLOST is also planning to do with this area.”

Richardson said the two issues are not related, and that “we’ve found as many compromises as possible” to accommodate business owners.

A citizen opposed to the project, Leroy Emkin, said there have been 27 crashes along that area of Lower Roswell in the last decade, according to DOT figures, suggesting that roughly six crashes a year shouldn’t justify a median.

But Cobb DOT Director Drew Raessler has repeated previous statements that there were 40 crashes from 2009 and 2016 that could have been prevented with a median.

Pamela Reardon, an East Cobb resident running to succeed Richardson, blasted the vote afterward, saying that the 30 businesses that will be affected “have not had a voice, even though this board says they have.

“This is a useless project. It’s a waste of time. It’s a waste of money.”

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4 thoughts on “Cobb approves $7M Lower Roswell Road construction contract”

  1. Will a raised median prevent parking lot crashes?

    You will be astounded to know that we received the Open Records Request (ORR) response for accident/crash report details along the Lower Roswell Road section next to the proposed raised median, since the county did NOT voluntarily provide those details to us after many, many requests. We did a RANDOM ORR request for eleven (11) crash addresses and dates. Guess what? They ALL were accidents in PARKING LOTS, not the road! Why is the county being so deceptive if this is such a JUSTIFIED project? What other surprises are there? Remember that the county justified this project based on safety.

    Weird.

  2. What the commission leaves out is the high cost of maintaining the new “features” added by this project. This is not a one-time spend. Residents will face tax increases for years to come.

  3. Why are the. democrats on the commission hell bent on a project no one wants? Wanna bet its all about the buses in the proposed SPLOST no one wants either?
    Why don’t they care about the voices of the residents and the business owners?

    • Hi – I am a home owner in this district and we 100% want this project. Heaven forbid someone actually wants to walk from the church to lunch or ride their bike from the existing bike trail on lower roswell through this intersection. There are far too many curb cuts for drivers to safely make left turns across 2 travel lanes into all of the different business driveways on both sides of lower roswell – the crash stats speak for themselves. Plenty of other locations in east cobb have center medians limiting left turns around commercial destinations (powers ferry, terrell mill are the closest examples) and life goes on and new businesses continue to open. Your opinion that no one wants this is completely wrong. Most cobb county ‘public engagement’ meetings are attended by retired homeowners who have nothing but time on their hands – this is also the majority of commenters on this website. Folks who work and have significant child care responsibilities can’t attend 9am county commission meetings but still want safer streets and the option to walk/bike to get to parkaire and have made that clear to our commissioners.

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