The group that revived the East Cobb Cityhood effort earlier this year announced Monday it has commissioned a new financial feasibility study to be conducted by Georgia State University.
The group also said it is proposing a fourth service, road and construction maintenance, to be evaluated during the study.
GSU’s Center for State and Local Finance is to conduct the study, which is expected to be completed by Nov. 1, according to information released by the Cityhood group Monday.
The Cityhood group said $10,000 has been paid upfront to initiate the study and it is raising funds for the remaining $10,000 that will be due upon completion.
When asked by East Cobb News about who’s footed the bill thus far, the Cityhood group responded via e-mail that those funds “are being raised by supporters here in the East Cobb Community.” According to a donation page, less than $8,000 of a goal of $25,000 has been pledged.
State representatives Matt Dollar and Sharon Cooper, both East Cobb Republicans, submitted cityhood legislation near the end of the 2021 session, that, if passed by the legislature next year, would call for a November 2022 referendum by voters living in the proposed new municipality.
The proposed services that were mentioned in the bill are planning and zoning, code enforcement and parks and recreation.
Citing a state law regarding ownership and control of county right of way, the Cityhood group explained the addition of road projects by saying that “unless the municipality and the county agree otherwise by joint resolution, new cities forming in Georgia are required to assume these services.”
In Georgia, new cities must provide at least three services, and cityhood legislation requires proponents to conduct a financial feasibility study.
Dollar’s also sponsored a City of East Cobb bill in 2019 that would have included police, fire and community development services.
But the Cityhood group abandoned that effort after a series of town hall meetings in late 2019, after community opposition surfaced.
The initial proposed City of East Cobb would have had a population of more than 100,000.
The new boundaries are much smaller, comprising most of the Johnson Ferry Road corridor west to Old Canton Road, with an estimated population of 55,000.
While some parties in the initial Cityhood group are still on board, the revamped effort features some new leadership that conducted virtual town hall meetings this spring.
The East Cobb group said it will likely hold another virtual information session in August.
Three other Cityhood bills have been filed by Cobb County lawmakers, including new efforts in Vinings and in West Cobb for a proposed City of Lost Mountain.
Another bill for Mableton Cityhood also was filed this year, just as in 2019.
In 2018-19, only a handful of individuals identified themselves as being part of the East Cobb Cityhood effort, and declined to reveal how an initial financial feasibility study conducted by GSU was paid for, at a cost of nearly $30,000.
That study, released in late 2018, declared that the proposed City of East Cobb, with the proposed public safety and community development services, was financially viable.
An independent group of local finance experts gathered by the Cityhood group conducted a separate review, and in mid-2019 recommended that police services not be part of the city to start.
The initial Cityhood group also spent tens of thousands of dollars on high-powered legislative lobbyists, but didn’t provide the funding sources.
The East Cobb Educational Research Committee, Inc., which was formed in early 2019, is the non-profit that is continuing as the sponsoring group of the Cityhood effort.
According to the Georgia Secretary of State’s Office, Craig Chapin is the CEO, Sarah Haas is the Secretary and Scott Hausman is the Chief Financial Officer.
Their profiles and related information can be found here.
Related Stories
- “Sense of pride” emphasized at Cityhood town hall
- Cityhood committee leadership team details revealed
- At town hall, Cityhood leaders stress ‘local control’
- Q & A: State Rep. Matt Dollar, sponsor of cityhood bill
- Cityhood group to hold virtual town hall April 14
- Anti-East Cobb Cityhood group calls renewed effort ‘Jaws 2’
- East Cobb Cityhood bill calls for Nov. 2022 referendum
- Cityhood effort revived with new proposed services, map
- East Cobb News Cityhood Page
Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
As is most all things , “follow the money”.
Georgia State will make any study look good if you pay them. Couldn’t they get UGA to do a valid study rather than the same guys who messed up the last one?
The services they’re proposing to provide (road maintenance and construction, zoning and planning, code enforcement, and parks) do not serve the public as a whole – their main purposes revolve around developers’ needs.
This time, it’s $20k for the study … last time, it was $30k. That immediately brings to mind two questions: from where was the $50k taken and is part of the information from the last study being used for this one, hence the 30% price cut.
This doesn’t stink like two-day-old fish; it stinks like two YEAR old fish.
Well, I certainly hope the new “financial feasibility study” is more accurate than their last one which was apparently written by Mrs. Thompson’s 4th grade math class. . .
Maybe they can get the old CFO of Enron or maybe Richard Scrushy, ex-CEO of HealthSouth to draw one up for them.