Aloha to Aging to hold ‘Concert and Cornhole for a Cause’ event

The East Cobb-based Aloha to Aging, a non-profit dedicated to services to senior citizens and their caregivers, is marking its 13th anniversary this month with a special fundraising event.Aloha to Aging Concert Cornhole Cause

It’s called Concert and Cornhole for a Cause, and takes place on June 26 at Red Hare Brewery and Distillery (1998 Delk Industrial Blvd.) from 2-6 p.m.

As the name suggests, there will be live music and a cornhole tournament. Participants will enjoy the sounds of Saints N Sinners and Northside Duo, specialty drinks and the competition.

Proceeds will benefit Aloha to Aging and its programs, including an aging sensitivity class for individuals, businesses and families dealing with those with age-related health or cognitive changes, family support groups and the Aloha Day Club, designed for those 50 and older who are no longer driving.

Sponsors and participants are needed for the event and more information can be found by clicking here.

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Cobb DA’s office taking part in World Elder Abuse Awareness Day

From Cobb County government:

Cobb County is gathering donations of knitted and crocheted squares for the 2022 Yarn Storm project in recognition of World Elder Abuse Awareness Day. The project is being coordinated by Cobb County Government, the Cobb District Attorney’s Office and LiveSafe Resources.The 6-inch and 10-inch squares can be in any color or design and will be used to install yarn storming displays on June 15.

Please bring your donation by Wednesday, June 8, to one of these locations: 

  • 100 Cherokee St. in Marietta. (There will be a collection box located inside the building for your donations.)
  • Cobb Senior Wellness Center, 1150 Powder Springs Street, Marietta 
  • Freeman Poole Senior Center, 4025 South Hurt Road, Smyrna 
  • N. Cobb Senior Center, 3900 South Main Street (inside Kennworth Park), Acworth 
  • Tim D. Lee Senior Center, 3332 Sandy Plains Road, Marietta 
  • W. Cobb Senior Center, 4915 Dallas Hwy, Powder Springs 

You may also mail your completed pieces to:
Cobb District Attorney’s Office, 70 Haynes St., Third Floor, Marietta GA 30090.
For additional information, please visit www.cobbcounty.org/WEAAD.

 

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Cobb Police to hold job fair for officers, other positions

The Cobb Police Department is holding a job fair next weekend, June 10-11, for potential officer recruits for its police academy and other positions.Cobb Police job fair

The event takes place from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. both days at the Cobb Police Department headquarters, 545 S. Fairground St., Marietta.

In addition to job interviews, candidates will go through a physical agility test, as well as a polygraph test and a psychological questionnaire.

Candidates should bring a state-issued ID, proper clothing for the agility test and any necessary medications, food and snacks.

Candidates are also asked to apply online in advance at JoinCobbPolice.com; computers will be available on site for applications.

Cobb PD has prepared the following video about the job fair: https://youtu.be/emGMIFeXCxY.

For questions and more information call 770-528-3812.

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Walton earns all-sports championship; Lassiter, Pope finish strong

Walton High School has been named the recipient of the Georgia Athletic Directors Association Directors’ Cup trophy for the school’s performances in high school athletics in the 2021-22 academic year.Walton High School logo

The honors are given in each of the eight classifications of the Georgia High School Association.

Walton is the overall and boys’ and girls’ winner in Class 7A, the largest of the classifications. The Raiders collected 1,281 points, winning state championships in four sports: girls volleyball; girls swimming, and boys and girls tennis.

Lambert was second with 1,143 points, followed by Mill Creek with 1,140.

In the girls division Walton had 599 points, while North Gwinnett had 552. On the boys side, Walton collected 682 points to 624 to Hillgrove.

(You can read through the standings here.)

The GADA totals points based on how teams finish in all sports for which the GHSA awards state championships.

Walton, the only high school in East Cobb in Class 7-A was second in the Directors’ Cup standings in 2021, and last won the all-sports trophy in 2019.

In Class 6A, Lassiter finished third with 1,082 points and Pope was fourth with 1,073 points, trailing Buford and Cambridge.

The Lassiter girls topped their division and the Trojans boys were 9th, and the Pope girls were 4th.

Lassiter teams won state Class 6-A championships in fast-pitch girls softball, girls swimming and boys and girls soccer.

The Pope baseball team won the state championship in late May at Truist Park.

Also in Class 6-A, Kell finished 32nd, and Sprayberry was 54th.

In the Class A private school division, Mt. Bethel Christian came in at No. 45.

 

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Mt. Zion UMC offering diversity scholarships for East Cobb students

Mt Zion United Methodist Church

Mt. Zion United Methodist Church in East Cobb is offering diversity scholarships to students in the area as part of its Life Skills Outreach Ministry.

It’s an extension of the church’s racial unification (RU) team that was formed in 2021, “to raise awareness of the issues facing historically marginalized populations.”

This year, the ministry “wishes to demonstrate the compassion that will benefit deserving students from our community.”

The ministry’s mission statement is that “We truly love others, recognizing our differences. We will listen intently, learn what others need, lament when others suffer or struggle, and leverage our gifts to help everyone, in the name of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.”

Five college scholarships of $1,000 each will be distributed for the upcoming school year, and applications will be received through June 15.

They are merit-based scholarships for students in the East Cobb area, including the Sprayberry, Wheeler, Lassiter, Pope, Kell and Walton high school attendance zones.

Students receiving the scholarships must be enrolled in an institution of higher education for the 2022-23 academic year.

The RU team will review the applications and announce the recipients by Aug. 15. The RU team also will provide one-on-one mentorship for the scholarship recipients for life skills, character development and spiritual growth.

For more information and to apply, click here.

 

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Mt. Bethel Church to keep property, pay $13.1M in settlement

Mt. Bethel Church

Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church has finalized a legal settlement with the denomination’s North Georgia Conference that will allow the congregation to keep its property and assets at its two East Cobb campuses.

In return, Mt. Bethel will pay the Conference $13.1 million as it begins to leave the denomination following more than a year of highly charged rhetoric and legal action.

Robert Ingram, the lead attorney for Mt. Bethel, told East Cobb News on Thursday that the settlement has been agreed to by both parties, and awaits formal signatures.

He said once those signatures have been collected, he expects to file a motion in Cobb Superior Court early next week to finalize the agreement, and that it will take up to 120 days to become official.

Also next week, Ingram said, Mt. Bethel will be known only as Mt. Bethel Church, another significant step toward separating itself from the UMC, the nation’s second-largest Protestant denomination.

Ingram said Mt. Bethel will have up to 120 days to submit the payment to the North Georgia Conference, and will be conducting a fundraising drive.

“They’re going to be out of the UMC,” Ingram said of Mt. Bethel, which has been seeking in its lawsuit a vote to disaffiliate.

Mt. Bethel was sending out word to its members and the public Thursday about the agreement, which was forged after several weeks of discussions facilitated by Cobb Superior Court Senior Judge Mary Staley.

The settlement announcement comes as the North Georgia Conference is holding its annual meeting in Athens, with more than 70 congregations requesting disaffiliation.

Mt. Bethel is not among them, due to the litigation. A tentative agreement was announced in early May, but no terms were disclosed.

Last September, the Conference sued Mt. Bethel after several months of contentious actions and public statements over the denomination’s reassignment of Mt. Bethel senior pastor Rev. Dr. Jody Ray.

When Ray refused, Mt. Bethel announced its intention to disaffiliate from the UMC. Mt. Bethel and Ray claimed they weren’t properly consulted by the North Georgia Conference, which each spring makes clergy assignments based on the UMC’s “itinerant ministry” tradition.

Mt. Bethel’s conservative leadership also has been at odds with the UMC over theological disputes that include the ordination of gay clergy and performing same-sex marriages. 

Currently, the UMC’s Book of Discipline governing documents forbid both, but the denomination is expected to change its policies.

Mt. Bethel has been a founding member of the Wesleyan Covenant Association, a consortium of conservative Methodist churches that have been planning to create a new denomination called the Global Methodist Church. 

After mediation failed last summer, the North Georgia Conference filed suit in Cobb Superior Court attempting to seize Mt. Bethel assets and property valued at $35 million.

The denomination also claimed that Mt. Bethel was not a church in good standing, including its refusal to accept Rev. Dr. Steven Usry, the Conference’s appointed successor to Ray, and was not eligible for disaffiliation.

The national UMC has been preparing for a split with more conservative congregations for several years. But international conferences to consider its Protocol for Separation and Reconciliation have been postponed due to COVID-19 measures.

When a conference scheduled for September was pushed back to 2024, the Global Methodist Church announced it was accelerating its launch to May.

On Wednesday, Wesleyan Covenant Association leader Keith Boyette—also a member of Mt. Bethel’s legal team—became the GMC’s senior executive and administrative officer, overseeing the denomination’s transition over the next 12-18 months.

Ingram told East Cobb News that because of the settlement, there won’t be a disaffiliation vote. He said Mt. Bethel wanted that to happen, especially because it would have cost “millions and million of dollars less” than what’s been settled.

“We wanted the court to allow a vote just on disaffiliation,” he said, explaining that only the North Georgia Conference superintendent could call for a such a vote.

“Despite our pleas, they never did that,” Ingram said. 

He said Mt. Bethel has not decided whether or not to pursue membership in the Global Methodist Conference.

Mt. Bethel, with nearly 10,000 members, is the largest congregation in the North Georgia Conference, which oversees nearly 900 churches.

Before the lawsuits, North Georgia Conference records indicated that Mt. Bethel was more than $2 million behind in making annual “apportionment” payments dating back a couple of decades.

A more recent update shows that Mt. Bethel paid only $24,037 of the $627,889 of assigned apportionments in 2021, the lowest dollar figure and percentage (3.8 percent) in records dating back to the early 1990s.

None of the churches seeking disaffiliation this week are in Cobb, and many are splitting over similar differences in theology as Mt. Bethel. Late Thursday, North Georgia Conference delegates voted to accept the disaffiliation requests, including Sardis UMC in Buckhead and Ebenezer UMC in Roswell.

A group of Mt. Bethel members opposed to the church’s handling of the controversy sent out a message Wednesday under the headline “What Now?” The group has been meeting with Usry, who gave the sermon at a special Easter service for them at Collins Memorial UMC in Atlanta.

“Many of us have big decisions to make, and those decisions should be made with a heart of discernment,” said the message of the Friends of Mt. Bethel group. “Under the direction of Pastor Steven we are working to help members of our faith family determine how to move forward, and to take care of each other during this time.”

As for Usry, the Friends of Mt. Bethel said that technically, he is assigned to Mt. Bethel through June 30, 2023. It’s not clear how the settlement will affect his status.

“He will be available to serve any church members, or former church members, during this transition,” the Friends of Mt. Bethel message stated. “He will be working with Friends of Mt. Bethel UMC members to try to discern how we can best support our community during this time.”

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Cobb school district to hold job fair for staff support positions

The Cobb County School District is hiring for support staff positions for the 2022-23 school year and it holding a job fair next week for applicants.Campbell High School lockdown

The job fair will take place next Thursday, June 9. from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Cobb Innovation and Technology Academy, 114 Windy Hill Road.

Positions to be filled include bus drivers, food and nutrition workers, school nurses, paraprofessionals, substitute teachers, custodians and and more. Hiring supervisors will be available to talk to candidates one-on-one.

Candidates may apply online by completing a Cobb Schools job application in advance. Cobb school district staffers will be at the fair to assist those who cannot apply before the hiring event.

Registration for the job fair can be completed by clicking here. Admission is free.

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National Merit Scholarship winners include Pope, Sprayberry students

This spring we’ve noted that a number of Walton and Wheeler students have been named recipients of National Merit Scholarships.East Cobb National Merit Scholarship Program

They’re included in the latest batch of winners announced on Wednesday, recipients of scholarships ranging from $500 to $2,000 provided by the university of their choice.

Two others are from Pope and Sprayberry high schools, as part of a group of eight students from the Cobb County School District and 18 overall.

Nearly 7,500 high school seniors will receive National Merit Scholarships for undergraduate college worth nearly $28 million.

Applicants took the 2020 Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test as an initial screening, followed by the naming of more than 16,000 as semifinalists, chosen on a state-representational basis in numbers proportional to each state’s percentage of the national total of graduating high school seniors.

They were the highest-scoring program entrants in their state. Those reaching the finalist stage fulfilled additional requirements, including an essay and information about extracurricular activities, awards, and leadership positions.

They also had to display a superior academic record, be endorsed and recommendec by their high schools and earn an ACT or SAT score to confirm their qualifying test performance.

A final round of NMS recipients will be announced in July.

Madeleine M. Stewart, Pope High School
Probable career field: Wildlife Conservation
National Merit University of Tennessee Scholarship

Bradley Scott, Sprayberry High School
Probable career field: Real Estate Development
National Merit University of Georgia Scholarship

Fevin Felix, Walton High School
Probable career field: Computer Science
National Merit University of Georgia Scholarship

Ryann A. Jacobson, Walton High School
Probable career field: Theater
National Merit University of Southern California Scholarship

Sungwon Kim, Walton High School
Probable career field: Dentistry
National Merit University of Georgia Scholarship

Carson D. Felton, Wheeler High School
Probable career field: Chemical Engineering
National Merit Vanderbilt University Scholarship

William P. Jewel, Wheeler High School
Probable career field: Biology
National Merit University of Georgia Scholarship

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Rocky Mount, Tritt students receive Kiwanis ‘Silver Pen’ awards

Kiwanis Golden K Silver Pen Awards 2022
L to R: Dr. Sage Doolittle, Assistant Principal, Rocky Mount ES; Dianna Simmons, Preston’s teacher; Pamela Lagason, mom; Preston Lagason, Silver Pen Award winner; Henry Raper, dad; Jim Perry, Past President Golden K Kiwanis; Peggy Fleming, principal.

Fourth grade students from Rocky Mount, Tritt and Acworth elementary schools have been named recipients of the Silver Pen Award of the Kiwanis Club of Marietta Golden K.

The students are Preston Lagason of Rocky Mount, Ainsley Rowe of Tritt and Olivia James of Acworth.

Students were asked to write about how COVID-19 affected them, their families, their school and their relationships.

“We were pleasantly surprised at the level of engagement and the quality of the writing the subject stimulated,” the Golden K noted.

“We heard over and over from faculty and administration how engaged the kids were and how much thought and effort they put into these writing assignments. Kiwanis got kudos for inviting the kids to work through some of their feelings and experiences. In one school, the paper was so good that the Assistant Principal copied it and distributed it to all teachers.

“The kids obviously went through far more than even we were hearing about on news broadcasts. And it changed who they were. But the surprise to us was that they came through COVID with hope and determination. They caught the light at the end of the tunnel, as we were all still complaining about how dark the tunnel was. Our kids are resilient, and they have shown it in our post-COVID interactions with them and the comments they incorporated in their Silver Pen assignments.”

Here are excerpts from some of the responses:

“Wearing a mask was a tremendous change for me, because when I wear a mask, I get sores on my nose and those really hurt.”

“The aggressive protests during COVID made me scared that things were really getting out of control. This added to my levels of concern with my mental health and increased my fear, anxiety, and depression.”

“I was not allowed to see friends or even family members that lived out of state. My Grandma got real sick and died and none of the family was allowed to be with her. I was so lonely being isolated from family and friends. I can’t imagine how lonely that was for her.”

“I had countless times of pain, suffering, struggles, trouble, and sorrow. I could not eat. It was hard to get through the day.”

“COVID ruined a lot of stuff for me, my family, my friends, and my school. COVID was an awful virus. No one liked it, and I hope it never returns.”

“The skills I learned in the middle of the pandemic were a much-needed boost to my outdated self. Tons of computer programs gave me the skills I have today.”

“I decided it was not the end, so I didn’t give up. I pressed on, even through times of mass pain. It was my only hope. I decided to make a comeback – to strike from the shadows, and to truly press on. I eventually came out victorious and was able to get back to living my life.”

“COVID 19 has made an enormous impact on my everyday life because I would not be who I am today, and would not know what it would feel like to have something crazy be going on like this. I am so glad that my family and I were okay.”

Noted the Golden K in summary:

“Our kids hurt deeply, but they bounced back, too, not to where they were but to a new way of doing life. From what we heard, most of them are doing that fairly well, perhaps better than we are.”

The Silver Pen presentations also were posted on YouTube and can be watched by clicking here.

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Cobb Superior Court Chief Judge re-elected; other local results

Cobb Superior Court Chief Judge Robert Leonard
Cobb Superior Court Chief Judge Robert Leonard

Following up on some other local races in Cobb County in last week’s elections, beyond our primary focus on East Cobb Cityhood and county and legislative races, were several non-partisan judicial contests.

Chief among them was for a seat on Cobb Superior Court. Chief Judge Robert Leonard had two challengers in attorneys Charles Ford and Matt McMaster. But Leonard eased to re-election by getting 67.8 percent of the vote.

You can check out more local results by clicking here; we’ve summarized the others below.

There will be a runoff on June 21 in another Superior Court race. Sonja Brown received 29 percent of the vote and James Luttrell got nearly 22 percent to forge another round of voting in a field of five candidates.

The winner will succeed retiring Judge Robert Flournoy. Judge Ann Harris won a third term after being unopposed.

Two other Superior Court vacancies have occurred in recent weeks due to retirements. Judge Tain Kell resigned to pursue private practice, and longtime judge Mary Staley also has stepped down.

Their terms end in 2024 and Gov. Brian Kemp will be making appointments to fill out those terms.

Four Cobb State Court judges were unopposed and have been re-elected: Eric Brewton, Jason Fincher, Bridgette Campbell Glover and Ashley Palmer.

Cobb Solicitor General Barry Morgan is not seeking re-election. Courtney Martin Brubaker won the Republican primary unopposed. On the Democratic side, Makia Metzger advanced to the general election with nearly 58 percent of the vote against Chris Lanning.

Cobb Commissioner Keli Gambrill, a first-term Republican from District 1 in North and West Cobb, was unopposed, and has no Democratic opposition in November.

The Cobb Board of Education will have at least two new members after November elections. In Post 6, Democrat Nichelle Davis won unopposed and has no Republican opposition in November. She will succeed first-term Democrat Charisse Davis (no relation), who did not seek re-election.

Post 6, which currently includes the Walton and Wheeler clusters, was redrawn to exclude areas of East Cobb and will consist the Smyrna-Cumberland-Vinings area.

In Post 2, also in the Smyrna area, Democrat Becky Sayler and Republican Stephen George advanced to the November general election. The winner will succeed first-term Democrat Jaha Howard, who failed to reach a runoff for state school superintendent.

In Post 4, which includes the Kell, Lassiter and Sprayberrry clusters, two–term Republican incumbent and current board chairman David Chastain and Democrat Catherine Pozniak ran unopposed in the primaries. They will meet in November.

Three justices on the Georgia Supreme Court were re-elected: Carla McMillian and Shawn Ellen LaGrua, both of whom were unopposed, and Verda Colvin, who got 68.8 percent of the vote in a primary against Veronica Brinson.

Three judges on the Georgia Court of Appeals were re-elected without opposition: Anne Elizabeth Barnes, Chris McFadden and Trea Pipkin.

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Atlanta Koi Pond and Garden Tour slated for East Cobb homes

This Sunday the Atlanta Koi Club is holding its annual Pond & Garden Tour event at eight homes in the East Cobb and Marietta area.

The self-guided tour takes place from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 a.m., rain or shine. The tour will display the many varieties of koi and their pond ecosystems.

The cost is $15 a person and the tours begin at  Splendor Koi & Pond (1552 Rosewood Circle). Tickets may be purchased at https://atlantakoiclub.org/shop

The addresses of the private residences will be made available after purchase, and the venue address listed is NOT on the tour route.

Atlanta Koi Club pond gardent tour

 

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East Cobb real estate sales, May 9-13, 2022

Piedmont Crossing, East Cobb real estate sales May 2-6 2022
Piedmont Crossing

The following deeds for residential East Cobb real estate sales were filed May 9-13 with the Cobb Superior Court Clerk’s Office Real Estate Department.

The addresses include ZIP Codes and the subdivision names and high school districts are in parenthesis:

May 9

4533 Reva Drive, 30066 (Stockton Place, Lassiter): Lucille and Paul Gardella to Offerpad Spe Borrower A LLC; $447,000

1758 Tulip Tree Court, 30066 (North Ridge, Sprayberry): Evealine Smith to Sarah Marie Station; $425,000

3378 Emory Drive, 30062 (Hembree Hills, Pope): Zeni Dias to Elder Caires Santis; $382,200

3160 Holly Springs Road, 30062 (Pope): Zillow Homes Property Trust to Joseph McCrary; $400,000

3239 Rangers Gate Drive, 30062 (Pine Springs, Pope): Carlos Ordonez to Jean Marc and Fanny Fontaine; $675,000

2796 Cottonwood Drive, 30066 (Piedmont Hills, Sprayberry): Andrew Pizzini to Debra Potter; $200,000

2720 Stillwater Lake Lane, 30066 (Stillwater Lake, Sprayberry): Scot Snyder and Keli Glacona to Andrew Noble and Christianna Rodriguez; $547,000

3323 Valley Field Court, 30062 (Post Oak Square, Pope): Debra Potter to Andrew Pizzini and Rebecca Potter; $400,000

615 Inglis Drive, 30067 (Dogwood Park, Wheeler): Katherine Albert to Brandon and Caroline Galvin; $460,000

May 10

2668 Forest Way, 30066 (Forest Chase, Lassiter): Cynthia Harris to Bill Day; $420,000

4488 South Bay Court, 30066 (North Landing, Kell): Tanya McTeer and Jayne Walters to San Felipe Investments LLC; $322,000

3339 Hunters Lodge Road, 30062 (Cutters Gap, Pope): Jason Boatman to Opendoor Property Trust; $388,800

2990 Pauls Way, 30062 (Barbara Estates, Pope): Brian and Michelle Jones to Judy Beard; $525,000

2329 Sunny Day Drive, 30062 (Piedmont Crossing, Sprayberry): Michael Varnadore to Willlie Davis and Melaniece Bardley; $785,000

1208 Fairfield Drive, 30068 (Fawn-Quail Ridge, Walton): Karthik Majeti to Rashmi Sandhya and Bisht Balwant; $600,000

548 Flintwood Drive, 30068 (Beverly Hills Estates, Wheeler): Zachary Darling to Patrick and Chelsea Parr; $550,000

830 Bonnie Glen Drive, 30067 (Bonnie Glen, Wheeler): Lonnie Michael Slaughter to Trevor Gene Spurgeon; $185,000

May 11

4267 Trickum Road, 30066 (Kell): Lyman Franklin Watson Jr. to GCO Capital LLC; $310,000

2710 Bentwood Drive, 30062 (Bentwood, Pope): Debrora Jean Wesley Moheb to Elegance in the Making LLC; $350,000

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Editor’s Note: Community and the East Cobb Cityhood saga

Editor's Note East Cobb Cityhood vote

At the Taste of East Cobb festival earlier this month, Craig Chapin, the chairman of the Committee for East Cobb Cityhood, was approached by an irate citizen.

Less than three weeks before the East Cobb Cityhood referendum, tempers and allegations were flaring over what has been a contentious issue ever since it first arose in 2018.

With a vote looming over carving out a slice of a vast East Cobb community into a city of around 60,000 people, emotions were going into overdrive.

(Monitoring just a sliver of the cityhood chatter on NextDoor, a social media platform for people for whom Facebook apparently isn’t unhinged enough, is a vivid reminder for Internet oldies of the Wild West days of early Web message boards.)

Mindy Seger, Chapin’s counterpart with the anti-Cityhood group East Cobb Alliance, said she was called over “to help defuse the situation.”

She said they “discussed how heated things were getting and wanted to show our ability to share space.”

In between debates the two groups had agreed to—and before a forum at Pope High School that turned a little nasty— there was good-natured conversation, and the above photo-op.

“Craig and I agreed Top Gun Maverick is going to be a great movie, we both love BBQ and Righteous Q is one of the best, and that it is possible to be kind to people you disagree with,” Seger said Thursday, two days after the cityhood referendum was soundly defeated.

East Cobb Cityhood opponents
Mindy Seger of the East Cobb Alliance, who also debated Cityhood leaders in 2019, became a visible figure of the opposition.

She and what the Alliance claimed was a grassroots collection of citizens across political and social lines were gratified not just by the victory, but by the margin.

All but one of the 17 precincts voted handily against the referendum. It was a thumpin’, as President George W. Bush memorably described a midterm election that torpedoed his fellow Republicans.

More than 73 percent of those casting votes in the East Cobb referendum rejected it, a 46-point gap and by far a larger spread than defeated cityhood votes in Lost Mountain (58 percent voted no) and Vinings (55 percent opposed).

All three votes were, among other things, the victims of sloppy, poorly managed legislation that further riled up the citizenry and a chastened Cobb County government alike.

Instead of November referendums, they were pushed up to May. The East Cobb bill changed several more times, including how the mayor would be chosen and residency requirements for city council candidates.

Republican lawmakers responding to the new Democratic majority of the Cobb Board of Commissioners made a coordinated, and at times ham-handed, attempt to create the chance for more local control in the county’s most conservative areas.

Minutes after the Georgia House passed the East Cobb Cityhood bill, State Rep. Matt Dollar, its main sponsor, abruptly resigned, and non-locals were left to carry the bill.

State Rep. Sharon Cooper, a co-sponsor of the bill, and State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick, whose seat was redrawn out of the proposed city, voted for allowing citizens to have a referendum, but neither spoke to the legislation during floor debate.

The East Cobb bill, predicated on the notion that our neighbors are best-suited to decide things like density and quality of life issues, was tellingly deflected by our neighbor-lawmakers.

East Cobb Cityhood debate
Craig Chapin of the Cityhood committee talked up his longstanding ties to East Cobb, but opponents questioned the motives of leaders behind the scenes.

Cobb County government set up a web portal on cityhood and held town hall meetings, in particular honing in on what they said would likely be slower response times for public safety calls in East Cobb.

The Cityhood group twice accused the county of campaigning against the referendums, and while those calls were ignored, it’s clear Cobb’s role was vital to their defeat.

In the final week of the campaign, Cobb public safety agency heads appeared on a Zoom call organized by the East Cobb Alliance, rehashing previous concerns.

Most of all, Cobb’s cityhood referendums were swamped by everyday citizens of communities who never bought the argument that there was a need to change their form of local government, and in the case of East Cobb, to create expensive police, fire and 911 agencies.

When East Cobb cityhood was revived in March 2021, the new focus was to be on planning and zoning and controlling growth and development.

Those were issues I thought could make for a stronger cityhood campaign, as I wrote when the first effort was abandoned in 2019.

But when a required financial feasibility study was released in November, it included public safety services. That study left a lot easy financial holes for opponents to poke at, and even shred.

Cityhood leaders said police and fire “kept coming up” when they met with citizens, but they never offered specifics.

Cobb Fire Chief Bill Johnson
The Cityhood group decried comments by Cobb public safety heads about what they said would likely be longer response times in a City of East Cobb.

Just as in the initial East Cobb cityhood campaign, however, there never was much of a groundswell for cityhood. It was a secretive initiative that blindsided the community when it first arose nearly four years ago and lacked any kind of grassroots appeal.

That some behind-the-scenes leaders had development interests fanned the flames of suspicion.

An East Cobb resident I spoke to in late March who supported cityhood felt even then it was ill-fated.

“Too much emotionalism,” he said, adding that as a small-government advocate, he’s leery of a Democratic-led county commission and thinks a City of East Cobb would be preferable on a number of fronts, not just development.

While that’s a novel way to make the case for smaller government, those against cityhood turned up their calls that a new city would add another layer instead.

This citizen also questioned the county’s financial estimates of the cost of losing cities, and the numbers and claims being peddled by the Alliance.

But East Cobb Cityhood was always a hard sell, and its public-facing proponents, while well-meaning, were fighting a multi-front war on multiple issues. All three of the failed referendums in Cobb (another comes in November, in Mableton) also were the subjects of lawsuits that were ordered to be set aside until after the elections.

In trying to press for the need to better control zoning and development, East Cobb cityhood advocates spent too much time and energy defending why police and fire services were necessary.

After receiving documents via an open records request, the Alliance contended that transferring the county fire fund millage rate was the only way to make a City of East Cobb financially viable.

The Cityhood group disputed that charge without elaborating, and resorted to some dog-whistle rhetoric that Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid and federal Democrats in Washington, notably the Biden Administration, were pushing policies “to incentivize states and localities to buck market forces to increase housing density.”

It smacked of desperation, and was meant to appeal to voters who’ve been concerned about zoning density and a proposed Unified Development Code in Cobb County.

Near the end of the campaign, the Cityhood group insisted it wasn’t obligated to file a financial disclosure report revealing who was funding its efforts.

The Cityhood group parked an electronic sign in front of the former Tokyo Valentino sex shop, but refused to divulge how it was paid for.

That harkened back to the early days of Cityhood, when the group explained that it wasn’t identifying its donors or others involved for fear of harassment from their “enemies” and the media.

To repeat such an arrogant, even paranoid refusal to be modestly transparent reflects disdain for the citizens of a community whose blessing they needed to realize their vision for local control.

This was a case study in how to rub a community the wrong way while seeking its vote.

The East Cobb Cityhood group may eventually be right about the development and housing concerns it raised.

“East Cobb will be under increasing growth and tax pressure from Cobb County to urbanize our community,” the Cityhood group said in a post-referendum statement, as it scrubbed its website.

Their issues may, like Sandy Springs and other North Fulton communities that are now cities, resonate over time and gain adherents to a new effort to create a city.

Cupid’s handling of zoning matters—especially the Dobbins case that prompted a rare protest from the Cobb Chamber of Commerce—has sounded some understandable alarm bells.

The theme of the East Cobb Alliance has been that it likes East Cobb “just the way it is,” but this community isn’t static.

It’s not merely a bedroom community any more, just as a once-rural area became an affluent, in-demand suburban hotspot for great home values, schools and quality of life several decades ago, when I was growing up here.

If you remember the Parkaire airfield, and farmland where retail centers and million-dollar homes stand, you understand how different East Cobb looks and feels now, and how it can change again.

From the outset, the masterminds of the East Cobb Cityhood effort never understood or seemed to care about what it takes to create a winning grassroots campaign.

They had money and political influence to get a referendum bill passed in the legislature, but that’s about it. During the second campaign, a more concerted attempt was made to garner community support, and did they did make some headway.

Broader public support was essential, but ultimately they didn’t trust the public enough to come clean about who they are, or to build authentic community connections.

If there’s to be another attempt, there’s got to be the kind of ground-up impetus that prompted successful cityhood efforts elsewhere.

A revived East Cobb Cityhood effort also would need to be rid of its original parties, who while sowing visceral skepticism, inadvertently gave rise to a new brand of community activism they could learn from.

“Many in this community stepped out of their comfort zones by attending meetings, wearing buttons, knocking doors, and waving signs on street corners,” Seger said. “Not only did we find a way to work together sharing various skills, we made some unexpected friendships along the way.”

Seger said there’s an interest in trying to “raise the bar for Georgia’s Cityhood process. The community has the mic, we hope those in authority are listening.”

She said while she doesn’t have contact information for Chapin, with whom she momentarily tried to demonstrate some local goodwill, “I hope we can connect in the spirit of community.”

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Teenage motorcyclist killed in crash on Piedmont Road

A 17-year-old riding a motorcycle was killed Friday after a crash with a car on Piedmont Road.Northeast Cobb car crash, Cops on Donut Shops

Cobb Police said Gabriel McLachlan of Kennesaw was pronounced dead on the scene. The crash closed traffic in both directions on Piedmont Road.

Sgt. Wayne Delk said in a release that McLachlan was driving gray a 2022 Kawasaki EX400 motorcycle eastbound on Piedmont Road at 11:26 a.m. Friday as it approached Bob Bettis Road.

Police said a black 2016 Volkswagen Jetta, driven by 25-year-old Graham Dobbs of Rockmart, was heading north on Bob Bettis and preparing to make a left turn onto Piedmont.

As Dobbs made the turn, he entered the path of the motorcycle, which struck the front of the Volkwagen, according to police.

Police said McLachlan was thrown from his bike and landed on the westbound lanes of Piedmont Road. He was pronounced dead on the scene by the Cobb County Medical Examiner’s Office and his next of kin was notified, police said.

Dobbs was not injured, according to police, who said the crash remains under investigation.

Anyone with information is asked to call 770-499-3987.

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Mt. Bethel Church to participate in MUST summer lunch program

MUST Ministries is once again feeding needy children during the summer months, when school is out, and various Cobb organizations are providing assistance.MUST Summer Lunch program

MUST’s goal is to provide breakfast and lunch to at least 6,000 children for nine weeks, and to distribute an estimated 540,000 meals in six counties (Cobb, Cherokee, Douglas, Fulton, Paulding, Gwinnett).

Mt. Bethel Church in East Cobb has produced a flyer outlining food items that it will be collecting, as well as “mind, body and soul kits.”

At Mt. Bethel, the collection day is Wednesday. Barrels are located at the entrance to the Mt. Bethel kitchen.

Items also can be ordered from Amazon and delivered to:

Mt. Bethel Church
MUST Summer Lunch Program
4385 Lower Roswell Road
Marietta, GA 30068

The church also is accepting financial donations that can be mailed or dropped off at the financial office, and is seeking volunteers to pack and deliver boxes to families in need.

For more information, click here.

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Inspiring Cobb seniors include Lassiter, Walton, Wheeler students

Tadiwa Zinyongo, inspiring Cobb senior

Tadiwa Zinyongo was the last member of Walton High School’s large graduating class to receive his diploma Wednesday during commencement exercises.

As shouts of joy rank out from this year’s seniors at the KSU Convocation Center, Zinyongo shook his head a little, smiling.

Like many of his Walton classmates, he graduated with honors. But beyond the world of academics, Zinyongo stood out in many ways during his high school career.

Tadiwa Zinyongo, Walton HS
Tadiwa Zinyongo, Walton HS

He’s among the “inspiring seniors” chosen by the Cobb County School District from a number of high schools, whose graduations concluded on Friday.

They were chosen not only for their success in the classroom and in extracurricular and community activities, but also in how they perservered and helped impact other students.

Zinyongo, who will be attending Boston University as a Posse Foundation Scholar, has been vigorously involved in campus activities at Walton.

He was a member of the Raiders track and field team, the Walton Robotics Club and was president of the Walton Debate Club.

As a junior, Zinyongo honed his debate skills by taking part in debate tournaments in the Harvard Diversity Program. When he returned, he developed a debate curriculum and led outreach to other high school debate clubs.

But in the community, he has been just as busy, co-founding a non-profit called The Fight for Freedom, which raises money and awareness for sex trafficking and advocates for increased funding and services for sex traffic survivors.

Andrea Garzon Pena, Lassiter HS
Andrea Garzon Pena, Lassiter HS

Andrea Garzon Pena moved from her Venezuela in 2017 and attended Palmer Middle School and Mabry Middle School as she and her brother lived with a family friend until their mother arrived.

After starting at Lassiter High School, some stability arrived, and she eased into a number of academic and athletic pursuits.

“She has always worked hard and challenged herself in the classroom by taking upper-level Honors and Advanced Placement courses,” Lassiter counselor Liz Clarke said.

An honors graduate, Pena played varsity volleyball and was involved in chorus, the Step Team and Project HOPE. She will be attending Wingate University on a full-ride scholarship.

While he was in the 8th grade, Amblessed Nzenwata moved with his family to the United States from Nigeria, and suffered a loss in the family due to an airplane crash.

Amblessed Nzenwata, Wheeler HS
Amblessed Nzenwata, Wheeler HS

He was motivated to become an aeronautical engineer as a result, and as a student in the AVID program at Wheeler High School (previous post here) he received the support to excel in his studies.

Nzenwata took many AP and Honors classes at Wheeler, played three varsity sports, held down a part-time job and was on the co-ed cheer team with his twin sister Blossom.

They were named Wheeler’s homecoming king and queen. More than 40 colleges have offered him acceptance.

The Cobb school district said this week, as graduations ended, that its Class of 2022 of more than 8,000 students earned more than $106 million in scholarships.

More than 78 percent of graduates will be attending college, and combined the senior class logged more than 100,000 in community service hours.

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East Cobb Traffic Alert: Piedmont Road reopened after crash

Piedmont Road closed

UPDATED, SATURDAY, 11:30 A.M.

The crash was fatal, according to Cobb Police, who said a teenage motorcyclist was pronounced dead on the scene.

UPDATED, 2 p.m:

Cobb County government said that Piedmont Road west of Sandy Plains Road reopened at 1:50 p.m. Friday.

ORIGINAL REPORT:

Cobb County government said Friday afternoon that a portion of Piedmont Road is temporarily closed after a crash.

Lanes are closed in both directions at the intersection of Piedmont Road and Bob Bettis Road, where a serious crash occurred.

That area is between Sandy Plains Road and Canton Road.

There’s no estimated time for when traffic may reopen, but a Cobb government message said updates will be provided at its Cobb Commute traffic portal.

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East Cobb Weekend Events: Memorial Day; Music in the Park; more

A 2018 photo of flags in front of Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church for Memorial Day. (ECN file)

Another school year is completed, and summer vacation season looms.

But the Memorial Day weekend includes a number of local events to honor those who gave their lives serving the country, and to enjoy some splendid weather outdoors.

On Friday, Food Truck Friday continues at The Auto Accident Attorneys Group (1454 Johnson Ferry Road) from 4-7 p.m., a weekly event through June.

From 6-8, another Electric Avenue concert at the Central Boulevard area of The Avenue East Cobb (4475 Roswell Road). The Atlanta acoustic trio of Lilac Wine returns to the stage. Admission is free. While guests can bring their own food and lawn chairs, coolers and outside beverages are not permitted.

Wellstar Health System is the sponsor of the continuing Music in the Park series Sunday from 4-6 p.m. at East Cobb Park (3322 Roswell Road). Bring food, blankets and chairs to the concert pavilion to enjoy a “Bach to Rock” event. It includes performances from young people and is meant to introduce children to musical instruments and styles.

Several Memorial Day observations will take place in Cobb County on Monday, including at the Marietta National Cemetery (500 Washington Ave.) starting at 12 p.m. The guest speaker is Cobb Veterans Memorial Foundation President Donna Rowe. The organizing committee is looking for volunteers to help Scout troops plant flags starting at 8 a.m. Saturday.

Other Memorial Day events include a ceremony at the Veterans Memorial at Patriots Point in Acworth (4425 Beach St.) from 10-11 a.m. and a ceremony in Smyrna at 9:30 a.m. at the Veterans Memorial next to City Hall, 2800 King Street.

The City of Roswell also is having a Memorial Day observation starting at 11 a.m. at City Hall (38 Hill St.). The Roswell Garden Club will dedicate the Blue Star & Gold Star Families Memorial Markers. Live music and food trucks will be available after the ceremony.

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East Cobb Cityhood referendum precinct-by-precinct results

East Cobb Cityhood referendum precinct results
NO precincts are in green, YES in blue. For more map details, click here. Source: Georgia Secretary of State

As we noted Wednesday in a follow-up story on the defeated East Cobb Cityhood referendum, voters in 16 of the 17 precincts overwhelmingly rejected the creation of a city.

The final but official overall tally is 16,290 NO (73.4 percent) to 5,900 YES (26.6 percent), still to be certified by the Cobb Board of Elections and Registration (you can click through the results here).

A total of 22,190 Cityhood votes were cast in all: 13,043 Tuesday, with 7,686 during early voting and 1,461 absentee by mail votes.

In that lone YES precinct—Sope Creek 3, near the Atlanta Country Club and Chattahoochee Plantation where several Cityhood leaders live—that was a narrow YES, 643 to 600 votes, or 51.7 percent to 48.3 percent.

In all the others, NO votes won in a rout, ranging from 85 percent at the Murdock precinct to 65 percent at Mt. Bethel 3.

Cityhood referendums in Lost Mountain and Vinings also were defeated by narrower margins, with 58 percent and 55 percent, respectively, voting NO.

Sixteen of the 22 precincts in Lost Mountain (full results here) voted NO, with the six voting YES located in the most northwestern part of that proposed city, and none with more than 56 percent of the vote.

In Vinings (full results here), all five precincts voted NO, ranging from 51-59 percent.

A cityhood referendum will take place in Mableton in November.

We’ve compiled precinct-by-precinct breakdowns below for the East Cobb referendum. A couple of notes: the totals in the Pope and Sewell Mill 1 precincts are lower than the others because only a portion of those precincts are located in what was the proposed City of East Cobb.

YES NO
Chestnut Ridge 352 1,226
Dickerson 363 1,054
Dodgen 229 810
Eastside 1 433 1,098
Fullers Park 143 496
Hightower 368 1,455
Murdock 161 955
Mt. Bethel 1 599 1,463
Mt. Bethel 3 512 953
Mt. Bethel 4 468 983
Pope 105 402
Roswell 1 326 1,624
Roswell 2 466 1,292
Sewell Mill 1 41 138
Sope Creek 1 344 843
Sope Creek 3 642 600
Timber Ridge 348 898
TOTALS 5,900 16,290

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East Cobb Food Scores: Goldbergs Bagel; House of Ming; more

Goldberg’s Bagel, East Cobb food scores

The following East Cobb food scores for the week of May 23 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Goldbergs Bagel Co. & Deli 
1062 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite A110
May 25, 2022 Score: 87, Grade: B

House of Ming
3101 Roswell Road, Suite 116
May 24, 2022 Score: 96, Grade: A

Indian Hills Country Club pool snack bar
4001 Clubland Drive
May 26, 2022 Score: 91, Grade: A

Laredo’s Mexican Bar & Grill
1860 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 400
May 24, 2022 Score: 91, Grade: A

Moe’s Southwest Grill
2022 Powers Ferry Road, Suite A
May 23, 2022 Score: 90, Grade: A

Monticello
2000 Powers Ferry Road, Suite 1200
May 27, 2022 Score: 88, Grade: B

Red Elephant Thai Cuisine
3000 Windy Hill Road, Suite 152
May 23, 2022 Score: 87, Grade: B

Zaxby’s 
750 Johnson Ferry Road
May 24, 2022 Score: 100, Grade: A

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