The Avenue East Cobb Fall Fest: Updated schedule, details

The Avenue East Cobb Fall Fest

A couple weeks back we mentioned that The Avenue East Cobb was having its inaugural Fall Fest on Saturday, Oct. 9, part of the expanded events calendar that’s the result of its new management partnership with North American Properties.

The thumbnail schedule is as follows:

  • 2 p.m. – Artist’s Row opens
  • 3 p.m. – Event begins with live music and roaming entertainment
  • 3:30 p.m. – Cornhole ATL tournament starts
  • 4 p.m. – Hayrides commence
  • 6 p.m. – Event ends

More details have been provided that NAP has passed along as noted below, with the event slated from 3-6 p.m.:

Starting at 3 p.m., Super Deluxe band will get the Central Boulevard rockin’ with crowd-favorite tunes. Throughout the afternoon, complimentary face painting, balloon art, hayrides and other surprise offerings will be available for guests to enjoy. Cornhole ATL is also hosting a cornhole tournament during Fall Fest and interested participants can pre-register online (October 8 deadline). Tournament winners will receive an Avenue East Cobb Experience basket filled with retailer and restaurant goodies.

Before Fall Fest officially kicks off, the first-ever Artist’s Row, curated by the Marietta Arts Festival, will come to life in the Avenue’s Central Boulevard and feature hand-crafted goods from local makers. The Artist’s Row opens at 2 p.m. and attendees are encouraged to arrive early to select their favorite pieces. A full list of participating artists can be viewed here.

All Fall Fest activities will happen in the Central Boulevard between Kale Me Crazy and Banana Republic. Drift Fish House & Oyster Bar will also provide drinks for purchase at its pop-bar in the Central Boulevard all afternoon long.

To stay in the know on updates at The Avenue East Cobb, follow the lifestyle center on FacebookInstagram and Twitter, or visit the website.

The festival is free for the public to attend; you pay for your own food, drink and shopping purchases.

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Cobb school district sued by parents over COVID-19 protocols

Cobb schools sued COVID-19 protocols
The middle school son of East Cobb resident Sara Cavorley has been learning at home due to a rare form of cancer.

Four parents of Cobb County School District students with disabilities or illnesses have filed a federal lawsuit against the district, saying its COVID-19 protocols aren’t protecting the students’ safety.

One of the parents is Sara Cavorley, whom East Cobb News profiled in August after she pulled four of her children out of schools in the Sprayberry High School attendance zone.

She did so, she said at the time, to protect her homebound son, a 13-year-old enrolled at Simpson Middle School but who suffers from acute myeloid leukemia (AML), a rare form of cancer.

Cavorley said she was unaware of the district’s masks-optional policy when the 2021-22 school year arrived and was upset that parents could not switch from in-person to virtual learning, as they could do during the previous school year.

In their lawsuit (you can read it here), filed Friday in U.S. District Court in Atlanta by local attorneys working with the Southern Poverty Law Center, Cavorley and the other three Cobb schools parents allege that the Cobb school district’s “current COVID-19 response jeopardizes the health and safety of more than 110,000 individuals in the District, approximately 15,000 of whom are students with disabilities, like Plaintiffs, as well as the District’s employees and the entire Cobb County community.”

As a result, the lawsuit contends, their children can no longer attend classes in person, and they are being deprived of an appropriate education.

According to the lawsuit, the Cobb school district has “acted with deliberate indifference to Plaintiffs’ rights to inclusion, health, and education” and are seeking “relief from this Court to ensure they receive the educational services, programs, and benefits to which they are legally entitled” under the federal Americans With Disabilities Act.

Ragsdale and each of the seven members of the Cobb Board of Education are listed as defendants.

The defendants are asking the court to require the Cobb school district to develop COVID-19 protocols that follow existing CDC guidelines for schools and to “maintain consistency with CDC guidelines in the event of subsequent changes.”

Earlier this spring, parents opposed to the district’s mask mandate at the time filed a federal lawsuit, but their attempt for a temporary injunction was denied. They dropped their suit when Ragsdale announced that a masks-optional policy would be in place for the 2021-22 school year.

In the August East Cobb News profile, Cavorley said she kept her children at home in the Cobb school district’s virtual option last school year to protect her son Leland, who needs regular blood transfusions.

He also was not old enough at the time to get the COVID-19 vaccine, which is available to people ages 12 and older.

But she wanted her children to return to in-person learning for this school year, and said they were upset when they returned to classes to be around staff and other students who weren’t wearing masks.

The lawsuit said her son has been vaccinated and his doctors approved him returning to in-person classes “so long as the 2020-2021 safety protocols were in place, namely universal masking, plexiglass between students, and social distancing. [Her son’s] doctors advised against him attending school in-person if the District discontinued those safety protocols.”

Cavorley withdrew her son from in-school instruction and requested hospital/homebound (HHB) services for him, according to the suit, which further claims that “HHB is not an appropriate placement for a child who could attend school in-person with reasonable modifications.”

The lawsuit continues that he gets only five hours of instruction a week and is isolated from his peers, as are the children of the other parents in the lawsuit.

According to the suit, the Cobb school district threatened to disenroll Cavorley’s other children, and her homebound son’s siblings “now attend school fearful of bringing COVID-19 home” while he is “being denied access to in-person education opportunities because of his disability.”

The lawsuit also details Cobb school board discussions about masking and COVID-19 protocols, noting the partisan divisions on the board, and also how Ragsdale abstained from voting for a Cobb Board of Health statement in September calling for universal masking in schools.

That’s following guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and the American Association of Pediatricians, as well as Cobb and Douglas Public Health.

At the Cobb school board’s September meetings, Ragsdale adamantly defended the district’s masks-optional policy, citing dropping COVID-19 case rates and saying its metrics weren’t much different from nearby school districts that mandated masks.

“This district will not be anti-mask,” Ragsdale said, emphasizing that mask use is “strongly encouraged” among students and staff.

After being refused a request to question Ragsdale, the three Democrats on the school board walked out of the meeting.

“Because of Defendants’ actions, Plaintiffs are being denied critical educational opportunities, including the social, emotional, and academic advantages of being in the classroom with their peers,” the lawsuit states.

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Cobb schools awaiting accreditor’s special review report

Cobb school district

The Cobb County School District is still awaiting a report from its accrediting agency, several weeks after a special review process was conducted.

Alpharetta-based Cognia interviewed district officials and Cobb Board of Education members over several days in August, following complaints from three board members and 50 others in the community on a range of board governance matters and concerns over equitable opportunities and student performance.

Mariama Tyler, Cognia’s vice president of public relations, said Thursday in an e-mail response to East Cobb News that “I do not have a timeline for the release of the report. It will be released to the Cobb Board of Education once completed.”

East Cobb News has left a message with the Cobb school district seeking comment. Cobb schools have been on fall break this week.

The district announced in April that Cognia would be conducting the review, expressing concern that determinations made through a Special Review Team can negatively impact college acceptance rates, college scholarships, enrollment, funding, and educator recruitment and retention . . . Impacts can also negatively affect a county’s economy, property values, and bond credit ratings.”

In 2019, Cognia reaccredited the Cobb County School District—the second-largest in Georgia, with more than 107,000 students—through 2024.

But Democratic board members Charisse Davis, Jaha Howard and Tre’ Hutchins went to Cognia after saying they were being ignored by the board’s Republican majority and Superintendent Chris Ragsdale to discuss early literacy, educator and employee support and board governance training topics.

They sent a letter to Cognia in January outlining their issues and that the district released to the public when announcing the special review:

“The continued silencing of board members who would like to not only talk about positives, but also publicly address challenges, continues. The three of us remain concerned that our governing body is not adhering to the leadership standards set forth by Cognia.”

They asked for third-party assistance in to help the board “navigate our differences,” specific agenda items for COVID-related staff support and safety improvements and additional agenda items “related to the study and expansion of targeted literacy interventions.”

Ragsdale responded in late March to Cognia, defending Cobb’s record on all three matters.

In addition, community members lodged complaints citing financial concerns, the district’s handling of COVID-19 matters and even the board’s refusal to consider requests to rename Wheeler High School.

Depending on the findings, a special review—which is a rare occurrence—typically affords districts time to make recommended changes before a possible loss of accreditation.

At the time Cognia undertook the Cobb process, it also was conducting a special review of Gwinnett County Public Schools, the largest system in the state.

In mid-September, Cognia announced that Gwinnett would retain full accreditation.

The Gwinnett review evaluated that school district based on six performance standards. Cognia found that Gwinnett schools exceeded one of those standards, met three others, and recommended improvements for two other standards, both relating to governing authority issues.

In the months leading up to the special review, the Cobb school district openly expressed frustration that Cognia would not disclose specifics of the 50 community complaints.

But WSB-TV reported in June that it had obtained a copy of a report detailing those complaints, something the district has said it had not been able to see.

A number of them apparently focus on allegations that the Cobb school board—with an all-white four-member Republican majority and a minority of three black Democrats—has not adequately responded to community concerns.

“We are only aware of specific complaints to COGNIA through reporting from select media outlets,” a district spokeswoman told East Cobb News in August, just as the review was set to begin.

The MDJ also reported it has been rebuffed in its efforts to see the complaints after unsuccessfully filing open records requests. The newspaper, which appealed to the Georgia Attorney General’s office for assistance but was denied, also reported that Cobb school officials demanded unredacted copies of the 50 complaints, but to no avail.

For more than a year, students, parents and others associated with Wheeler High School have been speaking at school board meetings about a desire to change the school name, and to get a response.

Wheeler, named after a Confederate Civil War general, is among the most racially and ethnically diverse schools in the Cobb district. Students in favor of a name change have said publicly they’re embarrassed and ashamed their school is named after someone they say doesn’t reflect what their school is about.

But they have said that only Davis, who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters, has responded in favor of their concerns—she signed an online petition supporting a Wheeler name change.

The issue hasn’t made a school board agenda because items can be added by members only with majority support, or unilaterally by the chairman or superintendent, none of which have happened.

On its Facebook page Thursday, the Wheeler Name Change group said that over the summer:

“We sent weekly emails yet only got a limited number of responses. We need to continue to increase public pressure on the Board so they can no longer ignore our efforts.”

Before the special review began, Cognia head Mark Elgart told the AJC that Cobb’s accreditation would not immediately be threatened by the special review.

Cobb district officials have cited a loss of accreditation in Clayton and DeKalb public schools in 2008 and 2011 respectively for their concerns about the process.

Shortly after the review was announced, the Cobb school district fired its longtime Marietta law firm and hired the Atlanta law firm of Nelson, Mullins, Riley & Scarborough.

At the same time, a Facebook group formed demanding a recall for the three board members who asked for the special review.

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‘Cumberland Sweep’ connectivity includes Chattahoochee NRA

Cochran Shoals Trail, Cumberland Sweep
The Cochrain Shoals Trail is one of the Cumberland Trails included in the Cumberland CID.

Last week the Cumberland Community Improvement District unveiled what it’s calling the “Cumberland Sweep”—a three-mile multimodal path designed to improve connectivity in that area, and not just for transit.

Its main connection points include The Battery Atlanta, Truist Park, Cumberland Mall, Cobb Galleria Centre and Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre, where shuttle connections also are being envisioned.

Recreational activities are another major part of the Cumberland Sweep plan, which has its own dedicated website.

Those include the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area, Bob Callan Trail, Akers Mill Trail and local bike share stations.

The Cumberland Trails include the Cochran Shoals Trail, which connects both edges of the Chattahoochee NRA from its southern point near Powers Ferry and Akers Mill Road and Columns Drive in East Cobb.

“The Cumberland Sweep name embodies the very essence of this path,” John Shern, Chairman, Cumberland CID Board of Directors, said in a statement. “The Sweep means movement and our goal is to move people more effectively and efficiently around the Cumberland area. This vital transportation resource will make our region more accessible connecting businesses, residents, and visitors to the best of what Cumberland has to offer.”

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East Cobb traffic alert: Johnson Ferry-Lower Roswell closures Friday

Johnson Ferry Lower Roswell closures

If your Friday morning traffic commute involves the intersection of Johnson Ferry and Lower Roswell roads, you’re advised to get through there before 9 a.m.

That’s when Cobb DOT is closing some southbound Johnson Ferry lanes and eastbound Lower Roswell lanes for water leak repairs.

The leaking has been located on an eastbound lane of Lower Roswell right at the Johnson Ferry intersection

A county government message sent out Thursday night said the time estimated to complete the repairs isn’t known.

We’ll provide updates during the day as we get them.

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Root House to hold ‘Mourning in the 1850s’ Flashlight Tour

Root House Mourning 1850s Tour

Submitted information and photo for a new event at the William Root House in Marietta every Friday in October:

Bring a flashlight and see the c. 1845 William Root House decorated for a Victorian-style funeral. Visitors will be able to view 19th century embalming equipment, mourning jewelry made from human hair, and other curious artifacts related to death and mourning in the Victorian era.

Flashlight tours are $10 per person. No coupons or discounts may be applied. Space is limited. Tickets may be purchased in advance by clicking here

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Town Center at Cobb to hold Dreamland Amusements carnival

Submitted information:Town Center at Cobb

Dreamland Amusements is back for their fall carnival at Town Center at Cobb, Oct. 7-17, just in time for the cool weather. Families and guests are invited to enjoy a variety of rides, including two new rides for the fall season: Super Himalaya and Jumbos – in addition to attractions, carnival games and classic fair food, like corndogs, funnel cakes, fried Oreos and more!

WHAT:
Dreamland Amusements Fall Carnival at Town Center at Cobb

WHEN:
Thursday, Oct. 7 – Sunday, Oct. 17
Hours vary per day

WHERE:
Town Center at Cobb, parking lot near Macy’s Men’s & Furniture Gallery
400 Ernest Barrett Pkwy
Kennesaw, GA 30144

HOW:
Ride tickets:
Single ticket: $1.50
20 tickets: $30
50 tickets (includes one free ride): $60

Pre-sale ride special:
Four for $99
Two for $55
One for $29
Fifty Ride Tickets (includes one free ride) $49
*Sale ends Oct. 7, 2021, at 5 p.m.

MORE INFO:
Families will enjoy free parking with admission to the carnival. For more information, including the carnival’s
COVID safety protocols, and to purchase tickets in advance, please visit bit.ly/TCCDreamlandCarnival21. Walk
up tickets are also available.

For more information, visit towncenteratcobb.com. Connect with Town Center at Cobb on Instagram and Facebook.

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East Cobb Food Scores: Chick-fil-A Woodlawn; Clean Juice; more

Chick Fil A Woodlawn, East Cobb food scores

The following food scores for the week of Sept. 27 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Chick-fil-A
1201 Johnson Ferry Road
September 27, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

Clean Juice 
1205 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 124
September 29, 2021 Score: 99, Grade: A

Firehouse Subs
2745 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 102
October 1, 2021 Score: 93, Grade: A

Jamba Juice
4101 Roswell Road, Suite 304 
September 29, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

Planet Smoothie/Tasti D Lite
4805 Canton Road, Suite 300
September 27, 2021 Score: 84, Grade: B

Starbucks
2424 Roswell Road, Suite 1
September 30, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

Starbucks
4648 Woodstock Road, Suite 100, Roswell
September 28, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

Subway
2520 E. Piedmont Road, Suite A
September 30, 2021 Score: 90, Grade: A

Subway
2872 Canton Road, Suite A
October 1, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

The Superfood Company
2520 E. Piedmont Road, Suite 122
September 30, 2021 Score: 94, Grade: A

Touchdown Wings
2856 Delk Road, Suite 301
September 30, 2021 Score: 81, Grade: B

Yogli Mogli
1255 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 35
September 27, 2021 Score: 82, Grade: B

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Cobb commissioners approve additional rental assistance

From Cobb County government:Cobb County Government logo

With more than two-thirds of the county’s Emergency Rental Assistance funds already distributed, Cobb Commissioners approved tapping into an additional source of federal funding to continue providing rental and utility assistance to those impacted by the COVID pandemic.

Five nonprofit organizations have worked to distribute the $22.8 million Emergency Rental Assistance (ERA1) allocation and with assistance from the Cobb Magistrate Court and others more than $15 million has been distributed into the community.  Local governments were under a deadline to distribute 65% of the funding by the end of September, but with that goal surpassed commissioners okay’d using “ERA2” funds to continue the program.

Commissioners formally accepted the $7.2 million in ERA2 funds earlier this year.  Unlike the ERA1 funding, these funds would be available through September 2025. The same five nonprofit organizations that are currently administering the program will distribute the funds (see www.cobbcounty.org/ERA for details).  The other differences include:

  • In order to be eligible for ERA2 assistance, the applicant must have received unemployment or experienced a reduction in household income, incurred significant costs, or experienced a financial hardship DURING or due to COVID-19;
  • The aggregate amount of financial assistance an eligible household may receive under ERA2 when combined with financial assistance under ERA1, must not exceed 18 months. 

The Board of Commissioners approved the allocation of these funds during its Sept. 28 meeting.

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Pope HS students open Little Free Library at Green Acres ES

Pope students Little Free Library Green Acres ES

From the Cobb County School District:

Students at Green Acres Elementary School now have more opportunities to explore their love of reading. The Green Acres community and students from Pope High School recently held a ribbon-cutting ceremony to open the elementary school’s new Little Free Library (LFL).

Pope students Julia Acker, Abby Freed, Erin Kappel, Aila McLean, and Ansley Roberts chose to install an LFL at Green Acres as part of their Girl Scout “Silver Project.” 

Recognizing the need of her students, Greens Acres Principal Ashley Mize has wanted to install a little library for several years. Thanks to the work of the Cobb Collaborative and the Pope Girl Scouts, her wish is now a reality. 

“We are very excited at Green Acres to have our new Little Free Library! Many of our students live within walking distance of the school, so it is perfect for them to access after school and on the weekends. Building a love of reading is essential to our student’s success in school and life,” said Green Acres Principal Ashley Mize. “We can’t wait to see our students and community engage with the library and for our student’s love of reading to grow!”

To read more, please click here.

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Ga. Senate GOP leaders release Congressional district map draft

Ga. Senate GOP Congressional district draft map
You can view the proposed map in full by clicking here.

Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan and state Senate Reapportionment Committee Chairman John Kennedy on Monday released a draft map of proposed Congressional districts based on 2020 Census figures.

As anticipated, the lines for the 6th Congressional District—a swing seat held by Democratic U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath—would be moved substantially.

The proposed new lines for the 6th still include most of East Cobb, which has remained a relative Republican stronghold, as well as North Fulton and Sandy Springs.

But the GOP leaders have created a new map taking away more Democratic terrain of north and central DeKalb and would include all of Forsyth County, a strong GOP area with a growing population.

Based on the proposed map, it’s hard to tell how much of East Cobb has been removed from the 6th District and placed in the adjoining 11th because it doesn’t get down to census tract details.

An independent site, called Dave’s Redistricting App, has a zoom feature better showing the proposed lines that would take out some East Cobb precincts closer to the city of Marietta that have been trending Democratic in recent elections.

We’ve included a screen shot at the bottom of this post to show that in more detail; essentially the line runs below the Ashebrooke and above the Crossgate subdivision and bisects Indian Hills.

The area around Wheeler High School and extending to the Atlanta Country Club and below River Hills would be included in the 11th District seat currently held by Republican Barry Loudermilk.

The reapportionment process begins on Nov. 3 in a special session called by Gov. Brian Kemp to redraw Congressional, legislative and local elected districts.

Here’s what Georgia’s current Congressional districts look like now, per the Census Bureau; inset metro Atlanta photo is below.

Ga. 117th Congress maps
View the current Georgia statewide map in the 117th Congress by clicking here.

Republicans hold sizable majorities in the House and the Senate. In the U.S. House, there are eight Republicans and six Democrats from Georgia, including McBath.

The Democrats have a 224-214 edge in the 117th Congress (with three vacant seats) and McBath’s re-election in 2022 is considered crucial for their chances of maintaining party control.

McBath ended 40-year GOP control of the 6th District when she unseated former U.S. Rep. Karen Handel in 2018, then defeated Handel in a rematch in 2020. Several Republicans have announced they will be running in 2022, but no other Democrats have announced.

The proposed GOP Congressional map, if approved, would likely solidify the 7th District for a Democrat. That’s currently held by Carolyn Boudreaux, who won in 2020 by a slim margin. The draft map would take a portion of Forsyth County currently in that district and reshape the 7th to include most of Gwinnett County.

Cobb County has two other members of Congress, Loudermilk, whose 11th District currentlly includes Marietta, Smyrna-Vinings and Northwest Cobb.

Democrat David Scott represents District 13 that includes most of South Cobb.

Some areas of East Cobb currently in the 6th District would be in the 11th in the proposed GOP map. For more details, click here.

The maps proposed by Duncan and Kennedy would not alter those areas by much.

Nor would the proposed map changes affect the lines in the 14th Congressional District, where Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene, a strong ally of former President Donald Trump, has gained national attention since her win in 2020.

She was briefly a candidate in the 6th before switching to the 14th, which is considered the most conservative Congressional district in the state, and includes Paulding County. The new lines would take in some of Bartow County and retain most of northwest Georgia.

“It is clear that this map not only meets principles of redistricting, but we are proud to present a map that regardless of political party, Georgians can be proud of,” Duncan said in a statement “Ensuring that any maps we produce are fair, compact, and keep communities of interest together, will continue to be of upmost importance.”

In response, the Democratic Party of Georgia posted on its social media channels a Gwinnett Daily Post op-ed by State Rep. Sam Park calling for a “fair” redistricting process that includes “establishing [reapportionment] committee guidelines in a public forum” before the special session begins.

Several voting advocacy groups placed the piece, including Progress Georgia, All on the Line, Fair Districts GA and the ACLU of Georgia.

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Traffic update: Willeo Creek Bridge reopening delayed

Willeo Creek Bridge reopening delayed

The Willeo Creek Bridge, as we noted this spring, had a tentative reopening date of Sept. 29—Wednesday—after closing in June for a full replacement.

But Cobb DOT recently sent out this message, and later updated it to say that the new estimated date for reopening is now Dec. 20:

“Baldwin Paving Company, Inc., the contractor for the Willeo Road over Willeo Creek project, has encountered challenges during construction of this project which have resulted in significant delays. Therefore, the contractor will be unable to reopen the bridge to traffic on September 29, 2021 as the county previously expected.

“The county is pursuing every option to expedite this project and the safe reopening of the bridge to traffic as soon as possible. At this time, the contractor has not provided a firm date for reopening the bridge.”

Cobb government spokesman Ross Cavitt said that the delays have been caused in part due to “bad weather and unexpected conditions under the bridge. They are considerably behind their timeline.”

As noted in our earlier stories, the best detour option for now if you need to get to that area of Roswell is to go east on Roswell Road, then south on Willeo Road.

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Cobb commissioners to consider additional rental assistance

The Cobb Board of Commissioners will be asked on Tuesday to consider spending nearly $6.5 million in federal funding earmarked for rental assistance related to those impacted by COVID-19 shutdowns. Cobb County Government logo

The item is to come up on the board’s regular agenda during its business meeting that starts at 7 p.m. Tuesday.

According to the agenda item (you can read it here) five local non-profits would get $1.15 million each in American Rescue Plan funding, plus $115,000 each for administrative costs.

Those groups are STAR-C, HomeFree, Sweetwater Mission, MUST Ministries, and the Center for Family Resources, which have previously disbursed federal rental assistance in cobb under the CARES Act.

The second Emergency Rental Assistance plan (ERA2) would provide up to 18 months of rental, utilities and home heating costs for those adversely effected by COVID-related actions, including job losses.

Those qualifying for the program include people who’ve been eligible for unemployment and have had a reduction in income due to the COVID restrictions, those who are at risk for homelessness and have a household income at or below 80 percent of the area median.

More about what the new program will entail can be found here; the full meeting agenda can be found here.

If you’re planning to be in attendance (second floor board room of the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta) you will be required to wear a mask.

The meeting also will be live-streamed on the county’s website, cable TV channel (Channel 24 on Comcast) and Youtube page. Visit cobbcounty.org/CobbTV for other streaming options.

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Cobb Police searching for woman missing since Friday

This just in from the Cobb County Police Department:Nefirtiti Powers, missing Cobb woman

Cobb County Police are seeking the public’s help in locating a missing woman. 39-year-old Nefirtiti Strothers was last seen wearing brown pants, black boots, a beige shirt on top of a purple shirt, and a multicolored scarf. Nefirtiti suffers from Cerebral Palsy and has limited motor functions as well as a diminished mental capacity. She was last seen at her job on Powers Ferry Road in Cobb County and was reported missing on September 24, 2021. 

Anyone with information is asked to contact the Cobb County Police Department’s Crimes Against Persons unit at 770-499-3945.

 

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Cobb public health director: ‘On the downslope’ of Delta surge

On Friday, Cobb and Douglas Public Health Director Dr. Janet Memark provided her latest COVID-19 update:

Dr. Janet Memark
Dr. Janet Memark, director of Cobb and Douglas Public Health

Today, I hope to bring better tidings to our communities on the COVID-19 front. It appears that we are finally on the downslope of the Delta surge. We are seeing decreases in case counts, positive percentage of tests and hospitalizations. Unfortunately, death is the last indicator, and we continue to see COVID-19 deaths being reported to us daily.

Please remember as we see COVID-19 cases continue to drop, we are still in high transmission for both counties. Cobb County has 605 cases per 100,000 and Douglas is at 726 cases/100,000. Positive percentage rates are also 10.9 and 14.6% respectively. All of these indicators are still in the HIGH range, and we need to continue to push them down a significant amount. Our Cobb hospitals are still reporting SEVERE status and Wellstar Douglas now reports a BUSY status.

View the latest community transmission rates in both
Cobb and Douglas Counties. Click here.

Some of you have heard the news about the Pfizer boosters approved by the FDA and now the CDC. The CDC has released recommendations for the booster dose to be eligible for Americans aged 65 and older, adults with underlying medical conditions and adults in high-risk working and institutional settings.

We are awaiting more guidance for each of the categories, but the vaccines will be ready to be given starting Monday. Remember that these boosters have only been approved for those who received the Pfizer vaccine series at least 6 months ago, and boosters will be available anywhere that offers the vaccine.

Also, remember that the 3rd dose for people with immunocompromising conditions like transplants and active cancer treatment is still available for those who received Moderna and Pfizer at this time. The FDA and CDC are working quickly to make recommendations for boosters for people who received the Moderna and Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccines, and we will share those recommendations as soon as they are available.

The last thing I will leave you with today is to remind you that cooler weather also brings influenza. Due to precautions taken against COVID-19 last year, we had a negligible flu season. We have seen a resurgence of other respiratory viruses wreaking havoc already-like RSV. Please remember that you can get some pretty good protection from the flu by getting a flu shot. You can come to the health department, go to your primary care provider or many retail providers to get your shot.

Please enjoy this new season of fall and of hope that all the progress we have made against the COVID-19 Pandemic pays off, and that we do not see another surge.

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Ex-Cobb Magistrate judge announces Superior Court candidacy

Cobb Superior Court Judge Robert Flournoy III is retiring after 2022 and candidates are beginning to announce for the May 24, 2022 non-partisan primary to succeed him:
Gerald Moore, Cobb Superior Court Judge candidate

Gerald Moore, Cobb County’s Assistant District Attorney and previous Magistrate Court Judge, announced today that he will run for the open seat in the county’s Superior Court. Moore has served the county since he was appointed to the bench as a part-time judge in 2013. 

“I’ve lived in Cobb County for over 20 years. During my time here, I’ve built family and community and have dedicated my life to serving and protecting my neighbors,” said Moore. “I believe the people of this county deserve to be treated fairly and with respect while feeling safe. If I’m elected Superior Court Judge, my goal is to see that reflected in my courtroom.”  

In 2016, Moore was appointed to the bench as a full-time Magistrate Judge where he served a four year term. During this time, he also sat as an Assisting Superior Court Judge, making him the only candidate who has already served in this position. Currently, Moore represents the state as an Assistant District Attorney handling a large volume of criminal proceedings, working to protect the community and ensure every defendant is treated with fairness and respect. In addition to these responsibilities, Gerald also works with the North Georgia Elder Abuse Task Force to educate and protect Cobb’s elderly community.

Moore is a widower who lost the love of his life to cancer in 2019. As a single dad of two teenage boys, he hopes to honor her life through meaningful community engagement and honest public service. 

For more information about his candidacy please visit www.mooreforcobb.com.

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‘Friends of Mt. Bethel’ growing more vocal against church leaders

Friends of Mt. Bethel

A group of members of Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church opposed to the church’s leadership in its legal battle with the regional denomination have begun speaking out in greater numbers in recent weeks.

Several dozen individuals have listed their names in the About page of a new website called the Friends of Mt. Bethel, which began earlier this summer in newsletter form.

They include “member stories” written by individuals expressing their concerns about the situation that’s been brewing since the spring, when senior pastor Rev. Dr. Jody Ray refused a reassignment by the North Georgia Conference of the United Methodist Church.

Ray turned in his UMC credentials and has stayed on as a lay pastor and CEO, in defiance of what the Conference has said is a violation of the denomination’s Book of Discipline governing document.

Mt. Bethel also was accused by the Conference of refusing the reassignment of Rev. Dr. Steven Usry and declining to provide him office space or pay his full salary.

After Mt. Bethel declined to turn over property and assets, a mediation process was attempted and when that failed, the Conference filed suit in Cobb Superior Court on Sept. 8.

In a newsletter issued to church members shortly after that, Ray compared Mt. Bethel’s situation to the Montgomery Bus Boycott, saying the struggle is over more than appointments and properties and “it’s about contending for our faith.”

Until recently, only a few Mt. Bethel members opposed to church leadership had gone public with their concerns. One of them is Donna Lachance, whom East Cobb News interviewed in June.

But with a lengthy and likely expensive legal battle only beginning, others have been speaking up.

Some of the Friends of Mt. Bethel members have been in the church for decades, including Charlotte Hipps, whose membership dates back 53 years, long before Mt. Bethel grew to having nearly 10,000 members, the largest congregation in the conference.

In her testimonial, she wrote about the pre-suburban days when that part of East Cobb was known as Mt. Bethel, and that church members openly embraced newcomers to “this loving farm community.

“The spirit of Mt. Bethel has not been extinguished completely, but for the last five years it has been dimming rapidly,” Hipps wrote, referring to the length of Ray’s tenure as senior pastor. “Now, it has become unbelievably divided. So many have given up and walked away.”

Member Terry Dubsky wrote that “Frankly, with no insult to anyone, I believe we’ve lost our focus. I feel we are playing politics, instead of keeping Christ first.”

Mt. Bethel has declared an intent to disaffiliate from the UMC, but a vote cannot happen until next fall.

That’s because the national UMC has delayed a vote on allowing conservative congregations to leave amid theological disputes that have centered largely on gay and lesbian clergy and same-sex marriages.

The UMC currently prohibits both, though Mt. Bethel is a leading member of the Wesleyan Covenant Association, a consortium of conservative UMC churches formed in 2016 in anticipation of a split.

Shortly after the lawsuit was filed, Mt. Bethel members received another newsletter from church leadership accusing the Friends of Mt. Bethel of “inaccurate and misrepresentative third-party communications” about the disaffiliation request and litigation:

“We also have reason to believe that this group may be in contact with the Trustees of the North Georgia Conference, as they shared a document this week, related to pending litigation, that was not part of the public record. Our concern is whether the Friends of Mt. Bethel may be acting as an extension, facilitator, or possibly an agent of the very party that is suing Mt. Bethel and attempting to seize its property. As such, we recommend cautious and careful review of any further statements and communications from this group.”

The e-mail was written by Robert Ingram, a prominent Marietta attorney Mt. Bethel has hired to handle the lawsuit, and with Ray and eight other church leaders also listed as signatories.

In response, the Friends of Mt. Bethel issued their own newsletter saying that the church was upset that it got out the word about the lawsuit before the church. “The documents we shared are public documents and you have a right to see them.”

The Friends group said it was comprised of church members who “who disagree with the path of civil disobedience our leadership has chosen for our church.”

They further insisted that “the attacks, derision, and downright bullying of church members who simply oppose the path we are on have got to stop. Mostly, we seem to have differences of opinion and interpretation, which should be allowed in civil society.”

On Wednesday, the day the Friends of Mt. Bethel site went live, Mt. Bethel Church posted on its Facebook page a note of thanks for:

“Continued prayers and support we have received over the past several weeks and months. God has given us an incredible community to walk beside us during these uncertain times. No matter what we may face, we take comfort knowing we will never walk through it alone. If you, too, are navigating the unknown today, rest assured we serve a faithful God that is bigger than our circumstances.”

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Cobb Accountability Courts recognized as model courts in Ga.

Submitted information:Cobb Accountability Courts, Cobb Veterans Court

The Cobb County Veterans Accountability and Treatment Court and the Cobb County Family Treatment Court have both been selected as Model Courts by the Council of Accountability Court Judges for 2021 – 2024. The honor was bestowed on these Courts for their commitment to Georgia’s Accountability Court Standards. Model Courts serve as a resource to other Georgia accountability courts in need of programmatic and technical assistance.

In addition, retired Marine Sergeant Major Ernie Hines, who has served as Mentor Coordinator for Cobb’s Veterans Court since its creation, was awarded the 2021 STAR Award by the Council of Accountability Court Judges in recognition of his excellence and long-standing dedication to the program.

Judge Tain Kell, who presides over Veterans Court, said he is “extraordinarily proud of the Sergeant Major.”

“The entire Veterans Court team is incredible, and we are thrilled to be recognized as a model court,” Judge Kell said.

Cobb’s Veterans Accountability and Treatment Court (VATC) serves veterans facing criminal charges by providing treatment and other support to help return participants to productivity rather than remain incarcerated. During the program, each participant is paired with an honorably discharged veteran through the VATC Mentor Program. Cobb’s VATC was established in 2014 and has graduated more than 50 participants. With the designation as a Model Court, VATC will continue to improve the lives of local veteran participants.

Cobb’s Family Treatment Court (FTC) operates within Juvenile Court and serves parents with substance-use disorders who have lost custody of their children. FTC manages and monitors the parents’ progress through a five-phase program over a minimum of 19 months. Staff of the FTC, its treatment providers, the Department of Family and Children Services, and the Court collaborate toward securing and ensuring safe, stable and reunified families. The FTC program saves taxpayer dollars by decreasing the time children are in foster care and increasing permanency outcomes with healthy, drug-free, reunified families. Cobb’s FTC program began in 2006 and has served more than 130 graduates.

Judge Jeffrey Hamby presides over FTC. “The team is highly trained, knowledgeable, compassionate, and truly trying to help these parents,” Judge Hamby said. “Together with the therapists and community partners, they make my job easy: show some tough love, provide a structured regimen for success, sanction when necessary, and let folks know that the team really cares.”

Superior Court Chief Judge Robert Leonard said, “I am proud of the hard work of the entire Veterans and Family Treatment Court teams. This award is a testament to their continuous dedication to excellence in all they do.”

Both the Veterans Accountability and Treatment Court and the Family Treatment Court are proud to be named as Model Courts for exhibiting excellence in both programmatic management and for the positive outcomes achieved by participants.

For more information, contact VATC Coordinator Katelyn Parker at 770-528-7988 or FTC Coordinator Jennifer Tillery at 770-528-3342.

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Cobb Interfaith Habitat Coalition dedicates 21st home

Cobb Interfaith Habitat Coalition

Submitted information and photos:

On Sunday September 19, Habitat for Humanity of NW Metro Atlanta and the Cobb Interfaith Habitat Coalition (CIHC) dedicated the coalition’s 21st Habitat home in Austell. The house was the first build started in 2021.  

Future Homeowner Rachel Coates has built alongside coalition volunteers for nine weeks and is looking forward to moving into her own home with her children. Rachel is a 47-year-old single mom to Jeremy (13), and Polleen (12), and she works as a caregiver at Arbor Terrace at Burnt Hickory.

The Kenya native has lived in Cobb County for 13 years. Their family currently lives in a two-bedroom apartment in Marietta, which has become too small for them. She is very grateful for the opportunity to partner with Habitat and is excited about her future prospects of finally owning her own home. 

The 2021 Coalition includes 12 religious organizations and four corporate members.  

Faith partners include: 

  • First Presbyterian Church of Marietta  
  • St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church  
  • Unity North Atlanta Church  
  • Covenant United Methodist  
  • McEachern United Methodist  
  • Due West United Methodist  
  • Smyrna First United Methodist   
  • Bethany United Methodist  
  • Temple Kol Emeth  
  • Log Cabin Community Church  
  • St. Catherine’s Episcopal  
  • East Cobb Islamic Center
  • West Cobb Islamic Center 

Corporate sponsors include:  

  • Moore Colson CPAs and Advisors  
  • Pinkerton & Laws  
  • Truist (BB&T)  
  • Atlanta West Carpets  

The annual coalition uses the motto, “We Build to Coexist, We Coexist to Build.”

“For 21 years, this faithful, cross-denominational coalition has represented the best of our county, and always finds a way to build, no matter the challenges,” said Coalition co-chair and Habitat board member, Henry Hene. “It was very rewarding to again be building side by side with this special homeowner who worked so hard to make a better life for the next generation.”  

“For more than two decades, this coalition has been a light in this community and a shining example of what people can do when they come together to improve lives,” said Jessica Gill, CEO, Habitat for Humanity of NW Metro Atlanta. “We are grateful for their unwavering dedication to our mission and bettering our community though stable and sustainable housing.” 

Cobb Interfaith Habitat Coalition

Cobb Interfaith Habitat Coalition

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Cobb school superintendent defends mask, COVID-19 policies

After coming under repeated attack for several weeks for not requiring masks, Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale made a lengthy and emphatic defense of that and other COVID-19 measures Thursday.

He took issue with what he said were false reports in the news media about school case figures, and showed a series of slides to illustrate how sharply infection numbers have been falling in the Cobb County School District.

Last week, the Cobb school district sent out a release showing that the case rate had dropped 44 percent since a peak in late August.

He also showed figures from a U.S. Centers for Disease Control study of elementary schools in Georgia conducted last school year—when Cobb schools had a mask mandate—concluding that “masks could not be said to be effective” at slowing the spread of COVID-19.

“We need to understand what is happening, why it is happening, and what will happen next. We need to understand our data and what it means,” he said during the school board’s Thursday night meeting.

“I felt it was time to get an accurate depiction of our data. When we are not presented with a forward-looking process, we will use our own data-driven process.”

He said his slide presentation would be posted on the Cobb school district website, but as of Friday afternoon that had not be done. Some of those slides are shown below.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

You can watch Ragsdale’s presentation in its entirety by clicking here; his remarks begin at the 1:07 mark.

“Good news today does not guarantee good news tomorrow,” he said, although Cobb school district data released Friday continues a downward trend.

Over the past week there have been 394 cases of COVID-19 among students and staff, the lowest single-week total since the school year began.

There are 13 active cases at Dickerson Middle School, down from 38 a week ago, and 11 cases have been reported at Eastvalley Elementary School.

No other school in East Cobb was in double figures this week, after previous outbreaks at several schools.

The district sent out a release late Friday indicating that the rate decrease is 62 percent since the peak five weeks ago.

In Cobb County the 14-day average of cases per 100,000 was at 605, according to Cobb and Douglas Public Health, well above the “high community spread” threshold of 100 cases but falling from more than 800 a few weeks ago.

Earlier this month Ragsdale was the only member of the Cobb Board of Health not to vote for a statement supporting universal masking in schools, as the CDC has recommended.

“This district will not be anti-mask,” Ragsdale said Thursday, adding that the current policy “strongly encourages” masks. Vaccinations are also encouraged, he said, but those will not be mandated either.

“We will not be requiring vaccinations to be employed in the Cobb County School District,” he said.

At the end of Ragsdale’s presentation—which was not specified on the school board’s meeting agenda in advance—the three Democratic members attempted to question him.

At a Thursday afternoon work session, the Democrats voted against adopting the evening meeting agenda because it mentioned nothing about COVID-19 policies.

When Republican board chairman Randy Scamihorn denied their requests to directly talk to Ragsdale, they walked out of the meeting room.

“We a get a surprise update and I think it would be nice to have a little Q and A,” board member Jaha Howard said to Scamihorn moments before. “Were you curious? Did you have questions? Because we’re hearing this for the first time.”

Ragsdale said he would be happy to talk to board members one-on-one about the data, but Howard pressed on for a public dialogue.

“The chair is not going to entertain questions at this time,” Scamihorn said. “Moving on . . .”

At that point, three Democratic members—Howard, Charisse Davis and Tre’ Hutchins—left the room, and Scamihorn paused. When he heard shouting from the back of the room, he slammed his gavel and said, “Dr. Howard, you’re out of order, sir.”

On her Facebook page, Davis, who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters, wrote about the incident, referencing earlier statements by Ragsdale and Scamihorn about anti-Semitic incidents at Pope and Lassiter high schools but that like the COVID issue wasn’t listed on the meeting agendas for a public board conversation:

“Yes, the three of ‘us’ board members walked out of the voting session. It was the second time today we were refused an opportunity to ask questions about some of the biggest things going on in the district right now: acts of hate in the schools and COVID. We represent the public, so if we cannot ask questions then I hope you understand why that’s a problem for YOU.”

She also posted a graphic that said the following:

“I am on a school board, where in the same meeting, leadership both condemned hate due to antisemitism and did not let Black board members ask questions.”

East Cobb News contacted Davis seeking further comment, including what questions she would have asked him if she were permitted.

“It seemed like a big mistake for the superintendent to not take questions about his data. You either stand by it or you don’t,” she said.

Davis remained out of the room when the four Republican members later voted 4-0 to approve $378,000 in funding for a new robotics lab at Wheeler, converting the original auditorium.

The motion to approve came from board member David Chastain, a Wheeler graduate.

Cobb schools will be on fall break next week.

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