Mt. Bethel to leave United Methodist Church; pastor staying on

Mt. Bethel UMC, Dr. Jody Ray
Dr. Jody Ray has been senior pastor at Mt. Bethel UMC since 2016.

Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church of East Cobb—the largest congregation in the North Georgia Conference—will be leaving the denomination.

Rustin Parsons, a lay leader of the 8,000-member church, said during a news conference Monday morning that Mt. Bethel was doing so over the North Georgia Conference’s decision to reassign senior pastor Dr. Jody Ray.

“We have begun the process to disaffiliate from the United Methodist Church,” Parsons said in reading a statement in the church sanctuary.

“It’s time for us to part ways with the denomination.”

Ray also said at the news conference (you can watch it and read statements here) that he is surrendering his credentials as an ordained minister in the UMC. He will continue serving Mt. Bethel as CEO and lead minister.

The announcements come a week after Mt. Bethel leadership said the church “is not in a position to receive a new senior minister at this time.”

Ray had been reassigned out of the ministry to a role with the North Georgia Conference staff in Atlanta involving racial reconciliation. The North Georgia Conference has 800 churches and more than 340,000 members, and every spring routinely reassigns clergy.

Steven Usry, the senior pastor at Sugarloaf UMC in Duluth, was appointed to succeed Ray at Mt. Bethel, starting in July. Usry was not mentioned at the Mt. Bethel news conference on Monday.

Parsons said that he was “dismayed” by the “abrupt” decision of Bishop Sue Haupert-Johnson of the North Georgia Conference to remove Ray from Mt. Bethel.

“Despite our repeated requests to reverse course, she has refused,” he said, “or provide a reason or rationale for her capricious action.

“We have no intention of accepting another pastor.”

Ray, who came to Mt. Bethel in 2016, said he was told by Haupert-Johnson on April 5 of the reassignment, and said that her “hasty and ill-conceived action” has “undermined her credibility with the people of Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church and jeopardized the health and vitality of this great congregation that is a beacon of hope and light in this community and beyond.”

More than 4,000 people signed a petition started last week by church leaders to oppose Ray’s reassignment.

He said he was not given a reason for his reassignment. In the United Methodist Church, ordained ministers are subject to what’s called the “itinerant ministry,” in which they are reassigned at the behest of the denomination.

“Unfortunately, my options were to accept the move, take a leave of absence, or surrender my credentials,” Ray said. “That’s not consultation, it is merely notification, and it violates both the spirit and letter of the covenants that bind us together.”

Bishop Sue Haupert-Johnson, North Georgia Conference UMC
Bishop Sue Haupert-Johnson

In a statement issued by the North Georgia Conference, Haupert-Johnson said that “while it is painful for any church or pastor to leave the denomination, there are protocols in place to allow clergy and congregations to depart. These protocols include having at least two-thirds of the congregation vote for disaffiliation and the regional governing body approving the measure.”

In a pastoral letter she issued on Monday, Haupert-Johnson said Ray hung up on the North Georgia Conference superintendent who called him about the reassignment, saying he was interested only in staying at Mt. Bethel.

With more than 12 million members, the UMC is the second-largest Protestant denomination in the United States, behind the Southern Baptist Convention.

Before the COVID pandemic, the United Methodist Church nationwide was in turmoil over a number of theological issues, including the ordination of gay and lesbian clergy.

The denomination was to have met in 2020 to begin a “Protocol for Reconciliation through Grace and Separation.” That process has been pushed back to 2022.

During his sermon last week, Ray addressed his children by saying that “your Daddy didn’t bow the knee, or kiss the ring, of progressive theology. . . . which is no theology.”

In her pastoral letter, Haupert-Johnson said Ray’s sermon “cast this as a ‘hostile takeover’ by an evil, ungodly woman bishop and denigrating The United Methodist Church.

“This reckless behavior has caused a great deal of pain to the congregation and threatens its covenant with The United Methodist Church.”

She further said that Mt. Bethel leaders:

“Refused to have any meaningful conversation, and instead threatened that $3-4 million would walk out of the church if they were not allowed to deviate from the appointive process and keep their pastor. When asked to further the consultation by submitting written concerns to the Cabinet, they gave no missional reasons against the appointment. The leaders wrote that they would withhold compensation, benefits and any reimbursement for a new pastor. They warned that upon his arrival the church, its ministries, and its school will ‘most certainly be unstable and likely hostile.’ “

Some UMC churches have made similar disaffiliation decisions as Mt. Bethel, including seven congregations in South Georgia last August.

In recent weeks Mt. Bethel, which is more than 175 years old, has changed some of its branding, calling itself “Mt. Bethel Church” on its website and social media channels.

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Cobb schools mask mandate lawsuit shifted to federal courts

A lawsuit filed by parents against the Cobb County School District for its face mask mandate has been moved to the federal court system.CCSD logo, Cobb 2018-19 school calendar

The district’s attorneys filed a notice of removal on Tuesday in Cobb Superior Court, where five parents had filed their lawsuit (you can read the notice and the suit by clicking here).

A hearing had been scheduled for Tuesday before Cobb Superior Court Judge James Bodiford before the notice of removal was filed.

The suit, filed on April 9, says the district’s mask mandate and contract tracing procedures violate students’ right to privacy under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, as well as the equal protection provisions of the 14th amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

Another claim by the plaintiffs about “separate but equal” treatment for students unable or unwilling to wear masks is “analogous” to the Brown v. Board of Education ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1954 that outlawed racial segregation in public schools, according to a filing by Brandon Moulard, the district’s attorney.

The lawsuit was filed against the seven members of the Cobb Board of Education and Superintendent Chris Ragsdale, who issued the mask mandate before the start of the 2020-21 school year, and seeks injunctive relief.

The suit has been shifted to the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, located in Atlanta.

In recent months some parents have been vocal about relaxing the mask mandate, and some spoke out at Thursday’s school board meeting.

One of them was John Hanson, the father of students in West Cobb schools and who is a plaintiff in the lawsuit.

“Please give families back our freedom to be treated equal when we choose not to wear a mask,” he said during a public comment period. “Please stop the toxic policy that’s infected our school district.”

Other parents asked the board and Ragsdale to consider relaxing the mandate for the next school year, but no announcement has been made about whether the policy will continue.

In its weekly COVID-19 case update on Friday, the Cobb school district announced 107 newly confirmed cases among students and staff, the lowest since early March.

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Cobb school district to undergo special review by accreditor

Cobb school board member Charisse Davis
Charisse Davis represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters on the Cobb Board of Education.

The Cobb County School District will undergo a special review by its accrediting agency at the request of three members of the Cobb Board of Education, who contend the board’s majority and superintendent have ignored their concerns on several academic and governance issues.

In a release issued Thursday night, the district said that Cognia, an Alpharetta-based accreditor, will conduct the special review, which centers on three matters.

In its release, the Cobb school district said that “determinations made through a Special Review Team can negatively impact college acceptance rates, college scholarships, enrollment, funding, and educator recruitment and retention, as occurred in Clayton and DeKalb counties in 2008 and 2011. Impacts can also negatively affect a county’s economy, property values, and bond credit ratings.”

Board members Charisse Davis, Jaha Howard and Tre’ Hutchins—all black Democrats—said they sent a letter in January to the full seven-member board and Superintendent Chris Ragsdale requesting a discussion on “early literacy, educator and employee support, and board governance training,” but never got a reply.

“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,” read the Jan. 21 letter by the three Democratic members, which the district included in its release.

Specifically, they wanted the board to discuss the following:

  • enhancing our governance training by bringing in a third party to help us navigate our differences for the sake of our students and staff
  • specific agenda items related to teacher and staff support and safety improvements during this pandemic
  • specific agenda items related to the study and expansion of targeted literacy interventions

Davis, Howard and Hutchins said in their letter to Cognia that their initial letter was completely ignored.

“While there are so many great things about CCSD, such as high SAT scores and graduation rates, we are also a district that has work to do,” their letter to Cognia continued. “We are grappling with many of the same challenges as other districts, including closing opportunity gaps for students, keeping staff and students safe, and adjusting to changing demographics. The most recent data from the GaDOE reports that over 45% of our 3rd grade students are reading below.”

The Cobb school district release also included a response by Ragsdale, who sent a lengthy letter to Cognia defending the district’s record on all three issues.

Ragsdale said he was “surprised and disappointed” to have heard about the complaints, which included others from unspecified parties.

“The communication I received from Cognia centered upon allegations of political disagreements and intra-personal behavior within the board of education,” Ragsdale wrote.

“While these are serious concerns, an unscheduled Special Review seems to be a very unusual response, particularly following the extension of our accreditation and the possible adverse effects of a Special Review to the District’s students, faculty, staff, and community. Given this, the District is taking this Special Review very seriously.”

Ragsdale said the district has met board governance training standards, but did not address the Democratic members’ request for a third-party intervention.

Of the literacy issues, Ragsdale said the Cobb school district “has successfully maintained continuity of learning and support for students through a variety of strategically planned, designed and implemented initiatives,” including during the COVID-19 pandemic.

He acknowledged that “we know there is room for growth and improvement in all areas, including Board governance. To that end, we have recently appointed a new interim general counsel with deep experience in accreditation and school board governance matters.”

In March, the board dismissed its longtime outside legal counsel and hired the Atlanta law firm of Nelson, Mullins, Riley & Scarborough, which had an attorney presiding over the school board’s meetings Thursday for the first time.

The board governance issues figure to loom large in the special review.

Howard and Davis—who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters—have clashed with the board’s four white Republican matters several times in their first two years in office.

In 2019, the board majority voted to ban board member comments during public meetings after Howard made remarks about non-school issues, including local and national politics.

In November, the four Republicans approved a policy change requiring a board majority to approve board member requests to place items on meeting agendas.

Davis and Howard pointed to that as evidence of being silenced. That issue, plus a vote to abolish a newly formed committee to examine school name changes, prompted Howard to accuse his Republican colleagues of “systemic racism.”

Davis and Howard also tried to press Ragsdale for details of a $12 million emergency board purchase of COVID-related safety products, including handwashing machines and UV disinfecting lights.

Hutchins joined the board in January.

In early 2019, Cognia—the successor organization to AdvancedEd and the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools—extended the Cobb school district’s accreditation through 2024.

There’s not a timeline for the review, the district release said.

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Cobb school superintendent proposes employee pay raise

Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale said Thursday that he is proposing a pay raise for all Cobb County School District employees.Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

During remarks at a Cobb Board of Education work session, he said employees will be getting pay raises between 4 and 8.5 percent.

The district staff on Thursday presented a proposed fiscal year 2022 budget of $1.5 billion, with tentative approval scheduled by the board Thursday night.

“In a time that not only do they need it, but also for morale,” Ragsdale said in his remarks about the proposed pay raise.

All employees—around 18,000 in all—will get a baseline 4 percent raise, with those eligible for STEP increases receiving more, depending on their status and length of service.

He said the funding would not come from “one-time money”—a reference to $182 million in new federal CARES Act funding that is coming to the Cobb school district.

“We are confident that this is going to be financially sustainable moving forward,” Ragsdale said.

Brad Johnson, the district’s Chief Financial Officer, said more budget details will be released Friday on the district’s website.

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East Cobb food scores: Red Sky; La Madeleine; Johnny’s Pizza; more

Red Sky Tapas and Bar, East Cobb food scores

The following East Cobb food scores for the week of April 19 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

La Madeleine
4101 Roswell Road, Suite 812
April 20, 2021 Score: 90, Grade: A

Red Sky Tapas & Bar
1255 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 16
April 21, 2021 Score: 99, Grade: A

Johnny’s New York Style Pizza
4880 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 155
April 23, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

Rosa’s Pizza
3605 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 110
April 22, 2021 Score: 80, Grade: B

Scooter’s Cafe
2943 Canton Road
April 22, 2021 Score: 97, Grade: A

Taco Bell
2169 Roswell Road
April 20, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

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East Cobb Church launches ‘Revitalize JOSH’ rezoning campaign

East Cobb Church Revitalize JOSH
A new rendering of the proposed East Cobb Church parking area includes greenery fronting Shallowford Road.

With its rezoning case held until May, East Cobb Church has launched a new website to advocate for its redevelopment plans that have changed yet again.

“Revitalize JOSH” is the name of the renewed effort supporting plans for a church, residential and retail complex at the southwest corner of Johnson Ferry and Shallowford roads.

The Cobb Planning Commission voted to hold the case until its May 4 meeting. The new proposal alters the residential mix. Initially most units were to have been townhomes, but they’re now with 55 percent of the 110 units, with the other 45 percent being single-family detached homes bordering an adjacent subdivision.

East Cobb Church is planning to sell the residential portion of the 33-acre tract to a developer if the rezoning is approved, and both entities would work together to create community space that includes a park on Shallowford Road, greenspace around a proposed creek where a lake once stood, and jogging trails to connect the adjoining Marlanta neighborhood.

There’s also a parking deck and area for 900 spots, which East Cobb Church says will be mostly below street level (rendering at top of this post) and will be shielded by a wall and greenery.

At the April Planning Commission meeting, several nearby residents objected to density and traffic issues, and commission members voted to delay for more updated information.

The new website has outlines of those plans along with renderings and links to a traffic study, but as of yet there’s nothing new in the Cobb Zoning Office files.

Kevin Moore, an attorney for the applicant, said through a spokeswoman for the East Cobb Church plans that a new site plan was submitted on Tuesday.

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Tentative FY ’22 budget, bus purchases on Cobb school board agenda

The Cobb Board of Education will be asked Thursday to tentatively adopt a fiscal year 2022 budget in order to schedule public hearings before a formal vote in June.CCSD logo, Cobb 2018-19 school calendar

That tentative approval is scheduled for Thursday’s board business meeting at 7 p.m., and also will be discussed at a board work session that starts at 2 p.m. Thursday.

(You can read the agendas for both meetings by clicking here.)

The district’s finance office included in the agenda a summary of a $1.5 billion budget request for fiscal year 2022, which begins in July 1.

However, the projected revenues in the summary total $ 1.46 billion.

The Cobb school board typically adopts budgets in May, but required public hearings have not yet been scheduled.

The scheduled date for board adoption is June 10.

Last year, the board adopted several short-term budgets until August because of uncertainty over finances due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The current FY 2021 budget of $1.3 billion includes using $31 million in reserve funds. That was due primarily to state education spending cuts.

The Cobb County School District gets roughly half of its funding from the state.

The school board also will be asked to approve spending $5.78 million in current Ed-SPLOST V funds to purchase 52 new school buses with air conditioning.

During the work session, Superintendent Chris Ragsdale will discuss the district’s learning recovery plan, something numerous school districts have been implementing since COVID-19.

After the work session, the board will hold an executive session.

During the night meeting, Wheeler High School students said they will be speaking during the public comment period. They will be presenting a PowerPoint about research they’ve done on the topic, and according to group member Caroline Hugh, “it will also be very timely, considering the verdict on the Derek Chauvin case.”

That’s a reference to the Minneapolis police officer who was convicted Tuesday for the murder of George Floyd last May.

The name change initiative started last summer, with those favoring the change saying Joseph Wheeler, a Confederate Civil War general, is not an appropriate namesake for what’s become one of the most diverse high schools in the county.

Parents advocating a campus rebuild for Sprayberry High School also are planning at speaking at tomorrow’s meetings.

In-person attendance at the board meetings is limited to district staff and public speakers. Both public meetings will be livestreamed here and can be seen on Comcast Cable channel 24.

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Wheeler, Lassiter students earn National Merit Scholarship

East Cobb National Merit Scholarship Program

The first of the Class of 2021 National Merit Scholarships have been announced, and two students from East Cobb are among the 1,000 recipients.

These are corporate-sponsored scholarships financed by 140 corporations, company foundations, and other business organizations.

The recipients are children of company employees or residents in communities served by those companies, or who plan to pursue college majors or careers the sponsor wishes to encourage.

The scholarships range from $1,000 to $10,000.

Vishaal Kareti of Wheeler High School, who is interested in studying computer science, is the recipient of a Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation, Inc. compnay scholarship,

Victoria Ann Dutkiewicz, whose career field is undecided, has earned a James E. Casey Scholarship, which goes to children of United Parcel Service employees.

The National Merit Scholarship Corporation will name more recipients in May, June and July.

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Richardson to hold women’s self-defense class at East Cobb Park

Richardson self-defense class

Submitted information:

In honor of Sexual Assault Awareness and Prevention Month, District Two Commissioner Jerica Richardson is hosting a women’s self-defense class and fundraiser 10 a.m.-noon, Saturday, April 24, at East Cobb Park. The class will be taught by A.C.T. Women’s Self-Defense and Chi Budo Kwon Martial Arts. Each participant should complete registration, have a partner (if possible), wear a mask and comfortable clothes and bring water. To register, click here. East Cobb Park is located at 3322 Roswell Road, Marietta.

The Cobb based nonprofit LiveSafe Resources provides help for sexual assault and domestic abuse survivors. To donate to this worthy cause, visit livesaferesources.org/donate.

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Mt. Bethel UMC opposing reassignment of senior pastor

Dr. Jody Ray, Mt. Bethel UMC senior pastor
Dr. Jody Ray, Mt. Bethel UMC senior pastor, during his sermon on Sunday.

UPDATED, MONDAY, APRIL 26: Mt. Bethel announced it is leaving the United Methodist Church, and senior pastor Dr. Jody Ray is surrendering his credentials as an ordained minister in the denomination.

ORIGINAL STORY:

A new senior pastor has been appointed for Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church in East Cobb, but the congregation’s leadership announced Sunday it is opposing the move.

A posting on the church’s Facebook page said that the church is informing Sue Haupert-Johnson, the bishop of the North Georgia Conference of the United Methodist Church, that Mt. Bethel “is not in a position to receive a new senior minister at this time.”

Dr. Jody Ray, Mt. Bethel’s senior pastor since May 2016, was among those reassigned in North Georgia Conference changes formally announced on Monday in what’s called “Clergy Move Day.”

Around 70 clergy were reassigned by the North Georgia Conference, which has 800 churches and more than 340,000 members.

Sybil Davidson, a spokeswoman for the Conference, told East Cobb News that reassignments are made every spring and that this is a lower figure than normal.

Appointed to succeed Ray, who was reassigned to a non-preaching position with the Conference staff in Atlanta, is Steven Usry, the senior pastor at Sugarloaf UMC in Duluth. The appointments are effective July 1, according to the North Georgia Conference.

Mt. Bethel is one of the largest churches in Cobb County with around 8,000 members and is the largest congregation in the North Georgia Conference.

“It’s always hard on congregations to lose a beloved pastor,” Davidson said, but that the appointment of Usry to Mt. Bethel stands.

East Cobb News has left messages with Mt. Bethel seeking comment.

The Mt. Bethel Staff Parish Relations Committee and Administrative Council are urging members to read and sign a petition “that affirms the SPRC’s and Administrative Council’s position. Our goal is to have as many signatures as possible by 5pm on Tuesday, April 20 – time is of the essence.”

More than 3,300 people have signed the petition, which says that having a new senior pastor would be too disruptive as Mt. Bethel is only recently returning to in-person services due to the COVID-19 pandemic and that “it is no secret these are very fragile times for our denomination.”

The United Methodist Church was scheduled last year to begin implementing a “Protocol for Reconciliation through Grace and Separation.”

That’s a formal split in the second-largest Protestant denomination in the U.S., in which some churches would pull away over theological differences, including issues involving the ordination of gay and lesbian clergy and allowing same-sex marriage.

The UMC has delayed taking up the Protocol until its 2022 General Conference. Here’s more about the issue from Christianity Today.

During an emotional sermon on Sunday (you can watch it here), Ray announced that he declined his new appointment, and that the North Georgia Conference has not offered him another position.

“To those who helped orchestrate the events of today, I want you to know forgive you and I love you,” said Ray, who was stopped several times by applause.

He also directed a message from the pulpit to his family, saying, “I want you also to remember this day, that your Daddy didn’t bow the knee, or kiss the ring, of progressive theology. . . . which is no theology.”

With that, the audience gave him a standing ovation.

The Mt. Bethel petition indicated that “in the spirit of that Protocol, people of theologically diverse opinions and goodwill are striving hard not to disrupt the mission and ministries of those with whom they disagree. We, the people of Mt. Bethel UMC, are honoring that spirit in word and deed.

“So, in light of the challenges of the pandemic and in anticipation of an orderly and amicable separation of the United Methodist Church, we feel strongly that this is not the time for disruptive change in the senior leadership of our church.”

Mt. Bethel, which also oversees the K-12 Mt Bethel Academy on two campuses in East Cobb, employs around 300 people.

 

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Cobb Chamber of Commerce names 2021 top small businesses

Janice Overbeck, Emory ALS research
Among the Top 30 Cobb Chamber small businesses for 2021 is the East Cobb-based Janice Overbeck Real Estate Team.

Submitted information:

Cobb County is home to some of Georgia’s most successful small businesses. As a pro-business advocacy and economic development organization, the Cobb Chamber is committed to exceeding the needs of small business owners and helping them to be successful. Each year, since starting this program in 1982, the Cobb Chamber celebrates the achievements of small businesses that contribute to the vitality of the community with the announcement of its Top 25 Small Businesses of the Year. For 2021, the Chamber is expanding the Small Business of the Year awards to a Top 30 Small Businesses of the Year.

“In the past year, Cobb’s small businesses have shown such resilience and innovation, we felt it was only fitting to expand our Small Business of the Year awards to include a Top 30,” said Sharon Mason. “Small businesses play such an important role in the health of Cobb’s economy and in a year of recovery, we wanted to show our support to local entrepreneurs and small business owners even more. We look forward to recognizing our Top 30 Small Businesses this year.”

The Cobb Chamber is proud to honor the following businesses as its 2021 Top 30 Small Businesses of the Year:

41South Creative Innovation Compounding
All Roof Solutions, Inc. InPrime Legal
AQC Traffic Control Services, LLC Manay CPA, Inc.
CFO Navigator Mills Specialty Metals, LLC
CROFT & Associates Powers Electrical Solutions, Inc.
Darden & Company Priority Jet, LLC
Deluxe Athletics, LLC Prodew, Inc.
DynamiX RE/MAX PURE
Eclipse Networks SK Commercial Realty
Four Hats, Inc. SpeedPro Marietta
Georgia Trade School The Janice Overbeck Real Estate Team
Governors Gun Club The Partnership of Atlanta, Inc.
GreenMellen The UPS Store Smyrna
Henry’s Louisiana Grill, Inc. Win-Tech, Inc.
HR Knowledge Source Yalo!

An overall winner will be selected among the Top 30 and announced on May 10 at the Marquee Monday, presented by Superior Plumbing Small Business of the Year awards luncheon at the Coca-Cola Roxy Theatre. The top winner is determined by a thorough selection process including applications and site visits by a panel of outside judges. The luncheon will honor the Top 30 Small Businesses of the Year and the Small Business Hall of Fame inductees.

Additionally, the Cobb Chamber’s Small Business of the Year awards program includes recognition for the impressive accomplishments of many new Cobb businesses and startups with the Businesses To Watch awards. These are businesses that have launched three years ago or less and have already achieved substantial growth.

The 2021 Businesses To Watch are:

  • Abernathy Ditzel Hendrick Bryce, LLC
  • American Axes
  • Neighborhood Cuisine & Provisions
  • The Dwell Collective

Tickets to the luncheon are $35 for members and are $45 for general admission. Visit www.cobbchamber.org/SBOY for more information and event registration.

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Thomas Eye Group East Cobb to hold pediatric event

Thomas Eye Group East Cobb

Submitted information:

Thomas Eye Group is happy to open our newest location in East Cobb at 4343 Shallowford Rd., Bldg. 500, Suite 510, Marietta, GA 30062. In an effort to be a full family practice, we are announcing two events focused on pediatric eye care. Special events will be held on Friday, April 23, and Friday, May 7, with Christina Locke, O.D at our Thomas Eye Group, East Cobb location where pediatric patients (ages 4+) will be eligible to receive a comprehensive eye exam.

“Pediatric eye health is imperative in helping kids succeed, says Dr. Locke, O.D. When children have trouble with vision, they can easily be misdiagnosed. We hope during our two separate events, we can provide eye exams to the East Cobb community and become their go-to for family eye care.

This event is by appointment only and as an added bonus all attendees will receive 50% off their complete second pair of glasses in our Optical Shop! Please visit our website at https://www.thomaseye.com/event.htm to make an appointment or call:

We ask all attendees to please wear a mask and practice social distancing.

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Parents sue Cobb County School District over mask mandate

Five parents with students in the Cobb County School District have filed a lawsuit against the district’s face mask mandate.Campbell High School lockdown

The suit, filed April 9 in Cobb Superior Court, claims that the district’s mandate, which was announced before the start of the current school year, “has arbitrarily and capriciously segregated the student population.”

The mandate, which applies to all students, teachers and other staff working on school campuses, has effectively created two “separate, but unequal” learning environments, one in-person, and one virtual, according to the lawsuit.

(You can read it here.)

The suit, which names Superintendent Chris Ragsdale and the seven members of the Cobb County Board of Education as defendants, also alleges that the district’s contact tracing procedures are an invasion of privacy and violate federal health privacy laws.

The plaintiffs—listed as Caryn Sonderman, Matt Gill, Andrei Marcu, Gretchen Brochard and Erin White—are seeking a temporary restraining order against the mandate and a hearing has been scheduled for Tuesday at 11 a.m. before Senior Presiding Judge James Bodiford in Cobb Superior Court.

Ragsdale announced the mask mandate last July, after initially saying masks would be “highly recommended.”

The plaintiffs claim that masks don’t work, saying it’s a “scientifically baseless ‘solution’ that is pure political theater and harms children in its own way.”

Affidavits signed by the plaintiffs claim their children have been adversely affected by having to wear masks when attending classes in-person.

They include a student at Walton High School whom, the lawsuit claims, has been able to attend classes on campus only a couple weeks this school year. The masks constrict the breathing of the student, who has ADHD.

Another student at Wheeler High School has found it “difficult to breathe” wearing a mask throughout the school day and “has developed cynicism at 15 years old” and distrust of adults at the school.

A kindergarten student at Timber Ridge Elementary School also has complained of not being able to breathe, according to a parental affidavit filed with the lawsuit.

The lawsuit is being filed with about a month left in the 2020-21 school year.

The Cobb school year began all-virtual in August due to high COVID-19 case figures, which prompted protests by parents. An incremental classroom return began in October.

The final days of the fall semester also went all-online in November with another case surge, but the spring semester began in hybrid fashion in January.

Some teachers and parents pleaded for an all-virtual return after three Cobb school teachers died in December and January from COVID-19.

More recently, some Cobb parents have been speaking out against the mask mandate, including the mother of four students in East Cobb schools who organized the protest against the all-virtual start to the school year.

Amy Henry told the school board last month that “we’re putting on a show and denying our children in the process” by requiring students who attend classes in person to wear masks at all times.

“They need to have a normal childhood,” she said. “We’re teaching them that they’re dirty. We’re creating a fearful environment that for these kids cannot be normal.”

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Group pushing Sprayberry HS rebuild to hold campus rally

The “Rebuild Sprayberry High School” group we first reported on last week has already had one rally for its cause. Rebuild Sprayberry rally

Another comes on Sunday at 3 p.m. at the campus (2525 Sandy Plains Road), and it’s expected to last an hour.

Organizer Sharona Sandberg said participants will then go to the Sandy Plains-East Piedmont Road intersection and hold signs and banners for motorists to see until 5 p.m.

There’s going to be bottled water and pizza for attendees, and here are some of the ground rules if you plan to come:

If you want to park in the front of the school (there are approx. 55+ spaces up front) you need to arrive by 2:30 p.m at. the latest as we will be closing off the entrance for the Rally to begin and to serve the food.

The main parking lot (behind the school) will be open with plenty of spaces for all!

The community group is advocating for a rebuild of the 48-year-old campus if a new SPLOST referendum passes later this year.

The Cobb County School District is currently developing a tentative project list that will be finalized later in the year. Sprayberry principal Sara Griffin has submitted a request for a classroom building rebuild.

The Sprayberry advocates say their school has been overlooked when it comes to new facilities, especially compared to other East Cobb high schools. The say renovations that have taken place for many years have amounted to “lipstick on a pig,” which has inspired the t-shirts like the one above.

Sprayberry has been slated for a new gym and career training center in the current SPLOST, and an architect was approved in late 2018. But there has been no announcement about when construction will begin.

The group has organized on Facebook and will be providing further updates there on Sunday’s rally, and other activities.

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Cobb COVID-19 deaths near 1,000; more than 200 in East Cobb

Cobb COVID deaths near 1,000
For more Cobb COVID data, click here: Source: Cobb and Douglas Public Health

As of Friday afternoon there have been 940 confirmed deaths from COVID-19 in Cobb County since the pandemic began in March 2020, according to the Georgia Department of Public Health, which also has listed 77 probable deaths in its latest daily status report.

As has been the case for most of the pandemic, the COVID-19 deaths have largely occurred in older people. Cobb and Douglas Public Health’s latest data shows that 42.2 percent of the deaths have been people 80 and older; 304. percent are between ages 70-79; and 14.5 percent are between 60-69.

There have been 217 COVID-19 deaths in East Cobb ZIP Codes, according to the latest CDPH data, but that’s not broken down by age:

  • 30066: 4,316 cases; 57 deaths
  • 30062: 4,535 cases; 56 deaths
  • 30068: 2,489 cases; 64 deaths
  • 30067: 3,643 cases; 36 deaths
  • Totals: 15,580 cases; 217 deaths

Dr. Janet Memark, director of Cobb and Douglas Public Health, said in an updated message on Friday that while case rates are going down in the county, the public must continue to be vigilant.

Georgia DPH data as of Friday indicated that the 14-day average of PCR tests per 100,000 people in Cobb is at 126, close to the definition of “high community spread” threshold of 100 cases per 100,000.

But as school students in Cobb returned to classes this week, she said there figures to be a bump in those and similar metrics.

The British variant B.1.1.7. makes up about 45 percent of Cobb’s cases, a doubling from the last couple of weeks, she said.

That variant, one of three that’s been discovered in Cobb, is more transmissable, and is affecting younger age groups (30-50 in Michigan, where there’s another COVID-19 wave taking place).

“It may not be as deadly,” she said, perhaps because it’s not significantly affecting older people, one of the primary groups to be vaccinated.

“We’re not done yet,” Memark said. “If you are not vaccinated, you are still at risk. We still cannot gather with large groups of people yet. You cannot be risking high-risk folks that can’t get vaccinated.

“We’ve got to keep wearing our masks when we go out in public because not everybody’s vaccinated.”

She said 17 percent of Cobb’s more than 760,000 residents have been fully vaccinated, meaning that 83 percent have not. To reach herd immunity, Memark said, “that number’s got to flip.”

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East Cobb restaurant update: gusto! opening slated for summer

Gusto East Cobb summer opening

We got an update from a representative of the forthcoming gusto! casual eatery at Parkaire Landing Shopping Center, who says the opening is generally slated for the summer.

There’s not a date or more specific time range that’s been announced, and initial renovations are underway.

gusto! (it’s smaller case g) will occupy the former space of Moe’s Southwest Grill (688 Johnson Ferry Road), which closed in November.

The Atlanta-based chain, which has seven other locations, is making its foray into East Cobb. The menu includes salads, bowls and wraps, many with Tex-Mex ingredients. Here are more details about what you’ll be able to order:

“a choice of four base options: crisp mixed greens, seasoned brown rice, half and half or a steamed flatbread wrap topped with a grilled protein (such as grilled chicken, umami tofu, shrimp or new baby bellas) and a gusto! – a signature flavor profile, with choices including chipotle mango avocado, ginger lime peanut, chile sesame barbeque, tahini cucumber feta, sweet soy sriracha and tzatziki lemon artichoke. Each order comes with house-made sweet potato chips and in addition to the traditional menu, gusto! East Cobb will offer family meal and meal prep options along with catering.”

The gusto! East Cobb spot will have outdoor dining and “limited indoor dining” when it opens, and will be the second such location with drive-through ordering.

The hours will be Sunday from 10:30 AM to 10PM for lunch and dinner, and delivery will be availalble through select third-party partners.

“Our goal is to truly permeate the community and its subcultures within sports, churches, schools and beyond. We look forward to representing something different and becoming ingrained as an East Cobber brand,” gusto! founder Nate Hybl said.

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East Cobb food scores: Righteous ‘Que; Minas Emporium; more

Righteous Que, East Cobb food scores

The following East Cobb food scores for the week of April 12 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Bells Ferry Elementary School
2600 Bells Ferry Road
April 12, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

East Valley Elementary School
2570 Lower Roswell Road
April 14, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

Jersey Mike’s Subs
4400 Roswell Road, Suite 148
April 12, 2021 Score: 94, Grade: A

Manorcare Rehabilitation Center
4360 Johnson Ferry Place
April 14, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

Minas Emporium
2555 Delk Road, Suite B4
April 12, 2021 Score: 86, Grade: B

The Place
700 Sand Plains Road, Suite A-1
April 13, 2021 Score: 96, Grade: A

Righteous ‘Que
1050 E. Piedmont Road, Suite 136-140
April 14, 2021 Score: 94, Grade: A

Sabores de Mexico
1951 Canton Road, Suite 330
April 13, 2021 Score: 85, Grade: B

Sunrise at East Cobb
1551 Johnson Ferry Road
April 12, 2021 Score: 85, Grade: B

Wendy’s
2238 Roswell Road
April 15, 2021 Score: 91, Grade: A

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East Cobb Cityhood leaders stress message of ‘local control’

East Cobb Cityhood leaders
State Reps. Sharon Cooper and Matt Dollar have co-sponsored a new East Cobb Cityhood bill.

In their first interaction with the public, leaders of the revived East Cobb Cityhood movement on Wednesday stressed the importance of local control, especially when it comes to zoning and development matters.

During a virtual town hall meeting, cityhood legislation sponsors and members of the East Cobb Cityhood Committee took pre-screened questions from the public and sent out a survey for further feedback.

The committee also released biographical details about the cityhood committee members.

“It’s really about self-determination,” said State Rep. Matt Dollar, who introduced a cityhood bill before the end of the 2021 session. “If people in the cities of Marietta and Smyrna have that right, then the citizens of East Cobb should have that right as well.”

Much of the conversation revolved around the pro-cityhood theme of “preservation” of what’s been established in East Cobb—single family homes, limited density and quality-of-life amenities—as other areas of the county are becoming more urbanized and feature mixed-use developments.

“If people want density, they can go to the Cumberland area or Smyrna,” Dollar said. “People in East Cobb live here because they want the suburban lifestyle. They don’t want density.”

Former Cobb school board member Scott Sweeney, a member of the cityhood committee, added that it’s important for East Cobbers to protect “what’s in our back yard.”

The legislation sponsored by Dollar and State Rep. Sharon Cooper—both East Cobb Republicans—is vastly different from a 2019 bill he introduced and that she was lukewarm to support.

Cooper, who said last October she thought the cityhood issue was dead, said that some other Cobb cityhood bills introduced this year—in Lost Mountain and Vinings—also have been spurred by concerns over density.

The five-member Cobb Board of Commissioners, which represents nearly 800,000 people, is currently grasping with major redevelopment cases in East Cobb, including the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford and Sprayberry Crossing areas, that have drawn community opposition.

A city of East Cobb, Cooper argued, “would be people from our neighborhoods, people we live with, making those zoning decisions.”

The new effort scales down the size of the proposed city of East Cobb from more than 100,000 to about 55,000, mainly along the Johnson Ferry Road corridor.

Dollar said feeback he received from 2019 indicated that the initial boundaries were too big, and didn’t lend themselves for a clear community identity.

The new bill calls for a six-member city council, with a mayor and vice mayor to be chosen every other year by the council.

While the 2019 East Cobb cityhood bill would have called for police and fire services, the new legislation is what’s called “city light” and includes planning and zoning, code enforcement and parks and recreation.

Dollar said the “hope here is to be revenue neutral,” meaning no millage rate would need to be established.

“It’s a very stable tax base with light services,” he said. “It is not an expensive endeavor.”

Still, some of the questions addressed at the town hall were over whether a new city would create another layer of government.

Dollar disagreed, saying it was a “shift” in selected services.

The other proposed services, code enforcement and parks and recreation, weren’t discussed much.

There was a mention of the former in reference to the Tokyo Valentino adult retail store that opened on Johnson Ferry Road last summer, and that now tied up in the courts as Cobb County is trying to shut it down.

Dollar said adding parks and recreation “seemed like a good fit,” noting that they’re services offered in the newer cities of Milton and Brookhaven.

The cityhood leaders also said Wednesday that a new financial feasibility study conducted by researchers at Georgia State University will cost an estimated $22,000 and will be ready by July.

Dollar said that what’s happening now is just the beginning of a process, that there’s plenty of time before the 2022 legislative session. The Georgia General Assembly would have to pass the cityhood bill before it would come up for a local referendum next November.

“What I ask people, whether you’re for [cityhood] or against it, is just to keep an open mind,”  Dollar said.

Anyone interested in completing the cityhood survey can do so by clicking here.

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Marietta City Council denies Powers Ferry rezoning requests

Nexus Gardens
A rendering of the proposed Nexus Gardens project on Powers Ferry Road, south of the Marietta Loop.

After months of delays and a torrent of opposition from nearby residents, the Marietta City Council on Wednesday quickly nixed two proposed redevelopment projects in the Powers Ferry Road with little discussion.

By unanimous 7-0 votes, the council rejected rezoning requests by Nexus Gardens and Nexus Marietta for a mixed-use and housing developments, respectively, along either side of the South Marietta Parkway.

The projects would have been built by Macauley Investments, an Atlanta developer, on assembled land parcels owned by real estate investor Ruben McMullan and his related interests.

Several times the rezoning requests were tabled or otherwise delayed, including last month, after the Marietta Planning Commission voted to recommend denial.

Residents who turned out for the meeting implored the council beforehand to reject the rezonings, saying they’re too dense, provide access through their narrow neighborhood streets and will devastate their quality of life.

The Nexus Gardens project, according to Anna Holladay, a resident of nearby Virginia Place, “will ruin the lives of everyone in this neighborhood.”

Cloverdale Heights resident Brian Peters, who lives near the proposed Laurel Park residential project, said he moved from Buckhead a decade ago to to escape “runaway development” and was aghast he was fighting it in Marietta.

“We’ve had enough,” Peters said, referring to the constant delays in the rezoning case. “We’re pushing back. End of story.”

Before Wednesday’s council meeting, Kevin Moore, an attorney for both projects, submitted a revised plan for Laurel Park, scaling down what had been a mainly townhome project of 204 units to 134 units, with 84 townhomes and 50 single-family homes.

He said the Loop corridor between Roswell Road and Interstate 75 hasn’t seen new development in 50 years. The Nexus Gardens project, Moore said, is an opportunity that “would be fantastic for the city and fantastic for the nearby community.”

In addition to the density of the Nexus Marietta project—two five-story apartment buildings totalling 280 units served by a three-story parking deck, a five-story senior-living building with 160 units, 39 townhomes and restaurants and retail space—nearby residents in unincorporated Cobb objected to a single point of access, along Meadowbrook Lane.

City council members were unconvinced of Moore’s claim. Michelle Cooper-Kelly, whose district includes the Nexus Gardens land, told residents that “you guys came together as a community. You’re doing exactly what democracy is designed to do.”

After acknowledging the heavy amount of e-mails she received about that rezoning case, Cooper-Kelly said that “I don’t think this project is right for this community.”

She made a motion to deny the request, and the vote was unanimous with no further discussion.

Council member Joseph Goldstein, whose district includes the Laurel Park property, said even less, commenting that the rezoning proposal was inappropriate” as he made a motion for denial.

None of his other colleagues offered comments before the vote.

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Cobb senior centers to reopen; food distribution program ending

East Cobb Senior Center
Submitted information:

Cobb Senior Services announced that it is planning to welcome more seniors back into its centers. Effective Monday, April 19, the centers will operate Monday thru Friday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m., and add more ongoing activities such as, but not limited to, billiards, table tennis, bridge, needlework and woodcarving. Additionally, the gyms at all five multipurpose centers will be open once again.

NOTE: Registration is still required to participate in all activities, including gym usage. Please visit the center’s pages for listings of added ongoing activities through https://www.CobbSeniors.org.

On Monday, May 3, registration for Spring classes will open with classes beginning May 10. A list of classes offered at the centers may be found on each center’s page beginning Friday, April 16. Please note that registration for classes and all activities is only available by telephone or online using My Active Center. If you do not have an account with MAC, please call the center near you for assistance.

For your safety, the following protocols will remain in place:

  • Masks are required to be worn inside all CSS facilities, except when actively exercising
  • Your temperature will be screened upon arrival
  • COVID-related questions will be asked upon arrival
  • Water fountains and bottle fillers are closed

Please contact Senior Services at 770-528-5355 or CobbSeniors@cobbcounty.org. If you have any questions, updated information may be found at https://www.CobbSeniors.org.

Also:

Cobb Senior Services is hosting its last food distribution event from 11 a.m. to noon (or while supplies last) Friday, April 16. Residents age 60 and older are encouraged to get shelf stable food at Cobb Senior Services, 1150 Powder Springs St., Marietta. An ID showing date of birth and Cobb County home address for each senior is required upon arrival. No appointment is needed.

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