Cobb DOT accepting comments on Lower Roswell Road project

Lower Roswell Road project
For a larger view click here. Source: Cobb DOT

Submitted information:

The Cobb County Department of Transportation is hosting an open house web page to inform the public, take input and answer questions concerning planned improvements on Lower Roswell Road through April 30. Please note there is no scheduled event or presentation related to this open house.

The page, located at https://www.cobbcounty.org/lower-roswell, includes detailed information about the construction to provide safety and operational improvements to Lower Roswell Road from Woodlawn Drive to Davidson Road through a combination of intersection improvements, a raised median, bicycle lanes and sidewalks. The project is paid for through the 2011 Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax.

Comments and questions regarding this project should be submitted in writing to karyn.matthews@cobbcounty.org or mailed to Cobb DOT, Attn: Lower Roswell Road Project No. E6020, 1890 County Services Parkway, Marietta, GA 30008. For hand written comments, please download the optional comment card here: https://s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/…/E6020_Lower_Rowell….

Lower Roswell Road virtual open house

The purpose of this virtual open house is to provide the public with an opportunity to view the concept being advanced and to express their interest and questions. The information provided below is the same as would be provided at an in-person open house. This information will be available for review through April 30, 2021.  Please note that there is no scheduled event or presentation related to this open house.Comments and questions regarding this project should be submitted in writing to karyn.matthews@cobbcounty.org or mailed to Cobb DOT, Attn: Lower Roswell Road Project No. E6020, 1890 County Services Parkway, Marietta, GA 30008.  For hand written comments, please download the optional comment card.

The deadline for comments is April 30, 2021.

Offline materials will be made available to the public for pick up at the East Cobb Library, 4880 Lower Roswell Rd suite 510-B, Marietta, GA 30068 through April 30, 2021. This packet will include a letter thanking the public for their interest and providing details on how to submit comments, the project fact sheet, a hard copy of the concept (11×17), and an open-comment card. The public can obtain the information packet during normal library hours. These materials are also available for download below. Please note that the East Cobb Library has limited operational hours due to the pandemic. Please call 770-509-2730 to verify library hours of operation.

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Q & A: Rep. Matt Dollar, sponsor of East Cobb Cityhood bill

East Cobb candidates forum cityhood

Late last week East Cobb News conducted an interview with State Rep. Matt Dollar, an East Cobb Republican who for the second time is sponsoring a cityhood bill for a portion of East Cobb.

His bill will be taken up in the 2022 session of the Georgia General Assembly, and if it passes the legislature, a referendum would be held in November 2022 of registered voters within the proposed city boundaries on whether to create a City of East Cobb.

(You can read through the full text of HB 841 by clicking here.)

He said this renewed initiative is stronger than the 2019 effort, which East Cobb Cityhood leaders later abandoned after several town hall meetings and a public forum that included an opposition group.

(You can read previous stories on our Cityhood resource page.)

There are numerous changes from the 2019 bill, from services (planning and zoning, code enforcement and parks and recreation) to the form of government (weak mayor-city council) to the size a City of East Cobb (around 55,000).

The revamped East Cobb Cityhood group is having a virtual town hall with its leaders and Dollar on April 14.

Before answering our questions, Dollar prefaced his remarks:

“One of the biggest things I’m addressing right now for people with questions—most think this is the same ballot initiative as last time.

“Based on feedback from the last two years, there is a new map, a new city-lite model, and new governance framework. There is a new group leading the effort, committed to educating the voters, and leaving no questions unanswered.  

“People want to know if this will raise taxes. The feasibility study will be completed in the next few months. I am very confident it will come back as being tax neutral to homeowners.

“The cost to cover the limited services of code enforcement, parks, and zoning, will be very minimal. And our tax base is extremely strong. 

“Additionally, moving forward the council cannot raise the tax rate (millage rate) without a vote and approval of majority of registered voters in the city. This is a much higher threshold than just a simple majority of those that vote.     

“From the map, to transparency, to even the ballot question—the new effort and bill address every major concern that was previously voiced.”

What follows is from an e-mail exchange between Dollar and East Cobb News that’s been lightly edited for style.

ECN: Why are the city boundaries so different from two years ago? This looks like most of the Walton attendance zone with areas west—including most of the Wheeler attendance zone—taken out. This doesn’t impact the schools but some readers have been wondering.

Dollar: The map is a result of two years of feedback and input from the community. People wanted a more cohesive map, and many felt the proposed city was too large.

This map doesn’t go as far south, west, or north as the last proposed map. The eastern border is still the same, the county line.

When I asked people “where is East Cobb?” the area most mentioned was the Johnson Ferry corridor. This map starts at Johnson Ferry where it crosses the river, and stops at the top end of Johnson Ferry at Shallowford Road. Johnson Ferry runs almost exactly down the center of the map. And I find this very interesting. If you look on Google Maps, the label “East Cobb” sits on the intersection of Johnson Ferry and Roswell Road. That intersection is located in the direct center of the proposed map.

This map is very compact, cohesive, with clean boundaries.

Why the change from a mayor-council form of government that was in the 2019 bill to the six-member council format with a mayor chosen by a majority vote?

I think the objective of cityhood is to keep East Cobb as unchanged as possible. With the authority spread out over a city council and a weak mayor position, it’s set up so a single person cannot come in with a “Vision For East Cobb.” We have seen what can happen with that—right over in Sandy Springs. People believe the “vision” of East Cobb should be what it already is.

To help ensure this, all actions of the council will require a super-majority vote. So for any action to be taken, it must have very broad support. Support from council members, who I believe will run on policies opposed to high density residential development, and over commercial development.

This idea came from feedback, and is based on the way the Cobb School Board is set up.

The Lost Mountain cityhood initiative in west Cobb is also following this same model.

What’s behind having three districts with two members each and one at-large instead of six districts? If I recall the 2019 bill had six districts.

This is actually not accurate. There will be just the six members (two from each district) and all would be elected at-large.

Because this proposed map is much smaller (about half the size of the map two years ago), six districts would mean each one would be extremely small. But the number of districts is not overly important, because the six posts will not be running just in a specific district, but will be elected citywide. This will make them accountable to everyone. And importantly, having three districts ensures there is representation from across the city.

Compensation for council members will be low, $8,000 a year—in line with other city-lite models like Peachtree Corners.

All six members would be elected city-wide. The six members will elect one among them to serve as mayor, for a two-year term. The role of mayor is mostly ceremonial. And very importantly, all actions taken by the council must be a super-majority vote. The idea is to keep East Cobb the same, and for any council action to happen, it must be a very good idea with strong consensus. And a very weak mayor position helps ensure that no one person will have a lot of say over our community.

When will there be a district map available?

The federal government will send population data from the 2020 Census to states in August or September. Districts can be drawn at that time.

When were you approached about filing another cityhood bill? At an East Cobb Business Association candidates forum last October you sounded like you were done with this. Did something change or were you still interested in pursuing a cityhood bill this year?

During this session I was contacted by a number of people asking if I was going to introduce another referendum bill. A new group of people decided they wanted the opportunity to vote. I gave them the feedback I’d received over the last two years, the positive and the not so positive. And the result is the new, simpler map, and extremely city-lite framework. Since then, several people have contacted me who originally did not support cityhood, who really like this plan.

They feel having local control over what gets done in our community (we have none now), while not increasing taxes is a good thing.

You also said at that forum that you thought the cityhood group didn’t do a good job selling its proposal. Do you feel differently about this, and are you more confident taking this legislation into the 2022 session?

I don’t think the first group working on this quite new what they were getting into. For everyone involved, this was their first time working on anything like this. Also, this was a brand new idea for everyone here, and new ideas are hard at first.

The citizen group leading this referendum effort is a different collection of people than the previous. I think they learned lessons from the initiative started three years ago. The new condensed map, and entirely new city-lite model are all evidence to that. I also think having watched the process last time has provided them with better ideas and understanding how to educate the community.

They are very committed to being open, transparent, and leaving no question unanswered.

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Rep. McBath visits East Cobb salon on small business tour

McBath visits East Cobb salon

Back in December we wrote about Nancy’s Salon on Johnson Ferry Road as many small businesses are trying to cope with the effects of COVID-related closures.

Owner Qamar Hisamuddin told us then that while some federal Paycheck Protection Program assistance helped for a while, it’s still a challenge to get back to anything resembling normal business.

“It’s OK but not there yet!” she said “We have customers coming in after their vaccines. We all got vaccinated. Still following distancing and safety guidelines. Hopefully we should be back to normal in few months.”

Qamar followed up with us to note that U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath stopped by last week for a visit as part of a tour of small businesses in the 6th Congressional District and that included a round table discussion with other East Cobb business owners.

She said it was an “honor to have been invited to have East Cobb businesses talk about how the pandemic has impacted our business with the Congresswoman.”

McBath visits East Cobb salon

East Cobb News is profiling small businesses that have been affected by COVID-19 shutdowns. Let us know how you’re doing by emailing us: editor@eastcobbnews.com. If you’re a reader who wants to spread the word about a local small business you like, also get in touch.

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Cobb commissioner: All-Star Game ‘an opportunity that’s lost’

Cobb Commissioner Jerica Richardson

Newly elected Cobb commissioner Jerica Richardson had plenty of reasons to be pumped for the Major League Baseball All-Star Game coming to Truist Park in July.

The midsummer event was set to be staged in the heart of her District 2, which stretches from East Cobb to parts of Smyrna.

County leaders—government, business and community—had been eyeing the extravaganza as a vehicle for economic development in the aftermath of COVID-19 as well as civic pride four years after the Atlanta Braves moved to Cobb.

And as part of an historic black female Democratic majority on the Cobb Board of Commissioners, Richardson was eager to demonstrate the political and cultural evolution taking place in a county long known for deeply conservative, mostly white elected officials.

But Major League Baseball’s decision on Friday to relocate the game due to Georgia’s new elections law dashed all those aspirations.

“We’re obviously not happy at all, Richardson said in an interview with East Cobb News. “I wanted to use this as an opportunity to show leadership.”

Instead, she said, “it’s an opportunity that’s lost.”

On Friday, she stood by Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid, the county’s first black and first female head of government, who had tried to keep the game in Cobb.

Opponents of the law, passed by a Republican-majority legislature, said it amounts to voter suppression, and on Wednesday President Joe Biden called for the game to be moved. He said the new law in Georgia, a state he barely won in November, is “Jim Crow on steroids.”

Richardson said that while there some parts of the law she likes and others she does not, trouble arises “when you choose division.”

She said that “the people who were most impacted by that bill were not listened to. You can’t solve anything when people aren’t talking to each other.”

The pitched rhetoric over the new law, she said, reminded her of previous political battles in Georgia, including the state flag, and of an anti-gay resolution by Cobb commissioners in the early 1990s that resulted in the county losing Olympic events.

During a transformational time in the county, to be deprived of what Richardson said would have been Cobb’s biggest event ever “is a lost chance to elevate the kind of conversations we need to have.”

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East Cobb Cityhood group to hold virtual town hall April 14

Submitted information:East Cobb Cityhood virtual town hall

The East Cobb Cityhood Committee is hosting a virtual town hall to provide information to the residents of East Cobb. People who live within the boundary of the proposed new city are invited to attend. This will be a live session with Rep. Matt Dollar and ECC committee members.

Please, register in advance to reserve a spot in the virtual town hall. You can submit questions about cityhood during the registration process. There will also be an opportunity to submit questions during the live session.

Date: April 14, 2021

Time: 6:00pm ET

Location: REGISTER HERE

If you are not available at this date and time, you will be able to view the recording of this webinar. It will be posted shortly after the live session on the website.

East Cobb Cityhood
http://www.eastcobbga.com/

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Cobb County loses Major League Baseball All-Star Game

Major League Baseball announced Friday that it was moving the 2021 All-Star Game from Truist Park in Cobb County because of a controversial new Georgia elections law.Cobb loses Major League Baseball All-Star Game

Despite the protestations of Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid earlier this week, MLB commissioner Rob Manfred said in a statement that “Major League Baseball fundamentally supports voting rights for all Americans and opposes restrictions to the ballot box.”

You can read the full statement here. The MLB statement said the baseball draft also scheduled for Truist Park is being moved. A new city for both events in mid-July has not been announced.

The relocation decision comes a week after the Georgia legislature passed sweeping changes to elections laws that opponents said amount to voter suppression.

On two separate occasions this week, Cupid implored MLB to keep the game at Truist Park, and on Wednesday met with the head of the MLB players’ union.

A Democrat who is Cobb’s first black head of government, Cupid also opposes the new elections law. But she lamented comments from President Joe Biden calling it “Jim Crow on steroids” and his demands to move the game from Georgia.

The law was passed by a Republican-dominated legislature and was quickly signed by GOP Gov. Brian Kemp, and has been roundly denounced by Democratic and voting-rights interests.

The new law adds identification requirements for mailed ballots, restricts the use of absentee ballot drop boxes, requires more advanced voting across the state and shortens runoff elections.

The legislature also has oversight of proposed changes to election rules by the Secretary of State and state elections board.

Republicans had tried to eliminate no-excuse absentee voting and early voting on Sundays, but those were dropped from the final bill.

Cupid said Thursday that “I would be open to a discussion with the President and others about alternative actions that would channel our frustration into an opportunity to use this event as a chance to openly discuss this legislation, voter participation, and inclusion and then find an applicable response.”

That proved to be too little, too late, as political pressure accelerated following Biden’s comments.

Cobb County government spokesman Ross Cavitt said Cupid would respond to the All-Star decision later Friday afternoon.

The Braves issued a statement saying the club is “deeply disappointed” with moving the game, and that “unfortunately, businesses, employees and fans in Georgia are the victims of this decision.”

The Braves, who last hosted the All-Star Game at Turner Field in 1999, were going to use this year’s game to honor the legacy of home run king Henry Aaron, who died in January.

“The Braves organization will continue to stress the importance of equal voting opportunities and we had hoped our city could use this event as a platform to enhance the discussion,” the statement said.

“Our city has always been known as a uniter in divided times and we will miss the opportunity to address issues that are important to our community.”

The Cobb County Republican Party posted a brief reaction on its Facebook page Friday afternoon, saying that “MLB doesn’t just support stealing bases…they apparently support stealing votes!”

The Cobb Democratic Party responded by saying that “blame for this lies solely at the feet of Governor Kemp and the Georgia GOP for supporting anti-American, anti-democratic legislation. It’s a new day. Jim Crow 2.0 ain’t gonna fly.”

Kemp accused MLB of [caving] [in]to “fear, political opportunism, and liberal lies. Georgians—and all Americans—should fully understand what the MLB’s knee-jerk decision means: cancel culture and woke political activists are coming for every aspect of your life, sports included. If the left doesn’t agree with you, facts and the truth do not matter.”

He blamed the “repeated lies from Joe Biden and Stacey Abrams about a bill that expands access to the ballot box and ensures the integrity of our elections. I will not back down. Georgians will not be bullied.”

Abrams, the Democratic nominee for governor in 2016 who is considered a likely candidate to run against Kemp again next year, said she’s disappointed the All-Star Game is leaving Georgia.

“Georgians targeted by voter suppression will be hurt as opportunities go to other states. We should not abandon the victims of GOP malice and lies,” she said. “Georgia Republicans must renounce the terrible damage they have caused to our voting system and the harm they have inflicted on our economy.”

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Cobb schools to provide state $1K teacher bonuses to staff

A one-time $1,000 teacher retention bonus proposed by Gov. Brian Kemp and approved by the Georgia Board of Education will be extended to all full-time staffers in the Cobb County School District.Georgia Department of Education, Georgia Scholars East Cobb

The district announced Friday that the state bonuses will be provided to full-time staffers, both teachers and others, during a payroll period in April.

Kemp and Georgia school superintendent announced the supplement plan in January. The state is using part of a recent federal allocation of $240 million in COVID-19 relief funding for the bonuses. Georgia school districts must allocate the bonuses to their employees by June 30.

The criteria is designed to help public school districts in Georgia retain teachers, but is not limited to them. Employees receiving the bonuses include bus drivers, custodians, school nurses, paraprofessionals, librarians, cafeteria workers, social workers, counselors and other aides.

In Cobb, the full $1,000 bonus will go to all full-time staffers who, in the words of Superintendent Chris Ragsdale, have “truly gone above and beyond during the pandemic to ensure our students achieve our One Goal.””

Cobb school district staffers who are part-time will be getting a one-time bonus of $490.

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Anti-East Cobb Cityhood group calls renewed effort ‘Jaws 2’

East Cobb Alliance logo

A week after a new push for East Cobb Cityhood was launched, a group that organized against the first effort in 2019 is again expressing opposition.

In an e-mail sent out Thursday night, the East Cobb Alliance said the new cityhood effort, which includes state legislation filed on Monday, is a “process [that] appears to be putting the cart before the horse.”

That was a reference to the cityhood group not having a financial feasibility study prepared before the bill was filed, as was the case in 2019.

The Committee for East Cobb Cityhood, which includes some individuals from two years ago, said it will be commissioning a study, which is required by law.

“How can one decide a city is financially feasible enough to justify a legislative action to file a bill to form a proposed city…when no feasibility study has been completed to see if the numbers will work?,” said the East Cobb Alliance message.

“What if the feasibility study comes back and it’s not financially feasible? Wouldn’t that be embarrassing?”

In 2019, advocates for cityhood in Mableton had legislation filed before a feasibility study was conducted; like the East Cobb bill it was eventually abandoned and has not been resurrected.

The East Cobb Alliance formed during 2019, after cityhood leaders began holding town hall meetings, and participated in an issues forum on the matter in November of that year, before cityhood leaders abandoned their effort.

There are also proposed new cities of Lost Mountain and Vinings with bills filed this year in the legislature that also will have feasibility studies done.

The East Cobb Alliance has nearly 1,000 followers for its Facebook page, where it has been announcing updates, as well as a petition to oppose the new cityhood effort.

East Cobb Alliance members have been against cityhood for several reasons, claiming it will add an extra layer of government that will cost citizens more in taxes.

In the Thursday e-mail, the East Cobb Alliance labeled the new cityhood effort as “Jaws 2,” making a reference to the popular movie series: “Those land sharks who put forth the Proposed City of East Cobb two years ago are back at it again, infesting the waters of East Cobb with their ‘this layer of government we’re adding is so paper-thin, you will hardly notice it,’ yet again!”

The new cityhood bill calls for “city light” services—planning and zoning, code enforcement and parks and recreation, instead of police and fire, the main services proposed two years ago.

The East Cobb Alliance message claims that “once a city forms, though, a city council and a mayor can do whatever they want including adding police, fire, a development authority (yeah, like we need another one of those in Cobb County), and whatever else a small group of elected politicians decide they want to do in secret on behalf of their friends and family.”

The East Cobb Alliance is inviting citizens to fill out an online survey to express their thoughts about the new cityhood movement, and says it will actively fight against the latest initiative.

State Rep. Matt Dollar’s bill, if passed by the legislature next year, would call for a November 2022 referendum and would include a smaller area of East Cobb than his 2019 legislation.

The proposed City of East Cobb would have around 55,000 residents and includes much of the Walton High School attendance zone.

Dropped from the 2019 proposed map are areas around Wheeler High School, as well as some of the Pope and Lassiter clusters.

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Lassiter HS goes into code yellow status after off-campus incident

Lassiter High School graduation rate

Lassiter High School went into code yellow status for a while on Thursday after a student reported seeing another student with a weapon in an off-campus situation, according to the Cobb County School District.

In a message that went out to Lassiter parents Thursday afternoon, principal Chris Richie said that “we stopped all movement and secured the building until we were able to verify the student was not in the vicinity of Lassiter.”

In a code yellow situation, the outside doors to a school are closed while classes and activities continue inside.

Richie further said that “there is no reason to believe that our campus, students, or staff are in any danger.”

He did not indicate where off-campus the incident occurred; a Cobb school district spokesman also would not elaborate when contacted by East Cobb News. She said the code yellow situation was in effect at Lassiter “for a period of time” and confirmed that the weapon was a handgun.

She added that “teachers continued to teach and students continued to learn with minimal interruption to the school day while both the Cobb School Police Department and Cobb Police investigated.”

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Cupid: Biden All-Star Game remarks send ‘unfortunate message’

Lisa Cupid, Cobb Commission Chair candidate

While the Atlanta Braves were playing their 2021 season opener Thursday afternoon, Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid pushed back against calls from President Joe Biden to move the All-Star Game away from Truist Park.

The president said he “strongly supports” finding a new venue for the mid-July event because of the Georgia legislature’s recent changes to elections laws that have been sharply criticized by Democrats as voter suppression measures.

Cupid, the first black head of Cobb County government and its first Democratic chair in more than 35 years, has been among them. But she issued a statement that Biden’s comments send “an unfortunate message to those residents and businesses here who have supported him.”

Cupid met on Thursday with Tony Clark, head of the Major League Baseball Players Association, who last week suggested moving the game.

In an interview with ESPN Wednesday, Biden said that “I think today’s professional athletes are acting incredibly responsibly. I would strongly support them doing that. People look to them. They’re leaders.”

In previous comments, Biden decried the new elections law, signed quickly after passage in a Republican-controlled legislature last week by GOP Gov. Brian Kemp, as “Jim Crow on steroids.”

Kemp, who is up for re-election in 2022, lashed out at Biden, saying calls to move the All-Star Game are “ridiculous.”

In a statement issued by Cobb spokesman Ross Cavitt, Cupid said that “I would be open to a discussion with the President and others about alternative actions that would channel our frustration into an opportunity to use this event as a chance to openly discuss this legislation, voter participation, and inclusion and then find an applicable response.”

The statement didn’t specify what any alternate actions might be.

Cupid said last week that losing the All-Star Game could hurt Cobb’s economic recovery from business closures related to the COVID-19 pandemic (see video below).

Leaders of major Atlanta-based corporations, including Delta Air Lines and Coca-Cola, have spoken out in recent days against the new elections law.

Last year’s shortened baseball season due to COVID-19 included no fans allowed in stadiums.

It was the fourth season at the Cobb County ballpark for the Braves, who reached the National League Championship Series and are among the contenders for the World Series this year.

The Braves have set a goal of allowing for full capacity—more than 40,000—by the time the All-Star Game rolls around. That event includes a homerun derby on Monday and the game between American League and National League all-stars on Tuesday.

The Braves will play their first homestand of the 2021 season next week with a 33 percent capacity, and said on Thursday that they will allow up to 50 percent capacity at Truist Park for the second homestand.

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Zoning update: Sprayberry Crossing, East Cobb Church changes

East Cobb zoning update, Sprayberry Crossing site plan
The latest Sprayberry Crossing site plan expands green space around the Mayes family cemetery and includes a “town green.” For a larger view click here.

With just a few days before their first public hearings, two major rezoning cases in East Cobb are getting some last-minute changes.

Kevin Moore, the attorney for the proposed redevelopment of the Sprayberry Crossing and the proposed East Cobb Church mixed-use development, filed stipulation letters in both cases on Wednesday.

He also filed a new site plan for Sprayberry Crossing, the latest of several renditions for a mixed-use plan to replace a long-blighted shopping center.

After several months of delays, they’re slated to be heard Tuesday by the Cobb Planning Commission.

We’re still reading through everything, but will summarize what’s new.

The Sprayberry Crossing plans have undergone many revisions, the latest being filed late Wednesday afternoon, shortly before Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell held a public information session.

You can read through the new changes by clicking here; there’s a new Cobb DOT traffic analysis here; and the full agenda packet is here.

Atlantic Realty hasn’t changed the details for the residential component—125 apartments, 125 senior apartments and 44 townhomes—nor a proposed grocery store space.

The developer is asking for a waiver from a requirement of the Redevelopment Overlay District zoning category for at least 10 percent of the residential units be dedicated for “workforce housing.”

In addition, Atlantic Realty is proposing a property owners association for the overall development.

More green space has been added back into the new site plan, with a “town green” proposed near the Mayes family cemetery. That green space will be open to the entire community, not just those living in the development.

In addition, the developer listed a number of businesses in the retail portion that would not be allowed, from video arcades to adult retail to several kinds of automotive services.

East Cobb Church site plan
The townhome units proposed near what would be the East Cobb Church have been reduced from 125 to 110. For a larger view click here.

North Point Ministries Inc. has altered its mixed-use proposal anchored by East Cobb Church to include more low-rise office space at the southwest corner of Johnson Ferry Road and Shallowford Road.

A new stipulation letter (you can read it here), also filed Wednesday, would reduce the number of proposed townhomes from 125 to 110. The applicant is also seeking a new zoning category, Fee Simple Townhomes, instead of a multifamily residential category.

Among the stipulations are to designate that no more than 10 of the townhomes could be rentals at any given time.

North Point Ministries’ plan is to sell that 18.11 acres (out of more than 33 overall) to Ashwood Development, an upscale builder with projects in the city of Atlanta and Florida.

Sprayberry Crossing Shopping Center
Residents near the blighted Sprayberry Crossing Shopping Center have differences about what should replace it.

During Wednesday’s public information session about Sprayberry Crossing, Birrell said she and county staff had not had time to look through the changes.

They answered questions from the public submitted in advance.

Birrell stressed to viewers of the virtual meeting to e-mail their commissioner and members of the Cobb Planning Commission.

“It is in my district and I will take the lead in the discussions,” she said. “But there are five votes. So you need to e-mail all of us.”

She said of the e-mails she’s received thus far about Sprayberry Crossing, there are 83 e-mails against the project, and 21 in favor.

The opposition is mostly over traffic concerns and having any apartments at all.

It’s been three years since area residents held a town hall meeting at Sprayberry High School to jump-start a process that has led to a rezoning case of any kind.

“I know we’re all tired of looking at Sprayberry Crossing,” Birrell said of the retail center that’s been run-down for more than 20 years. “There’s nobody who wants to see this redeveloped than me.”

But she said it’s important to hear fully from the community to determine the best options.

The Cobb Planning Commission meets Tuesday at 9 a.m. in the 2nd floor board room of the Cobb Government Building at 100 Cherokee St., in downtown Marietta. You can read through the full agenda by clicking here.

There will be limited in-person attendance due to COVID-19 restrictions. The meeting can be seen on the Cobb County government’s Facebook and YouTube channels and Channel 23 on Comcast.

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Richardson to hold virtual town hall, announce priorities

Cobb Commissioner Jerica Richardson is having a virtual town hall next week to announce her priorities and to introduce what she’s calling a “quarterly report” for her District 2 constituents.Cobb Commissioner Jerica Richardson

The meeting takes place next Tuesday, April 6, starting at 6 p.m., and you can sign up by clicking here.

Up to 20 people who express a desire to attend in-person will be chosen from a drawing, as indicated on the sign-up form.

During her first three months in office, Richardson has undertaken what she calls a “priorities tour” around the district to hear from citizens about their priorities.

That’s part of what will be unveiled in the quarterly report.

Next Thursday, she’s holding another virtual town hall meeting about the North Point Ministries/East Cobb Church rezoning case that’s coming up in April.

She and Tony Waybright, the District 2 representative to the Cobb Planning Commission, held a town hall in February, but several changes have been made since then.

The Planning Commission is scheduled to hear the case on Tuesday.

Waybright, of Vinings, is among the holdover appointees Richardson has kept who were initially named by her successor, Bob Ott, to various board and commissions.

Among the others staying on are Abby Shiffman of East Cobb, the chairwoman of the Cobb Library Board of Trustees, and Roger Phelps, also of East Cobb, to the Cobb Board of Tax Assessors.

Richardson also has appointed a “community cabinet” on various topics and to reflect the geography of District 2. Her East Cobb liaison is Cellie Cohen-Smith, a resident of Princeton Corners who was part of Richardson’s campaign.

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East Cobb man gets life sentence for killing home contractor

Larry Epstein, East Cobb man gets life sentence
Larry Epstein has been in custody since the March 6, 2019 shootings at his home on Wellington Lane.

An East Cobb homeowner set to go on trial next month for shooting a home contractor to death and seriously wounding another has been sentenced to life in prison.

During a plea hearing in Cobb Superior Court on Tuesday, Larry Epstein, 70, pleaded guilty but mentally ill to murder, aggravated assault and possession of a weapon while committing a felony, according to the Cobb District Attorney’s office.

He has been in the Cobb County Adult Detention Center since March 2019 for shooting Jake Horne, then 21, and Gordon Montcalm, then 38, who were leaving his home after doing some electrical contracting work.

Horne was sitting in a van outside Epstein’s home on Wellington Lane off Johnson Ferry Road on March 6, 2019 when he was shot execution-style in the head with a .22-caliber handgun with a suppressor, according to the Cobb DA’s office.

According to statements at Tuesday’s hearing, Montcalm was getting ready to leave in another vehicle and tried to get away, but Epstein fired his gun at him several times.

According to testimony offered at Tuesday’s hearing, Epstein’s wife arrived at the home just before police arrived, and Montcalm screamed at her that Epstein had shot him and Horne.

The Cobb DA’s office said Montcalm escaped to a neighboring home and wounds to his face, back and arms were treated by a nurse living at that home and who called 911.

Horne was taken off life support the following day at Wellstar Kennestone Hospital, where Montcalm was hospitalized with long recovery.

“Epstein executed Jake, robbing him of life’s most precious experiences—owning a home, getting married, having children—at the young age of 21. And even though Montcalm survived, he is forever scarred, both physically and emotionally,” said Jesse Evans, the Cobb deputy chief assistant district attorney.

Horne’s uncle John Savell told the court the loss of his nephew leaves an “unfillable void,” according to the Cobb DA’s office, which said Montcalm did not attend the hearing but supported the case being resolved without a trial.

Cobb jury trials are set to resume in April after nearly a year of backlogs due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Earlier this month Epstein’s attorney tried to delay the trial until August, saying that his client wanted to be vaccinated against COVID-19 before having a trial. Cobb Superior Court Judge Ann Harris also had ordered a psychiatric evaluation of Epstein, whose attorney has said in court filings suffers from mental illness.

At Tuesday’s hearing, prosecutors said that after officers arrived at the Epstein home, they discovered a surveillance camera video that showed part of the murder.

Police blocked off the street, and the Cobb DA’s office said that after Epstein surrendered peacefully, he waived his Miranda rights.

Testimony introduced at the hearing said during a search warrant at Epstein’s home, officers found firearms, including the murder weapon and the suppressor hidden in the garage.

Prosecutors aid the handgun was “positively linked by ballistics testing to the shootings of Horne and Montcalm.”

The day after Epstein’s arrest, his wife filed for divorce.

Harris called the incident an “irreparable tragedy” as she issued the life sentence.

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East Cobb Cityhood bill calls for Nov. 2022 referendum

East Cobb candidates forum cityhood
At a candidates forum last fall, State Rep. Matt Dollar said East Cobb Cityhood proponents initially “didn’t do a good job of explaining why it would be beneficial.”

Here’s the first look at the new East Cobb Cityhood bill filed Monday by State Rep. Matt Dollar (you can read through it here).

As we reported on Thursday, this had to be done before the Georgia legislative session ends on Wednesday because cityhood bills must follow a two-year process.

Should the legislature pass the cityhood bill next year, there will be a Nov. 2022 referendum by eligible voters in the proposed City of East Cobb, which has been scaled down from the 2019 boundaries.

Here are the main components of how a City of East Cobb, with a proposed population of around 55,000, would work:

  • It would provide zoning and planning, code enforcement and parks and recreation services in what proponents are calling a preservation effort;
  • The East Cobb City Council would have six elected members from three posts, which would have two members each. One member from each post must be elected city-wide;
  • A special election would be held in March 2023 to elect council members;
  • A mayor would then be chosen by a council majority to serve a two-year term and could serve up to two consecutive terms;
  • There would be a city manager and a city clerk, an outsourced city attorney and a municipal court;
  • Property taxes would be capped at 1 mill, but the city would collect other revenues such as franchise fees, occupation and business taxes, licensing, permits, assessments and other fees;
  • Starting Dec. 1, 2023, the city would begin collecting taxes, fees and other revenues at the start of a transition period from county government that ends on Dec. 31, 2025.

What’s not in the bill are council district maps.

State Rep. Sharon Cooper
State Rep. Sharon Cooper said cityhood was a “dead issue” but is co-sponsoring a new bill.

The new city boundaries (you can view the map here) include areas south of Shallowford Road and east of Murdock Road and Old Canton Road, in much of the Walton High School attendance zone.

The 2019 proposed map included areas in the Wheeler High School cluster and was being expanded to include more of the Pope and Lassiter clusters when the cityhood group abandoned its effort.

Those areas have been removed; the 2019 bill called for police and fire services that are not part of the new legislation.

Three other cityhood bills have been filed by Cobb legislators in the 2021 session, including two new ones, for a City of Lost Mountain in West Cobb and a City of Vinings.

In 2019 a bill was filed for a City of Mableton and that was also re-introduced this year.

Dollar has a co-sponsor this time, something he didn’t have in 2019, in fellow East Cobb Republican State Rep. Sharon Cooper. She said at the time she was collecting information like other citizens; during a campaign forum late last year she said as far as she was concerned the cityhood matter is “a dead issue.”

The bill still needs a Senate sponsor, and State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick, an East Cobb Republican, has been reluctant to add her name because of what she says has been a lot of negative response from constituents.

The bill is expected to be assigned to the House Governmental Affairs Committee, just like the 2019 legislation, where it will be taken up at the start of the 2022 legislative session.

The revamped East Cobb Cityhood group has said it will be conducting a new feasibility study, another requirement for a cityhood bill, but that process has not yet begun.

East Cobb Cityhood effort revived

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Cobb libraries to resume Saturday hours starting April 10

East Cobb Library, Cobb budget crisis

Submitted information:

Saturday hours will return April 10 for Cobb County Public Library locations as a first step in renewing six days a week library hours throughout the county, library officials announced Tuesday.

Libraries will be open Saturdays from 10 am to 5 pm. Weekday hours  continue to be Mondays from 10 am to 8 pm and Tuesdays-Fridays from 10 am to 6 pm.

The first phase of this round of re-openings will add Saturday in-person hours for the seven libraries now offering limited services – East Cobb, Mountain View, North Cobb, Sewell Mill, South Cobb, Vinings and West Cobb. Libraries currently offering only curbside service – Gritters, Kemp and Sibley – will expand the service to include Saturdays starting April 10. 

The Stratton and Powder Springs libraries will offer curbside service only on Saturday, April 10, before expanding public access to in-person limited services Monday-Saturday on Monday, April 12.

Limited services enable the public to browse, check-out items, and use a limited number of public computers and other services.

The schedule for expansion to curbside services at the Switzer Library will be announced at a later date as the facility in downtown Marietta is under renovation, officials said.

Cobb County officials put in place coronavirus safety and health protocols throughout the year of the pandemic, including phased closures and reopening of libraries and grab-and-go curbside library services.

For information on Cobb library hours, programs and services, visit www.cobbcounty.org/library.

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Kell HS programs get support from the Credit Union of Georgia

Kell HS support Credit Union Georgia

Submitted information and photo:

Being founded by educators from Cobb County and Marietta City, the Credit Union loves to give back to local schools every year. After years of numerous sponsorships with Kell High School and their Athletics Program, the Credit Union of Georgia donated over $1,100 as a Featured Supporter of Kell High School this year. The donation will benefit students, faculty and the community through various Kell High School programs throughout the year. Some of these programs include a student awards/recognition program for good citizenship and academic performance, Academic Bootcamp Department Meal, Kell Teacher of the Month, providing free or discounted services for staff and much more.

Credit Union of Georgia was excited to partner with Kell High School and allow the school to create a better experience for students and staff alike. “Partnering with the Credit Union of Georgia was a natural fit for Kell High School. Both organizations have, at their core, a desire to serve their communities. I have had the opportunity to work with the Credit Union as a member over the past 10 years and being able to bring that same love for the community to Kell will be fantastic for both communities. The love they have for their employees is something that we try to model as well and we look forward to supporting each other.,” said Ben Needle, Kell High School Assistant Principal. 

To learn more about the Kell High School’s upcoming programs visit www.Cobbk12.org/Kell.

 

 

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Cobb COVID-19 rental assistance applications open Thursday

Submitted information:Cobb County Government logo

To help explain Cobb’s latest $22.8 million COVID-19 rent/utility assistance effort and the end of the eviction moratorium, we held a virtual town hall this week. Guest speakers included Chief Magistrate Judge Brendan Murphy explaining the eviction process, Sheriff Craig Owens sharing his office’s response and representatives from five nonprofits explaining the new rent/utility assistance program. Residents also had their submitted questions answered.

These emergency federal rental assistance grants are designed to help those impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic stay in their homes while struggling to recover. Assistance can be provided for rent, rental arrears, utilities and home energy costs, utilities and home energy costs arrears and other expenses related to housing.

To watch this informative town hall in its entirety, click here.

Applications will open on April 1. Please do not contact providers to apply until then. We are compiling and updating information on the Emergency Rental Assistance program at cobbcounty.org/era.

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East Cobb Food Scores: Bagelicious; Mellow Mushroom; more

Bagelicious, East Cobb food scores

The following East Cobb food scores for the week of March 22 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Bagelicious
1255 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 37
March 22, 2021 Score: 96, Grade: A

Catfish Hox
2595 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 101
March 26, 2021 Score: 97, Grade: A

El Rin Con Salvadoreno Bakery 
2100 Roswell Road, Suite 2104
March 23, 2021 Score: 98, Grade: A

Hoboken Bread & Bagel Company
1033 Sandy Plains Road, Suite G
March 22, 2021 Score: 99, Grade: A

Mellow Mushroom
1205 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 101
March 26, 2021 Score: 100, Grade: A

Waffle House
2642 Windy Hill Road
March 26, 2021 Score: 97, Grade: A

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Cobb first responders treated to public safety appreciation lunch

Cobb first responders appreciation lunch

Submitted information and photos:

On Thursday, March 25th, The Janice Overbeck Real Estate Team held an appreciation barbeque lunch to honor local police, firemen, EMT’s and military personnel. The Capital City Home Loans grilling food truck grilled up burgers and hotdogs with a variety of sides sponsored by other local partners.

Attendees were welcome to use the “social distancing patio” to enjoy their meal or take it on the road. Event sponsors and members of the Janice Overbeck Real Estate Team were able to socialize and meet all of the local first responder and military attendees and thank them for what they do day-to-day. There were also puppies available for adoption at the event.

Additional sponsors for the event included: Arrow Exterminators, Amerispec Home Inspection, Straight Line Roofing and Restoration, JG Artisan Painting, Aroma Ridge Coffee, The Hathaway Agency Insurance, 2-10 Home Buyers Warranty, Chick-fil-A East Lake, Panera Bread and Perrie & Associates.

Local Cobb County and surrounding area first responders, police, fire, detective units and military were all invited. Lunch was also packed up and delivered to Cobb County 911 dispatch by The Hathaway Agency Insurance. For more information on community events at the Janice Overbeck Team office, visit: www.JaniceOverbeck.com.

Cobb first responders appreciation lunch
David Perrie of Perrie and Associates Law Firm, Nathalie Jegg of Cobb County Police, and Janice Overbeck of the Janice Overbeck Real Estate Team.
Cobb first responders appreciation lunch
Kristen, an agent of the Janice Overbeck Real Estate Team, along with Bryan of Arrow Exterminators (a sponsor of the event).
Cobb first responders appreciation lunch
Jermaine and Janay of JG Artisan Painting (sponsors of the event) along with Imarii, Veterans Outreach Coordinator at Emory Healthcare Veterans Program.
Cobb first responders appreciation lunch
A local police officer spending time with one of the puppies up for adoption.

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Cobb schools report 147 new confirmed COVID-19 cases

This week’s COVID-19 case count in the Cobb County School District is a slight drop from the week of March 19, as the rate of new infections continues to fall.Campbell High School lockdown

The district announced in its weekly update on Friday that there were 147 new confirmed cases, nine fewer than a week ago.

It’s the fourth straight week the case totals have been less than 200. The district does not break down the numbers for students and staff.

The district lists the number of active cases by school as well as cumulative totals since July 1, 2020.

Overall, there have been 4,501 confirmed COVID-19 cases in the Cobb school district since that date.

This week there were fewer than 10 cases reported at schools with new active cases. They include the following at East Cobb schools:

  • Bells Ferry ES: 1
  • East Side ES: 1
  • Eastvalley ES: 1
  • Keheley ES: 1
  • Mt. Bethel ES: 6
  • Murdock ES: 1
  • Powers Ferry ES: 2
  • Sope Creek ES: 2
  • Timber Ridge ES: 1
  • Tritt ES: 1
  • Dickerson MS: 3
  • Dodgen MS: 1
  • East Cobb MS: 1
  • Hightower Trail MS: 1
  • McCleskey MS: 1
  • Lassiter HS: 1
  • Pope HS: 4
  • Walton HS: 5

In the nearly nine months the district has been compiling COVID data, Walton has the most cumulative cases with 130. Pope has 104, Lassiter 102 and Kell 101.

Dickerson has the most overall cases at the middle school level with 74, and McCleskey has 68.

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