East Cobb Ecumenical Thanksgiving Celebration to go virtual

Ecumenical Thanksgiving Service

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For the past 15 years, people from dozens of faith-based groups have gathered together at Temple Kol Emeth in Marietta, GA to celebrate Thanksgiving by sharing uplifting messages, singing and laughing together, and supporting interfaith charities. In 2020, this unifying event will be hosted online with inspiring speakers, beautiful music, and an online chat to share your feelings and thoughts.

This year’s theme, “Act Now: Silence Is Not An Option,” is the inspiration for messages from various religious and community leaders about speaking up for compassion and humanity, a common value of people of all faiths. The event will also spotlight the non-profit The National Center for Civil and Human Rights, one of the recipients of donations made to the Ecumenical Thanksgiving Give-A-Gobble program.

Event facilitator Hal Schlenger says, “Our transition from a large in-person gathering to a virtual event is an example of the multiple religious’ belief that, ‘Silence is not an option.’ Christian, Jews, Muslims, Hindu and so many others believe that we are responsible for our words, our actions, and the success of our community. Mahatma Gandhi said, ‘Be the change you wish to see in the world.’ Now is the time not to be silent.” 

Please join us on Thursday, Nov. 19th for this one-of-a-kind 16th annual Ecumenical Thanksgiving Celebration—an event organized by twenty faith-based groups in the Cobb, Fulton and Cherokee counties—because people of faith need to stand together and serve others now more than ever. The event will take place online at http://bit.ly/TKEstream at 6:30pm for musical performances, and the program begins at 7pm.

As we gather together, we collect funds through the Give-A-Gobble program to purchase turkeys and Thanksgiving dinners for our neighbors in need.

Please donate today at: https://www.kolemeth.net/gobble. Give-A-Gobble’s  success depends directly on your generous donations of which 100% goes toward purchasing turkeys, food staples, and Thanksgiving dinners to those in need. The organizations we support that provide help to those in need during Thanksgiving all promote peace and good-will, and this year’s featured organization, The National Center for Civil and Human Rights, is prominently included.  

Participating religions in this year’s Ecumenical Thanksgiving Celebration:

  •  Ahmadiyya Muslim Community
  • Art of Living Foundation
  • Baha’i Faith Center
  • East Cobb Islamic Center
  • East Cobb UMC
  • Emerson Universalist Unitarian
  • Faith Alliance of Metro Atlanta
  • Interfaith Community Initiatives
  • Islamic Center of Marietta
  • Masjid Al-Muminum
  • Pilgrimage United Church of Christ
  • Roswell Community Masjid
  • Sandy Springs Christian Church
  • Sikh Educational Welfare Association
  • St. Catherine’s Episcopal Church
  • Temple Beth Tikvah
  • Temple Kol Emeth
  • The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints: Roswell and Marietta
  • Transfiguration Catholic Church
  • Unity North Spiritual Community

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Cobb Republican Party to hold U.S. Senate campaign rally

Both U.S. Senate races from Georgia are headed to Jan. 5 runoffs, and those campaigns are already getting underway.Cobb Republican U.S. Senate rally

On Wednesday the Cobb County Republican Party will be holding a “Save Our Majority” rally in support of GOP senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler.

They will both be in attendance at the Cobb Republican headquarters (799 Roswell St.), and special guest is Florida Sen. Marco Rubio.

The rally begins at 10 a.m. and you can register to attend by clicking here.

Republicans are holding to a tight lead in control of the Senate after last Tuesday’s elections. After just missing winning without a runoff last week, Perdue is facing Democrat Jon Ossoff.

Loeffler will be facing Democrat Raphael Warnock, who got the most votes in Tuesday’s “jungle” primary.

Cobb figures to be a battleground, especially after Ossoff and Warnock got more votes in the county that their Republican foes.

Ossoff got 54 percent of the Cobb vote, while Warnock got 37 percent of the vote compared to 25 percent for Loeffler.

She was quickly endorsed by Congressman Doug Collins, a Republican who finished third in the jungle primary.

(Democratic president-elect Joe Biden also won the county with 56 percent of the vote, although the presidential voting in Georgia appears headed for a recount. Biden has a roughly 10,000-vote lead after final votes were being counted over the weekend).

Loeffler and Perdue have demanded that Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger resign over the handling of the presidential vote.

On Monday they issued a statement accusing him of mismanagement and lack of transparency and said Georgia’s election system was an embarrassment.

They didn’t specify what those failures were. Raffensperger is a pro-Trump Republican who was a state legislator and member of the Johns Creek City Council.

He said he won’t be resigning and that he’ll continue to make sure that all legal votes are counted, and illegal votes aren’t.

He said that if was any illegal voting it “is unlikely” it would rise to the numbers to change the outcome in Georgia.

“As a Republican, I am concerned about Republicans keeping the U.S. Senate,” Raffensperger said in a statement. “I recommend that Senators Loeffler and Perdue start focusing on that.”

The Trump campaign has been alleging fraud in states were the vote has been close, including Pennsylvania, which was called for Biden by news outlets on Saturday. Biden gave a victory speech on Saturday but Trump has not conceded.

There will be a Dec. 7 deadline to register to vote for the Georgia Senate runoffs, and anyone who wants to get a mail-in absentee ballot can request one starting Nov. 18.

The runoffs will have early voting starting Dec. 14; more details in Cobb are forthcoming.

The Cobb Board of Elections and Registration will be certifying election results on Friday.

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Cobb commissioner-elect: ‘We can overcome every challenge’

Jerica Richardson, Cobb Commission candidate

After soaking in the reality of winning her first stab at public office—and culminating an historic election in Cobb County in the process—District 2 commissioner-elect Jerica Richardson admitted there’s some sobering work ahead for her and her colleagues in the coming months.

She’s one of two new faces on the Cobb Board of Commissioners, which in January will have a Democratic majority and will be all female.

That majority also is made of black women, including Richardson, a 31-year-old Equifax manager, who edged out Republican Fitz Johnson in this week’s elections.

Chair-elect Lisa Cupid defeated incumbent Mike Boyce and Monique Sheffield was elected to succeed Cupid as District 4 commissioner in South Cobb.

As of Saturday, and with a few absentee and provisional ballots to count, Richardson was leading Johnson by 1,224 votes, 53,642 to 52,418 (updated results can be found here).

Johnson essentially conceded on Thursday, saying “it doesn’t look great.”

“I was hearing from a lot of people that [the closeness of the results] was because of the quality of the candidates,” said Richardson, who called Johnson “a Cobb County success story. He ran a real cordial race.”

After running the campaigns of Cobb State Rep. Erick Allen and Cobb school board member Jaha Howard, Richardson said she viewed her maiden campaign as an effort to “build bridges in deep waters.”

It was among various metaphors she’s used in her “Connecting Cobb” theme of her campaign (previous ECN story here).

In succeeding retiring commissioner Bob Ott, she’ll inherit a distinct district in itself. In includes most of East Cobb below Sandy Plains Road and the Cumberland-Vinings-Smyrna area.

Johnson won most of the East Cobb precincts, and Richardson prevailed in the latter.

“Colors on a map don’t tell the whole story of a community,” said Richardson, who lived in a neighborhood near The Avenue in East Cobb and now resides in the Delk Road area.

Part of her campaign outreach, she said, has been to “cut through echo chambers. If this is an opportunity to build those bridges then this is that year.”

Tackling a county budget affected by the continuing economic fallout from COVID-related lockdowns and other consequences of the pandemic loom large.

“There are going to be some really hard conversations,” Richardson said. “What are our priorities? Our focus? Our vision. And we’ll have to make decisions based on that.”

Among short-term priorities, she favors closing the Sterigenics plant “until further notice.” Homeowners living near the Smyrna-based company that sterilizes medical equipment have filed a lawsuit over what they claim have been cancer-causing emissions.

On a broader and longer-term scale, she said it’s going to be vital to bring as many individuals and areas of Cobb to the table to hash them out, to “build the synergy” of a community she said hasn’t been fully represented on the board.

“The commissioners haven’t had a united vision,” she said, noting that in recent years, it’s been four Republicans and one Democrat—Cupid—who’s often voted alone.

“I don’t see people as red or blue, I see them as an individual,” Richardson said.

During the campaign, Richardson set up some “open office hours” to get to know voters—in a socially-distanced manner—and plans to keep doing so.

She campaigned on a few occasions with Howard, who’s become a firebrand on the school board, angering his Republican colleagues and most recently, taking a knee during the pledge of allegiance at a meeting.

Richardson said “that’s not my method, but I will be having conversations with different groups of people.”

She said Howard was responding to school parents who weren’t being heard, “but he was always willing to listen.”

Richardson acknowledged that a new dynamic on the commission will take some getting used to in Cobb County, which has been dominated by a white, conservative and mostly male political establishment for decades.

“When things change, there’s a lot of fear and uncertainty,” she said. “The only way we’re able to overcome the challenges that we have is to focus on love,” and what she says are the three unifying things that are of utmost importance: expanding liberty, empathy and opportunity” for Cobb citizens.

“If we can do those things, we can overcome every challenge,” Richardson said. “I really believe it.”

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East Cobb legislative incumbents, McBath win re-election

Kay Kirkpatrick, East Cobb city map
State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick has won a second full term.

Although some of them got a scare—including one of the state’s most influential lawmakers—all members of East Cobb’s legislative contingent were re-elected this week.

In the race targeted as part of an effort to flip party control of the state house to the Democrats, Republican Rep. Sharon Cooper appears to have pulled out another close re-election battle over Democrat Luisa Wakeman.

As of Saturday morning, Cooper leads Wakeman by 481 votes, with the final absentee and provisional ballots still being counted.

It’s not clear how many there are, and how many may be in District 43, which includes part of East Cobb and some of Sandy Springs.

It’s the district Cooper has represented since 1997, and she serves as the Chairwoman of the House Health and Human Services Committee.

While Cooper claimed victory on Wednesday, Wakeman initially did not concede. On Friday, she acknowledged that “it appears as if we will fall just short.” She congratulated Cooper and said “I was so encouraged to see you campaign on funding schools and expanding Medicaid for women in need of maternal care. My hope is that you will use this term in office to continue advancing these progressive causes. Georgia is counting on you.”

The Cooper-Wakeman rematch was one of the key races Democrats were targeting in a high-stakes, and high-spending election.

The candidates raised more than $500,000 combined, but Democrats have flipped only one of the 16 seats they needed to win to end Republican control.

State House results

District 37

  • Mary Frances Williams (D, incumbent): 15,931 (54%)
  • Rose Wing (R): 13,591 (46%)

District 43

  • Sharon Cooper (R, incumbent): 15,920 (50.7%)
  • Luisa Wakeman (D): 15,439 (49.2%)

District 44

  • Don Parsons (R, incumbent): 16,978 (51.8%)
  • Connie DiCicco (D): 15,606 (48%)

District 45

  • Matt Dollar (R, incumbent): 19,273 (54.8%)
  • Sara Tindall Ghazal (D): 15,902 (45.2%)

District 46

  • John Carson (R, incumbent): 21,680 (61.5%)
  • Caroline Holko (D): 15,583 (38.5%)

In the Georgia State Senate District 32 race, Republican incumbent Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick was facing Democrat Christine Triebsch for the third time in four years.

They first met in a 2017 special election to succeed former Sen. Judson Hill. Kirkpatrick earned a first full term in 2018, and on Tuesday the early results were close.

But Kirkpatrick earned a comfortable victory to retain the seat that includes most of East Cobb and some of Sandy Springs.

District 32

  • Kay Kirkpatrick (R, incumbent): 63,221 (56%)
  • Christine Triebsch (D): 49,859 (44%)
U.S. Rep Lucy McBath, gun violence research funding, McBath border-funding vote
U.S. Rep Lucy McBath is going back to Washington for a second term.

The 6th Congressional District race was also a rematch, as Republican former U.S. Rep. Karen Handel was trying to reclaim the seat from Democrat Lucy McBath, who won in a 2018 cliffhanger.

McBath has been the first Democrat to hold the seat in 40 years, and it was targeted by national Republicans in their bid to win back control of the House.

While the GOP did flip some House seats, Democrats will maintain their majority and their ranks will include McBath, who claimed her re-election thanks to strong results in the Fulton and DeKalb portions of the district.

Handel won the East Cobb area, as she did in 2018, but only with 51 percent of the vote there.

  • Lucy McBath (D, incumbent): 215,680 (54.6%)
  • Karen Handel (R): 179,398 (45.4%)

For full results of these races, click here.

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Banks wins 4th term as Cobb school board stays in GOP hands

Cobb school board GOP majority

Cobb Board of Education member David Banks was targeted in both the primary and general election this year, criticized as being out of touch and insensitive to minority concerns in the Cobb County School District.

The East Cobb Republican had his closest challenge yet on Tuesday from Democratic first-time candidate Julia Hurtado. She said Cobb County has “outgrown” Banks, a retired technology consultant whom some have accused of falling asleep during school board meetings.

After trailing through election-day results, however, Banks bucked the absentee-balloting trend that favored Democrats in Cobb County and pulled out a 2,639-vote win to earn a fourth term.

He was one of three incumbent Republican males who won re-election over Democratic women, meaning that the GOP will hold on to its 4-3 majority on the Cobb school board.

Banks won 21 of the 27 precincts in Post 5—which comprises the Pope and Lassiter clusters, and some of the Walton and Wheeler areas—and captured 52 percent of the vote, which was the lowest for him since he first was first elected in 2008.

“I was expecting 70 percent, but a win is a win,” said Banks, the board’s vice chairman this year. (Full results can be seen by clicking here.)

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Chairman Brad Wheeler of West Cobb also had a close contest, but was able to win by 1,800 votes, also against a first-time Democratic candidate.

The Democratic wins in countywide races didn’t filter down to the three contested school board races (another board seat was secured in the primary by Democrat Tre’ Hutchins, who will succeed outgoing member David Morgan from Post 3 in South Cobb).

Banks couldn’t resist stirring up the partisan pot in victory.

“I really hope people aren’t trying to believe in socialism,” he said. When asked who those people might be, Banks said “anybody who voted for Democrats. Why cut your own throat?”

Banks spent little and campaigned even less, using the reach of his e-mail newsletter and distributing some yard signs to get out the word about his campaign.

He was dismissive of Hurtado, whose daughter is a Sedalia Park Elementary School student.

“I didn’t pay any attention to what she said,” Banks said.

He did mention a concession statement Hurtado posted on social media, saying that she contacted Banks after the election results were in, and reminded him, among other things, that “I am going to be the airhorn that wakes him up every time he snoozes on our kids and our teachers.

“We’ve built an unprecedented movement and have already ignited so many important conversations that were never part of East Cobb before; I know we’ll continue to make change together, even if we have to go around him to do so.”

She lashed out not just against Banks.

“The men who will be keeping their seats on the school board couldn’t stick to the issues because they didn’t have anything productive to contribute to the conversation. They chose to focus on partisan politics rather than stuff of substance; I thought we as a community had evolved past that, but the demographics just aren’t there yet. These men went negative because they only know how to lead through fear.

“They spread misinformation and ran poorly-produced attack ads against a bunch of moms. In a school board race. They should be ashamed of themselves. I hope they’ll consider their very narrow wins as a referendum on this behavior. There may not be more of us yet, but there are too many of us to ignore, and we won’t tolerate this kind of behavior. Our kids deserve better.”

Among the attacks against Hurtado was a video ad that quoted her in an online candidates forum, saying she supported changing the name of Wheeler High School and favored revisiting the county’s popular senior tax exemption from school taxes.

Banks said he wasn’t involved in the ad, but didn’t like what he said was a “nasty” response from Hurtado, a “nasty threatening statement she made.”

Banks came under fire during the campaign from Democratic board member Charisse Davis for comments he made about racial and cultural issues in the Cobb school district, which has a majority-minority enrollment.

Davis said Banks was “spewing racist trash,” including comments he made about Cobb being endangered by “white flight” he cited in other metro Atlanta school districts.

He reiterated that concern after his re-election victory, and said that with a continued Republican school board majority, the Cobb school district can continue to have a “forward-thinking learning environment.

“If it had gone the other way, we’d be headed in the direction of Atlanta and DeKalb,” Banks said.

He said the biggest challenge the Cobb school district faces now is “how we manage getting back the learning process. We can do this more than one way.”

With the Cobb school district offering face-to-face and remote options for students this year, Banks said better integrating those programs will be critical.

He does support full face-to-face learning at the elementary school level, but believes there can be more of a mix of virtual options at the middle- and high school levels.

“Virtual doesn’t work for everybody,” he said. “Our job will be to figure out what works best for each student. There are many opportunities we haven’t explored yet.”

Hurtado thanked Davis and Jaha Howard, another board member Banks has lashed out against over the last two years. He’s not optimistic the tenor of a fractious Cobb school board will improve anytime soon.

“As long as those two Democrats continue to create chaos and not work for the best interests of the students, I don’t see anything changing,” Banks said.

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East Cobb food scores: Frankie’s Italian; Lemon Grass; more

East Cobb Food Scores, Frankie’s Italian Restaurant
The following East Cobb food scores from Nov. 2-6 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

China Great Wall
1860 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 302
November 4, 2020 Score: 91, Grade: A

Dickerson Middle School
855 Woodlawn Drive
November 2, 2020 Score: 100, Grade: A

Dodgen Middle School
1725 Bill Murdock Road
November 6, 2020 Score: 100, Grade: A

Duck Donuts
1281 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 116
November 2, 2020 Score: 99, Grade: A

East Cobb Fit Nutrition Club
2145 Roswell Road, Suite 130
November 3, 2020 Score: 100, Grade: A

Frankie’s Italian Restaurant
3100 Roswell Road
November 5, 2020 Score: 96, Grade: A

J. Christopher’s East Lake Pavilions
2100 Roswell Road, Suite 500
November 3, 2020 Score: 93, Grade: A

Lemon Grass Thai Restaurant
2145 Roswell Road, Suite 190
November 3, 2020 Score: 90, Grade: A

Los Bravos Mexican Restaurant
1255 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 42
November 6, 2020 Score: 95, Grade: A

Moxie Burger
255 Village Parkway, Suite 110
November 6, 2020 Score: 92, Grade: A

Sedalia Park Elementary School
2230 Lower Roswell Road
November 6, 2020 Score: 100, Grade: A

Sope Creek Elementary School
3320 Paper Mill Road
November 5, 2020 Score: 100, Grade: A

Subway
2520 E. Piedmont Road, Suite A
November 6, 2020 Score: 99, Grade: A

Subway
1860 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 301
November 6, 2020 Score: 99, Grade: A

Timber Ridge Elementary School
5000 Timber Ridge Road
November 6, 2020 Score: 100, Grade: A

Tritt Elementary School
4435 Post Oak Tritt Road
November 5, 2020 Score: 100, Grade: A

Willy’s Mexicana Grill
4250 Roswell Road, Suite 120
November 3, 2020 Score: 95, Grade: A

Winston’s Food & Spirits
1860 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 101
November 4, 2020 Score: 78, Grade: C

Zaxby’s 
2981 Delk Road
November 2, 2020 Score: 100, Grade: A

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32 Cobb schools reporting COVID cases as total passes 500

The Cobb County School District has reported more than 500 COVID-19 cases among students and staff since July 1, according to new figures posted on Friday.Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

The exact total is 510, according to the update, which is posted on the district’s website.

The district has been updating that figure weekly since the first week of face-to-face learning began last month.

When elementary students returned in the first phase of reopening, there had been 287 COVID cases reported.

Since the campuses reopened for classes, there have been 223 reported cases, which don’t break down specific numbers of students and staff.

The current week’s total is 67 more than last week and includes cases reported at 32 elementary and middle schools.

Ten or fewer cases were reported at each school, which has been the case since the district began posting. The district does not disclose the exact number at each school when the threshold is at or under 10.

Nine of those schools are in East Cobb, including three that had no reported previous cases.

They are Addison ES, Sope Creek ES and Dodgen MS.

Other East Cobb schools with reported cases this week, and which have reported cases in previous weeks, are Brumby ES, East Side ES, Tritt ES, Daniell MS, East Cobb MS and Mabry MS.

Cobb high school students returned for face-to-face learning on Thursday; previously the district began posting COVID case figures for elementary and middle schools at the end of the second week of students’ return to campus.

As of Thursday there have been 22,836 COVID cases in Cobb County since March, and 469 deaths. In East Cobb, more than 5,000 cases have been reported and nearly 100 deaths.

At one point the 14-day average of cases per 100,000 population in Cobb dropped just below 100, which is considered high community spread.

As of Thursday, that two-week figure is 171 cases per 100,000 people. That’s been a key metric used by Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale. He ordered the start of the school year to be all online when that average was in the 300-400 range, then called for a phased reopening when the average dropped between 100-200.

In explaining its COVID reporting procedures, the Cobb school district said that in accordance with student and health privacy laws, “the Georgia Department of Public Health recommends refraining from publicly publishing numbers of cases or quarantined students or staff that are less than 10 unless the number is 0.”

Cobb and Douglas Public health will “communicate confirmed cases to affected students/staff/ parents,” according to CCSD protocols.

Those guidelines also state that those who test positive “will isolate until 10 consecutive days have passed from their positive COVID-19 test and they are asymptomatic.”

The district details health and safety protocols in this FAQ and encourages parents to follow a daily well-being checklist before sending students to school. More health and safety information can be found here.

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Cobb Elections settling final ballots, counting provisionals

cobb advance voting, Cobb voter registration deadline, Walton and Dickerson PTSA candidates forum

Here’s an update from Cobb County government as of 10:30 Friday morning:

  • Cobb Elections workers are working with the bi-partisan panel to adjudicate the last few ballots under investigation.

  • They have 25 ballots left to adjudicate. Another 50 cured ballots will be processed only after confirming those voters are NOT on the list of those who voted on election day.

  • There are 906 provisional ballots pending. Voters have until the end of the day today to provide ID if they didn’t have it at the polls, sign the absentee envelope if there was a missing signature or provide more evidence if the ballot was identified as having a signature mismatch. Those voters were contacted by letter, email, or phone call.

Earlier Friday, Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said there are 8,197 votes left to count in the state, including 700 in Cobb.

The majority of those are in Gwinnett (4,800), which like Cobb has been surging for Democrats in recent elections.

As of 10:30 a.m., Democratic former vice president Joe Biden took the lead from Republican President Donald Trump overnight Friday, by 1,098 votes, with Georgia’s 16 electoral votes up for grabs.

As of 10:30 a.m., Biden had 2,449,590 votes to 2,448,492 for Trump.

That’s a difference of 1,098 votes.

Republican U.S. Sen. David Perdue also was trying to avoid a runoff with Democrat Jon Ossoff. At 10:30 a.m. Perdue has 49.84 percent of the vote to Ossoff’s 47.84 percent.

The results from those races are being updated here.

 

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Walton marching band to hold final 2020 recycling event Saturday

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Leaders of the Walton Marching Raider Band have announced that their final recycling event of the year – known for accepting metal, electronics and paint – will be held this Saturday, November 7th. Proceeds support the marching band program and help provide a high-quality experience for East Cobb students attending George H. Walton Comprehensive High School. 

The final recycling event of 2020 will be held on Saturday, November 7, 2020 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Walton High School, 1590 Bill Murdock Rd, Marietta, GA 30062. 

Support of the event is especially needed this year due to the novel coronavirus and its impact on regular band fundraising activities.  

All residents and businesses are welcome to donate and support this Walton Marching Raider Band event. People who have cleaned their homes during the pandemic and don’t know what to do with the metal, electronics and paint they want to dispose of and local businesses who are in the same situation are all welcome to support the event.  

The Walton Marching Raider Band is participating in a limited number of school events and following stringent protocols including wearing masks and being physically distanced during outside performances.  

Here’s more information, including a list of items that will be accepted and how you can pay; the cost is a $10 donation per car.

 

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2nd Georgia Senate runoff looms as presidential race closes

Ga. Senate runoff

UPDATED, SATURDAY, 3 P.M.

Georgia will have two U.S. Senate runoffs on Jan. 5 that could determine which party gains control in that chamber.

Republican Sen. David Perdue was at 49.78 percent of the vote in his race against Democrat Jon Ossoff.

At the same time, the Georgia presidential race could be headed for a recount, with Joe Biden holding a roughly 7,500-vote lead over Donald Trump.

The results from those races are being updated here.

As final votes were being counted in Georgia, news outlets began calling the presidential race for Biden based on vote-counting in his home state of Pennsylvania.

If that holds up, that would give Biden 290 electoral votes to 214 for Trump. Presidential candidates need 270 votes to win.

Georgia, Arizona and Nevada were the other states that remain too close to call.

Trump led Biden in Georgia by 370,000 votes on election night, but absentee ballots have heavily been in favor of Biden.

Biden and Ossoff also won Cobb County easily, as did Raphael Warnock, the first-place finisher in a “jungle primary” special election in the other U.S. Senate race.

Warnock, the minister of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta—the church of Martin Luther King Jr.—will face U.S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler, a Republican appointed last year.

The winner of that runoff will fill the remaining two years of the term won in 2015 by Johnson, who retired due to health reasons..

UPDATED, FRIDAY 10:30 A.M.:

Democratic former vice president Joe Biden edged ahead of Republican President Donald Trump overnight Friday, with Georgia’s 16 electoral votes up for grabs.

As of 10:30 a.m., Biden had 2,449,590 votes to 2,448,492 for Trump.

That’s a difference of 1,098 votes.

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said that as of 8:15 a.m. Friday, there are 8,197 votes still to count in Georgia, including 700 in Cobb County.

The majority of those votes are in Gwinnett, where 4,800 votes have not been counted in a county that like Cobb has been surging toward Democrats in recent elections.

Provisional, military and overseas ballots, and ballots needing to be “cured” or corrected by voters also were to be counted on Friday.

Biden also has moved ahead of Trump in Pennsylvania as final vote-counting continues.

Georgia Republican U.S. Sen. David Perdue (in photo at left) was trying to fend off a runoff with Democrat Jon Ossoff (in photo at right). That runoff would take place on Jan. 5.

Perdue’s lead as of 10:30 a.m. Friday stands at 98,849 over Ossoff. More importantly, Perdue has 49.84 percent of the vote to Ossoff’s 47.84 percent.

Runoffs take place in Georgia when the leading candidate gets less than 50 percent of the vote plus one vote.

Shane Hazel, a Libertarian candidate, has tallied 2.32 percent of the vote.

ORIGINAL STORY:

Cobb will certify election results next Friday, Nov. 13.

Party control of the U.S. Senate, which has been in Republican hands, could be determined in if both Georgia races go to runoffs.

In Tuesday’s special election, appointed Republican U.S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler finished second in a “jungle primary” to Democrat Raphael Warnock.

The winner of that runoff, also on Jan. 5, will fill the remaining two years of former Sen. Johnny Isakson’s term.

Biden (56 percent) and Ossoff (54 percent) won Cobb, and Warnock was the top vote-getter in the county in his race (37 percent).

Like Biden, Ossoff has been able to close with absentee votes from metro Atlanta and other strong Democratic parts of the state.

On Thursday afternoon Ossoff’s campaign manager, Ellen Foster, sent out a statement saying that “the votes are still being counted, but we are confident that Jon Ossoff’s historic performance in Georgia has forced Senator David Perdue to continue defending his indefensible record of unemployment, disease, and corruption.”

Perdue hasn’t responded directly to the prospects of facing a runoff; instead he went on social media Thursday, commenting on the presidential race, and saying that if “every lawful vote cast should be counted, once,” Trump will be re-elected.

Some pro-Trump supporters gathered at State Farm Arena in Atlanta Thursday to protest what they said was a “fix” against the president in the vote-counting.

In Thursday evening remarks at the White House, Trump claimed “we’re clearly going to win Georgia,” referring to a 117,000-vote margin he enjoyed after election-day votes were counted.

He didn’t mention the new numbers based on absentee ballots counted.

The Trump campaign and the Georgia Republican Party have filed lawsuits over the ballot-counting in the presidential race, and Trump’s campaign also was doing the same in Michigan and Pennsylvania, where mail-in ballots are being counted.

Other states that are too close to call and that are still counting are Arizona and Nevada.

“This is a fraud to the American public,” said Trump, adding that “frankly, we did win this election. . . . This is a major fraud on our nation.”

The latest overall results compiled by C-SPAN have Biden with 264 electoral votes to 214 for Trump, with four states to call: Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Nevada.

A total of 270 electoral votes are needed to win the presidency. Georgia has 16 electoral votes.

 

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Cobb commission election update: Richardson extends lead

Cobb commission election update

After seeing her lead whittled to just a few hundred votes after Tuesday’s election-day votes were counted, Democrat Jerica Richardson now has a lead of 1,208 votes over Republican Fitz Johnson for the District 2 seat on the Cobb Board of Commissioners.

Richardson and Johnson are vying to succeed Republican three-term commissioner Bob Ott,, who decided not to run again.

According to figures updated Wednesday night by the Georgia Secretary of State’s office, Richardson has 53,509 votes to 52,301 for Johnson.

That’s a margin of 50.57 to 49.43 percent, which would preclude a recount.

UPDATED, 5:30 P.M. THURSDAY:

Additional ballots counted have pushed Richardson’s lead to 1,224 votes (53,642 to 52,418), and a margin of 50.58 to 49.42 percent.

Recounts in Georgia are allowed if the difference between two candidates is 0.5 percent of the vote or less.

Candidate profiles

You can read through the results by clicking here. The latest numbers include mailed-in absentee ballots.

Early-voting numbers for the candidates were very close: 22,167 for Richardson, and 21,269 for Johnson.

He got 11,061 votes from in-person election-day voting, while she received 6,322.

But Richardson has been able to pull away with mail-in absentee votes.

She has received 25,020 of those, and Johnson has 19,971.

“It doesn’t look great but we just have to wait and see what happens,” said Johnson, who won the Republican nomination in similar fashion, with a razor-thin edge over Andy Smith in a runoff in August.

For details and to view precinct results, click here.

Johnson won most precincts in East Cobb and his home base in Vinings (indicated in blue on the map above), while Richardson took most of the precincts in the Cumberland-Vinings-Smyrna area (in green).

In an interview with East Cobb News, Richardson said she expected the race to be close, and credited Johnson with “running an impeccable campaign. He’s a Cobb success story and he ran a very cordial campaign.

“Yes, it was really close, and I think the community benefits from that.”

Cobb Elections had 15,000 votes to count as of Wednesday, but that number is now down to 700 remaining absentee ballots, according to a message sent Thursday morning.

On Friday, another 882 provisional ballots will be processed, along with military ballots postmarked on election days.

Voters who need to “cure” their ballots—addressing those with missing or mismatched signatures, among other things—will have that done on Friday as well.

As we noted earlier, this race will swing party control on the five-member commission from Republicans, who have had a 4-1 advantage, two Democrats, with a 3-2 split.

Commissioner Lisa Cupid, who defeated Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce and Monique Sheffield’s, her successor in South Cobb, are the other Democrats.

In January, Richardson, Cupid and Sheffield will form a board majority, joining Republicans JoAnn Birrell of Northeast Cobb and Keli Gambrill of North Cobb.

The Cobb Board of Elections and Registration will certify all the results next Friday, Nov. 13.

The District 2 race isn’t the only nailbiter left.

In the State House District 43 seat in East Cobb, Republican State Rep. Sharon Cooper leads Democrat Luisa Wakeman by 487 votes, with all but remaining absentee and provisional ballots counted.

Cooper has 15,874 votes, or 50.78 percent, to 15,387 votes for Wakeman, or 49.22 percent.

That’s even closer than Cooper’s win over Wakeman in 2018, which was by less than 800 votes.

The current numbers were updated Thursday at 9:30 a.m. If they stand, that margin of the vote also would preclude a recount.

Cooper declared victory on Wednesday, while Wakeman said she’s waiting for every vote to be counted.

 

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East Cobb Elections Update: Democrats sweep county races

Cobb Democrats sweep county races, East Cobb Elections Update
From L-R: Lisa Cupid, Craig Owens and Flynn Broady

In countywide races, Democrats swept out incumbent Republicans across the board in Cobb County general elections this week. (see previous ECN election-night post).

Commissioner Lisa Cupid defeated incumbent Republican Mike Boyce in the Cobb Commission Chair race, becoming the first woman and the first African-American to hold the position.

She received 203,738 votes, or 53 percent to Boyce’s 179,375 votes or 47 percent.

Cupid led from the outset, as Democrats across the county at all levels enjoyed early and absentee voting advantages, and Boyce could never get closer than the final margin.

On Wednesday morning he conceded on his Facebook page, saying he called Cupid with a congratulatory message, “expressing my appreciation for running an issues-based campaign, and wishing her all the best in the future.

“Thank all of you for your support during my term as Chairman. It has been an honor to have served the people of Cobb County.”

Boyce was elected in 2016 after defeating then-incumbent Tim Lee in the Republican primary, but was caught up on an historic wave of Democratic support across Cobb.

Cupid also congratulated Boyce on running a “respectful” campaign and called him a “respectful colleague.”

She told supporters that “this was a campaign about moving Cobb forward together. Whether you voted for me or didn’t, whether you voted at all, my aim is to serve everyone the same. My goal is to move the whole county forward and make this an ever better place to live for everyone.”

Cupid said announcements will be forthcoming “as we begin the collaborative process of embarking on this new chapter in Cobb’s history.”

Updated election results

Related coverage

The Democratic wave also swept out of office Republican Cobb Sheriff Neil Warren, who lost to Cobb Police Major Craig Owens.

Owens got 202,272 votes, or 54 percent, to 167,472 votes, or 45 percent for Warren, who has been in office since 1994. But recently he came under fire for a series of deaths at the Cobb County Jail that have prompted an investigation by the Cobb District Attorney’s Office.

That office will have a new top prosecutor after the elections. Republican Joyette Holmes, who was appointed last year to succeed current GBI director Vic Reynolds, lost to Democrat Flynn Broady, an assistant Cobb solicitor.

Broady, who ran unsuccessfully for the 11th Congressional District seat in 2018, edged Holmes by a 187,708-180,990 vote count, or 51-49 percent.

Early Wednesday morning Broady said in a statement that “I will use restorative practices, not punitive, while acting as District Attorney for Cobb County and I will ensure the fair treatment of all people.”

In the final weeks before the campaign, he had pushed for Holmes to investigate the death of Vincent Truitt, a 17-year-old who was shot in the back and killed by a Cobb police officer in July.

Democrats also claimed victory for Cobb Superior Court Clerk. Connie Taylor defeated Republican incumbent Rebecca Keaton 51-48 percent.

Cobb voters overwhelmingly approved another Cobb Special-Purpose Local-Option Sales Tax with 66 percent of the vote. The new sales tax period will begin in 2022 and will last for six years.

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East Cobb Election Results: Democrats lead county races

 

 

East Cobb election results
Democrat Luisa Wakeman (center) led State Rep. Sharon Cooper in the District 43 State House race before the GOP incumbent edged ahead late. (ECN photos)

UPDATED, 2 P.M. WEDNESDAY

UPDATED, 12:30 A.M. WEDNESDAY

This will be the final update of the evening; we’ll have more coverage later Wednesday as final absentee and provisional ballots are still to be counted.

East Cobb News also will be sending out a special election newsletter on Wednesday. If you’re not a subscriber and you’d like to sign up, please click here.

Live election night reporting

Related coverage

Party control of the Cobb Board of Commissioners could be switching over to Democrats.

Shortly after midnight, Democrat Jerica Richardson held a 109-vote lead over Republican Fitz Johnson, 33,971-33,862. 

But with 100 percent of the precincts reporting, she now holds a lead of 41,169 to 37,951, with absentee and other late ballots still to be counted.

They’re seeking to succeed retiring Republican commissioner Bob Ott.

Commissioner Lisa Cupid appears headed to victory over Republican incumbent Mike Boyce for Cobb Commission Chair.

With 99 percent of the precincts reporting, Cupid has 171,074 votes to 156,005, or 52-47 percent.

Cupid would be the first Democrat to hold that position since Ernest Barrett in 1984.

Republicans currently have a 4-1 advantage on the commission, with Cupid the only Democrat. Her successor in District 4 in South Cobb, Monique Sheffield, is a Democrat. 

Control of the Cobb Board of Education also was on the line.

Republican incumbent David Banks has 23,672 votes in the Post 5 race in East Cobb (Pope and Lassiter clusters), while Democrat Julia Hurtado had 21,634 votes with 100 percent of the precincts reporting.

Two other Republican incumbents also were seeking re-election. Randy Scamihorn appears headed to victory, and current chairman Brad Wheeler had trailed his Democratic challenger by less than 200 votes.

But he took a lead of less than 2,000 votes early Wednesday.

Going into the elections, Republican held a 4-3 majority on the school board.

Another race that’s too close to call is the State House District 43 race in East Cobb. Republican State Rep. Sharon Cooper had trailed Democrat Luisa Wakeman by five votes, 9,679, to 9,674.

Wakeman has stretched her lead, and has 10,417 votes to 9,995 for Cooper.

All other East Cobb legislative incumbents were leading their races early Wednesday, after trailing before election-day votes came in. 

Vote-counting is still going on in other metro Atlanta counties, so statewide races, some Congressional races and and the presidential race still haven’t been determined.

President Donald Trump leads Joe Biden 53-42 in Georgia, although Biden leads in Cobb 55-42 percent.

U.S. Sen David Perdue leads Democrat Jon Ossoff 52-45 percent.

The U.S. Senate seat that’s in a jungle primary appears headed for a runoff. Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler has 27 percent and Democrat Raphael Warnock has 29 percent.

Republican Congressman Doug Collins, who has 23 percent, has conceded and has offered his support to Loeffler. The runoff will be on Jan. 5, 2021, and the winner will fill the remaining two years of Johnny Isakson’s term.

U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath, a Democrat, looks to have won re-election over Republican Karen Handel, whom she beat in 2018, in the 6th Congressional District race. 

McBath led 54-45 percent with 50 percent of the precincts reporting, as votes from Fulton and DeKalb counties still hadn’t been counted.

Longtime Cobb Sheriff Neil Warren appeared headed for defeat by Democrat Craig Owens, a former officer in the Cobb Police Department.

Joyette Holmes, a Republican appointed Cobb District Attorney last year, also was trailing by 3,699 votes to Democrat Flynn Broady, an assistant Cobb solicitor.

The Cobb SPLOST was resoundingly renewed by voters, with “yes” votes totaling 66 percent.

All the results are unofficial pending certification by the Cobb Board of Elections and Registration.

UPDATED, 11:30 P.M.

With 80 percent of Cobb precincts reporting, Democratic commissioner Lisa Cupid leads Republican incumbent Mike Boyce in the Cobb Commission chair’s race 52-48 percent, by around 11,400 votes.

The District 2 race for Cobb Board of Commissioners is a virtual dead heat, also with 80 percent of precincts reporting. 

Democrat Jerica Richardson’s lead has been reduced to 674 votes, or 50.5 percent to 49.4 percent, over Republican Fitz Johnson.

She has 32,856 votes to 32,182 for Johnson. With late absentee ballots still to be counted, this race may not be determined until Wednesday at the earliest.

In the Post 5 race for Cobb Board of Education, Republican incumbent David Banks has a 52-48 percent lead over Democrat Julia Hurtado.

Banks has 23,399 votes to 21,509 for Hurtado. Two other school board Republican incumbents have bigger leads over Democratic challengers, so the GOP’s 4-3 majority on the school board for now looks like it will remain.

Another close race in East Cobb is in State House District 43. Republican Rep. Sharon Cooper, who has trailed all evening, is 210 points behind Democrat Luisa Wakeman, 9,488-9,288. 

Republican Sen. David Perdue was leading Democrat Jon Ossoff 54-43 percent, with metro Atlanta counties still to report.

Democratic U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath continues to lead Karen Handel in the 6th Congressional District race 54-45 percent.

President Donald Trump leads Joe Biden in Georgia’s presidential voting by 54-45, although again metro Atlanta counties have not yet reported. 

UPDATED, 10:30 P.M.

With nearly half of all Cobb precincts reporting, some of the key races we’re looking at are starting to tighten.

Democratic commissioner Lisa Cupid leads Republican incumbent Mike Boyce in the Cobb Commission chair’s race, but her margin has been reduced to 53-46 percent, or a 14,000-vote lead, with 51 percent of precincts reporting.

In Cobb Commission District 2, Democrat Jerica Richardson’s lead over Republican Fitz Johnson also has been cut. With 51 percent reporting, she’s up by less than 3,000 votes, or 52.-47 percent.

The Cobb Board of Education Post 5 race also has closed. Republican incumbent David Banks has gone ahead of Democrat Julia Hurtado by less than 400 votes, or 50.4 percent to 49.6 percent, with 55 percent of precincts reporting.

Democrats lead Republican incumbents in the Sheriff and District Attorney’s race, but those margins are getting smaller as more election-day results come in. Both races have 51 percent of precincts reporting.

Democrat Flynn Broady leads Republican incumbent Joyette Holmes only by 51-48 percent, or less than 6,000 votes, for District Attorney. Longtime Republican sheriff Neil Warren trails Democrat Craig Owens 55-44 percent.

In East Cobb legislative races, Republican State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick is pulling away from Democrat Christine Triebsch 54-45 percent in District 32.

Republican State Rep. Sharon Cooper is closing on Democrat Luisa Wakeman, who leads 51-47 percent in District 43.

Two other East Cobb Republican incumbents, State Rep. Matt Dollar of District 45 and Don Parsons of District 44, have pulled ahead of their Democratic foes. 

Republican State Rep. John Carson of District 46 is cruising to re-election, leading Democrat Caroline Holko 61-39 percent.

Democratic State Rep. Mary Frances Williams continues to hold a solid lead over Republican Rose Wing, 55-44 percent, in District 37.

East Cobb News will be sending out a special election newsletter on Wednesday. If you’re not a subscriber and you’d like to sign up, please click here.

UPDATED, 9:05 P.M.

Election-day results are starting to trickle in, and a combination of early and absentee ballots have Democrats in the lead in a number of races. 

You can follow real-time updates at the links below.

Lisa Cupid has 58 percent of that vote in the Cobb Commission Chair race, with incumbent chairman Mike Boyce at 42 percent.

In Cobb Commission District 2, Democrat Jerica Richardson leads Republican Fitz Johnson 55-44 percent, and in Cobb Board of Education Post 5, Democrat Julia Hurtado is ahead of Republican incumbent David Banks 56-44 percent. 

Similar trends are playing out in countywide races for Sheriff, District Attorney and Superior Court Clerk, as Republican incumbents are trailing their Democratic challengers for now.

Likewise in the state legislative seats in East Cobb, where the only Republican incumbent, State Rep. John Carson of District 46, has a lead at this stage.

Across Georgia, 43 of 159 counties have reported, many of them in rural parts of Georgia where Republicans are strong. 

President Donald Trump leads Joe Biden 57-42 percent, and U.S. Sen. David Perdue leads Jon Ossoff 57-40 percent.

In the other U.S. Senate race, a jungle primary has Republican incumbent Kelly Loeffler surging ahead of Democrat Raphael Warnock, 29-27 percent, and Republican U.S. Rep. Doug Collins has 24 percent.

In the 6th Congressional race, Democratic U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath leads her predecessor, Republican Karen Handel, 60-39 percent.

But again, full metro Atlanta returns are a long way from being reported.

ORIGINAL POST, 7:01 P.M.

The polls have closed in Georgia, and the counting has begun for the 2020 general election.

Voters who were in line by 7 p.m. Tuesday will be able to vote. Voters in the Sope Creek 2 precinct in East Cobb who were in line by 7:20 p.m. also will be able to vote.

A judge approved a time extension Tuesday afternoon at that polling station at Sope Creek Elementary School because the poll manager arrived 20 minutes late this morning.

Absentee ballots that were left in the 16 designated drop boxes in Cobb County also were collected at 7 p.m.

East Cobb News will continuously update this post all evening with results from local, state and federal races.

Early voting results have been posted, and in Cobb they generally show Democrats with the lead at all levels—federal, state and local.

Some polling stations in Cobb had lines when the polls opened at 7 a.m., but otherwise, there were few lines and little waiting at the county’s 145 precincts.

Cobb Elections said 58 percent of the county’s roughly 540,000 registered voters cast absentee ballots or voted during the early-voting period.

Voters were selecting seats on the Cobb Board of Commissioners (chairman and District 2), three Cobb Board of Education seats (including Post 5 in East Cobb), all state legislative seats, both U.S. Senate seats, the 6th Congressional District and president.

Countywide races for Sheriff and District Attorney are also on the ballot, as is a 6-year renewal of the Cobb Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax (SPLOST).

Typically early voting and absentee figures are tallied first, followed by same-day voting results and more recent absentee votes. 

Earlier absentee ballots are expected to be counted rather quickly, as they have been processed to prepare for tabulation when the polls close.

While we await full we’ll results, we’ll post early voting and absentee figures as they are revealed.

 

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Restaurant news: Aurelio’s Pizza closes in East Cobb

Aurelio's Pizza closes East Cobb

The Vitt family, which has been operating the Aurelio’s Is Pizza location at Market Plaza in East Cobb (1255 Johnson Ferry Road, next to Red Sky), has announced the restaurant was closing.

The announcement was made on Monday, the same day the doors closed for good:

We want to offer our sincere thanks for your support. We thank you for your continued business over these last few months.

It is with great regret that we must inform you that we will be closing the Marietta Aurelio’s, as of today.

We have enjoyed our time running Aurelio’s of Marietta and considered it a pleasure to be a part of so many family memories.

We loved making your perfect pizza recipes, and we will miss it very much! Thank you for the support. We will miss you all.

Paul Vitt, a native of the Chicago area, opened the Chicago-style franchise on Johnson Ferry Road in June 2011.

The reaction from customers—more than 200 comments and running—was overwhelming, a mix of sadness, shock and gratitude for what for many was their favorite local pizzeria:

“I am heartbroken, it was a good run Mr. Vitt, wish you the best my friend…..thanks for the memories and the best pie ever…”

“My family and I moved here from Chicago. The Marietta Aurelio’s gave us a little taste of home. It will be very much missed.”

“This is our favorite pizza place and this is a big loss for East Cobb.”

“This may be the very worst news of 2020 and that is saying something. We are devastated that you’re going!!”

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Cases surge as East Cobb COVID numbers reach milestones

East Cobb COVID cases
To click details of each ZIP code and to view a similar map of COVID deaths in Cobb, click here.

By the end of October, 96 deaths from COVID-19 had been reported in East Cobb ZIP codes, and there have been 5,000 confirmed cases of the virus.

Data compiled by Cobb Commissioner Bob Ott and the Georgia Department of Health reflect another rise in the rate of confirmed COVID cases as colder weather approaches.

As of Monday afternoon, there were 22,430 confirmed cases in Cobb County and 460 deaths.

The latter is the second-highest figure in Georgia, as it’s been for a while, with Fulton County having 628 deaths.

What’s causing renewed concern is a resurgence of what public health officials call “community spread.”

When we last posted in early September about those metrics—used by the Cobb County School District to determine when, and how, to reopen for classes—Cobb had just ducked under the “high community spread” designation.

That’s a 14-day average of 100 cases per 100,000 or less, after Cobb’s number was nearly 400 during the summer spike and prompted the Cobb school district’s decision to start the school year online-only.

But that dipping point hasn’t lasted long.

As of Tuesday, Cobb’s 14-day average is now 151 cases per 100,000, and that’s a jump from around 120 just last week.

(You can read the Georgia DPH daily status report by clicking here; it’s updated daily at 3 p.m.)

The above map breaks down COVID cases by ZIP Code, and was last updated Oct. 31. Ott said he’s doing this once a week because the numbers don’t change that much.

You can click here to get more details and to switch to a COVID deaths map that also shows COVID data in long-term care homes.

Here’s what those numbers look like in East Cobb for the moment:

  • 30062: 1,499 cases, 23 deaths
  • 30066: 1,364 cases, 24 deaths
  • 30067: 1,336 cases, 15
  • 30068: 741 cases, 32
  • 30075: 154 cases, 2 deaths

The Cobb school district provides a weekly update of COVID cases, and last week there were nine schools in East Cobb where staff or students had confirmed cases.

By early September the 7-day moving average of cases in Cobb County began to drop, going by what’s called “date of onset.” That’s data showing the date of a confirmed case, not the day it was reported.

That average (seen in the yellow line below) fell from 108 to 55 by the end of September, and as of Oct. 20 is at 68.4. Onset numbers since that 14-day window are considered preliminary and are occasionally updated with later reports.

Cobb COVID Cases 7-day average onset 11.3.20
To view more details from the Georgia DPH daily status report, click here.

Similar data from Georgia DPH about deaths in Cobb County shows a similar pattern. In late September, the 7-day moving average of deaths according to the date of death had reached zero, after being as high as 4.9 in July.

As of Oct. 20, that 7-day figure was 0.6, after having been at 1.1 on Oct. 7.

As has been the case since the summer, the vast majority of confirmed COVID-19 cases are being reported between the ages of 18-59 (as shown below, with data compiled by Ott).

Cobb COVID cases by age 11.3.20

A little deeper into the numbers among the youngest ones, with some school-age breakdowns:

There have been 213 cases between 0-4 years old; 306 cases between 5-9 years old; and 1,097 cases between 10-17 years old.

Only two deaths have been reported in Cobb between the ages of 0-17 years old.

The deaths remain overwhelmingly among those who are older and/or who have multiple serious health issues.

Of the 460 deaths in Cobb, 340 are among those ages 70 and older, and 384 had known comorbidities.

Cobb COVID deaths by age 11.3.20

On Tuesday Georgia will reach another milestone. As of Monday there have been 7,999 COVID-19 deaths in the state, and 362,921 cases.

Cobb County Government also has its own COVID hub with data, maps and other details of deaths, cases, hospitalization and demographic information relating to the virus.

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East Cobb Election Day 2020: Voting info, candidates and more

Editor's Note voting and citizenship

On Tuesday voters will be going to the polls in the 2020 General Election that’s already seen record turnout for early and absentee balloting in Cobb County and Georgia.

This East Cobb Election Day post rounds up everything we’ve put together before you head to your precinct—if you haven’t already voted.

The polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday at all precincts.

If you have an absentee ballot, that must be dropped off at a designated drop box location by 7 p.m. It’s too late to put it in the mail, because all ballots have to be received by Cobb Elections by 7 p.m. in order to be counted (more info about this below).

EAST COBB ELECTIONS GUIDE

For voters in East Cobb, there’s a full slate of competitive races at every level—local, state and federal.

Georgia and Cobb have become battlegrounds in the presidential sweepstakes, and candidates in both U.S. Senate races have been heavily courting voters in the county.

Cobb Elections said 174,379 people voted during the three-week early voting period that ended Friday, and it has received 135,633 of 181,861 absentee ballots requested.

That’s an estimated 58 percent of Cobb’s registered voters who have already cast their ballots.

Democrats cut into East Cobb’s Republican stronghold in 2018 and are vying for more, including possible control of the Cobb Board of Commissioners and the Cobb Board of Education.

Republican Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce is seeking a second term against commissioner Lisa Cupid of South Cobb. She could become the first female and African-American to head the county government, as well as the first Democrat since Ernest Barrett in 1984.

In the race to succeed retiring District 2 commissioner Bob Ott, Republican Fitz Johnson and Democrat Jerica Richardson are both seeking their first stint in public office.

Another political newcomer, Democrat Julia Hurtado, is challenging three-term Republican school board member David Banks in Post 5, which includes the Pope and Lassiter clusters. 

Legislative races in East Cobb that previously had little competition will be contested everywhere, including some rematches from 2018.

Republican State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick is facing Democratic attorney Christine Triebsch for the third time in four years in District 32.

Democrats need to flip 16 seats in the House to gain control, and one of the most closely-watched races is in District 43. Longtime Republican State Rep. Sharon Cooper is facing Democrat Luisa Wakeman, who nearly beat her two years ago.

In the District 45 race, Republican State Rep. Matt Dollar, the sponsor of an East Cobb cityhood bill last year, is facing first-time candidate Sara Tindall Ghazal, a former voter protection director for the Georgia Democratic Party.

Two Republican and one Democratic state house incumbents in Northeast Cobb also have opposition.

Another 2018 rematch is in store in the 6th Congressional District, where Republican Karen Handel is trying to regain the seat she lost to Democrat Lucy McBath.

Cobb voters also will be voting in countywide races for sheriff and district attorney and will be deciding on whether to renew the Cobb SPLOST, starting in 2022.

CHECK YOUR REGISTRATION

WHERE TO VOTE

ABSENTEE BALLOT DROP BOXES

GOING TO THE POLLS

Since the 2018 election, a number of precinct changes have been made as Cobb Elections is gradually moving away from schools. 

Here’s a list of precinct changes since last year. Most recently, the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center (2051 Lower Roswell Road) was designated the polling station for the Powers Ferry 1 precinct. The Mountain View Regional Library (3320 Sandy Plains Road) is the venue for the Simpson 1 precinct. 

They’re among five Cobb library branches that will be closed all day Tuesday to serve as precincts.

On Friday, Cobb Elections said that the Elizabeth 5 polling station at Sandy Plains Baptist Church would be unavailable due to damage from Hurricane Zeta. Voters in that precinct should go to Holy Trinity Lutheran Church (2922 Sandy Plains Road), which is also the Sandy Plains 1 precinct.

If you’re going to your precinct on Tuesday, Cobb Elections is asking you to remember four things before you come:

  • Check your polling location at the “My Voter Page” at the Georgia Secretary of State website;
  • Bring a photo ID;
  • If you received an absentee ballot but want to vote in person, bring the absentee ballot. It must be cancelled before you can vote at the polls;
  • Voters must wear masks and should expect socially-distant lines.

If you’re voting in the morning, you may want to bundle up. Tuesday’s expected to be bright and sunny, but temperatures will be in the high 30s when the polls open. It’ll get warmer, into the mid-50s around noon, and then rise to the low 60s by mid-afternoon.

If you are in line by 7 p.m., you will be allowed to vote.

If you’re dropping off an absentee ballot, here are the locations. In East Cobb, they’re located at the following:

  • East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road)
  • Sewell Mill Library (2051 Lower Roswell Road)
  • Mountain View Regional Library (3320 Sandy Plains Road)
  • Gritters Library (880 Shaw Park Drive)

Remember: Absentee ballots must be dropped off by 7 p.m., when the polls close. All but the Gritters Library are being used as precincts, so expect traffic bottlenecks.

The Georgia Secretary of State’s office has created an absentee ballot tracker that lets you follow the status of your absentee ballot after you have returned it.

FOLLOW ELECTION COVERAGE

East Cobb News will provide continuing coverage all day and evening on Tuesday, as well as the rest of the week, given the high turnout and time needed to count absentee ballots.

If you have questions about voting, or photos or impressions to share of your experience at the polls, let us know: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

We’ll also be sending out a special election newsletter on Wednesday. If you’re not a subscriber and you’d like to sign up, click the link below.

We’ll have much more detailed coverage in our Sunday edition of the newsletter.

 

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Cobb not-for-profits approved for $842K in CARES Act funding

Good Mews 30th birthday
The Good Mews Animal Foundation of East Cobb is among the CARES Act not-for-profit recipients.

The Cobb Board of Commissioners has approved federal CARES Act funding totaling $842,500 for 68 non-for-profit organizations in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The organizations were recommended by SelectCobb, the economic development arm of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce, and will receive grant funding for personnel and operational expenses.

They include community service organizations, animal welfare groups, special-education schools and arts entities.

The cash grants range from $2,500 to $25,000, and will go organizations that are locally-operated. They include the following:

$25,000

  • MUST Ministries
  • Nobis Works

$20,000

  • MDE School of East Cobb
  • liveSAFE Resources Inc.

$15,000

  • The Georgia Ballet Inc.
  • The Center for Family Resources
  • The Extension
  • Habitat for Humanity of Northwest Metro Atlanta
  • Good Mews Animal Foundation
  • Friends of the Strand
  • Davis Direction Foundation

$10,000

  • Marietta/Cobb Museum of Art
  • Mostly Mutts Animal Rescue & Adoption
  • Food Security of America
  • Curing Kids Cancer Inc.

$2,500

  • Cobb Landmarks & Historical Society
  • Family Promise Cobb County
  • Marietta Police Athletic League

The full list of recipients can be found here. In July commissioners approved $2 million for the not-for-profits; all CARES Act funding must be designated and distributed by Dec. 31.

Commissioners also voted last week to allocate an additional $57,864 in emergency food funding from the CARES Act to 25 Cobb organizations, including MUST, the Noonday Baptist Association and the YMCA of Metro Atlanta.

Each organization will receive $2,314 and the full list can be found here.

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United Military Care to provide free BBQ for veterans on Saturday

East Cobb veterans aid group

On Saturday the East Cobb-based United Military Care organization will be holding a free barbecue lunch for veterans, and this year it’s going to be a drive-through event.

The pickup period takes place from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at their offices (1220 Canton Road, across from the Olde Mill Shopping Center) and you can sign up by calling 770-973-0014 or by e-mailing peggyb@unitedmilitarycare.org.

Proof of veteran status is required when you pick up your food. Non-veterans can purchase meals for $10 to help fund programs to help veterans in crisis. Volunteers will be holding signs thanking veterans for their service.

Last year we visited United Military Care at its Veterans Day event and wrote about the organization’s efforts to provide food, financial, housing and other assistance to veterans in need.

More updates about the event are posted on UMC’s Facebook page.

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Northeast Cobb home condemned after being smashed by tree

Northeast Cobb home condemned

More stunning devastation of Thursday’s storms from Hurricane Zeta:

Rachel Curry sent these photos of a tree that demolished two-thirds of her Northeast Cobb home, which has been condemned.

She said the 16,000-pound tree made a direct hit on the structure around 4:30 a.m. :

“The interior is crushed sheetrock, fallen attic rafters, and insulation everywhere along with a crack in the main floor joist. We are just grateful to be safe.”

She and her family are staying for now in a hotel with their pets, and Curry said an insurance adjustor is coming Tuesday to see if the house will have to be totalled.

Northeast Cobb home condemned

Northeast Cobb home condemned

Northeast Cobb home condemned

Earlier on Saturday we heard from Tracy Cullo, a homeowner in the Mountain Creek neighborhood, and whose house was also hit by a tree, barely avoiding slamming into one of her daughters’ bedrooms.

Everyone is safe there too.

Send us information about conditions in your area, and photos to share, if it’s safe for you to do so: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

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