Traffic alert: Interstate North Parkway closure through Friday

Interstate North Parkway closed
Cobb Govt. photo

UPDATED THURSDAY, 5:05 P.M.

Here’s what Cobb commissioner Bob Ott’s office released just a little while ago:

The break was on our 12-inch line that connected directly to the Cobb County-Marietta Water Authority’s 48-inch line. It was determined that we do not need this connection, so our repair eliminated the connection to the Water Authority’s line. Water was restored to 400 Interstate North Parkway around 7:45 p.m. last night. The line we repaired yesterday began leaking today. We have a crew onsite now to resolve the problem.

The CCMWA expects their contractor to complete this work by 6 p.m. today. This work does not affect our customers.

The road remains closed, but there is access to the 400 building. CW Matthews will repair the road tonight after the CCMWA’s contractor finishes his work. Road work should be finished tomorrow between 6 a.m. and noon.

ORIGINAL REPORT, WEDNESDAY, 4:35 P.M.

If you commute to and from this part of the Cumberland area be advised: A massive water main break has forced the closure of a portion of Interstate North Parkway until at least midday Friday.

Cobb officials released the above photo of the gushing break in front of the 400 Interstate Parkway North building. That’s near Cumberland Boulevard and the newly opened Bob Callan Trail extension, and in a heavily traveled corridor of office parks.

They said water service is shut off only to this one building. Here’s more of what was released around 4 p.m. Wednesday:

Work to repair the water main break at 400 Interstate North Parkway near Cumberland Blvd will take longer than initially thought. Crews will not be able to get in to repair the roadway until later Thursday.

  • Interstate North Parkway will remain CLOSED between Cumberland and Powers Ferry until midday FRIDAY;
  • Cobb DOT has arranged traffic flow so there is access to all businesses in the area.

For enlarged view of map and updates click here.

Interstate North Parkway closure

 

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Sen. Isakson retiring due to ‘mounting health challenges’

The office of U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson announced Wednesday that due to health reasons, he will be resigning his seat with three years left in his term.Isakson blisters Trump

Here’s the message from Isakson, 74, an East Cobb Republican, who’s been rehabbing from a fall in his Washington apartment and has been battling Parkinson’s disease.

He also announced he had kidney surgery this week:

“After much prayer and consultation with my family and my doctors, I have made the very tough decision to leave the U.S. Senate at the end of this year. I have informed Georgia Governor Brian Kemp today that I will resign my Senate seat effective December 31, 2019.

“I am leaving a job I love because my health challenges are taking their toll on me, my family and my staff. My Parkinson’s has been progressing, and I am continuing physical therapy to recover from a fall in July. In addition, this week I had surgery to remove a growth on my kidney.

“In my 40 years in elected office, I have always put my constituents and my state of Georgia first. With the mounting health challenges I am facing, I have concluded that I will not be able to do the job over the long term in the manner the citizens of Georgia deserve. It goes against every fiber of my being to leave in the middle of my Senate term, but I know it’s the right thing to do on behalf of my state.

“I look forward to returning to Washington on September 9 when the Senate goes back into session. And after December 31, I look forward to continuing to help the people of Georgia in any way I can and also helping those who are working toward a cure for Parkinson’s.”

Isakson’s term ends at the end of 2022. Under Georgia law, the governor will appoint a successor until a special election in 2020.

That means both Georgia senate seats will be on the ballot next November. Republican Sen. David Perdue, the junior senator, has indicated he will be seeking a second term.

The winner of the special election for Isakson’s seat would serve two years, with that office then being up for a six-year term in 2022 elections.

Here’s the letter Isakson wrote to Kemp.

Walton High School

An East Cobb civic icon

Isakson was a pillar of the East Cobb business and civic community before he ever ran for public office. The founder and president of Northside Realty, Isakson was called upon by Cobb school superintendent Kermit Keenum in the early 1970s to help the district find land for a badly needed middle school and high school in fast-growing East Cobb.

As he noted in 2017 at the ribbon-cutting for the new Walton High School building (in photo above), the properties he located on Bill Murdock Road for what were to become Walton and Dodgen Middle School cost less than $5,000 combined.

He and his wife Dianne, whom he married in 1968, raised three children, who attended school in the Walton cluster. They have eight grandchildren and are members of Mt. Zion United Methodist Church on Johnson Ferry Road.

When Isakson was elected to the Georgia House in 1976, he was one of the first Republicans in what was becoming known as East Cobb to win public office. While in the lower house, he ran for governor in 1990 but lost.

Two years later, he won a seat in the Georgia Senate, where he served for one term, then left to run for the U.S. Senate. Isakson lost a GOP runoff to succeed the retiring Sam Nunn, who was followed by Max Cleland.

Serving in Washington

After U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich announced in 1998 he would not seek re-election, Isakson ran for and won the 6th District seat that includes East Cobb, serving until he won his first U.S. Senate term in 2004.

While in the Senate, Isakson has been chairman of the Veterans Affairs and Ethics committees.

In 2015, Isakson announced he had Parkinson’s disease, but ran for a third term the following year and won the general election with 54 percent of the vote.

He is the first Republican in Georgia history to win three U.S. Senate terms and is the only Georgian to be elected to the Georgia House and Senate, as well as the U.S. House and Senate.

Isakson also has served as chairman of the Georgia Board of Education.

Georgia has become a more competitive state politically since his last election. The 6th District seat that had been in GOP hands since 1979 was narrowly won by Republican Karen Handel in a special election in 2017 that was the most expensive race in U.S. House history.

But she lost last year to Democrat Lucy McBath. Statewide, Democrats ran close races, including governor.Sen. Johnny Isakson

A fiscal and social conservative, Isakson has been hailed for his moderate temperament and earned a reputation for working across the aisle during his political career.

Earlier this summer, Isakson led a bipartisan Senate delegation to Normandy to observe the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings.

Perdue has been a staunch and unapologetic defender of President Donald Trump. Earlier this year, Isakson blistered the president for his comments about late Sen. John McCain, a close friend of Isakson, making good on remarks from the Senate floor he had made earlier that anyone who “tarnishes the reputation of John McCain deserves a whipping.”

“I never worry about what I’m doing politically or practically in the Senate as long as I think I’m doing what’s right,” Isakson said in an interview on Georgia Public Radio.

In 2017, Isakson was named the East Cobb Citizen of the Year by the East Cobb Area Council of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce.

Isakson was unable to attend due to duties in Washington, but then-Chamber president David Connell remarked that “if you looked up a definition of a statesman and a public servant, you’ll see a picture of Johnny Isakson.”

Local, state, national reaction

McBath issued the following statement about Isakson Wednesday afternoon:

“Sen. Johnny Isakson’s last 4 decades in public service show his deep commitment to serving the people of Georgia and this country. He will be missed in our delegation & Sen. Isakson and his family are in my prayers.

Gov. Kemp’s office issued this statement with First Lady Marty Kemp, the daughter of a former legislative colleague of Isakson, that says in part:

“Georgia should be most thankful for is the high standard that Johnny held as a true gentleman, a fighter for his constituents, a trusted advocate for our nation’s veterans, and one of the greatest statesmen to ever answer the call of service to our country. Marty and I are forever grateful for the friendship that Johnny and Dianne have shown us over the years and wish them the very best in the years to come. I will appoint Senator Isakson’s replacement at the appropriate time.”

Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr, Isakson’s former chief of staff and a possible appointee to fill his seat:

“I will be forever grateful that he was willing to take a chance on me in 2004 and that he has served as a mentor to me ever since. Whenever I am confronted with a tough decision, I often ask myself, ‘What would Johnny do?'”

New York Democrat Chuck Schumer, the Senate Minority Leader, issued this statement:

“One of the many fine adjectives to describe Johnny Isakson is a word not used enough in the halls of Congress these days: kind. Not only is Johnny a diligent and successful legislator, he is one of the kindest, most thoughtful senators. Independent of any party or politics, everyone will miss Johnny.” 

We’ll add more reaction from elected officials and others as we get it.

 

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Cobb schools to have early release for professional learning

Cobb school bus safety

Just a reminder if you’re out and about at lunchtime on Wednesday: Cobb schools are releasing early for a local professional learning day for teachers and staff. Here’s the schedule:

  • High school, 11:30 a.m.
  • Elementary school, 12:30 p.m.
  • Middle school, 1:30 p.m.

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Georgia gas prices continue falling as Labor Day holiday approaches

Georgia gas prices Labor Day

Information submitted by AAA Georgia:

Labor Day is quickly approaching and gas prices for the holiday weekend are lining up to be the lowest in 2-3 years. However, there are still a number of factors that could push prices higher before the holiday. 

Today, the average price for gasoline in Georgia is $2.42 per gallon. Drivers are currently paying 28 cents less than they did on Labor Day 2018 ($2.70) and 27 cents less than on Labor Day 2017 ($2.69).

“Labor Day travelers will benefit from lower oil prices this year as they fill up for their holiday road trip,” said Montrae Waiters, spokeswoman, AAA – The Auto Club Group. “Strong US oil production rates are holding oil prices about 15% below last year’s levels, effectively reducing the price of producing gasoline. Gas prices should remain low heading into the holiday, unless something unexpected threatens fuel supplies, like geopolitical tensions or a hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico.”

Labor Day marks the end of the busy summer travel season, and the last big surge in gasoline demand before the fall. The expectation of strong demand can promote a slight and temporary bump at the pump before the holiday. However, after Labor Day, refineries begin their seasonal switch to winter-blend gasoline. Summer-blend gasoline is more expensive to produce than winter-blend, because the EPA requires more additives in the hotter months of the year. The combination of lower demand and fuel production costs typically restores downward pressure on pump prices through the end of the year. 

 

Find Georgia Gas Prices

 

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East Cobb food scores: Kale Me Crazy; Okko Ramen; Zama and more

Okko Ramen Asian Kitchen

The following East Cobb food scores from Aug. 19-30 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing to view details of the inspection:

Alto Senior Living Marietta 
840 Lecroy Drive
August 21, 2019 Score: 96, Grade: A

Arby’s 
2161 Roswell Road
August 20, 2019 Score: 98, Grade: A

Bitefull
2217 Roswell Road, Suite B1
August 21, 2019 Score: 96, Grade: A

Cazadores Mexican Restaurant
2731 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 160
August 19, 2019 Score: 97, Grade: A

Chick-fil-A
2530 Sandy Plains Road
August 27, 2019 Score: 99, Grade: A

Dunkin’ Donuts
611 Johnson Ferry Road
August 28, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Kale Me Crazy
4475 Roswell Road, Suite 1620
August 20, 2019 Score: 96, Grade: A

Laredo’s Mexican Bar and Grill
1860 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 400
August 23, 2019 Score: 96, Grade: A

McDonald’s 
3011 Johnson Ferry Road
August 22, 2019 Score: 99, Grade: A

Okko Ramen 
3045 Gordy Parkway, Suite 108
August 20, 2019 Score: 93, Grade: A

The Rusty Barrel
138 Powers Ferry Road
August 22, 2019 Score: 97, Grade: A

Starbuck’s and Pizza Hut at Target
1401 Johnson Ferry Road
August 27, 2019 Score: 97, Grade: A

The SuperFood Company
2520 E. Piedmont Road, Suite 22
August 21, 2019 Score: 96, Grade: A

VFW Post 2681 Snack Bar
140 Powers Ferry Road
August 22, 2019 Score: 99, Grade: A

Which Wich Superior Sandwiches
1401 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 310
August 22, 2019 Score: 91, Grade: A

Wing Stop 
2900 Delk Road, Suite 100
August 21, 2019 Score: 84, Grade: B

Zama Mexican Cuisine
2550 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 300
August 21, 2019 Score: 99, Grade: A

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Cobb schools to hold dual enrollment information sessions

Submitted information:Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

Parents, students, and families are invited to learn more about Dual Enrollment opportunities and eligibility at the Cobb County School District Dual Enrollment Summit on September 4 at the Cobb Civic Center. Cobb Counselors will present informative sessions at 6:00-6:30 p.m. and 7:30-8:00 p.m.  

Colleges and universities will also be available to talk about the programs at their schools, including Georgia Tech, Kennesaw State University, Chattahoochee Technical College, Georgia State University, Young Harris College, Georgia Highlands College, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University and Georgia Military College.  

“Dual Enrollment not only provides an opportunity for eligible students to be challenged with the rigor of a college-level course, but it also cuts the cost and time after high school graduation in pursuing a Bachelor of Arts degree,” said Cheryl Crooks, Cobb Schools Supervisor of Personalized Learning. “In addition, many students choose to build a career skill set in technology, business, computer science, public service, and healthcare while in high school. This increases opportunities for employment with high wages as they are completing their educational goals.” 

Dual enrollment courses are held on college campuses, online, and even high school campuses, but they are all taught by college professors. Beyond core classes, students can explore a variety of career tracks. They also have the potential to earn certificates ranging from Cisco Network Specialist, Marketing Management, and Diesel Equipment Technology to Healthcare Assistant, Nursing Assistant, and Carpentry. 

Some students may even earn an Associate degree or diploma, all while in high school. Participating universities in Georgia include the Technical College System of Georgia, University System of Georgia, and some eligible private colleges on GAfutures.org

“The vast array of career and college courses available with the Georgia Dual Enrollment program is expanding and is one of the most exciting opportunities available for Cobb high school students,” added Crooks, who is helping organize the information session for parents.   

 

For more information visit the Cobb schools dual enrollment page.

 

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East Cobb faith communities help dedicate new Habitat house

Habitat House, East Cobb faith communities

Submitted information and photo:

Nine Cobb County churches, two Mosques, a Synagogue and three corporations gathered yesterday in unity to dedicate the 19th Cobb County Interfaith Habitat Coalition home they built together for newest homeowner Belinda Arkoh.  

The 2019 Coalition included: Temple Kol Emeth Synagogue, Bethany United Methodist Church, Covenant United Methodist Church, Log Cabin Community Church of Vinings, Unity North Church, St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church, First Presbyterian Church of Marietta, Smyrna First United Methodist Church, McEachern United Methodist Church, St. Catherine’s Episcopal Church, West Cobb Islamic Center and the Islamic Center of Marietta. Corporations include BB&T, Moore Colson and Pinkerton & Laws Construction of Atlanta.  

They all work in concert to do as their motto says, ‘We Build to Coexist, We Coexist to Build’. The annual coalition is co-chaired by Henry Hene, NW Metro Atlanta Habitat Board Member and Paul Wilson, both members of Temple Kol Emeth. 

The home on Old Bankhead Highway began on June 1. Volunteers from each organization built alongside the new homeowner each Saturday since to complete the home.

Belinda is a recent widow and mother of two children: a 4-year-old son and 2- year old daughter. Belinda has been a United States resident since 2007, and proudly became a naturalized citizen in 2013. She lost her husband and father of her two children in 2018.  

After living in a single bedroom apartment with her two children, they now have a home, yard, neighborhood and community. Belinda is professional seamstress and a devoted Christian who loves working in her community work and her church.

Pictured from left to right: David McKay, House Leader; Jessica Gill, CEO NW Metro Atlanta Habitat; Greg Lee, McEachern United Methodist Church; Paula Wilson, Temple Kol Emeth; Henry Hene, Coalition Co-Chair and NW Metro Atlanta Habitat Board; Paul Wilson, Coalition Co-Chair; Tony Phillips, Pastor McEachern United Methodist Church; Rabbi Steve Lebow, Temple Koh Emeth; Belinda Arkoh, homeowner; Amjad Taufigue, West Cobb Islamic Center; Rev. Avril James, Unity North Church; Jerry Zigler, Covenant United Methodist Church; Connie Bergeron, Dave Daniels, St. Catherine’s Episcopal Church; and Alan Nicely, Smyrna First United Methodist Church.

 

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Sterigenics CEO to brief Cobb commissioners after town hall

Bob Ott, Sterigenics
Cobb commissioner Bob Ott

After a heated town hall meeting last week at the Cobb Civic Center over toxic emissions coming from a Smyrna medical sterilization plant, the CEO of that company will address Cobb commissioners at a work session Monday.

It’s the first item on the work session agenda, which includes a presentation of the 2018 Cobb government pension report, an update on the Cobb 2050 Comprehensive Transportation Plan and updates of the 2005, 2011 and 2016 SPLOST (Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax) programs from PARKS, Transportation, Facilities, Public Safety, Public Services and Information Technology.

(You can read through the agenda items here.)

The work session begins at 1:30 p.m. Monday in the second floor board room of the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., in downtown Marietta.

According to the agenda summary, the commissioners “will receive presentations from Mr. Philip McNabb, CEO Sterigenics, Lauren Curry, [Georgia] EPD Deputy Director and Karen Hays, Chief, Air Protection Branch regarding the Smyrna Sterigenic Plant, their operational processes and their plan moving forward.”

More than 1,000 people turned out for the town hall in the wake of a report by Georgia Health News and WebMD that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency didn’t notify the state of three ethylene oxide hotspots it detected with higher cancer risks in Georgia for more than a year.

One of those hotspots is the Smyrna plant off Atlanta Road. Ethylene oxide is an invisible, odorless toxin that’s used to sterilize around half of all medical products that require it. It’s also been linked to higher cancer rates in areas near facilities that emanate the gas.

In 2016 the EPA upgraded the designation of ethylene oxide to a carcinogen.

In his weekly newsletter released Friday, District 2 Cobb commissioner Bob Ott wrote the following:

I want to emphasize here that there is much that we all now know, but there is also much that we don’t know yet. For example, until the air quality testing being done by Cobb, Smyrna and the City of Atlanta is complete, we do not know what levels of ethylene oxide from the plant are in our air. The testing is also going to give us the ambient amount of ethylene oxide in our air. Studies have shown that in most areas of the country there is some amount of ethylene oxide in the air. The testing sanctioned by the county and the cities will give us that information. The results should be known in about a month.
    
In talking with many of you I know that you are concerned about the health and safety of you and your families. I share your concerns and want you to know that the county is doing all it can to get factual data to determine the path forward.

Until we gather more information, I ask you to not make any rash decisions about moving or closing your business. The commissioners will have in short order factual data about the amount of ethylene oxide in our air and the health ramifications.

Ott mentioned the Monday work session, and included the following links for more information:

 

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Enhance Floors to hold kitten adoption with Angels Among Us

Submitted information from Enhance Floors and More, which is holding the following kitten adoption event on Tuesday (Aug. 27) from 4-7 p.m. at its showroom at 1847 Roswell Road:Enhance Floors kitten adoption

ANGELS AMONG US PET RESCUE is overflowing with kittens (and cats!) Come meet these fabulous felines and find your new fluffy best friend.

Join us for food, drinks, fun, and kittens! Bring a donation* and you’ll be entered to win a Roomba.

Be sure to ask about the Kitten Caboodle Adoption Specials. And while you are here, we will be happy to help you find the purrfect pet friendly floor for your home.

*Suggested items include wet and dry kitten food (Royal Canin Mother and Babycat), cat litter (clumping and nonclumping), postage scales, food and water bowls, breakaway kitten collars, bottles, and little snuggly toys.

 

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Corky Kell Classic: Kell freshman shines; Walton rallies

The Kell offense was bound to have a different look after star quarterback Evan Conley graduated. At the Corky Kell Classic Saturday morning, it was a freshman running back who gave the Longhorns’ attack a big boost, and perhaps a new identity.Kell Touchdown Club, Corky Kell Classic

David Mbadinga caught a screen pass and ran it 33 yards for a touchdown early in the fourth quarter, and he rushed 17 times for 104 yards for the game, as Kell downed Mays 17-12 at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

Mbadinga helped ease the transition for new Kell quarterback Corbin Lafrance. A junior, Lafrance succeeds Evan Conley, who is now playing at the University of Louisville.

Kell’s offense sputtered early on, although the Longhorns took a 7-0 lead into the second half. Mays scored a touchdown in the third quarter, but missed the extra point to trail 7-6.

That’s when Mbadinga took over. After his touchdown reception from Lafrance, Mbadinga peeled off a 16-yard gain for a first down to reach the Mays 4-yard-line. Kell kicked a field goal to push the lead to 17-6.

On the next series, Kell defender Keith Williams intercepted a pass.

With 1:28 to play in the game, Mays scored a touchdown to close to 17-12 but could not convert a two-point play.

Kell is 8-2 all-time in the Corky Kell Classic, which like the school is named in honor of the late Wheeler coach.

“Our kids played with great passion and emotion, they really played hard,” said Kell coach Brett Sloan, who is 2-1 in Corky Kell games as he begins his third season.

As for Mbadinga, Sloan smiled and said, “We’ve been excited about him for a while. We’re glad he’s on our team.”

The Longhorns are off next week, then play at Lassiter Sept. 6.

Walton ‘found a way’

Walton played Norcross Saturday afternoon in the Corky Kell Classic, and trailed 20-7 before staging a big comeback in the fourth quarter.

Walton all-sports championQuarterback Zak Rozsman threw a pass to Julian Bumper, who ran down the sideline for an 82-yard touchdown with 7:03 remaining.

Walton’s defense responded on the next drive for Norcross as Jonathan Chesser and Titus McBride teamed up for a quarterback sack on third down.

The Raiders started their next possession on the Norcross 21 after a personal foul on the fair catch of a Blue Devils punt.

That’s when running back KD Stokes took over for Walton, picking up 14 yards to set up first-and-goal on the two, then scoring the touchdown on the next play.

A Conor Cummins extra-point gave Walton a 21-20 lead with 3:10 to play, but Norcross had a chance to win with 16 seconds left.

After a long drive, Norcross placekicker Kellen Grave de Peralta, who made two field goals in the second half, attempted a 44-yarder. But after a shaky hold, his kick came out on a line drive and was no good, and Walton players celebrated their 21-20 win.

“We found out what kind of team we are today,” said Walton coach Daniel Brunner. “They fought, fought, fought. They’re a resilient bunch.”

He said the Raiders emphasize a set of “core values” and that one of them embodied their victory Saturday.

“Find a way,” he said. “They found a way today.”

Walton is off next week and plays host to Pope on Sept. 6.

Friday night highlights

Three East Cobb teams opened their seasons on Friday night.

J.D. Thomas scored four touchdowns, including a 93-yard kickoff return on the opening play of the game, as Wheeler won its first game under new coach Bryan Love by a 42-19 score over Lambert.

Next week the Wildcats will visit East Cobb rival Sprayberry, which lost its season opener on the road, 34-20, at South Forsyth.

Lassiter also was on the road to open the season and things got out of hand early for the Trojans in a 47-3 loss at Harrison. The only points of the game for Lassiter, which was playing for a new coach, Sean Thom, came on a field goal late in the fourth quarter.

The Trojans will stay on the road next Friday in another all-East Cobb game when they meet Pope in the season opener for the Greyhounds.

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AJ’s Seafood and Poboys expanding to include oyster bar

AJ's Seafood Pobobys expanding

The former Great Clips space at the Pavilions at East Lake has been papered over for several weeks now, right next to longstanding AJ’s Seafood and Poboys, which announced this week it’s expanding with an oyster bar.

Assorted oyster selections and a full bar are planned, and the tentative opening is around Labor Day. In addition, items from AJ’s Louisiana-style fare of poboys, seafood platters, muffelata sandwiches, gumbo, salads and burgers also will be available.

Great Clips has moved a few doors down. The AJ’s oyster bar will be located at 2100 Roswell Road, Suite 2148, next to Kroger.

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Sprayberry Crossing community reps to meet with developer

Sprayberry Crossing redevelopment, Reserve at The Ballpark
Atlantic Residential, developer of the Reserve at The Ballpark near SunTrust seen above, is tentatively proposing a 3- or 4-story apartment development, senior living, townhomes and retail on the site of Sprayberry Crossing.

Following up last week’s news of a sharper vision for the Sprayberry Crossing property, community leader Joe Glancy has an update on a meeting scheduled for next week with Atlantic Residential, the potential redeveloper, as posted today on the Sprayberry Crossing Action group page.

He’ll be one of five citizens who’ve met over the summer with Atlantic Residential, which has done some very upscale projects around metro Atlanta and other markets:

“The purpose of the meeting will be for the developer to show a plan for the property that they hope will be a starting point for conversations with the community. They will look for feedback on the plan and they will work with us on figuring out the best way to have a discussion with the community. . . . 

“There are strong opinions on both sides with regard to the residential aspect (mostly directed at proposed apartments, but some also directed at senior living with a very small amount towards townhouses.) . . .

“I’m hesitant to post this, as some will undoubtedly see it as my advocating for the developer (and subsequently for apartments.) I am not pro-developer and I am not pro-apartments. I’m pro-reasonable development that will remove this two decades old blight and have a positive impact on the community.

“That said, I think it’s important the community understand that the prospect of holding out for a strictly retail development with shopping and restaurants is a difficult one. . . . 

“Strictly retail developments face a changing and challenging market, and that doesn’t look to improve any time soon. . . .”

Read the whole post here as well as the comments, which clearly are guiding community response.

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Rocky Mount ES finds treasures in 20-year-old time capsule

Rocky Mount ES time capsule

Text and photos submitted by the Cobb County School District:

Where were you two decades ago? Current Rocky Mount Elementary School students, of course, had not been born yet. Most of their parents were still in school themselves. 

And yet, many things were still the same in 1999. Students collected Pokémon cards, the U.S. Women’s Soccer team were World Cup champions, and a Toy Story movie played in theaters.  

Rocky Mount Elementary School also included some of the same dedicated educators that teach students today. That may have surprised some of the students who peered over their principal’s shoulder with excitement as she pulled out class books from a 20-year-old time capsule.  

Principal Peggy Fleming recently opened Rocky Mount’s time capsule during the school’s back-to-school bash. Each class at the school in 1999 carefully selected their contributions for the box. It was a treasure of memories from the school’s then 20th birthday celebration, which included photos and even a nameplate of a former Rock Mount staff member.  

The principal unrolled a scroll of student goals. One student set a goal to have better handwriting while others aimed to be the best soccer player or gymnast, to run fast, and to get a better education.  

There was even a first-grade book dedicated to Beanie babies, a tribute to the stuffed animal craze of the 1990s. There was also a beanie baby snuggled inside. 

The lunch container from the Roadrunner Café looked largely unfamiliar to the students who watched in awe as Principal Fleming revealed pieces of Rocky Mount’s history. The box even included canvas bags from the school’s PTA and a student handbook. 

Some of the elementary students claimed to recognize the antiquated VHS tape Principal Fleming pulled from the capsule, but they had no difficulty identifying the Pokémon that was hidden in the two-decade-old history box.  

Now that Rocky Mount has celebrated its 40th year, it’s time for the current students to make their own time capsule. What will they include this year and who will be watching as the box is opened two decades from now? Only time will tell.  

 

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East Cobb man arrested after bomb scare at MDJ building

MDJ bomb scare arrest
Marietta PD photo

A note suggesting a bomb threat and that was found on the dashboard of a car parked in front of The Marietta Daily Journal office Wednesday has led to the arrest of an East Cobb man.

Gary S. Studenic, 70, was booked in the Cobb County Adult Detention Center Wednesday afternoon on a misdemeanor charge of reckless conduct, according to the Marietta Police Department.

According to the Cobb Sheriff’s Office, Studenic’s home address is on Bill Murdock Road, and he was arrested at 12:15 p.m.

Police said an unoccupied black Porsche was parked in front of 47 Waddell Street at 10:10 Wednesday morning with a sign on the dashboard that stated in part: “will explode on contact.”

That’s near the Marietta Square, and it’s the address of the MDJ, which evacuated the premises, as did those in other nearby buildings, according to police.

Police said they established a perimeter around the vehicle as they investigated, and asked the Cobb Police Department to dispatch its bomb squad to the scene.

At 10:40 a.m., the registered owner of the car, whom police said is Studenic, walked from a building on the Square to the Porsche, and when he arrived said the note was a joke among friends.

The note said at the top: “NOTICE OF EXPLOSIVE INSTALLATION” and further stated in the text that “it has been modified to explode on contact. A nominal fee of $10,000 will be collected at time explosive charges are removed,” according to the MDJ.

Police said Studenic told them he didn’t realize he had placed the note in public view and in front of a newspaper office.

Police said the man who wrote the note, Richard Calhoun of Marietta, arrived at 11:11 a.m. The Cobb bomb squad inspected the car and found no explosives.

Marietta Police said Studenic went to their headquarters and was interviewed, and was charged with reckless conduct, which carries a bond of $250. Calhoun was not charged.

Studenic is the president of the Pain Relief Clinic, a chiropractic practice on South Marietta Parkway.

The MDJ moved to the Waddell Street building last summer, after selling its 50-year-old facility on Fairground Street to the Cobb County School District.

 

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East Cobb traffic alert: Mabry Road closed north of Shallowford

Mabry Road closed

A gas main break has shut down Mabry Road north of Shallowford Road Wednesday afternoon.

That’s coming from Cobb government and Cobb DOT, which said it’s not known yet how long the closure may last.

Suggested detours: Chimney Lake Drive between Mabry Road and Johnson Ferry and Wesley Chapel Road from Shallowford Road to Sandy Plains Road.

We’ll update when we find out more.

 

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East Cobb activist joins new Cobb Public Safety Foundation

As one of the more vocal community leaders in support of better pay for Cobb public safety employees, Susan Hampton was expanding a role she began several years ago on behalf of police officers in East Cobb.Susan Hampton, Cobb public safety advocates

Now she’s taking her activism to another level as part of a new initiative, the Cobb Public Safety Foundation, that provides support to county public safety employees and their families.

Hampton has joined the non-profit as a board member, as it raises funds and awareness.

“It’s an opportunity for people to help our public safety employees and their families,” Hampton said.

The money raised goes to those employees who may need help paying the rent, or who are sick, or in distress, or who are dealing with some other kind of physical, emotional or financial need.

The foundation was launched in June by Lance LoRusso, an East Cobb resident and attorney who represents officers with the Cobb Fraternal Order of Police.

He and Hampton were among several citizens who strongly urged Cobb commissioners this year to raise not only salaries but improve benefits and incentives for public safety employees, and called their current situation a crisis.

In the Cobb fiscal year 2020 budget adopted last month, most police officers, firefighters and sheriff’s deputies got a seven-percent raise, and those who got satisfactory performance reviews also received a one-time bonus of $1,475.

The Cobb Public Safety Foundation addresses some of the needs that other public safety advocates mentioned in public comment sessions, including financial and psychological issues.

The pledge the foundation is making to public safety employs who need assistance is this:

“Whatever the call, whatever the need, no matter the danger, the professionals we serve answer the call with a simple response: Here I am. Send me.”

The organization’s board includes some prominent Cobb citizens, including Cobb Chamber of Commerce CEO Sharon Mason and former Cobb Commission Chairman and Georgia Attorney General Sam Olens, both East Cobb residents.

“We believe in this so much that we’ve written personal checks to help kick things off,” Hampton said of the foundation board. “We’ll be fully transparent about where the funds are going.”

Contributions are tax-deductible, and a secure online donation page has been launched with the partnership of the Cobb Community Foundation.

Hampton is continuing in her role as an organizer of the East Cobb Public Safety Appreciation dinner, which will be held in October.

It’s a project of the East Cobb Business Association, which is giving Cobb Police Precinct 4 employees and their spouses a night with dinner and entertainment. The ECBA organizes a similar dinner for the full Cobb Fire and Emergency Services department every March.

For information please visit the ECBA website.

 

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Walton volleyball win streak at 101 with new gym opener next

The Walton volleyball team trounced Cherokee 3-0 on Tuesday (by scores of 25-12, 25-15 and 25-15) to move to 4-0 on the season.Walton Volleyball team

The win was the 101st consecutive victory against a team from the state of Georgia for the Lady Raiders, who are the state’s most dominant volleyball team.

When they next take the court on Tuesday, Aug. 27 against Roswell, it will be for the first time in the new Walton gym. The match starts at 5 p.m and is a region contest.

Walton has won 13 state titles overall and eight in the last nine years and was declared the 2017 national high school champion by PrepVolleyball. USA Today has the Lady Raiders ranked No. 22 in its first national poll of the season. MaxPreps has Walton ranked 26th after the graduation of 2019 seniors Gabby Gonzalez, Reilly MacNeill, Riley Spurlin, Meghan Froemming and Jordan Rush.

This year, senior Madison Morey and junior Emery Dupes are among Walton’s top experienced returning players. The listed varsity team members include the following, with some already announcing their college choices:

  • Seniors: Phoebe Awoleye (University of Georgia), Madison Morey (University of Virginia), Katie Strickland (Georgia State University), Kendall O’Brien (Marist College), Sydney Barrett;
  • Juniors: Emery Dupes (Florida State University), Ashlyn Goolsby, Lia Ekendahl, Catherine Cheney, Chandler Parker, Kaye Gresham, Paeton Stoner, Olivia Langham;
  • Sophomores: Greta Hans, Aviah Miller, Avery Storm, Vera Laytham, Sophie Barrett, Laura Middleton, Elizabeth Curry;
  • Freshmen: Mary Neal, Clara Paulsen, Elizabeth Cheney, Maya Szkaradek.

The coach is Suzanne Fitzgerald, who is in her 14th season at Walton, where she also teaches English.

After next week’s game against Roswell, the Lady Raiders will step out of state to compete in a tournament in Sarasota, Fla. They also will travel to competitions in Louisville and Phoenix during the regular season.

On Sept. 17, Walton will visit Lassiter, currently ranked No. 2 in Georgia, in an East Cobb and regional showdown.

 

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Cobb Senior Citizen Council honors East Cobb resident

Thanks to Linda Harris of the Senior Citizen Council of Cobb County, which on Wednesday is honoring its citizens of the year at a special luncheon at the Cobb Senior Wellness Center in Marietta. John Huey, who’s heavily involved at the East Cobb Senior Center, is among the honorees, and here’s what she’s sharing about what he does not just at the center, but in the community:John Huey, Cobb Senior Citizen Council

John M. Huey has been an active member of the East Cobb Senior Center since 2008. Almost a daily visitor of the center, John M. Huey volunteers in any way possible to help keep the center running smoothly in its efforts to serve senior citizens in its immediate area. He is said to be up for any task, whether it be taking out the trash, answering phones, decorating for holidays, or serving as center ambassador/tour guide for newcomers who wish to learn more about the center.

John M. Huey monitors attendance, develops guidelines, and recommends equipment care for the at the East Cobb Senior Center’s billiard room where 16 to 30 people may be playing daily. His volunteer activities include Friends of East Cobb Senior Center, East Cobb Senior Center representative in and treasurer for the Senior Citizen Council of Cobb County in Cobb EMC Owners Association and Friends of Mabry Park. 

John M. Huey, the son of a career army man and housewife, is the oldest of six brothers who all of whom were raised on military bases in Georgia, Germany, Austria and Oklahoma. He settled back in his birthplace of Atlanta, GA in 1968.

A lifelong Sooners fan, John M Huey attended the University of Oklahoma and University of Tulsa where he earned a degree in Preclinical and Industrial Psychology. He held corporate positions at Rich’s, Federated Department Stores and Macy’s for many years before retiring. 

John M. Huey, at the age of 78, demonstrates his belief in staying physically and mentally active by walking, weight lifting, practicing tai chi, yoga, participating in senior games, gardening and playing billiards. He and his wife Dianne, with whom he recently celebrated their 46th anniversary after first meeting at Rich’s, walk 2 miles daily. John M. Huey has run the Peachtree Road Race 27 times. After 10 years at the center, he is still an eager volunteer. 

 

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Loudermilk: Solution to gun violence won’t be in Washington

After nearly being the victim of a mass shooting two years ago, Georgia Congressman Barry Loudermilk says he’s been asked frequently about whether he would support more stringent gun control legislation at the federal level.U.S. Rep. Barry Loudermilk, gun violence

“I’m a survivor,” Loudermilk says in reference to the attempted assassination of Republicans in June 2017 at a Congressional baseball practice in Alexandria, Va.

A gunman who supported Democratic presidential candidate and Sen. Bernie Sanders opened fire with a military-style weapon, seriously wounding then-House Majority Whip Steve Scalise and five others before being shot by U.S. Capitol Police.

During the 10-minute shootout, Loudermilk took cover behind an SUV, and figures he was shot at around 20 times by the gunman, who later died and was identified as James Hodgkinson.

“He knew what he was doing,” said Loudermilk, recalling the incident as the guest speaker at the East Cobb Business Association luncheon on Tuesday. “He didn’t have mental health issues. He was radicalized.

“And there wasn’t a single thing we could have done to change that.”

Law enforcement later found that Hodgkinson had left behind some strident social media messages against President Donald Trump and was particularly upset about Republican efforts to repeal Obamacare.

“He had no respect for the law,” Loudermilk said about the shooter. “He intended to commit mass murder.”

In light of recent mass shootings in El Paso, Texas and Dayton, Ohio, Loudermilk still believes federal legislation won’t properly address issues of gun violence and mass shootings.

“We have a cultural crisis and a moral crisis in this country,” said Loudermilk, a third-term Republican from Cartersville who represents the 11th Congressional District of Georgia that includes part of Cobb County.

“There’s nothing that we in Washington can do about that.”

He made his remarks in the 6th District, where first-term Marietta Democrat Lucy McBath narrowly won last November with a strict gun-control message. McBath’s son was shot and killed by a motorist at a Florida gas station, sparking her activism.

She’s been a sponsor of federal background check and related legislation, and secured $50 million in federal funding for the Centers for Disease Control to study the effects of gun violence.

But Loudermilk says background check measures and “red-flag” proposals—in which law enforcement can confiscate guns from those considered to be a a danger to others or themselves—will be more effective at the state and local levels.

A total of 15 states have such red-flag laws, but Georgia is not one of them.

‘The George Patton of presidents’

In wake of the attempted shootings that affected him, Loudermilk has called for greater civility in American life, and not just politics.

He said that given the “unusual time” in the country, and especially in Washington, he’s also asked a lot about a figure who’s at the center of much of that divisive rhetoric—Trump.

“He says some things that I wish he would say differently,” Loudermilk said of the president. “I don’t always like the way he does things. But I try to judge Trump by what he is actively doing.”

Loudermilk says he thinks that Trump—”the George Patton of presidents”—will go down as an effective president, and that his “shock and awe” approach is part of the reason why.

On the subject of the Mueller Report—an investigation into alleged Russian government influence on the influence American elections—Loudermilk is certain the 2016 Trump campaign didn’t act in collusion, as many of the president’s opponents still believe.

“If he had colluded with the Russians,” Loudermilk said of Trump, “he would have already bragged about it.”

The Trump Administration’s renegotiating trade policy with China includes the threat of tariffs because, Loudermilk said, “that is the stick he has to use.”

He said the benefits of tax cuts in 2017 pushed by the White House are continuing to boost the economy. While some changes had to be made to address the concerns of small-business owners, Loudermilk said “I want to think it’s because it’s nothing we did. We got out of the way, so you can do what you do.”

 

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Five Guys plans at East Cobb Crossing OK’d by commissioners

East Cobb Five Guys

A Five Guys restaurant proposed for the former Del Taco location at the East Cobb Crossing Shopping Center can go ahead after site revisions were approved Tuesday by the Cobb Board of Commissioners.

The measure, which was approved unanimously as part of the commissioners’ consent agenda, includes site plan and design changes that didn’t require rezoning.

The only addition to the original case file came from the East Cobb Civic Association, which requested that the district commissioner (Bob Ott) approve a landscaping plan. That stipulation was included before the vote at Ott’s request.

Commissioners also approved via consent a special land-use permit for SZS Holdings LLC to expand a used-car parking lot on an acre at 2069 Roswell Road by 41 spaces. Among the stipulations are for a landscaping plan subject to district commissioner approval and for no vehicles to be parked on pervious surfaces.

Some East Cobb cases on Tuesday’s agenda were not heard. Among those applications that have been delayed is a request by Poag Shopping Centers, LLC, owners of The Avenue East Cobb, to change stipulations and a site plan amendment (case file here).

Poag wants to change the appearance and location of the monument sign at the entrance to the shopping center, and to alter opening hours for a fitness center from 7 a.m. to 5 a.m. The closing hours would remain at 11 p.m.

The nearby East Hampton neighborhood has objected on both counts, asking for a smaller sign and saying there’s no need for a fitness center to open at 5 a.m.

The East Cobb Civic Association has filed a letter in support of East Hampton.

Proposed The Avenue East Cobb sign
A rendering of a proposed monument sign at the entrance to The Avenue East Cobb.

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