Center for Family Resources gets COVID-19 emergency funding

Submitted information:Center for Family Resources

The Center for Family Resources (CFR) announced today that it has received funding to provide emergency financial assistance for Cobb County families, including assistance with rent, mortgage and utility payments to ensure housing stability. The CFR is providing access to basic needs for families who currently fall below 200% of the Federal Poverty guidelines. Funding has been provided through grants from Cobb Community Foundation through the Cobb COVID-19 Response Fund, Cobb EMC Foundation, and the Greater Atlanta COVID-19 Recovery and Response Fund.

“Stabilizing families and providing a safety net during challenging times ties directly into our mission,” says Lee Freeman-Smith, Vice President of Operations for the CFR. “This critical funding will immediately impact families in critical need of services throughout Cobb County. With more than 22 million Americans filing for unemployment and lower wage earners disproportionately impacted, the need for financial assistance will be tremendous,” she continued.

Currently, the CFR has over $170,000 in financial assistance available. However, it anticipates the requests for assistance are easily triple that amount. Many of those impacted were already living on a limited income, and any reduction to hours and pay can cause a huge disruption to a family’s budget. The CFR serves over 12,000 people a year and helps more than 700 families with housing and rent assistance. In the past two weeks, they have received over 160 calls for assistance related to COVID-19. Those calls are in addition to the inquiries from individuals who were already in need of services prior to the pandemic.

Melanie Kagan, CEO at the CFR, adds, “Keeping families stably-housed and with access to basic needs is imperative. Our goal is to help families stay as current as possible with rent and mortgage payments. What we don’t want is for these families to be 2-4 months behind in paying these expenses, and have no way of climbing out of that hole. The financial impacts on our community and many others are going to be severe.”

For people seeking assistance, contact the CFR at (770) 428-2601. All inquiries are being taken over the phone, and the agency is not open to walk-ins in an effort to maintain a safe environment for staff and clients. Anyone who would like to donate to the emergency assistance fund at the CFR can make their tax-deductible donation at www.thecfr.org/give

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As Cobb Coronavirus cases surpass 1,000, testing accelerates

Cobb Coronavirus testing
A hopeful sign on Holly Springs Road, near the Davis Road roundabout. (ECN photo)

A total of 1,014 Coronavirus cases have been confirmed in Cobb County, as of 7 p.m. Thursday.

The Georgia Department of Public Health is also reporting that 49 people have died from COVID-19 in the county.

UPDATED for those seeing this in the Sunday newsletter: As of 7 p.m. Saturday the number of cases stands at 1,104 in Cobb County, with 51 deaths.

(The Georgia DPH daily status report is updated at 12 and 7 p.m.)

Those figures are among the highest in the state of Georgia, and according to Dr. Janet Memark, Director of Cobb and Douglas Public Health, Cobb is likely a couple weeks away from reaching its peak.

The reference was to hospital capacity, which she said is escalating but has not yet topped out.

In a videotaped message at Jim Miller Park that was released by the county Thursday afternoon, Memark also said the public can now without needing a doctor’s reference.

That had been the case until earlier this week, when expanded criteria also was contingent on a medical referral.

She said anyone with symptoms for COVID-19—such as a shortness of breath, fever or dry coughing—can call Cobb and Douglas Public Health or go to its website “and you can get an appointment very quickly.”

Jim Miller Park had been designated as one of several drive-up testing centers around the state, but has only been able to do around 50 tests a day.

Memark previously told the Cobb Board of Commissioners that patients with medical referrals, health care workers and first responders had been the first priorities.

Those scheduled to be tested came in during a short window of operations. Memark said testing hours have been expanded at Jim Miller Park and Hunter Park in Douglasville, and soon will have the capability to test 100 people an hour.

(Here’s the detailed criteria to get tested)

Testing will be available Monday-Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m and on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m.

In addition, people can call the Cobb and Douglas Public Health call center at 770-514-2300 between 8 a.m. and 7 p.m. Monday-Friday and 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday to schedule an appointment.

You can also click here for an appointment.

For a larger view of this map, click here. Source: Cobb County COVID-19 Resource Page.

According to Georgia DPH, more than 16,000 cases have been confirmed in Georgia, with 617 deaths as of Thursday evening.

“Testing is extremely important,” Memark said, especially lieu of a vaccine (not likely to be ready for another 12-18 months).

With more widespread testing, “we can have a better idea how it’s affecting our community.” Those testing results will help public health officials better determine how the virus is spreading, Memark said, “and when we talk about reopening we need this kind of information going forward.”

Georgia’s shelter-in-place order has been extended to April 30, and a public health emergency has been declared through May 13.

Memark said the number of cases in Cobb is rising at lower rates than a few weeks ago, an indication, she said “that social distancing is working, and we’re very happy about that.”

Georgia National Guard troops also have been called to Jim Miller Park as the testing procedures expand.

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New principals appointed at 2 East Cobb elementary schools

Felicia Angelle
Felicia Angelle

The Cobb Board of Education on Thursday approved the appointment of several principals for the 2020-21 school year, including two at East Cobb elementary schools.

Jessica Appleyard, a longtime teacher and administrator at Mt. Bethel Elementary School, is leaving after seven years as principal to become the new principal at Pitner Elementary School in Acworth.

She will be succeeded by Tucker Smith, who has been the principal at Keheley Elementary School since 2015.

The new principal at Keheley will be former Shallowford Falls Elementary School principal Dr. Felicia Angelle. For the last two years she has been the director of instruction and innovation in the Cobb County School District’s academic division.

In 2016, Angelle was named the Outstanding Elementary School Principal of the Year by the Georgia PTA.

All of those appointments will be effective on July 1.

A longtime former East Cobb educator will be retiring on June 1. Robin Lattizori, a former principal at Mt. Bethel and Dodgen Middle School, among other schools, has been an assistant superintendent since 2013, overseeing elementary schools in west Cobb.

In a brief business meeting conducted via the Zoom teleconferencing platform, the board also approved $4.5 million in SPLOST V funding to be used for roofing projects at four schools in west and south Cobb.

At a work session Thursday morning, also on Zoom, board members heard superintendent Chris Ragsdale provide a briefing on the status of online digital learning through the end of the school year.

(You can watch here.)

Cobb students will be in session through late May, but last week the district cut back the virtual instructional schedule to Monday-Thursday, with Friday designated as a catch-up day.

The district also has facilitated a program to deliver 600 electronic devices to students needing them to complete the school year. Selected students and their families were distributed the computers earlier this week after a fundraising effort by the Cobb Schools Foundation.

In April each year the school board is given a formal presentation of the next fiscal year budget.

That didn’t happen on Thursday, and there’s no word for now on when that might happen. That’s because Cobb, like all other public school districts in Georgia, was awaiting final legislative action on the state budget that includes education funding.

The legislative session has been suspended indefinitely due to the Coronavirus outbreak.

The Cobb school board typically adopts an operating budget in May, after holding three public hearings required by law.

The 2021 fiscal year in Cobb begins on July 1.

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Ga. absentee ballot mailings start April 21; drop boxes OK’d

The Georgia presidential and general primaries have been pushed back to June 9, but some absentee ballots that have been requested will start to be mailed back to voters next week.

The Georgia Secretary of State’s office has said the mailings will begin on April 21. The state’s estimated 6.9 million active voters were sent forms in the mail to request an absentee ballot.

Voters who wish to vote absentee must return their filled-out ballots by 7 p.m. on the primary date.

The broad absentee ballot access is just for the primaries for now, with a much higher return rate than usual expected due to safety and social distancing concerns over the Coronavirus.

Cobb voters over the age of 60 received two absentee ballot request forms, one from the county elections office and one from the state, due to an inadvertent overlap.

Cobb Elections said it mailed out absentee ballot applications to those older voters in late March, but its print vendor was late in fulfilling the order due to virus-related staffing shortages.

By the time those were sent out, the state mailed applications to all registered voters in Georgia regardless of age.

In a note on its website, Cobb Elections said both applications are valid, and voters 60 and older can fill out and return either of them to request an absentee ballot.

If you have not received an absentee ballot application, you can request one by clicking here and filling out the form.

The Cobb Elections office also said it is processing absentee voting applications in the order in which they are received. The preferred email to send in your application is absentee@cobbcounty.org.

More information can be found here on absentee balloting in Georgia at the Secretary of State’s website.

If you haven’t registered to vote, you now have until May 11 to do so, and can do that here.

On Wednesday the Georgia State Elections Board held an emergency meeting related to the delayed primaries and approved the use of drop boxes by county elections officials to handle returned absentee ballots.

The measure, which also is for the primary only, doesn’t require county elections offices to provide them, but offers some guidelines on how to set them up.

Cobb Elections is asking for a couple of other things while staff responds to so many absentee ballot requests.

One of them is patience. You’re asked not to call or e-mail to find out when your application was processed, and when you may get our absentee ballot. The office is updating its list of processed applications and making it public; a daily file of those forms can be found here.

Staff also is in need of homemade cloth masks. Starting May 4, Cobb Elections will be accepting masks at a donation bin at its main office at 736 Whitlock Ave. in Marietta. They’re seeking 1,400 masks to protect poll workers for the primaries.

If you’d like to help out, you can drop off masks in a plastic bag in the donation bin from 12-1 p.m. Monday-Friday.

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East Cobb’s Meadowgrove Club to hold MUST food drive

Meadowgrove Club food drive

Thanks to Kirsten “KT” McClellan for the above photo and details about a food drive at the  Meadowgrove Club this weekend to help MUST Ministries feed the needy during the Coronavirus crisis.

The dates are Saturday and Sunday, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day in the club parking lot at 2850 Meadow Grove Way.

That’s in the Grove Meade neighborhood, located off Terrell Mill Road near East Cobb Middle School and Brumby Elementary School.

Kirsten says they’re accepting dry canned and food donations with social distancing and disinfecting protocols in place.

Here’s the list of items they’re collection to be turned over to MUST Ministries, which is continuing its Food Rapid Response drive that began in March with school and business closings.

Also on the first link is a traffic flow map to follow for a safe and expedient collection process.

Send Us Your News!

If you have Coronavirus-related event changes, business openings or closings to share with the public, e-mail us: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

Contact us at the same e-mail address for news about efforts to assist those in need, health care workers, first responders and others on the frontlines of combatting Coronavirus in East Cobb.

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East Cobb hair salon connects with customers during closure

East Cobb hair salon closure

When customers pulled into the Intrigue Salon parking lot on Johnson Ferry Road Saturday morning to pick up their supply of hair-care products, they were greeted by staffers wearing masks and bunny ears.

On the day before Easter, the playful gestures meant to encourage a sense of fun blended in with the somber new realities of the post-COVID-19 world.

Staff placed the products in the popped-up trunks of customers, who then drove away, all in the no-contact fashion that’s becoming the new normal for many businesses these days.

“We tell them this is for your temporary fix,” said Bonnie Bonadeo, Intrigue’s marketing director.

Like most “personal touch” businesses in Georgia—hair salons, barber shops, nail salons and spas—Intrigue has been closed to regular business for the better part of the last month.

In that time, owner Jeff South and his staff have held a few Saturday curbside pickup sessions for customers who order in advance.

It’s not just a way for Intrigue to do a spare bit of business for the time being, but for its clients to stay in touch, and do what they can until they’re allowed to come back in for a haircut and other hair treatments.

“We pride ourselves in our license to touch, but we can’t do that at all right now,” Bonadeo said.

She said for the two hours of the curbside pickup service, around 50 to 60 customers have come by.

They order their products—powders, conditioners and foams, for the most part—online. They’re not being sold anything that’s not advisable for them to use at home.

Instead, the daily hair products they take with them are meant to “help people feel better about themselves.”

It’s all part of what Bonadeo said is “making a very simple connection” to a customer base in an intensively customized and personalized industry, and one that’s in a very competitive market in East Cobb.

“For a small business, this is as valid as it can get,” she said.

Future curbside sessions are dictated by having enough customers order online.

Bonadeo also sends out e-mails with a light touch on occasion, another means of maintaining connections.

When a customer sent a note wondering how long the shutdown might last, Bonadeo sent out another e-mail with a giraffe and indicated “this long.”

A statewide shelter-in-place that ordered non-essential businesses closed has been extended by Gov. Brian Kemp at least through April 30.

Some other personal care businesses in East Cobb have tentatively announced reopening dates of May 1. Others are saying for now they may reopen on May 13, when a statewide public health emergency is set to expire.

When does Intrigue open again, Bonadeo said more patience will be necessary for customers. Social distancing guidelines are likely to limit staffing levels and how many customers can be accommodated at any given time.

“The priority is that we have to ensure that people feel safe coming back,” she said. “We all want to believe this is a temporary situation.”

How are you coping?

We’re writing a series of stories about how people in East Cobb are faring during the Coronavirus crisis—business owners, parents homeschooling their kids, personal caregivers, worshipping via Zoom, etc.

Let us know how your daily routine has changed, and what you’re doing during this uncertain time. E-mail us: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

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Cobb expands Coronavirus drive-up testing at Jim Miller Park

Cobb Commissioners Coronavirus meeting

Cobb and Douglas Public Health is allowing more people to get tested for Coronavirus at its drive-up location at Jim Miller Park, but it remains closed to the general public.

Previously, those able to get a test there were those who showed symptoms for the virus and had a medical referral or were health care workers or first responders.

Expanded criteria include the following people, per a release issued late Monday:

  • Hospitalized patients 
  • The following people with symptoms:
    • Healthcare workers, first responders, and other critical infrastructure workers
    • Persons residing in long-term care facilities or other group residential settings
    • Persons 65 years of age and older
    • Patients with underlying medical conditions
    • Household members or caregivers of any of the groups above 
    • Persons with close contact with a known COVID-19 case
  • The following people without symptoms will also be tested as capacity allows: 
    • Healthcare workers, first responders, and other critical infrastructure workers that have been exposed to COVID-19
    • Residents of a long-term care facility or group residential setting experiencing an outbreak of COVID-19

Cobb and Douglas Public Health says the testing is free and the results are faster, but didn’t elaborate.

The agency is asking those who think they may qualify for the test to call their health care provider or the Cobb & Douglas Public Health Call Center at 770-514-2300.

From there, a decision will be made if a test is needed, and if so, testing will be scheduled by appointment only.

As of noon Tuesday, Cobb has 874 confirmed cases of Coronavirus, or COVID-19, and 39 deaths.

The latter is the third-highest figure in Georgia, which has 501 deaths and 14,223 confirmed cases.

The Georgia Department of Public Health also updates the numbers at 7 p.m. at this link.

DPH is gradually adding more data to its reports, including race and ethnicity, and as seen in the map below, rates of confirmed cases per 100,000.

While Cobb is among the highest in Georgia in overall numbers, it’s in the lower tier of counties in the latter category.

Southwest Georgia remains the biggest part of the state for the outbreak, with a state-high 78 deaths in Dougherty County (Albany), and in 15 in nearby Lee County. There also have been 15 deaths in Mitchell County, and 11 each in Terrell County and Sumter County (Americus).

In metro Atlanta, Fulton County has 57 deaths, there are 26 in Gwinnett County, 15 in DeKalb County, and 12 in Clayton County. Bartow County has 17 deaths, while Clarke County has 12.

 

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J. Christopher’s temporarily closes at Pavilions at East Lake; updated Open for Business listings

J. Christopher's East Lake

J. Christopher’s management announced Monday that it’s temporarily closed its restaurant at the Pavilions at East Lake (Roswell at Robinson Road west).

Its other locations in East Cobb remain open, including Woodlawn Square (1205 Johnson Ferry Road) and Powers Ferry Plaza (1275 Powers Ferry Road) remain open for takeout, pickup and delivery service only from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. seven days a week.

The Atlanta-based breakfast, lunch and brunch chain has closed eights restaurants thus far, with 16 remaining open.

Some other businesses keeping their doors open have been added to our East Cobb Open for Business Directory, which is mostly restaurants/food operations but other locally owned businesses as well.

The new listings include G’Angelo’s Pizza on Canton Road and Heywoods Provision Company at East Lake Shopping Center.

Also since our last update, the Cazadores Mexican Restaurant location on Sandy Plains Road has reopened, joining its Johnson Ferry restaurant for delivery, takeout and curbside service.

Send Us Your News!

If your business closed and is reopening, please e-mail us: editor@eastcobbnews.com and we will place it in our East Cobb Open for Business Directory. We want to help local businesses get back on their feet with this free listing!

Contact us at the same e-mail address for news about efforts to assist those in need, health care workers, first responders and others on the frontlines of combatting Coronavirus in East Cobb.

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Weather Update: Worst of deadly storms bypass Cobb County

We got very heavy rains overnight but the early indications are that the severe thunderstorms and tornadoes that roared through Georgia overnight spared Cobb County.

Several people were killed in Murray County in northwest Georgia, and a man in Cartersville died when a tree fell on his house, according to WSB-TV.

Tornadoes also reportedly touched down in Upson County, in central Georgia. Thus far the National Weather Service has not confirmed when and where tornadoes may have touched down.

But Cobb County and most of Georgia got heavy rains overnight, and high winds brought down trees.

On Monday morning, Gov. Brian Kemp declared a state of emergency due to the storms.

In our area, the heaviest period of rainfall occurred around 2:30 a.m., after a severe thunderstorm watch, then warning were issued.

A tornado watch in Cobb expired at 7 a.m. Monday.

Cobb government said around 10 a.m. Monday that there are reports of trees down in the county, with work crews repairing electricity poles due to downed trees in the Kennesaw are.

For the moment there are no reports of flooding or impassable roads in the county, and there were few power outages.

The Georgia Emergency Management Agency is asking anyone with property damage from the storms to take a photo and fill out and submit a form at this link.

Areas of southeast Georgia remain under a tornado watch Monday morning.

 

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Cobb Chamber holding business recovery webinar series

Cobb Chamber of Commerce

Submitted information:

The Cobb Chamber is addressing the difficulties in navigating a post-pandemic business climate through a “Business Recovery from COVID-19: Navigating Human Resources Changes & Challenges” webinar Tuesday, April 14, at 10:30 a.m.

Part three of the “How To” webinar series on business recovery will feature experts sharing methods for managing the many human resources changes and complexities, as well as how to motivate your team during this challenging time. This webinar is for business owners, managers, executives and human resources professionals. Attendees will also have a chance to ask questions.

Speakers for the “Business Recovery from COVID-19” webinar include, the following:

  • Mark Butler, Georgia Department of Labor Commissioner
  • Dave Cole, Partner at Freeman Mathis & Gary
  • Tammy Cohen, Founder & Chief Visionary Officer of InfoMart
  • Secret Holland, VP of Human Resources & Community Affairs at Gas South
  • John Loud, 2020 Cobb Chamber Chairman & President of LOUD Security Systems
  • Sharon Mason, President & CEO of the Cobb Chamber

To register for this virtual event, visit cobbchamber.org/events. There is no cost, and Chamber members and non-members are welcome to attend on a first, come first served basis, up to 500 attendees.

For recordings of the first two webinars from the “How To” series, visit the Cobb Chamber’s COVID-19 Resources page at cobbchamber.org.

For more information, contact Mandy Burton, Vice President of Member Development at mburton@cobbchamber.org.

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Cobb in high-risk area for severe weather, tornadoes

UPDATED, MONDAY a.m: We dodged the worst of the storms, which have killed at least six people in Georgia.

The National Weather Service in Atlanta is urging citizens across much of Georgia to prepare for extremely severe storms Sunday night and into Monday morning.

Shortly before 5 p.m Sunday, the NWS elevated most of western and central Georgia, including Cobb County, into its highest-risk category for tornadoes.

The NWS is saying that a storm system coming into the state after 8 p.m. Sunday includes the potential for tornadoes, some of which could be especially strong (EF2+, with possible winds of around 70 mph).

That same portion of Georgia also is at high risk for damaging high winds. The rest of Georgia is at an elevated risk for high winds, according to the NWS forecast.

The Level 4 risk (on a scale of 1 to 5) that includes Cobb also includes the possibility of flash flooding and hail.

The chance of rain—up to an inch in some places—in the Cobb area Sunday night is 100 percent, with severe thunderstorms and winds gusting as high as 30 mph.

The low overnight Sunday into Monday morning will be around 60.

Citizens are encouraged to prepare for more severe conditions, and to move to safety in interior rooms or hallways if need be. They should also take other emergency precautions, including flashlights and getting around should electrical power is knocked out or their homes are damaged.

They’re also asked to turn off do not disturb settings on phones and other devices in order to receive weather alerts.

On Monday, there’s a 30 percent chance of rain and thunderstorms before 8 a.m. Sun is expected with a high will be around 70, winds will remain high, with gusts possibly up to 30 mph.

Monday night will be colder, with lows in the mid 40s. Tuesday also will be sunny, with highs around 70. A 40 percent chance of rain is expected Tuesday night.

 

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Celebrating Easter in the East Cobb community of Somerset

East Cobb Easter celebrations

Thanks to reader Lynn Hamilton for passing along the photos from her Somerset community on this Easter Sunday!

She said her neighbors, Audra and Harry Thompson, made the crosses, affixed chicken wire and invited neighbors to bring flowers. “It was the perfect Easter gesture of community,” Lynn wrote.

“They were missing the beautifully decorated floral Easter cross as many of us were missing Mt. Bethel’s cross which is part of our community.

“This week has been a week for grieving losses for many of the people I know—lost relationships with school out, lost 8th grade graduation, lost Easter hugs from grandkids, lost Spring Break experiences.”

If you’d like to share your Easter thoughts, photos, etc., please pass them along and we will post them. E-mail us: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

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EDITOR’S NOTE: Coming to terms with a new extraordinary time

Late Friday afternoon, I turned into The Avenue East Cobb and couldn’t believe my eyes.

A practically empty parking lot, save for a handful of cars.

And two pedestrians taking advantage of the surroundings to enjoy a late afternoon walk on a glorious spring day.

On a typical day, the place would be packed, and the roads leading to it would be groaning with vehicles at one of East Cobb’s busiest bottlenecks.

Instead, like many busy places in the community, The Avenue East Cobb felt like Sunday morning, before church traffic and those seeking a late breakfast or brunch started hitting the roads.

Just a few stores remained open at that retail center, and it wasn’t alone in looking abandoned.

My drive through East Cobb on Friday felt the same way: From the Lower Roswell-Johnson Ferry interchange, and along Sewell Mill Road, Roswell Road, Robinson Road.

Bereft of cars, and lined by more individual human beings walking than I can ever recall seeing.

One of them was a young father, pushing his twin infants in a double-stroller along Johnson Ferry Road near Mt. Zion United Methodist Church.

Many others were making their way up and down the rolling hills of Shadowlawn Drive.

Those who were getting out for something other than exercise were having to take the precautionary measures that have become iconic for our new extraordinary time.

A dozen or so shoppers were lined up outside Trader Joe’s, standing six feet apart, waiting for their cue to move ahead by an employee who was sternly enforcing foot traffic at the door.

The supply of Two Buck Chuck I had in mind for the weekend will have to wait, I thought as I drove by.

I am not comfortable with this. Nor with the sight of masks, which are becoming more commonplace as the days go by.

Or the eerie, dystopian phrases that are now part of our everyday language. To hear, or write, “social distancing” gives me the chills.

Human beings were not designed to do the things we are now having to undertake to combat a deadly virus that has taken the world by storm, and claimed many thousands of lives.

Sometimes I think I’m in a state of denial, although for the past month I’ve written about little but COVID-19 and our community’s response to it.

For weeks now, the days have bled into the nights. At times I forget what day of the week it is. With a few moments to spare, I’ve broken down to consider the monstrous losses that have piled up thus far, and that are sure to continue.

The number of people getting sick and dying.

The businesses closing and workers losing their jobs.

The school kids having their academic work cut short and high school graduations nixed.

The civic and social groups that can only meet virtually.

What all of this is going to do to us in the long run.

It is a scourge seemingly without end.

But nothing hit me like driving Friday to the entrance at East Cobb Park, locked up with barriers and yellow tape.

The parks were closed along with everything else, and have been for a few weeks.

I was stunned, and sat there for a few minutes. Total silence, and stillness, at one of the hubs of our community, on a day in which there would have been a bevy of activity.

I consider myself blessed, however. There is a walking trail near where I live, and I’m an old pro at working remotely. Getting community updates to you in the way I’d like hasn’t been hampered by technology as much as a matter of time.

There’s a staggering amount of news to provide when the basics of daily life have been so disrupted.

I miss getting out and covering stories in public, and connecting with citizens in person.

I miss the human connections that make doing community news so rewarding and valuable. While it’s true that we have tremendous ways to connect—e-mail, social media, text messages and video streaming—nothing truly replaces the real thing.

We’re doing the best we can with what we have. I’m buoyed by the spirit of cooperation from many in East Cobb to observe public health guidelines, and to help those in need and on the frontlines of battling the virus.

I admire the resilience of small business owners who are fighting to survive, and parents and teachers providing educational instruction in a very different classroom environment.

Most of all, I miss the tactile greetings of Sunday mornings. Not long ago, an older woman at the church I’ve been attending gave me a lovely scarf as a friendly gesture. I’m not a member, but have been worshipping there regularly.

I sit near her and some other elderly parishioners, and I wonder about them constantly now. Will we ever be able to say the peace together anytime soon?

It’s been wonderful to say hello and follow the liturgy on Facebook Live for these last few weeks.

But more than anything, I just want to hug someone the way we used to do, before our world was turned completely upside down a month ago.

I want to sit in a restaurant and dine in. I want to take a nap under the trees at East Cobb Park. I want to shop without seeing lines of demarcation taped to the floor, spots not to cross.

I have faith those things will happen, but we’re in for a very long haul for the time being. The statewide shelter-in-place will continue at least through the end of April, and it will be months before any sliver of normalcy will return to our lives.

On this Easter and Passover weekend, I wish all of you a peaceful and restive interlude, and pray we’ll find the strength and courage to navigate this anxiety and uncertainty.

Thanks for your readership, stay safe and be in touch.

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East Cobb food scores: Chipotle; Chopsticks China Bistro; more

Chopsticks China Bistro, East Cobb food scores

The following East Cobb food scores from March 24-April 10 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for details of the inspection:

Artisan Hospitality Unit 1 Mobile 
2409 Shallowford Road
April 9, 2020 Score: 98, Grade: A

Catering Cajun of Georgia
2409 Shallowford Road
April 9, 2020 Score: 98, Grade: A

Chipotle Mexican Grill
1281 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 104
March 25, 2020 Score: 100, Grade: A

Chopsticks China Bistro
3822 Roswell Road, Suite 113
March 25, 2020 Score: 99, Grade: A

Subway
1295-B Powers Ferry Road, Suite B
March 30, 2020 Score: 82, Grade: B

Waffle House
1176 Roswell Road
March 26, 2020 Score: 92, Grade: A

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East Cobb churches make online Easter service arrangements

East Cobb online Easter services

With churches and other houses of worship closed due to the Coronavirus-related shelter-in-place order in Georgia, many congregations have prepared for Holy Week and Easter services online.

Some have been doing this since early in the Lenten season in Early March.

We’ve compiled Easter Sunday listings and you can find them here, in similar fashion to what we do for the Advent and Christmas season.

The individual church links have more information about other special services and events, including a few Easter Vigil services on Saturday.

If you’d like to add what your church is doing, and don’t see it here, or need to correct or update information that we have listed, please let us know.

Send all information to: editor@eastcobbbnews.com.

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Cobb schools to start Monday-Thursday digital learning schedule

New Brumby Elementary School

The return from “spring break” will come with a new digital learning schedule for Cobb County School District students starting on Monday.

For the rest of the school year, they’ll be on a Monday-Thursday schedule, with Friday set aside for catching up on homework, reviewing student progress and more.

“No new work or assignments will be presented to students on Fridays,” the district announced Friday morning:

“We have been actively listening to the experiences of our students, parents, and teachers. In an environment that has changed much in our day-to-day lives, we have heard many examples of an entire community that is supporting learning in exciting, creative ways. We are also committed to listening and learning from those experiences so student learning can best continue for the rest of the 2019-2020 school year.”

After in-person classes were cancelled for the rest of the year in Georgia public schools by Gov. Brian Kemp, Cobb schools issued academic guidance that includes pass/fail grading for students in K-8, and gives students the choice of accepting their grades as of March 13 (when schools closed) or continuing through the end of the school year.

Students on track to graduate as of March 13 also will be given credit for courses for which they were enrolled on or before that date.

Earlier this week, Georgia school superintendent Richard Woods announced that there will be no further mandated testing for the rest of the school year, including Milestones. There also will not be a 2020 College and Career Ready Performance Index (CCRPI), the state’s baseline educational accountability measure.

The Cobb school district said it was exploring options on having some kind of graduation observance, but thus far hasn’t indicated anything beyond that.

Five full weeks of school remain, with the last day of classes on May 20.

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East Cobb Events Update: Marietta Greek Festival cancelled

Marietta Greek Festival

The organizers of the Marietta Greek Festival announced Thursday that this year’s event, scheduled for May 15-17, has been cancelled and will not be made up. Here’s the message that’s being sent out:

“As the COVID-19 situation continues to evolve, our utmost concern is for the health and safety of our guests, neighbors, and church family. We look forward to seeing you again in May 2021 – as always, the weekend after Mother’s Day!”

That was the last of the major spring festivals and events in East Cobb to announce a cancellation or postponement.

The May 2 Taste of East Cobb was called off last month, as was the Cobb Master Gardeners plant sale and expo and spring garden tour.

Another event that had been scheduled for April 18 will be held in the summer.

That’s the sendoff for retiring Temple Kol Emeth Rabbi Steven Lebow, whose Opus celebration is now taking place on July 18.

Send Us Your News!

If you have Coronavirus-related event changes, business openings or closings to share with the public, e-mail us: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

Contact us at the same e-mail address for news about efforts to assist those in need, health care workers, first responders and others on the frontlines of combatting Coronavirus in East Cobb.

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BREAKING NEWS: Georgia primary election delayed until June 9

Georgia runoff elections

The May 19 Georgia primary election has been delayed due to the Coronavirus crisis.

Secretary of State Brad Raffensparger announced Thursday that the presidential and general primaries will now take place on June 9.

His decision came the day after Gov. Brian Kemp extended the statewide shelter-in-place order through April 30, and a public health emergency until May 13.

“This decision allows our office and county election officials to continue to put in place contingency plans to ensure that voting can be safe and secure when in-person voting begins and prioritizes the health and safety of voters, county election officials, and poll workers,” Raffensparger said.

He had resisted calls from Georgia House Speaker Dennis Ralston and others to delay the elections due to the statewide response to COVID-19, which has claimed 370 lives and infected more than 10,000 people in the state.

The Georgia delay also comes two days after the Wisconsin primary took place following a legal battle in which the state’s Supreme Court overturned the governor’s attempt to postpone voting.

There were poll worker shortages reported and many polling places were closed and consolidated. Citizens showed up at polls waiting in long lines, not able to observe social distancing guidelines, to cast their ballots.

In his announcement Thursday, Raffensparger said there were concerns from county elections officials in southwest Georgia that they “could not overcome the challenges brought on by COVID-19 in time for in-person voting to begin on April 27.”

The Albany area and surrounding counties have been hard-hit by COVID-19, with a state-high 62 deaths reported in Dougherty County.

April 27 is the date early voting was to have begun, and it falls around the time a leading COVID-19 forecasting project is predicting the virus will reach its peak in Georgia.

The voter registration deadline has been pushed back to May 11, and early voting will take place on May 18.

Raffensparger had mailed out an absentee ballot application to all registered voters in Georgia, and the number of requests has overwhelmed county elections officials.

That includes Cobb Elections, which this week notified county voters that the Secretary of State’s vendor had not yet started mailing out absentee ballots.

According to Raffensparger, absentee ballot applications “will continue to be accepted and processed by counties even if the application said May 19. Once county election officials properly verify the signature on the application, the voter will be sent an absentee ballot for the primary election now to be held on June 9.”

More information on absentee ballots can be found here.

The general primary includes voting for the U.S. Senate seat currently held by David Perdue, Congressional races, state legislative races, county commission contests, school board campaigns and judicial seats.

Any runoffs will now take place on Aug. 11.

The race for the U.S. Senate seat held by Kelly Loeffler will be a “jungle primary” held during the Nov. 3 general election.

The presidential preference primary had been moved to May 19 from its original date of March 24, but there won’t be anything unresolved on the ballot.

President Donald Trump is the only Republican candidate on the ballot, and former vice president Joe Biden is the presumptive Democratic nominee after Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders suspended his campaign this week.

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Walton student aims to ‘do more’ with homeless non-profit

Walton student homeless non-profit
Walton student Emory Paul (center) delivers daily living supplies to homeless people in Woodruff Park in downtown Atlanta. Photos courtesy of Soul Supplies

During his sophomore year a year ago at Walton High School, Emory Paul was a teenager with a mission to play a role helping homeless people in downtown Atlanta.

He started an organization called Soul Supplies to provide individuals with backpacks of toiletries, hygiene products and other daily living essentials.

Paul and a few others would travel to Woodruff Park and drop off those supplies. Along the way, he said he learned more about those who live on the streets but who remain largely invivisible.

“We want to humanize people,” Paul said. “They become homeless in many ways. Many of them have just fallen on hard times. We shake their hands, ask their names, try to get to know them.”

As a result, he estimates that he and Soul Supplies volunteers have helped more than 150 people, delivering 3,000 items that have been collected through donations, from more than 200 donors thus far.

Soul Supplies
Items collected by Soul Supplies to be distributed in backpacks.

“I’m excited with what we’ve done on a small scale,” Paul said, who got Soul Supplies started through the Giving Point Social Innovators Academy.

As his junior year comes to a close, Paul has been planning the next phase of his project. He just completed paperwork and other tasks to make Soul Supplies a non-profit, enabling it to partner with other organizations and businesses.

“I’ve always had a passion for helping the homeless,” he said. “I want to do more, but I just didn’t know how.”

Each backpack is filled with around $40-$50 in supplies—among other things soap, deodorant, brushes, handwipes, socks, lotion, non-perishable snacks, toothbrushes and toothpaste and water bottles.

Before heading to Woodruff Park, Paul said he researched where the need for such provisions would make sense. Some of those he meets do go to shelters on occasion, but the supplies are designed to be used wherever someone may spend time.

Soul Supplies is accepting donations of items for the backpacks—including the backpacks—as well as financial donations.

He said they’ll be glad to pick up items at your curbside, given the Coronavirus social distancing guidelines.

More information on getting involved can be found here, and a temporary PayPal link can be found here while Soul Supplies awaits its business account.

He’s also gotten involved with an organization called Atlanta Survival Program, which is helping provide food supplies for those affected by COVID-19.

Paul said this year he’d like to reach 1,000 people through Soul Supplies. “The sky’s the limit,” he said, because the need remains significant.

Soul Supplies

 

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U.S. Sen. Loeffler says she’ll liquidate individual stocks

After coming under fire for selling investments right before the Coronavirus outbreak, Georgia U.S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler said Wednesday she and her husband are liquidating their individual stock holdings and will be trading in exchange-traded and mutual funds from now on.

U.S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler
U.S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler

In an op-ed published in The Wall Street Journal, the appointed successor to Johnny Isakson denied accusations of insider trading, and said she and her husband are changing their portfolios to “end media fixation” on the issue even though ethics provisions don’t require it.

Loeffler, who lives in Buckhead, was the chief executive of a subsidiary of Intercontinental Exchange, a commodity and financial service provider founded by her husband, Jeffrey Sprecher. He is also the chairman of the New York Stock Exchange.

Published reports indicated Loeffler and Sprecher bought and sold a total of $1.4 million in stock before financial markets suffered their worst fall since the recession in October 2008.

In the piece, entitled “I Never Traded on Confidential Coronavirus Information,” Loeffler wrote that she has never engaged in direct trading of investment accounts managed by third-party advisers, including Wells Fargo, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs:

In its hunger to place blame, the media fixated on a fantasy of improper congressional trading, stemming from a Jan. 24 briefing I and other Senators attended with health officials. But based on contemporaneous reporting and public statements by the officials who provided the briefing, there was no material or nonpublic information discussed. All we did was meet public-health leaders and ask them questions about the emerging virus.

She referenced comments from Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut about the briefing that “what I heard in response to many questions is a tentative answer. . . . We need to know more.”

The full text of Loeffler’s op-ed was distributed to media outlets by her campaign.

Loeffler, a Republican appointed in December by Gov. Brian Kemp to fill Isakson’s unexpired term, is up for election in November.

She’ll be in a “jungle” primary that includes Republican Congressman Doug Collins of northwest Georgia, who was lobbying to be appointed and has been critical of her stock market activities.

In her op-ed, Loeffler said she expected attacks once she began her election campaign, “but these allegations go well beyond what should be considered acceptable. We have spent our entire lives building careers based on integrity and hard work.

“My family’s investment accounts are being used as weapons for an assault on my character at a time when we should all be focused on making our country safe and strong.”

The winner of the November election will serve out the final two years of Isakson’s term.

 

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