East Cobb Elections Update: Qualified primary candidates

Georgia runoff elections

The qualifying deadline for 2020 elections in Georgia has passed, and there haven’t been any major surprises from what candidates had announced in the weeks leading up to this week’s filing period.

The most competitive primary races for East Cobb voters will be in the Republican primaries for Cobb Commission Chairman and Cobb Commission District 2, as well as Democratic and Republican primaries for Post 5 on the Cobb Board of Education.

There also will be a multi-candidate field in the Republican primary for the 6th Congressional District, including former Congresswoman Karen Handel and four others.

The primaries are May 19, and Cobb voters also will be choosing party nominees for countywide offices including sheriff and district attorney, all legislative seats and one of two U.S. Senate seats.

Non-partisan primaries for judge positions on Cobb State Court and Cobb Superior Court also will be on the primary ballot.

Two legislative elections in East Cobb will feature rematches in November. In State Senate 32, Republican incumbent Kay Kirkpatrick is being opposed once again by Democrat Christine Triebsch.

In State House 43, Republican State Rep. Sharon Cooper will face Democrat Luisa Wakeman, who made a close race in what has been a what has been a safe seat for Cooper, the House Health and Human Services Committee chairwoman.

Cobb Commission Chairman

Republican incumbent Mike Boyce of East Cobb is seeking a second term, and will be facing a familiar primary opponent and another newcomer.

Mike Boyce
Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce

Another East Cobb resident, Larry Savage, is making his third attempt in the GOP primary, having run in 2012 and 2016. Ricci Mason of Acworth, a retired Cobb Police officer, will be making his political debut.

The only Democrat to qualify is Lisa Cupid, who is completing her second term as District 4 commissioner in South Cobb.

Cobb Commission District 2

The retirement of Bob Ott has prompted several Republican candidates to qualify for the district, which includes some of East Cobb as well as the Smyrna-Vinings-Cumberland area.

The GOP qualifiers are East Cobb residents Andy Smith, Ott’s appointee to the Cobb Planning Commission, Kevin Nicholas, a Boyce appointee to the Development Authority of Cobb County, and business executive and entrepreneur Fitz Johnson of Vinings.

Nicholas ran for Post 6 on the Cobb school board (Walton, Wheeler clusters) in 2012 and Fitz Johnson is a former candidate for Georgia School Superintendent.

Jerica Richardson, who’s worked on several Democratic campaigns, including that of current Cobb school board member Jaha Howard, is the only Democrat to qualify.

Richardson and Smith are first-time candidates for public office.

Cobb School Board Post 5

David Banks
Cobb school board member David Banks

Three-term Republican incumbent David Banks had little opposition in his last two re-election bids but has plenty this year from several first-time candidates for the seat that includes the Pope and Lassiter attendance zones.

Other GOP candidates he’ll be facing in the primary are Delta Air Lines pilot Shelley O’Malley and IT consultant Matt Harper.

Another announced Republican candidate, attorney Rob Madayag, said this week he wouldn’t be running due to legal action he’s threatening against the Cobb County School District over bullying reporting issues.

Two Democratic candidates have qualified, current Lassiter PTSA co-president Tammy Andress and physical therapist Julia Hurtado.

The Pope High School Council is holding a forum for the Post 5 candidates next Sunday, March 15, at 3 p.m. in the school’s performing arts center.

6th District Congress

Handel, who won the seat in a 2017 special election but lost to Democrat Lucy McBath in 2018, got the support of the Republican establishment as she began her bid to regain her seat.

Karen Handel concedes, 6th Congressional District
Former U.S. Rep. Karen Handel

In the GOP primary, she will be on the ballot along with operations manager Mykel Lynn Barthelmy, Alpharetta businessman Blake Harbin, retired business owner Paulette Smith and former Altanta Falcons running back Joe Profit.

McBath is the only Democrat to qualify in the 6th District, which includes East Cobb, North Fulton and North DeKalb.

Cobb Sheriff

Longtime incumbent Neil Warren is the only Republican to qualify, but there’s a three-way race for the Democratic nomination, involving former sheriff’s deputy Jimmy Herndon of East Cobb, Gregory Gilstrap and Craig Owens.

Legislative races

Caroline Holko
State Rep. candidate Caroline Holko

The only East Cobb seat in the Georgia General Assembly with a contested primary is in District 46. Caroline Holko, who ran for Cobb Commission District 3 in 2018, is facing nurse Shirley Ritchie. Incumbent State Rep. John Carson is the only Republican who qualified.

In District 33, Republican incumbent Don Parsons will face Democratic consultant Connie DiCicco in November. In District 45, Republican State Rep. Matt Dollar is being challenged by Sarah Tindall Ghazal, a former voter access specialist for the Georgia Democratic Party.

Cobb Judgeships

Five incumbent Superior Court judges will not face re-election opposition: Kimberly Childs, Mary Staley, Gregory Poole, Tain Kell and Chief Judge Reuben Green did not draw any challengers.

Jason Marbutt, Cobb senior assistant DA
Jason Marbutt, Cobb Superior Court Judge candidate

Two retirements have prompted primary contests: Attorneys John Robert Greco, Jason Marbutt of East Cobb and Greg Shenton are vying for the post being vacated by Stephen Schuster.

Judge Lark Ingram also is retiring, and her post drew candidates Kellie Hill, currently a Cobb magistrate judge, and attorney Daniele Johnson.

In State Court, a retirement there also has led to a contested primary in Division 1, Post 6, where Toby Prodgers is stepping aside. The candidates are attorneys Joseph Atkins, Trina Griffiths, Scott Halperin, Mazi Mazloom, Diana Simmons and David Willingham.

Seven other incumbents are unopposed, as are the incumbent Chief Magistrate Judge, Brendan Murphy, and Probate Court Judge Kelli Wolk.

See State Court candidates listed here.

U.S. Senate

Seven Democrats have qualified for the nomination to oppose Republican incumbent David Perdue, who has no primary opposition.

U.S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler

The hopefuls include Jon Ossoff, who lost to Handel in a special Congressional election in 2017, former Columbus Mayor Teresa Tomlinson, former lieutenant governor candidate Sarah Riggs Amico, retired military veteran James Knox, journalist Tricia Carpenter McCracken, health care professional Marckeith DeJesus and civil rights lawyer Maya Dillard Smith.

A “jungle primary” to determine who’ll finish the final two years of former U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson’s term will take place in November.

Republican businesswoman Kelly Loeffler, appointed by Gov. Brian Kemp until then, has primary opposition from Congressman Doug Collins, engineer Derrick Grayson, business executive Wayne Johnson and educator Kandiss Taylor.

Democratic candidates include Matt Lieberman, the son of former U.S. Senator and Democratic vice presidental nominee Joe Lieberman, Tamara Johnson-Shealey, physician Joy-Felicia Slade, attorney Ed Tarver and Richard Dien Winfield, a philosophy professor at the University of Georgia.

Unless there is an outright winner (50 percent plus-1 of the vote), the top two finishers, regardless of party, would go into a runoff.

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Cobb Schools Foundation honors 2020 volunteers of the year

Cobb Schools Foundation volunteers honored
Cobb County School District photo

The Cobb Schools Foundation, which provides financial and other support to the Cobb County School District, honored the volunteers of the year from each of the district’s schools at a luncheon Thursday.

The volunteers were individually greeted by Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale. Walton High School graduate Kit Cummings, founder of the Power of Peace Project, which fosters the creation of community role models, also spoke at the function at the Hilton Marietta Hotel and Conference Center.

The following volunteers from East Cobb schools were honored:

Elementary Schools

  • Addison: Kim Campbell
  • Bells Ferry: Stacy Zellner
  • Blackwell: Jackie Southern
  • Brumby: Al Zwettler and Bill Campbell
  • Davis: Kathryn Marek
  • East Side: Kelly Wilkinson
  • Eastvalley: Ellen Sauve
  • Garrison Mill: Lori Morrisey
  • Keheley: Laura Kubica
  • Kincaid: Amanda Musson
  • Mountain View: Stacey Albracht
  • Mt. Bethel: Dara Onori
  • Murdock: Kathy Dalen
  • Nicholson: Samer Dilbeck
  • Powers Ferry: Donye Demitri
  • Rocky Mount: Jerry Shepler
  • Sedalia Park: Susan Monk
  • Shallowford Falls: Anna Baker
  • Sope Creek: Darrell Young
  • Tritt: Lynn Gilbert

Middle Schools

  • Daniell: Linda Dafoe
  • Dickerson: Kelly Gunter
  • Dodgen: Stacy Gillen
  • East Cobb: Lisa Spessard
  • Hightower Trail: Sarah Chaloupek
  • Mabry: Barbara Adamson
  • McCleskey: Dawn Cooper
  • Simpson: Leslie Graham

High Schools

  • Kell: Kara Huey
  • Lassiter: Lori Bartik
  • Pope: Laura Borel
  • Sprayberry: Sharona Sandberg
  • Walton: Sallie Winokur
  • Wheeler: Linda Yu

For more on the Cobb Schools Foundation, click here.

 

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McCleskey MS science teacher honored by state teachers group

The Georgia Science Teachers Association has named Annette Simpson of McCleskey Middle School in East Cobb as its middle school teacher of the year for 2020.

It’s not the first time she’s been honored by that organization for her work in the classroom. Annette Simpson, McCleskey MS science teacher honored

In 2015, she was the GSTA’s elementary school teacher of the year when she was at Keheley Elementary School. Per a Cobb County School District release, Simpson also has earned the Cobb STEM Distinguished Educator Award and the Shell Teacher Award, which honors classroom K-12 science teachers.

Here’s what McCleskey principal Dr. Andrea Jenkins-Mann had to say about Simpson:

“Mrs. Simpson is a consummate, caring professional who works tirelessly with all our school’s populations of students. 

“Annette works tirelessly outside of the classroom to extend learning for our students,” her principal praised. “She is a winning Science Olympiad Coach and is an assistant Math Team Coach. She revived our Environmental Club; and leads the 7th Grade campus cleanup with Rivers Alive! I fully support her efforts to implement new curriculum and bring new professional ideas to our staff. Annette leads our staff with assisting students in taking ownership of their learning, thinking more deeply, delving into the curriculum to relate it to real-world experiences, and engaging in meaningful tasks.”

Simpson and other honorees were recognized recently at the GSTA conference in Columbus.

 

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Flooding closes Keheley Road-Eula Drive intersection again

Keheley Road at Eula Drive closed
Cobb DOT map

A waterlogged intersection in Northeast Cobb that was closed last month after heavy rains is shut down again.

Cobb County’s communications office sent a message Thursday afternoon that Keheley Road is closed at Eula Drive for the time being, as another bout of rainy weather is slated to move out of the area.

The water from the rains is running over from a privately-owned late into the intersection.

It’s near Keheley Elementary School, but the closure isn’t affecting related traffic. However, the county’s message said the solution involves negotiating with the lake owner.

The message said the county will monitor water levels before reopening the intersection. Residents aren’t being cut off but some may have to use a detour.

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East Cobb food scores: Goldbergs Bagel gets a failing score

Goldberg’s Bagel, East Cobb food scores

Goldbergs Bagel Co. & Deli got a failing score from Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health inspectors on Thursday after they cited the eatery at 1062 Johnson Ferry Road for several health code violations.

Goldbergs received a score of 65, which is unsatisfactory, and a notation of “U” is indicated in the full inspection report (you can read it here).

The violations included improper holding temperatures for food.

Specifically, partially-cooked chicken tenders were being held well above the holding temperature limit of 41 degrees fahrenheit.

What are called “TCS” foods—such as meats, produce and dairy products—also have temperature guidelines. Goldbergs was found to have held chicken and matzo soup below the 135-degree minimum for hot soups.

The eatery also did not properly label the discard dates for ready-to-eat TCS foods, including cream cheese in a walk-in cooler, open packages of deli meat and containers of rice, a repeat violation.

An employee handling trash also was found to have not washed hands before returning to the dish area.

Inspectors noted that all the above violations were corrected on-site.

Another repeat violation indicated in the report was the lack of a test kit for a high-temperature sanitizing machine for ware washing equipment.

When Cobb restaurants get failing scores, inspectors typically return to perform another inspection within a couple weeks.

Goldbergs got an “A” score of 93 on its last inspection last September. In June and July of 2019, Golbergs got “C” scores of 70 and 76.

Another well-known East Cobb restaurant that got a low health score recently was reinspected this week.

Ted’s Montana Grill got a “C” score on Feb. 4, with violations that included no paper towels in the dish washing area and no proof of procedures for employees on how to respond to vomiting or diarrheal events.

When inspectors returned to Ted’s on Wednesday, they gave the restaurant an “A” score of 91 and found only a TCS food storing temperature violation for ribs, horseradish cream sauce, butter and sour cream.

The report noted the violation was corrected on-site, the ribs and sour cream were discarded and the horseradish cream sauce was placed on ice.

Ted’s three previous inspections, dating back to 2017, all had “A” scores.

“Ted’s held a mandatory retraining course for the entire team to ensure this does not happen again,” said Eddie Hensley, the director of operations for Ted’s at East Cobb, in a statement issued through a Ted’s spokeswoman.

“Food safety and training are of the utmost importance to the team at Ted’s Montana Grill, and our guests will always be our number one priority. We assure you that incidents such as this are no indicator of the high level of standards and proper training we have established.”

Other food scores this week

Arby’s 
4367 Roswell Road
March 5, 2020 Score: 91, Grade: A

McDonald’s
2371 Delk Road
March 5, 2020 Score: 100, Grade: A

 

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Driver in fatal East Cobb crash charged with vehicular homicide

Alabama Road crash kills motorcyclist

UPDATE to the fatal crash involving a motorcyclist on Feb. 22 on Alabama Road in Northeast Cobb: The driver of the car who hit the bike turned herself in Wednesday after being charged with vehicular homicide.

Cobb Police Sgt. Wayne Delk said Thursday that Genesis Lugo, 21, of Woodstock, also has been charged with a failure to yield.

They’re both second-degree misdemeanor charges, and Lugo was released from the Cobb County Adult Detention Center after paying a $2,970 bail, according to Cobb Sheriff’s Office records.

According to those records, Lugo was booked shortly after 9 p.m. Wednesday and was released around 11:30 p.m.

Police said that at 4:25 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 22, 18-year-old Cameron S. Clason, of Woodstock was heading west on Alabama Road when his black 2009 Suzuki SV650 motorcycle collided with a gray 2001 Nissan Altima making a left turn from eastbound Alabama Road to Old Mountain Park Road, according to police.

Clason was later pronounced dead at North Fulton Hospital. Lugo, the driver of the Nissan, not did not require medical attention at the scene.

The crash was the second of three in as many days that took the lives of motorists in East Cobb, following a Feb. 21 incident at Johnson Ferry Road and Powers Drive that killed a nearby resident.

On Feb. 23, a 91-year-old man died after he was trying to turn left on Davis Road from Sandy Plains Road southbound.

 

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Cobb included in flash flood watch until Thursday afternoon

Cobb flash flood watch

After a brief respite from the rain on Tuesday, wet weather has returned to most of Georgia, and the National Weather Service has issued a flash flood watch that includes Cobb County.

The watch began Wednesday morning and continues until 1 p.m. Thursday. A watch means that conditions are favorable for flash flooding to occur, especially around rivers, streams and creeks.

The watch zone is generally below Interstate 20 but also includes metro Atlanta.

The NWS office in Atlanta reported that between 1-2 inches had fallen in central Georgia Wednesday morning, and that another 1.5 to 3 inches could fall in the watch area by Thursday afternoon.

The chance of rain in Cobb is 90 percent for the rest of Wednesday and Thursday morning, reducing to 20 percent by Thursday night.

Highs Wednesday will be near 60, with lows Wednesday night dropping to the high 40s. Thursday’s highs will be in the low 50s and Thursday night’s low around 40.

Friday will be sunny and clear with a high in the low 50s, and the weekend will be the same, with Sunday’s high in the low 60s.

Low temperatures Friday and Saturday will be around freezing.

 

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East Cobb Biz Update: More Sandy Plains Marketplace openings

First Watch, Sandy Plains Marketplace

A couple more restaurants are opening their doors, or are about to, along with the Jim ‘N Nick’s Bar-B-Q that christened the Sandy Plains Marketplace.

On Monday, MOD Pizza began serving with a fast-casual menu (peruse it here) and had a grand opening. The 12-year-old Seattle-based chain, with 400 restaurants in the U.S. and United Kingdowm, now has seven locations in Georgia and its first in the East Cobb area.

Hours are Sunday-Thursday from 10:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. and Friday-Saturday 10:30 a.m. to 11 p.m.

A few doors down, the First Watch breakfast-lunch-brunch eatery (here’s the menu) announced it’s opening Monday, March 16.

Based in Florida, First Watch has more than 200 restaurants in 26 states, including 12 in Georgia (one is in Kennesaw).

On Saturday, the Hollywood Feed organic pet supplies store at Sandy Plains Marketplace is opening with 20 percent discounts. The hours are 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 11:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Sunday.

The Clean Juice smoothie bar is continue to hire for an April opening. That’s also the target month for the GreenWise Market that we noted last week, but a specific date is TBA.

Kroger gas stations coming

While a fueling center run by Kroger across the Street at Sandy Plains Village is under construction, work will begin soon on another Kroger gas station in East Cobb.

Reader Kevin passed along the photo below of a portion of the Pavilions at East Lake at Roswell Road that’s being torn down for the gas station.

It’s where a Panera Bread restaurant once was located, and another restaurant had to move to make room.

The Ege Sushi restaurant is now located on the other end of the Pavilions, near J. Christopher’s and Kayhill’s Sports Bar and Grill.

An existing Kroger gas station is at the Shallowford Falls Shopping Center at Johnson Ferry Road.

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Tommy Nobis Center named a Top Workplace in Atlanta

Submitted information:Tommy Nobis Center

TOMMY NOBIS CENTER (a Marietta-based nonprofit) has been awarded a Top Workplaces honor by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution for the second consecutive year. The list is based solely on employee feedback gathered through a third-party survey administered by Energage, LLC. The anonymous survey measures several aspects of workplace culture.

Tommy Nobis Center has been a staple of the Marietta community for more than 42 years. They are being recognized for their strong culture and for being a great place to work.

President & CEO, Dave Ward said, “We set and achieve audacious goals every year while also investing heavily in a robust culture with a focus on fun and innovation.”

About Tommy Nobis Center
Since 1977, Tommy Nobis Center has helped more than 25,000 individuals find independence and workplace success by empowering people through employment. It envisions supportive communities where people with disabilities are afforded the opportunity to work. For more information, please visit http://www.tommynobiscenter.org, or follow Tommy Nobis Center on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube and LinkedIn.

 

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Cobb public health officials issue coronavirus statement

As the first cases of coronavirus in Georgia were revealed, the Cobb and Douglas Public Health Department has issued a statement about the outbreak.Cobb coronavirus statement

The alert was issued prior to a late-night press conference Monday by Gov. Brian Kemp confirming two cases of COVID-19 in Fulton County.

They’re a father and son, and one of them had traveled back recently from Milan, Italy, which is experiencing an outbreak of the virus.

During the press conference, state health officials said the two individuals were in home quarantine and in communication with their doctor.

More than 90,000 people have contracted coronavirus, a highly contagious illness, in nearly 80 countries around the world. More than 3,000 deaths have been reported, mostly in China.

The only deaths thus far in the U.S. have been in Washington State, where on Tuesday a ninth fatality was confirmed.

The Cobb/Douglas statement contains a basic explanation of the virus, along with preventative measures, such as thorough hand-washing, and that all testing is being done by the state at this time.

The statement said coronavirus spreads through the air when an infected person coughs or sneezes, and that symptoms appear between two and 14 days after exposure. They include:

  • runny nose
  • headache
  • cough
  • shortness of breath
  • fever
  • a general feeling of being unwell.

Here’s more about the local response, as the number of cases is expected to grow:

  • Cobb & Douglas Public Health (CDPH) is preparing internally, as well as with the state and the CDC to slow or prevent community spread. We are working with our partners, including the local governments, healthcare organizations, businesses, first responders, and local school districts to ensure our community is prepared for a potential COVID-19 outbreak.

  • We are reaching out to our county Boards of Health, emergency management agencies, chambers of commerce, and other partners who may need our guidance and are sending them guidance on how to prepare their organizations.

  • CDPH staff receive frequent updates from the CDC and the Georgia Department of Public Health. These updates include information on the current situation abroad and in the U.S., testing, surveillance, quarantine, and more. This helps shape our local response.

  • CDPH  has a previously-developed pandemic influenza plan that can serve as a template for responding to other outbreaks of severe respiratory disease, like COVID-19. We are reviewing our plan and are also prepared to implement specific COVID-19 guidance from the Georgia Department of Public Health and the CDC as the situation evolves.

The Cobb County School District last week sent out a notice about the coronavirus, including a statement from the Georgia Department of Public Health, as well as an updated FAQ Tuesday following the confirmation of the Georgia cases:

The District will continue to stay in constant communication with Georgia Department of Health officials and will follow their guidance every step of the way in order to keep our students and staff safe. Our schools continue to remind students and staff on how to prevent the spread of illness including hand washing, covering mouths when they cough, and keeping their hands away from their face. Parents are urged to keep students at home if they have any symptoms of sickness. 

Should a staff member or student become ill, Cobb Schools already has a reporting protocol in place regarding infectious diseases, which is part of the District’s Infectious Disease Response Plan. The District will use guidance from public health officials to update and apply the plan to respond to COVID-19.  

DPH has also issued guidance about the coronavirus, which was first diagnosed in December in Wuhan, China.

The federal Centers for Disease Control has issued its highest alerts for China and Iran, recommending against non-essential travel there, and that entry by foreign nationals from those countries has been suspended.

U.S. travelers are being advised against non-essential trips to South Korea and Italy, and older adults or those with chronic medical conditions not visit Japan.

More CDC coronavirus information can be found here.

 

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Cobb school board candidate withdraws; threatens to sue district

A candidate for the Cobb Board of Education says he’s withdrawing after he announced that he may file a lawsuit against the Cobb County School District.Rob Madayag, Cobb school board candidate

Rob Madayag, an attorney, said late Monday that he wouldn’t be qualifying for the Post 5 seat currently held by two-term incumbent David Banks.

Madayag had been one of four GOP hopefuls to announce for the seat, including Banks, as qualifying began Monday.

Post 5 includes the Pope and Lassiter clusters.

In a post to a Cobb schools-related Facebook page, Madayag said that “based on several factors, I do not think I am the best candidate at this time.”

Madayag filed notice last week that he may take the CCSD to court, saying it doesn’t properly report bullying incidents under the state’s school anti-bullying law.

“I intend to win the lawsuit and will not be able to dedicate the amount of time to campaign and win that i think necessary,” Madayag said in his statement on Monday. “I do not plan on losing, and with the number of depositions and document requests in the litigation I have mapped out, I expect to have most of my free time taken up.”

In a letter sent to school board members and Superintendent Chris Ragsdale on Feb. 25 (you can read it here), Madayag said he was skeptical of huge reductions in reported instances of bullying in Cobb schools under Ragsdale—to be specific, 86 percent between 2014 and 2018.

Madayag, who said his daughter has been bullied in Cobb schools, wrote that it’s “a rate that defies all logic and reason and is a significant outlier with respect to all the other school districts in the metro-Atlanta area, and quite possibly the entire United States.”

In addition to Banks, the other Republican candidates for the Post 5 season are Shelley O’Malley, a Delta Air Lines pilot, and IT consultant Matt Harper.

Two Democrats also have announced, current Lassiter PTSA co-president Tammy Andress, and physical therapist Julia Hurtado.

Qualifying for the May 19 general primary ends at noon Friday.

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Cobb 2022 SPLOST draft project list released as open houses start

Cobb Fire Station 12
Replacing the aging Fire Station No. 12 near Shaw Park is included in the Cobb 2022 SPLOST draft list.

Public safety infrastructure in Cobb County would get a substantial overhaul if the Cobb Special-Purpose Local Option Sales Tax for county government (SPLOST) is renewed by voters later this year.

A draft project list for the six-year, $810 million 2022 SPLOST collection and other information has been released by the county as a schedule of 20 open houses gets underway Tuesday at the Piedmont Church in Northeast Cobb.

The open house takes place from 6-8 p.m. The church is located at 570 Piedmont Road. Citizens can view the proposed projects, offer feedback on them and ask county staff about them as well.

The SPLOST, if renewed, would succeed the current 2016 SPLOST, which expires on Dec. 31, 2021. The one-percent sales tax pays for a wide variety of government projects, including transportation, public safety, parks, libraries, information services, property management, community centers and senior services.

Each of Cobb’s six cities would also collect sales-tax funds for projects in their municipalities. The 2022 SPLOST would be collected through Dec. 31, 2027.

The draft list (you can read through it here and see an overview here) includes $18 million for renovating the former Lockheed Georgia Employees Credit Union building on Fairground Street in Marietta for a new Cobb Police headquarters, and for a new police training center and firing range.

That’s part of a $82 million tab to be spent on public safety under the 2022 SPLOST.

Another $24 million would be spent for renovating fire training facilities, and to build a new Fire Station No. 12 to replace the existing building on Brackett Road in Northeast Cobb, near Shaw Park.

Replacing radio public safety equipment would cost $16 million, and a new Cobb animal shelter is pegged at $15 million.

Replacing police vehicles and building a new E-911 center would come in at $10 million each.

The biggest chunk of SPLOST spending, nearly $361 million, would be for Cobb DOT projects, with $227 million for repavings alone, along with bridge repairs, traffic management, and sidewalk improvements countywide.

The principal traffic projects in East Cobb would be $3.9 million to improve the intersection of Holly Springs Road and Post Oak Tritt Road, $2.4 million for Canton Road corridor improvements, and $701,500 to improve the Shallowford Road-Gordy Parkway intersection.

Tritt property
The tree-shrouded home of Wylene Tritt next to East Cobb Park is located on nearly 30 acres the county has purchased for current greenspace. (ECN file)

In the category of what’s called “community impact projects” is a line item for the purchase of additional Tritt property next to East Cobb Park.

Last year, Cobb commissioners spent $8.3 million to buy 29.7 acres from Wylene Tritt, with the possibility of purchasing more.

She owns 54 acres that she had tentatively agreed to sell for a senior-living project that was denied by commissioners following community opposition.

Tritt and Isakson Living had agreed on a $20 million purchase price, and both later sued the county.

The SPLOST draft list line item indicates only “TBD” in a purchase price column next to “Acquire Tritt Property.”

Another $5 million would be dedicated to repurposing Shaw Park, and $3 million would go to construction of the new Ebenezer Downs Park in Northeast Cobb.

Another $24 million would be earmarked for Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs, including a variety of renovations and upgrades at Sewell Park, Fullers Park, Terrell Mill Park, Hyde Farm, the Mountain View Aquatic Center, Noonday Creek Park and The Art Place.

Paving work would be included for East Cobb Park, Fullers Park and Terrell Mill Park and video surveillance cameras would be installed at several Cobb library branches, including the Mountain View Regional Library.

The Cobb County SPLOST Renewal Page has more information, including dates and times for the open houses.

In East Cobb, those events will be on April 1 at the East Cobb Library, April 14 at the Tim D. Lee Senior Center and May 5 at the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center.

 

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East Cobb festival update: New dates, format for Noshfest

Alex Guthrie, Noshfest
Alex Guthrie performing at the 2018 Noshfest (ECN file).

The dead of winter is the time when spring, summer and fall festival news is announced. Following a recent post about the 2020 date in May for the Taste of East Cobb comes word about some changes with the Noshfest at Temple Kol Emeth.

Noshfest organizers announced over the weekend that the 10th anniversary of the Jewish food and cultural festival is taking place in late August, instead of over the Labor Day weekend.

It’s also being streamlined into a one-day festival, from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 22. The previous day, Saturday, Aug. 22, will have a “Nosh at Night” musical concert featuring East Cobb artist Alex Guthrie, who’s opening for the Zack Brown Band, and others, along with refreshments.

More details are to follow, including ticketing for Nosh at Night.

The dates for the 2020 Marietta Greek Festival also have been announced, and for the 30th anniversary of the event, it’s keeping to its usual spring time slot, May 15-17 at the Holy Transfiguration Greek Orthodox Church on Trickum Road.

The Greek Festival hours are Friday, May 15 from 3-11 p.m. (with free admission from 3-5 p.m.); Saturday, May 16 from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m; and Sunday, May 17, from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

 

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Cobb Planning Commission agenda includes preschool relocation

Legacy Christian preschool site plan

There’s just one East Cobb application coming before the Cobb Planning Commission on Tuesday, and it’s held over from last month.

A request to relocate the Legacy Christian Preschool from the Woodstock Church Shallowford to Bethany Presbyterian Church at 4644 Sandy Plains Road requires a special land-use permit.

The Cobb Board of Commissioners voted to continue the matter for traffic and parking reasons. (Here’s the initial application; and a Feb. 13 stipulation letter provided before the commissioners meeting).

Legacy Christian wants to occupy what had been preschool space at Bethany, but the special land-use permit is needed to add kindergarten.

According to the stipulation letter, Legacy would lease the preschool from Bethany and operate from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday-Friday, with an after-school period lasting until nearly 2 p.m.

Garvis Sams, an attorney for Legacy, said his client has met with residents in the adjacent Jefferson Park neighborhood to discuss the school’s plans, which do not call for any additions or renovations to the current school building.

The school plans to enroll around 65 students between the ages of 2 and 6, with a maximum anticipated for the 2021-22 school year. If enrollment goes above that, Legacy would have to seek permission from the commissioners.

The school would put up a privacy fence between the church and school and residents of Springwood Place in time for the 2020-21 school year. No playground activity will be allowed on the site after 2 p.m.

The Planning Commission meeting begins at 9 a.m. Tuesday in the second-floor board room of the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta.

County commissioners will take up final action on March 17.

 

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Wheeler boys, Kell girls reach state basketball finals

Wheeler basketball
The Wildcats will attempt to add to the school’s banner collection when they play for the Class 7A GHSA state championship next Saturday. ECN photo

A two-point loss early in the season to Milton was on the minds of Wheeler players as they took the floor in Buford Saturday for a rematch.

But there was much more riding on this one, in the Class 7A Georgia High School Association boys semifinals.

The Wildcats led from wire-to-wire, and by double digits for most of the way, in exacting revenge on Milton in a 59-47 win.

In doing so, they now have a chance to win the seventh state title in school history.

Next Saturday, Wheeler will play either Grayson or McEachern in Macon.

Later Saturday afternoon at Fort Valley State, the Kell girls remained undefeated and reached the state finals for the first time ever with a 60-55 victory over Eagle’s Landing.

After reaching the Final Four for the first time since 2015 on Wednesday in a quarterfinal win over Berkmar, Wheeler can end a five-year trophy drought with one more win.

Sam Hines Jr. scored 19 points for the Wildcats, who once again played stifling defense in holding their opponent to under 50 points for the second game in a row.

Bruce Thornton had a game-high 28 points for Milton, but Wheeler had more contributors on offense.

Wheeler pulled away in the second quarter. Hines scored on a dunk to make the score 22-14, then A.J. Burke and Prince Davies made 3-point shots for a 28-16 score.

Later in the quarter, Hines cut to the baseline, took a pass and threw down another dunk to give Wheeler a 32-20 advantage.

He had 12 points at halftime, and scored only two points in the third quarter, but the Wildcats got a 3-point basket from Maxwell Harris to lead 43-26.

Milton trailed by 11 points at the start of the fourth quarter, but never put together enough of a run to threaten Wheeler from there.

The Kell girls were 31-0 on the season coming in to Saturday’s game, led from the opening moments, built a double-digit lead in the second half but had to hang on in the closing seconds.

Kell’s freshman star, Crystal Henderson, tossed in a desperation shot at the halftime buzzer to give the Lady Longhorns a 27-24 lead.

Eagle’s Landing hung around for much of the third quarter, but Henderson provided a spark when she headed down the court on the break, dribbled between her legs and passed to Amaya Moss for an easy basket.

Kell’s lead was 37-32 at that point, and Henderson drained a 3-point shot, followed by Makyah Favors with another 3, and the score was 42-34.

After Kell missed a free throw, Henderson got the rebound, put the ball back up and in the basket for two more points for a 47-34 lead.

Eagle’s Landing called timeout after that, and climbed back in the fourth quarter.

Kell nearly squandered its lead as Eagle’s Landing fought back to trail 57-55 with 40 seconds left.

Then Henderson was fouled, and she made one of two free throws. The Eagles nearly tied it up the other way, but the shot rimmed out and Kell got possession.

Henderson made two free throws with a second left, for a game-high 25 points, to clinch the win for the Lady Longhorns.

Next Friday, Kell will play Buford for the state title, also in Macon.

In the Class 5A boys semifinals on Saturday, Kell was playing in its first state semifinal game, against Dutchtown, also in Fort Valley.

The Longhorns couldn’t hold on to an eight-point lead in the fourth quarter and were forced into overtime. Then Dutchtown got the upper hand early in the extra period and held on for a 62-56 win.

Kell’s best-ever season ended with a 26-6 record.

 

 

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The East Cobb Interview: Doug Turbush, Seed/Stem/Drift owner

Doug Turbush

Since opening Seed Kitchen & Bar at Merchant’s Walk Shopping Center in 2011, Doug Turbush has dramatically influenced the restaurant scene in East Cobb.

He talks about his “modern American cuisine” menu being the result of having “a big sandbox to play in” as a creative chef.

The phrase also could apply to the community where he, his wife and son live, and that has long been a bastion of family-friendly, chain and franchise restaurants.

After serving as executive chef at now-closed Nava and Bluepointe—once part of the Buckhead Life Restaurant Group empire founded by Atlanta dining impresario Pano Karatassos—Turbush wanted to create an eclectic neighborhood dining atmosphere close to home.

He did market research and worked up a business plan, consulted with his former boss, Atlanta restaurateur Kevin Rathbun, got a small-business loan and became a first-time restaurant owner, near the spot of the former Merchant’s Walk library branch.

He recalls eating at Red Sky Tapas & Bar on Johnson Ferry Road and being told by someone there not to open a restaurant in East Cobb for what he had in mind, that it wouldn’t make it. Turbush had done his homework, and thought otherwise.

“The market was there,” Turbush said in an interview with East Cobb News. “We knew we didn’t have the expense account [diners]. We knew we didn’t have the Buckhead singles scene. What we wanted to do was to bring some sort of personality to the neighborhood.”

While Turbush admits he’s “a little jealous” of the vibrant restaurant scenes in Marietta and Roswell that sandwich East Cobb, “they don’t have the market we have.”

Mostly, he said, it was the revamping of Merchant’s Walk, anchored by a new Whole Foods store, that convinced him the time was right, in more ways than he initially imagined.

His background blending Asian, Latin and Southern flavors and locally sourced ingredients turned out a menu that has remained relatively consistent in eight years of business.

In stepping in an area that hasn’t been a haven of adventurous cuisine, Turbush has succeeded in creating something of a sandbox of his own in affluent East Cobb.

“I wanted to have a quaint little bistro in East Cobb,” Turbush said. “What I got was a really busy restaurant.”

In 2013, he opened the Stem Wine Bar next door to Seed and Drift Fish House & Oyster Bar at The Avenue East Cobb opened in 2016.

Last fall, he was named Restaurateur of the Year in the small and independent category by the Georgia Restaurant Association, and recently was recognized for that award during a legislative session at the Georgia Capitol.

On Tuesday, Drift will mark its fourth anniversary with a Bluegrass Birthday Bash that includes a special oyster, crab and lobster menu, drink specials and live music.

Seed Kitchen & Bar

Seed’s emergence as a restaurant that drew notice from dedicated Atlanta foodies was followed by some other chef-driven concepts in East Cobb. Some of them, including Zeal and Common Quarter/Muss & Turner’s, have closed in the same Johnson Ferry Road corridor.

Turbush, a Wisconsin native, relocated to Atlanta for his wife’s work (she’s now retired from the Coca-Cola Co.) and they moved to East Cobb as they have raised their son, who’s a student at the Wheeler Magnet School.

“With each new place, we’ve brought something that wasn’t here,” Turbush said of his three restaurants.

Turbush began making plans for Stem soon after opening Seed, in part to accommodate diners turned away when his original restaurant was at capacity.

While there’s still some of that overlap, Stem also has special wine tastings to attract another kind of diner, with a menu of small plate offerings.

When Drift opened in March 2016, “there was no dedicated high-quality seafood place here,” Turbush said. “I could have put a steakhouse there, but there’s a steakhouse on every corner in Atlanta.”

Drift underwent some growing pains, and Turbush encountered a rarity— a one-star review—from noted dining critic Corby Kummer, who briefly lived in Atlanta.

“I don’t know what happened there,” Turbush said. “I took everything he said to heart, but we reviewed those items and we still have most of them on the menu. Everyone’s got an opinion and he’s got the pen.”

Drift is the only restaurant in Georgia that’s listed by a seafood watch organization for following sustainable seafood practices.

Turbush attributes his longevity to focusing on satisfying the locals.

“I would hope that we’ve helped elevate the dining scene in East Cobb,” Turbush said. “But the biggest reward is someone who’s been living here for 20 years, who says thank you.”

Drift Fish House and Oyster Bar

He regularly gets offers to expand, open a new restaurant somewhere else, or entertain a new concept, but he’s leery of many of those pitches.

He said he wouldn’t rule out adding to his business, as long as it’s an opportunity that doesn’t require a lot of capital and time.

“We have aspirations for growth,” he said, but he can’t say for now what possible opportunities those might be.

The restaurant industry is suffering a decline in the full-service area, but Turbush said “we’re not seeing that yet.”

An advantage he feels he has is that “our biggest customers become our greatest ambassadors.” Those local diners spread the word, and now he’s seeing the grown children of some of his original customers come in for a bite to eat.

What do those diners like when they come to Seed?

“Our No. 1 seller is the Chicken Schnitzel,” Turbush said, without hesitation, a dish made with miso mustard, oven-dried tomato arugula and parmesan and cooked in wine. Popular side dishes include the caramelized brussels sprouts and cauliflower.

Turbush said roughly two-thirds of the menu “I can’t change much,” due to customer demand. Most of what does change is the seasonal part of the menu.

“The reason that so many restaurants fail is that anyone can get in the restaurant business,” Turbush said. “I watch a lot of restaurants get away from their core business. These are my core businesses.”

The question he says he keeps asking when potential suitors approach is: “Are we the best version of ourselves?”

It’s a question he also puts to the test in adapting his business to changing demands in the restaurant industry, including an appeal to a younger generation of up-and-coming diners.

“I’m very calculated and cautious about what I’m doing here,” Turbush said. “I have a good thing going and I recognize it.”

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National Merit finalists include 60 from East Cobb schools

Five high schools from East Cobb have students who have been named finalists for National Merit Scholarships. EAst Cobb National Merit Scholars

They include 35 from Walton High School and 13 from Wheeler High School.

National Merit Scholarships are awarded to high school seniors in the spring and summer of their graduating year for a academic achievements, based on test scores and other factors.

The Cobb County School District has 74 finalists this year—up from 41 in 2019—out of 15,000 nationwide. Other Cobb high schools with finalists are Campell, Harrison, Hillgrove and Kennesaw Mountain.

Recipients are awarded scholarships funded by a variety of organizations, colleges and corporations.

Lassiter High School

  • Eleanor B. Froula; Claire M. Halloran; Perry Kramer; Gabrielle P. Levitt; Anna K. Mitchell; Catherine L. Pereira; Paul H. Tegethoff

Pope High School

  • Ada R. Burris; Sanjeet C. Harry; Andrew M. Myers; Yelizaveta I. Pivnik

Sprayberry High School

  • Reilly S. Misra

Walton High School

  • Chanwoo Bae; Jordan Bass; Alec Berger; Andrew Cameron; Daniel Catanese; Anjali Chareddy; Taylor Chiles; Sinead de Cleir; Judith Denning; Julia Dierker; Russell Emerine; Reagan Jacobson; Guy Kemelmakher; Aleem Lakdawala; Andrew Li; Viviana Lu; Nidhi Manikkoth; Kara McKinley; Russell Newton; Erik Pitts; Neeraj Raja; Anant Rajan; Pranav Rajbhandari; Aaron Rieck; Arvind Saligrama; Tara Shabazaz; Eric Simon; Bill Sun; Shiloh Thomas-Wilkinson; Qilin Tong; Ria Uppalapati; Akshin Vemana; Tharun Venkatesan; Madeline Zhang; Zaim Zibran

Wheeler High School

  • Ann-Marie A. Abunyewa; Kruthik S. Alapati; Ava R. Autera; Charlie E. Bishop; Patrick G. Chen; Alessa L. Cullinan; Rose Jewel; Brian Kent; Emma G. Mason; Pranav J. Nedumpurath; Jeremy L. Payne; Morris I. Wan; Eric W. Yao.

 

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Senior care safety bill gets quick passage in Georgia House

A bill sponsored by an East Cobb legislator to increase protections for residents of senior care homes and require stronger training measures for employees at those facilities easily passed the Georgia House on Friday.

State Rep. Sharon Cooper
State Rep. Sharon Cooper

HB 987, introduced last week by State Rep. Sharon Cooper (R-East Cobb), passed by a vote of 160-1 and will now go to the Senate.

You can read the bill here. Cooper, a retired nurse, is the chairwoman of the House Health and Human Services Committee.

Her bill increases safety regulations for nursing homes and other senior care facilities, and raises maximum penalties for abuse and neglect cases.

Under HB 987, senior care facilities with memory care services must be certified. They also must make more detailed financial reports and provide more training for caregiving staff and administrators.

The bill was heavily pressed by senior advocates, including the Alzheimer’s Association of Georgia, following an investigative series by the AJC about injuries and deaths of senior-care residents due to abuse and neglect.

One of those deaths took place August 2017, when Adam Bennett, a 91-year-old resident at the Sunrise at East Cobb facility on Johnson Ferry Road, was found badly injured in his room. He later died at WellStar Kennestone Hospital due to what the Cobb Medical Examiner’s Office concluded was blunt force trauma.

Landon Terrel, a caregiver at Sunrise, was charged with elder abuse and also was tried for murder. A mistrial was declared on the murder charge, but he was sentenced to serve five years in prison and five on probation for elder neglect.

During the trial, some of Terrel’s coworkers testified he had been the subject of complaints from other residents and the court heard he had been fired from other caregiving jobs for neglecting patients.

Bennett’s family has sued Sunrise Senior Living, which operates more than 300 senior facilities in the U.S., Canada and the United Kingdom.

 

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East Marietta Little League opening celebration postponed

It’s going to be a bit chilly Saturday morning—just above freezing, according to the local weather forecast—and as a result the East Marietta Little League has postponed its opening day festivities.East Marietta Little League

They were supposed to take place at 9 a.m. Saturday at Sewell Park, but the event has been pushed back to the same time, the same place, next Saturday, March 7.

Saturday’s first slate of games is still scheduled to go on. By later Saturday morning, we’re expecting sunshine with high temperatures nearing 50.

The Little League season starts Friday and Saturday for East Side Baseball at Fullers Park and on Saturday for Sandy Plains Baseball at Carl Harrison Park and Sweat Mountain Park.

East Marietta’s Opening Day event includes special guests, team introductions and a ceremonial first pitch.

Next Saturday is projected to be warmer, in the high 50s.

 

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Cobb elections qualifying, presidential early voting next week

Candidates for federal state and local elected offices in Georgia will be qualifying next week as early voting in the state’s presidential primary also gets underway.East Cobb advance voting

Qualifying will be Monday-Friday of next week. To be more specific, the process begins on Monday, March 2, at 9 a.m. and concludes next Friday, March 6, at 12 p.m.

Cobb Elections has more information here about qualifying for offices in Cobb County, with a link to the Georgia Secretary of State’s office for state-level qualifying.

The Georgia presidential primary is March 24, but early voting can be done from March 2-20 at selected locations in the county.

For next week, those locations will be the Cobb Elections Office (736 Whitlock Ave.) and the Cobb Senior Wellness Center (1150 Powder Springs St.).

The East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road) will have early voting on Saturday, March 14 and March 16-20 for the presidential primary.

Presidential primary early voting in East Cobb also will take place March 16-20 at Noonday Baptist Church (4120 Canton Road) and Tim D. Lee Senior Center (3332 Sandy Plains Road).

Voters in the presidential primary will choose either a Democratic or Republican ballot. In the latter, only incumbent President Donald Trump’s name is listed, per a decision by the Georgia GOP (sample ballots shown below).

Cobb elections qualifying

All existing Cobb precincts will be open on primary day, March 24, and some polling places have changed, including several in East Cobb.

The Georgia general primary is May 19, and the ballots will be Democratic, Republican and non-partisan.

Among the local races in East Cobb that figure to be highly contested are the 6th Congressional District, Cobb Commission District 2, Cobb Board of Education Post 5 and State House District 43.

Cobb Commission Chairman, all legislative seats, all U.S. House seats and both of Georgia’s U.S. Senate seats will be up for grabs.

The deadline to register to vote in the general primary is April 20.

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