East Cobb’s most wonderful time of the year continues

Members of the East Cobb Business Association, Northeast Cobb Business Association and Marietta Business Association gathered at the WellStar East Cobb Health Park Tuesday for a joint holiday party.

Participants enjoyed food, drink and musical entertainment and donated unwrapped toys for the Toys for Tots.

The health park (3747 Roswell Road) will be the venue for a public holiday party Thursday from 5:45-7:45 p.m. It’s free with refreshments and includes Santa & Mrs. Claus, tree lighting and entertainment from the Dickerson Middle School Chorus and Dance Stop studios.

Here’s more about what’s coming up at the end of a busy week and weekend in East Cobb for holiday events, including the Apple Annie craft show, Holiday Lights, the Wheeler Fine Arts Holiday Showcase concerts, the Bethlehem Walk and more.

More events can be found at the East Cobb News Holiday Guide and in our regular calendar listings.

To submit calendar items for holiday events that are open to the public, please send an e-mail to calendar@eastcobbnews.com.

And if you’ve got holiday news, events, photos and videos to share, let us know: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

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Visit the East Cobb News Holiday Guide page

 

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Coach, park advocate named East Cobb Citizens of the Year

East Cobb citizens of the year
Tom Bills and Mack Cobb (center, with plaques) are joined by, from left, East Cobb Area Council president Dan Byers, Cobb Chamber CEO Sharon Mason and incoming Cobb Chamber president John Loud. (East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

The new recipients of the East Cobb Citizen of the Year award have been revealed, and a long streak of keeping the news a surprise to the winners has been maintained.

At a Tuesday morning breakfast of the East Cobb Area Council of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce, Mack Cobb wore a Pope letter sweater, with a light-blue P against a backdrop of darker blue. He was asked to speak about the youth football programs he’s been involved with for nearly 50 years.

Tom Bills was part of a special presentation about the past, present and future of East Cobb Park, as the organization’s first treasurer.

Both men did that, but as the co-citizens of the year, an honor that’s been shared only once since the award began in 1991.

“I don’t know what to say,” said Cobb, holding up papers with prepared remarks. “I came here to talk about football.”

He’s coached middle-school feeder football programs for Pope, Lassiter and Walton, as well as for the Cobb YMCA.

When asked later about why he’s coached sixth-through-eighth graders for so long, his reply was swift: “They’re kids,” Cobb said, with a spark in his eyes.

A favorite moment came during a practice when a player rushed to Cobb, put something in his hand and asked him to hold onto it. It was a bloody tooth.

“I want to put it under my pillow,” the boy told Cobb.

Mack Cobb, East Cobb Citizen of the Year
Mack Cobb poses with members of the Pope community, including head football coach Tab Griffin (back row, at right), who played for him as a middle-schooler.

One of his former players was in attendance at the event at Indian Hills Country Club. Tab Griffin, who’s been the Pope varsity coach for the past three years, said Cobb’s been one of the more influential figures in his life, far beyond football.

“He always taught you so much about non-football things,” Griffin said. “Hard work. Making good grades. Respecting others. You don’t realize how much you’ve learned from him until you’re out in the real world.”

Griffin said those life lessons came every day in practice and at games, not in any overbearing fashion, but as part of developing trusting relationships with other people. That was the strength of Cobb’s influence.

“Now that I’m a father and a coach, I try to instill them with the things that I learned from him,” Cobb said.

Tom Bill, East Cobb Citizen of the Year
Tom Bills was surprised at being named the East Cobb co-Citizen of the Year, as he is presented his plaque by 1992 recipient Johny Johnson.

Bills was an engineering consultant in private practice when he got involved with efforts nearly two decades ago to buy land to purchase what became East Cobb Park.

He lives in the nearby Mitsy Forest neighborhood, and served as the first treasurer of the Friends for the East Cobb Park.

Over the years, he’s served the non-profit board in various capacities, including president from 2003-05. Now, Bills is a senior construction project manager for the Cobb Department of Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs.

“I always thought that my award was the park,” Bills said.

He got involved in the volunteer group’s work, he said, because a park nearby “would be good for our neighborhood.”

It turned out to be a long-term commitment that included an ambitious fundraising project that continues today.

Before long, Sunny Walker, Mary Karras and Kim Paris—founding members and driving forces of the Friends group—got him fully involved, after initially asking him to evaluate an environmental impact study.

“Mary signed me up for 20 years,” he said.

He said as the organization’s treasurer, every single contribution, no matter the size, was important.

Among them were from kids who turned over big bags of change they solicited from golfers on the Indian Hills driving range.

“That meant as much to us” as the bigger checks, Bills said, “because it showed the support of the community.”

Bills’ other community work includes volunteering with activities at Walton High School, Keep Cobb Beautiful, and the Cobb Veterans Foundation.

 

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Georgia GOP submits only Trump’s name for 2020 primary ballot

Georgia Republican primary voters will have only one name to choose from in the 2020 primary next March: Incumbent President Donald Trump.Georgia GOP 2020 primary ballot

The state party’s executive committee on Monday submitted only Trump’s name for consideration on the March 24, 2020 ballot.

Georgia would be one of several states to exclude the names of other Republicans from primary ballots.

According to a release issued by Georgia GOP, state party chairman David Shafer said the vote was unanimous and that “Trump was the only candidate with any significant level of support among Republican voters in Georgia who ‘unambiguously’ pledged to support the Republican nominee for President.”

Five candidates were considered by the state party, including former Illinois Congressman Joe Walsh, now a talk show host, and former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld, the 2016 vice presidential nominee of the Libertarian Party.

The others were California businessman Roque De La Fuente and Fred Boddie-Yahshua of Atlanta, whose campaign is known as “President R19 Boddie.”

In a Twitter response on Monday, Walsh said:

“GaRepublicans just chose Trump over Georgians. Trump is a vulnerable criminal. Is the #GAGOP so scared they have to protect him from the ‘significant support’ they say he’d have in a contested primary?”

Weld chimed in similarly on his Twitter account:

“Apparently Trump’s bromance with Putin extends to emulating the Russian’s approach to elections. The #GAGOP just decided the Georgia Republican Presidential Primary ballot will have only one candidate on it: Donald Trump. What is DJT afraid of?”

According to The Hill, a political publication in Washington, the Minnesota GOP also has put only Trump’s name forward for its primary, while state Republican parties in Kansas, Alaska, South Carolina, Arizona and Nevada have cancelled their 2020 primaries or caucuses.

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East Cobb food scores: Paper Mill Village restaurants; more

The following East Cobb food scores from Dec. 2-6 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing to view details of the inspection:Camps Kitchen and Bar, East Cobb food scores

Camp’s Kitchen & Bar
255 Village Parkway, Suite 310
December 2, 2019 Score: 84, Grade: B

Capozzi’s
4285 Roswell Road
December 2, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Dogwood Catering of Marietta
4961 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 125
December 2, 2019 Score: 84, Grade: B

Domino’s Pizza
4724 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 101
December 2, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Indian Hills Country Club
4001 Clubland Drive
December 3, 2019 Score: 93, Grade: A

McDonald’s
3010 Canton Road
December 3, 2019 Score: 75, Grade: C

Mirko Pasta
1281 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 120
December 3, 2019 Score: 77, Grade: C

Moxie Taco
255 Village Parkway, Suite 330
December 2, 2019 Score: 90, Grade: A

Moon Wings & Hibachi
3012 Canton Road
December 2, 2019 Score: 82, Grade: B

Moxie Burger
255 Village Parkway, Suite 110
December 2, 2019 Score: 87, Grade: B

Papa John’s Pizza
4811 Lower Roswell Road
December 2, 2019 Score: 95, Grade: A

Pizza Hut
1480 Terrell Mill Road, Suite E
December 2, 2019 Score: 94, Grade: A

Powers Ferry Elementary School
403 Powers Ferry Road
December 4, 2019 Score: 93, Grade: A

Sam’s BBQ-1 
4958 Lower Road, Suite 108
December 2, 2019 Score: 78, Grade: C

Starbuck’s Coffee
31 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite A
December 2, 2019 Score: 91, Grade: A

Yeero Village
4751 Sandy Plains Road
December 5, 2019 Score: 92, Grade: A

Zaxby’s
2981 Delk Road
December 6, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

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Isakson to give farewell speech in U.S. Senate Tuesday

From U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson’s office this morning comes word that he’ll speak for the last time on the floor Tuesday afternoon, around 2:30 p.m. You can can watch on C-SPAN or the Senate floor webcast by clicking here.Sen. Johnny Isakson

Other senators will be offering tributes after his remarks, led by Georgia Sen. David Perdue.

Isakson announced in August he would be stepping down at the end of the year due to health issues. He has been battling Parkinson’s Disease and fractured ribs this summer in a fall in his Washington apartment.

Praise for the East Cobb Republican has been bipartisan, including his embrace with U.S. Rep. John Lewis in November during a House floor tribute.

But the process for filling Isakson’s post through next year’s election grew ugly over the Thanksgiving holiday weekend.

This week Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp is expected to appoint Atlanta businesswoman Kelly Loeffler, and recently flew with her to Washington to meet with President Donald Trump.

Trump wanted Georgia Congressman Doug Collins, a strong Trump ally, to get the post. On Twitter, another Trump backer, Florida Congressman Matt Gaetz, threatened to find a primary opponent for Kemp if he chose Loeffler, who has never held public office.

Kemp and one of his advisers answered back on Twitter, as the discourse dwindled down to insults over Gaetz’ jorts attire.

Some critics of Loeffler—an executive with a bitcoin company and the co-owner of the Atlanta Dream women’s pro basketball team—don’t think she’s conservative enough. She served on the board of directors at Grady Memorial Hospital, which one pro-life advocate called “an abortionist training hub.”

Others want Collins because he would be a vocal defender of the president if the Senate conducts a trial following possible impeachment in the House.

Kemp, who got a big boost from Trump last year to win the GOP nomination for governor, is said to prefer Loeffler to appeal to moderate and female voters in the Atlanta suburbs, which has become a partisan battleground.

That includes the East Cobb area and the 6th Congressional District, where a 2017 special election was won by Republican Karen Handel, who in turn was defeated by Democrat Lucy McBath, a gun control advocate, last year.

Isakson is among the GOP establishment who’s endorsed Handel as she attempts to win back her seat next year.

Loeffler will become only the second woman from Georgia to serve in the Senate. Her seat will be contested in a jungle primary and possibly a runoff late next year, with the winner to fill the final two years of Isakson’s term.

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Cobb schools seeks public input for 2020-25 strategic plan

The Cobb County School District is developing its strategic plan for 2020-25 and wants to hear from parents and the public.Cobb County School District, Cobb schools dual enrollment summit

The district compiles strategic plans for each school year, and for each school (click here to read more).

The five-year plan is a longer-range document that also reflects priorities outlined by the superintendent, district initiatives and school board goals.

Here’s what the district is sending out to solicit comments:

 

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Cobb commissioner Bob Ott podcast series features public safety

Cobb commissioner Bob Ott’s “2Talk” program is now a podcast.Bob Ott, East Cobb Restaurant Row

The District 2 commissioner started the program on the county’s public access television outlet, interviewing county officials and community leaders about a broad range of topics.

The first few “2Talk” podcasts are on the subject of public safety, including a discussion with Cobb Deputy Police Chief Stuart VanHoozer on crime trends, safety trips and how police use technology, including license plate readers and facial recognition tools.

The podcast segments can be heard by clicking here.

 

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East Cobb bookstore’s longevity due to ‘reinventing yourself’

Bookmiser, East Cobb bookstore
The Bookmiser store in East Cobb carries an ample supply of literary and popular fiction and has authors’ events. (East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

When Annell Gerson and her husband Jim opened their first Bookmiser bookstore in Roswell in 1998, Borders was the chief competition.

That was three years after Amazon, then a little-known Seattle company, was modestly selling books online. As the Gersons expanded to open an East Cobb location on Roswell Road, the book industry would undergo profound changes.

By the time Borders went out of business in 2011 (including a store at The Avenue East Cobb), Amazon had become not just a virtual bookselling colossus but a dominant force in the online retail world.

“You just keep morphing, you just keep reinventing yourself,” said Annell Gerson on Small Business Saturday, referring to Bookmiser’s sustainability amid the changes.

It was nine years ago that American Express came up with the Small Business Saturday promotion to help small, independent retailers in the wake of Black Friday at the start of the holiday shopping season.

Bookmiser has taken part each year, and takes part in Independent Bookstore Day, the last Saturday in April. The Small Business Saturday logo adorns the store’s website, and a floor mat is situated at the checkout counter.

Gerson says the promotions are good for raising awareness long-term more than prompting same-day sales, but every little bit helps.

What started exclusively as a used bookstore with a trading program has expanded into providing required reading materials for school classes, New York Times bestsellers, special orders and authors’ events.

Every book is sold at a 20 percent discount, used or new, without any membership requirements. Bookmiser customers also get further discounts and sales offerings via the store’s e-mail newsletter, which included 25 percent off all this weekend.

“As a bookstore, you have to establish relationships with people,” Gerson said. “We know exactly what they like to read.”

The store at 3822 Roswell Road (at the eastern intersection of Robinson Road) includes a wide variety of literary and popular fiction. Many of the featured authors are what Gerson refers to as “women’s fiction,” and events at the Milton and Sandy Springs libraries feature local and national authors.

Bookmiser
New and bestselling books by featured authors are displayed in the front of the store.

Gerson said several years ago, as she was doing an event with former Congressman Tom Price, she counted up the number of bookstores in and around his north metro Atlanta base that had closed in recent years.

“Twenty-two,” she said.

Even with a focus on customer service (1-2 days for special orders to arrive, no delivery charges) and special event, the competitive challenges for indie bookstores have grown. While Bookmiser is located in an affluent, well-educated community, that’s not necessarily an advantage.

“It’s so easy to push the button,” she said, referring to Amazon. “It’s a David and Goliath story every day.”

Unlike Amazon and other online sellers, “we pay property tax. We pay school tax. We pay for air conditioning.”

And Bookmiser, like many small and independent businesses, chips in to partner with community organizations, including the Walton volleyball and baseball programs, Dance Stop, the Chattahoochee Nature Center and Curing Kids’ Cancer.

Bookmiser also took part in helping run the Milton Literary Festival until this year’s event. Last year, the Gersons closed the Roswell store (located on Sandy Plains Road near the Sandy Plains Village shopping center), and donated the last of its stock to the Friends of the Milton Library.

In 2016, Half-Price Books opened in East Cobb at the Woodlawn Square Shopping Center. While other indie book stores exist in East Cobb at the Book Exchange and the Book Nook, another used-bookstore, Once and Again Books, closed last year on Shallowford Road.

Gerson said continuing to adapt to the retail book market and customer demands are imperative. Starting in 2020, Bookmiser will gradually increase its new book stock to take up about half of the store.

“That’s what we’re seeing the community wants,” she said of the growing demand for new books. “And they want it now.”

Bookmiser is open from 10-7 Monday-Friday, 10-6 Saturday and 12-5 Sunday. Phone: (770) 509-5611.

Bookmiser

 

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East Cobb Holiday Events: Apple Annie; Holiday Lights; more

Holiday Lights East Cobb Park
Holiday Lights at East Cobb Park returns Sunday, Dec. 8. (ECN file photos)

The first full week in December is the busiest of the holiday season in East Cobb, with many public events, services and shows on tap.

Here’s a glimpse of what’s coming up between now and next Sunday:

Thursday, Dec. 5

WellStar East Cobb Health Park Holiday Event, 5:45pm – 7:45pm, WellStar East Cobb Health Park (3747 Roswell Road), free with refreshments and includes Santa & Mrs. Claus, tree lighting and more! Entertainment will be provided by Dickerson Middle School Chorus & Dance Stop.

Georgia Festival Chorus: The Glory of Christmas, 7 p.m, Johnson Ferry Baptist Church (955 Johnson Ferry Road). The public is invited to an evening of music to celebrate Jesus Christ. Free admission. No tickets required. Doors open at 6:45 p.m.

Friday-Saturday, Dec. 6-7

Apple Annie Arts & Crafts Show, 9-6 Friday, 9-2 Saturday, Catholic Church of St. Ann (4905 Roswell Road). Artisans will be showcasing handmade items in a variety of categories, from holiday décor, woodworking, painting, jewelry, stained glass, fabric crafts, and more! Admission is $3 per person 13 & up, with proceeds going to local charities. Baked goods, soup, sandwiches and beverages will be available. Parking is at the church and overflow lots are at the Episcopal Church of St. Peter and St. Paul (1795 Johnson Ferry Road), with shuttle bus service provided. For information, click here.

Friday, Dec. 6

Crafting With Heidi, 3-4 p.m. East Cobb Senior Center (3332 Sandy Plains Road), enjoy some holiday crafting, led by a 4th grade Girl Scout troop. Free, but registration is required by calling 770-509-4900.

Carols for Christmas, the Glorious Mystery, 7:30– 9:30 p.m., Mt. Bethel UMC (4385 Lower Roswell Road); the church’s Chancel Choir and Orchestra are featured during an evening of joy and reflection.

Apple Annie Arts & Crafts Show
The Apple Annie Arts & Crafts Show takes place at the Catholic Church of St. Ann.

Saturday-Monday, Dec. 7-9

Bethlehem Walk, 7-9 p.m. each day, Mountain View UMC (2300 Jamerson Road). An East Cobb tradition since 1992, this interactive event allows visitors to walk through the streets of Bethlehem and haggle with shopkeepers, sign the census and pay taxes to Caesar Augustus’s collector. Dried fruits, apple ciders and fresh bread from the bakery also are available. The event is free but donations are accepted. For information, click here.

Saturday, Dec. 7

Art Place Gets Frozen, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. The Art Place, (3330 Sandy Plains Road). Frozen fun for the whole family, featuring a 20-minute version of Frozen: The Musical presented by From the Top Theatrics. After the show, take a picture with a princess, make crafts, shop at a holiday market and enjoy hot coco. All children must be accompanied by an adult. Tickets are $15. Sessions are 11-1 (click for tickets) and 2-4 (click for tickets).

Wheeler Fine Arts Holiday Showcase, 2-5:30 p.m., Wheeler HS Performing Arts Theatre (375 Holt Road). Prelude Concert: 2 p.m. by the Symphonic & Concert Bands, Full Orchestra, Philharmonia & Sinfonia Orchestras, and Chorale Choir. Finale Concert: 4:30 pm by the Bel Voce Choir, Chamber Orchestra, and Wind Ensemble This is a combined fundraiser for the school’s fine arts programs. One ticket is good for both concerts! For information and tickets, click here.

Vivaldi Christmas Concert, 7-8:30 p.m., Eastminster Presbyterian Church (3125 Sewell Mill Road), featuring the church’s Chancel & Road Choirs.

Sunday, Dec. 8

Holiday Lights at East Cobb Park, 5-7 p.m., East Cobb Park (3322 Roswell Road). Tree lighting, holiday music and the arrival of Santa Claus. Proceeds from refreshment sales will be used for future park improvements.

Carols for Christmas, the Glorious Mystery, 6-8 p.m., Mt. Bethel UMC (4385 Lower Roswell Road); the church’s Chancel Choir and Orchestra are featured during an evening of joy and reflection.

More events can be found at the East Cobb News Holiday Guide and in our regular calendar listings.

To submit calendar items for holiday events that are open to the public, please send an e-mail to calendar@eastcobbnews.com.

 

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Ebenezer Road senior living project on planning board agenda

Ebenezer Road senior living

A request for a 33-unit senior living community on Ebenezer Road near Sandy Plains Road is slated to be heard Tuesday by the Cobb Planning Commission.

Traton Homes wants to convert less than 10 acres at 2891 Ebenezer Road that’s currently zoned for single-family residential (R-15 and R-20) for senior residential living (RSL).

(Read the case file here.)

All that’s there now is a house built in 1931, and the land owned by Luther Higgins Jr. is surrounded by the single-family Kerry Creek subdivision. Below the property are two undeveloped tracts of land, totalling 6.67 acres, owned by Sandy Plains Baptist Church.

The current zoning category of the Wiggins land would allow up to 16 units. Traton is proposing to more than double that total under RSL, a density of nearly 3.5 units an acre.

The “non-supportive” RSL community would not include services like transportation, medical or food preparation, as is the case with some “supportive” senior-living facilities.

The Traton Homes proposal calls for units of at least 1,500 square feet, and the developer is asking to reduce the distance between the homes from 15 to 10 feet and remove a landscape buffer of 20 feet along the south property line.

The property has been designated for low-density residential use in the Cobb future master plan. The Cobb zoning staff is recommending approval of the Traton request, without any variances and to maintain the landscaping buffer.

Another high-density residential request in the Northeast Cobb area is on Tuesday’s agenda, after being delayed and substantially revised.

Smith Douglas Homes had proposed building 61 townhomes on 6.6 acres on Canton Road at Kensington Drive. According to a Nov. 19 stipulation letter from its attorney, the developer is now proposing 39 detached single-family homes, or 5.9 units an acre.

You can view the rest of the agenda and read case files by clicking here.

The planning commission meets Tuesday at 9 a.m. in the second floor board room of the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta. Its recommendations will be considered by the Cobb Board of Commissioners on Dec. 17.

 

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Good Mews holiday decor market winding down this weekend

The holiday shopping season has just begun, but the Good Mews Holiday Decor Market is ending this weekend, with all proceeds to benefit the non-profit cat shelter in East Cobb.Good Mews 30th birthday

Everything is marked down 50 percent and the hours are 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 12-5 on Sunday. The market is located at 1860 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 202 (in the Sandy Plains Exchange Shopping Center).

More details:

https://goodmews.org/special-events-fundraisers

 

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East Cobb food scores: Aspens; Marietta Fish Market; and more

Marietta Fish Market, East Cobb food scores

The following East Cobb food scores from Nov. 25-27 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing to view details of the inspection:

American Wings
2555 Delk Road, Suite A-8
November 25, 2019 Score: 86, Grade: B

Asahi Japanese Steak & Sushi
2960 Shallowford Road, Suite C9-11
November 27, 2019 Score: 76, Grade: C

Aspens Signature Steaks
2942 Shallowford Road
November 27, 2019 Score: 93, Grade: A

Brazilian Bakery Cafe
1260 Powers Ferry Road, Suite A
November 25, 2019 Score: 71, Grade: C

Domino’s Pizza
1230 Powers Ferry Road
November 25, 2019 Score: 90, Grade: A

First Serve
1600 Terrell Mill Road
November 26, 2019 Score: 95, Grade: A

Great American Cookies/Marble Slab Creamery 
4101 Roswell Road, Suite 308
November 26, 2019 Score: 92, Grade: A

Hardee’s
2520 Delk Road
November 26, 2019 Score: 96, Grade: A

Liberty Pizza
1275 Powers Ferry Road, Suite 130
November 25, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Marietta Fish Market
3185 Canton Road
November 26, 2019 Score: 95, Grade: A

Minas Emporium
2555 Delk Road, Suite B4
November 25, 2019 Score: 75, Grade: C

Moe’s Southwest Grill 
688 Johnson Ferry Road
November 27, 2019 Score: 88, Grade: B

Moxie Burger
2421 Shallowford Road, Suite 158
November 25, 2019 Score: 92, Grade: A

Perk’s Coffee & Bagels
3000 Windy Hill Road, Suite 176
November 26, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Radiance East Cobb Memory Care
200 Village Parkway
November 26, 2019 Score: 91, Grade: A

Rio Steakhouse and Bakery
1275 Powers Ferry Road, Suite 230
November 26, 2019 Score: 70, Grade: C

Starbuck’s Coffee 
1453 Terrell Mill Road, Suite 200
November 27, 2019 Score: 93, Grade: A

Waffle House
2642 Windy Hill Road
November 25, 2019 Score: 87, Grade: B

Wendy’s
1123 Roswell Road
November 25, 2019 Score: 95, Grade: A

Whey To Go!
1453 Terrell Mill Road, Suite 953
November 26, 2019 Score: 76, Grade: C

Zaxby’s 
3030 Johnson Ferry Road
November 26, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

 

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First East Cobb holiday event: Tree lighting at The Avenue

From 3-7 Friday The Avenue East Cobb (4475 Roswell Road) is kicking off holiday season festivities with its first tree lighting, Santa’s arrival and carriage rides.The Avenue East Cobb holiday event

There also will be holiday music and the tree lighting event will feature the Angel Tree Program from the Salvation Army of Marietta:

The Salvation Army’s Angel Tree program provides new clothing and/or toys for children of needy families. Each Angel Tree is decorated with numbered paper angel tags with the first name, age, and gender of a child who is in need of a gift. Contributors remove one or more tags from the tree and purchase appropriate gifts for the child or children described on the tags.

Santa Claus will be in Suite 400 and photos with him will be available for purchase. Other entertainment includes face painting. Carriage rides with Santa at The Avenue also will take place next Friday, Dec. 6, from 3-7 p.m.

For information, click here.

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Cobb Police issue holiday safety and shopping tips

Cobb Police holiday safety tips

From Cobb Police, some things to keep in mind as a busy holiday and shopping season begins:

Holiday safety tips
The holiday season is always a special time of year. It is also a time when busy people become careless and vulnerable to theft and other holiday crime. We can never be too careful, too prepared, or too aware. Please share this information with family, friends, and neighbors. The Cobb County Police Department wishes you a safe, happy, and peaceful holiday season.

Driving/Parking

  • Avoid driving alone or at night.
  • Keep all car doors locked and windows closed while in or out of your car. Set your alarm or use an anti-theft device.
  • If you must shop at night, park in a well-lit area.
  • Avoid parking next to vans, trucks with camper shells, or cars with tinted windows.
  • Park as close as you can to your destination and take notice of where you parked.

Shopping

  • Shop during daylight hours whenever possible. If you must shop at night, go with a friend or family member.
  • Dress casually and comfortably.
  • Avoid wearing expensive jewelry.
  • Do not carry a purse or wallet, if possible.
  • Always carry your Driver License or Identification Card along with necessary cash, checks and/or a credit card you expect to use.

At Home

  • Doorbell cameras are highly recommended. They can serve as a deterrent for criminal activity and/or an investigative tool for detectives should a crime occur.
  • Be cautious of having items delivered to your home. Try to arrange being home when your package is delivered.
  • Be extra cautious about locking doors and windows when you leave the house, even for a few minutes.
  • When leaving home for an extended time, have a neighbor or family member watch your house and pick up your newspapers and mail.
  • Indoor and outdoor lights should be on an automatic timer.

Get more safety tips from Cobb Police.

 

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Iskason’s colleagues pay tribute as he leaves U.S. Senate

Submitted information and video from the office of U.S. Sen Johnny Isakson:

“Johnny has a long political history, he has a long successful business history, but he also has a history of being known as being a compassionate person,” said former U.S. Senator Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., in the video.

As a family man first and foremost, Isakson explains his perspective. “Our children are the message you and I send to a time we’ll never see,” he said. “It’s a cycle, and you have to continue to invest in that cycle and improve it.”

“He will always be remembered for honesty and integrity, and setting an example of intellectual honesty for a younger generation of people who are going to be our leaders tomorrow,” said former U.S. Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., founder and co-chair the Nuclear Threat Initiative.

In a recent syndicated column published widely in Georgia, Dick Yarbrough wrote“With Johnny Isakson, what you see is what you get: A man who has always done what he thought was the right thing to do, not what was politically expedient.”

Isakson explains his personal approach in the video, saying for him, “It’s about relationships. It’s about respect. It’s about motivation, and it’s about getting things done. So make friends. Be a friend, and know how to be a friend. It makes all the difference in the world…” said Isakson. “It’s not about me, it’s about them. It’s about us, and that’s always the way I’ve felt about it.”

The December 2019 edition of Georgia Trend magazine included a column about Isakson, written by Dr. Kerwin Swint, award-winning author, commentator and Kennesaw State University political science professor.

In “An Inspiration,” Swint writes, “As a political science professor and an administrator, I’m often asked by students if good people can serve in government and keep their integrity. Johnny Isakson is always the first example I come to. It’s very often a shocking revelation to most people – that good people can, and often do, serve in government for long periods, fight hard for what they believe in, and remain true to themselves and their principles. And they don’t have to sell their souls to do it. It’s a great lesson, really.”

Isakson’s faith has guided his entire life. He taught sixth-grade Sunday school at Mount Zion Baptist Church in Marietta, Georgia, for more than 30 years. Isakson is a regular attendee of the weekly Senate prayer breakfast with Senate Chaplain Barry Black and served as co-chair of the National Prayer Breakfast in 2010.

“He was a Sunday school teacher for over 30 years. So here is a man who not only has a biblical worldview, but also knows the bible pretty, pretty thoroughly,” said Chaplain Black. “He has a tremendous amount of contentment, as I have learned to have as well, in the fact that ‘God’s got this.’”

The Senate video includes positive remarks about Isakson’s legacy from Republican and Democrat U.S. senators, an administration official and a member of the U.S. House of Representatives, who have each worked closely with Isakson on an array of policy areas.

“Johnny always came to prayer breakfast, and he was always one of the gentlemen who would be there and had an interesting message. Cared about other people and wanted to know what everybody else was doing, and he wanted to know what he could do to help you,” said U.S. Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D.

“Goes without saying that Johnny Isakson is hands down the nicest person to ever serve in the U.S. Senate. Nicest person to ever walk the halls of Congress,” said U.S. Sen. John Thune, R-S.D.

“He has an innate humility that is so natural,” said U.S. Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla.

“Johnny Isakson has always appealed to our better angels,” said U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa.

“Johnny doesn’t think that just because he has senator in front of his name, that he needs to get anything special,” said U.S. Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont. “Johnny’s the guy who says, ‘just because I’ve got senator in front of my name, I’ve got work to do,’ and he rolls up his sleeves, and he gets it done.”

“I think if there was a ‘Mr. Congeniality’ award in the U.S. Senate, [Isakson] would win it hands down, no question about it,” said Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D.

“There are very few members of the Senate who I feel are as selfless and have smaller egos than Johnny Isakson,” said Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va.

“When Johnny said, ‘I’m going to get this done,’ you could believe him, and you’d know it would get done,” said Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash.

“He has an ability to make you feel like he’s not only listening, but caring about what you think. And that is what has always struck me about Johnny Isakson: He listens,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn.

“Johnny was outspoken for somebody who didn’t have a voice at the table,” said Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C.

Current and former staff also commented in the video on Isakson’s style as an employer and on his positive outlook. Staff recounted an expression used regularly by Isakson, “Friends and Future Friends,” to explain his outlook on meeting new people and building relationships.

“He wants [the door to his office] open. He wants to see staff, he wants to talk,” said Adam Reece, staff director of the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs.

“He really lives the motto of ‘friends and future friends.’ There’s no enemy to Johnny Isakson,” said former deputy chief of staff Edward Tate.

In his popular commencement address and most frequently requested speech, Isakson shares his “Six Silent Secrets” to a happy, successful and fulling life. The elements of learning, respect, ethics, love, faith and dreaming have served as Isakson’s guiding principles.

“If you’re willing to continue to learn throughout your life, if you’re willing to respect your fellow man and treat everybody with ethics and principle, if you’re willing to love those who’ve gotten you to where you are and are going to take you to where you want to be, if you find a deep and abiding faith that gets you through the difficult times, and if you’re willing dream, you can do anything in America that you want to do,” said Isakson in his 2014 University of Georgia commencement address shown in the video. “Think about this – this is a stadium full of parents; you are their dream and they love you very much.”

After Isakson announced on Aug. 28 that he would be stepping down from the Senate at the end of the year due to mounting health challenges, tributes poured in from newspapers and columnists across Georgia. A few of the headlines illustrative of Isakson’s value-led career included, “Johnny Isakson sets bar high for integrity,” “We could use more Johnny Isaksons in the Senate, not fewer,” “Isakson a politician worth emulating,” and “Johnny Isakson: A true statesman.”

Yarbrough’s Nov. 8 column concluded, “I have written a number of columns over the years about Johnny Isakson. I have been trying to decide how to end this one. Then I remembered a quote the late Hall of Fame baseball player, Roberto Clemente, who said, ‘Any time you have an opportunity to make a difference in this world and you don’t, then you are wasting your time on Earth.’ Johnny, my friend, you have not wasted a day.”

To view the video, produced by the Senate Republican Conference, click here. For additional information about Isakson’s lifetime commitment to his values, click here.

 

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East Cobb Thanksgiving Day events and activities

East Cobb Thanksgiving Day events

We’re noting a few things going on in East Cobb on Thanksgiving Day, and if you have anything to add please let us know by emailing editor@eastcobbnews.com.

A handful of Thanksgiving Day worship services include a Mass at 9 a.m. at the Catholic Church of St. Ann (4905 Roswell Road), and you’re asked to bring a non-perishable food item for the St. Vincent de Paul pantry.

At 10:30 a.m., there’s also a service at the Episcopal Church of St. Peter and St. Paul (1795 Johnson Ferry Road).

Bradley’s Bar & Grill (4961 Lower Roswell Road) has done this before, and is doing it again this year: A Misfits Thanksgiving Dinner, for those who don’t want to spend the holiday alone. The restaurant is providing turkey, and you bring a side dish or dessert or pay $12 for the meal. It starts at 6 p.m., and karaoke begins at 9 p.m.

Early Thanksgiving Day is the Gobble Jog in Marietta to benefit MUST Ministries. If you’re out that early be advised of road closures in and around the Marietta Square until around 10:30 a.m.

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Pedestrian seriously injured in Terrell Mill Road crash

Terrell Mill Road pedestrian injured

A pedestrian who was hit by a garbage truck near the entrance of an apartment complex on Terrell Mill Road suffered serious injuries Wednesday morning, according to Cobb Police.

Officer Sydney Melton said in a release that Diana A. Ramone, 35, of Marietta, was rushed to WellStar Kennestone Hospital after the incident, which took place at 6:53 a.m.

Melton said Ramone was walking on the northern side of Terrell Mill near the entrance to the Sedona Falls complex, 1717 Waterfall Village Drive, when a blue 2016 Mack MRU600 truck owned by American Disposal Services turned into the apartment community and hit her in the crosswalk.

That’s near the Terrell Mill-Cobb Parkway intersection, and police said a portion of the road was closed for a while as they began investigating.

Police said the driver of the truck, Charles Strong, 45, was not injured.

Anyone with information about the incident is asked to contact the Cobb County Police Department at 770-499-3987.

 

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Former East Cobb cityhood review member explains resignation

A member of a five-man review panel that evaluated the East Cobb cityhood financial feasibility study said he resigned right before the group’s final report was issued in September due to a “math problem,” not ideological differences.Shailesh Bettadapur, East Cobb cityhood review group

Shailesh Bettadapur, an East Cobb resident and vice president for Mohawk Industries, disputed claims by Bill Green, another member of what was called the Independent Financial Group, that he had ideological reasons for stepping down.

Bettadapur’s wife Jackie is the chairwoman of the Cobb County Democratic Party.

Bettadapur told East Cobb News he resigned because he didn’t agree with the other four members of the review group on the financial conclusions in the report. He also alleged that the IFG wasn’t independent because Green “was attempting to reach a specific pro-cityhood conclusion.”

Bettadapur said he wasn’t interested in going public with his concerns until Green, speaking at a cityhood town hall meeting on Nov. 11, attributed the resignation of an unnamed fifth member to that person’s relationship with “a county party official,” who also was not identified.

“As that fifth member, I can say without hesitation that Mr. Green’s assertion is false,” said Bettadapur, who wasn’t at the town hall meeting at Wheeler High School but who said he watched a video replay of the event.

He’s also expressed his concerns to Cobb commissioners and members of the county’s legislative delegation.

Four IFG members concluded that a proposed City of East Cobb is financially feasible without tax increases, but recommended that a new municipality start without a police force until inter-governmental agreements would be hashed out.

The Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb, which spent $36,000 on the feasibility study conducted last year by Georgia State University researchers, is proposing community development, police and fire services.

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Its proposed City of East Cobb would include more than 100,000 residents with an expanded map that includes the Pope and Lassiter high school attendance zones.

State Rep. Matt Dollar of East Cobb has introduced legislation at the behest of the cityhood committee, which has spent tens of thousands of dollars on lobbyists. The bill must be passed by the Georgia General Assembly next year for a referendum to take place later in 2020.

Bettadapur was the only member of the group who voted against the final IFG report because of “fundamental” issues he said he had about financial assumptions. He resigned two days before the report was released, saying he wanted the others to be able to “speak with one voice” about its conclusions.

Green offered him a chance to write a dissenting report, but Bettadapur said he thought the original report was too long, and “this isn’t a court case. I didn’t see the point.”

Math or ideology?

When contacted by East Cobb News, Green said he stands by his belief that Bettadapur had ideological—but not necessarily partisan—reasons for leaving the group.

“It’s because he didn’t do any of the math,” said Green, a retired financial executive with a cloud computing company.

“He never contributed a darn thing to the group’s efforts. He just didn’t do squiddly-diddly. He was there to obstruct.”

East Cobb cityhood
East Cobb cityhood leader David Birdwell faces a packed audience at a March town hall meeting at the Catholic Church of St. Ann. (ECN file)

Green said Bettadapur may claim he’s impartial on cityhood, but says he observed a clear Democratic presence at a town hall meeting in March at the Catholic Church of St. Ann, with some wearing purple shirts bearing the name of Stacey Abrams, the 2018 Georgia Democratic gubernatorial candidate.

Green said he thinks Democrats eventually “are going to be opposed, but if you split the Republicans you don’t get cityhood.”

As for the IFG’s partisan affiliations, Green said he identifies as Libertarian-Republican, while the other three are Democrats, and two of them are mostly independent: “Our team is not ideological.”

Bettadapur acknowledged his wife’s political activities, “which is something that the Cityhood committee would have known at the time I joined. It obviously did not matter then, but became the scapegoat when I resigned.”

He said the Cobb Democratic Party is not taking a position on East Cobb cityhood and that he still doesn’t have an opinion.

Bettadapur said he doesn’t see how the cityhood group’s claims of providing better services for the same or lower tax millage rates can be accomplished.

He said when he joined the IFG, he told cityhood leaders David Birdwell and Rob Eble that he was neutral on cityhood.

Arguing over numbers

“I viewed, and still view, this primarily as a math problem,” Bettadapur said. “I started with the thesis that you could not add a layer of government and administration and obtain the same or increased quality of services without also raising taxes and fees. Yet, I was open to being persuaded otherwise. Nothing I’ve seen so far has done that.”

Bettadapur said each of Cobb’s existing six cities have higher millage rates than the unincorporated county, so “why would East Cobb be different?”

The IFG stated in its report that Cobb County government is committing double taxation with what it’s charging cities for providing county services. “The notion that a City of East Cobb could negotiate a transfer higher than the other six cities is, in my view, not credible,” Bettadapur said.

Bill Green of the Independent Financial Group, at right, with East Cobb cityhood leaders at a Wheeler HS town hall. (ECN file)

In particular, he thinks the IFG’s claim that a city of East Cobb would be able to get $11 million from the county for police services in the inter-government agreement (instead of a $2.5 million estimate in the feasibility study) is unrealistic.

He also questioned cost estimates for new city to purchase firehouses (at around $5K each) and suggested that the county would likely include older equipment in those purchases.

And he disputed Green’s claim at the Wheeler town hall that “there’s a tax cut to be had” should a new city of East Cobb be formed.

“It’s just nonsense,” Bettadapur said. “It’s not going to happen.”

Green defended the IFG’s calculations, “saying the numbers look good,” and took issue with financial claims made by cityhood opponents, including the East Cobb Alliance. “Any numbers we can come up with, we can blow them out of the water.”

He said he wishes Bettadapur well and admitted “he’s a smart guy” whose primary value to the review group was offering a differing point of view to avoid groupthink.

While Green countered that if Bettadapur “ever does the math, let me know,” Bettadapur said that he remains “sympathetic to the idea of local control. But local control doesn’t mean it’s going to be cheaper.”

 

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Georgia gas prices rise slightly before Thanksgiving holiday

Georgia gas prices Thanksgiving holiday

Some of the gas prices we’ve seen around East Cobb in recent days reflect what the American Automobile Association is finding around Georgia—they’ve ticked up a couple of pennies as the Thanksgiving holiday approaches.

Here’s more from AAA’s The Auto Club Group, which includes Georgia:

 Georgia gas prices increased slightly at the pump compared to a week ago. Georgia motorists are now paying an average price of $2.43 per gallon for regular unleaded. Monday’s state average is 2 cents more than a week ago, 2 cents more than last month, and 3 cents more than this time last year.

It now costs $36.45 to fill a 15-gallon tank of gasoline. That is $6.15 less than what motorists paid in May of 2018, when pump prices hit their peak of $2.84 per gallon.

“Gas prices have been fluctuating as of late, but are currently cheaper than the national average at this time last year, giving Americans a little extra money to spend on travel and motivating millions to take road trips,” said Montrae Waiters, spokeswoman, AAA – The Auto Club Group. “For the majority of Americans, AAA expects gas prices to be fairly similar to last year’s Thanksgiving holiday, which averaged $2.57.”

Regional Prices

  • Most expensive Georgia metro markets –Atlanta-Savannah ($2.48), Athens-Savannah ($2.45), and Gainesville ($2.44).
  • Least expensive Georgia metro markets – Catoosa-Dade-Walker ($2.29), Augusta-Aiken ($2.32) and Dalton ($2.33).

 

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John Driskell Hopkins to perform holiday show at Olde Towne

John Driskell Hopkins, Olde Towne holiday concert

Submitted information and photo:

John Driskell Hopkins (founding member of the Zac Brown Band) has released his third holiday album, entitled Our Finest Gifts, this time with  ATL Collective.The new album, with R&B-themed holiday tunes, is available for purchase or download on johndriskellhopkins.com, and is now available for download wherever you get your music — including iTunes, Amazon, Spotify and Pandora. 

WATCH VIDEO FOR “HAPPY SEASON”

ATL Collective is a nonprofit organization dedicated to enriching Atlanta’s music community by connecting artists to professional development, financial support and exposure to audiences. They are known to hand pick the finest musicians in town to collectively recreate the greatest albums ever recorded. 

The new album follows the success of the 2017 holiday album, You Better Watch Out, with The Joe Gransden Big Band; and In the Spirit: A Celebration of the Holidays, released in 2015 with the Atlanta Pops Orchestra (and on vinyl in 2016). 

Recorded at Hopkins’ studio — Brighter Shade Studios — Our Finest Gifts will feature appearances by Trombone Shorty, Ruby Velle, Dionne Farris, David Ryan Harris, Jason Eskridge and Maureen Murphy.

“I can’t begin to express how excited I am to be releasing my third Christmas album,” said Hopkins. ”I am so grateful to ATL Collective and all of these amazing artists who are part of this collaboration. It means so much to share my love of the holidays through music, and I think everyone will enjoy these R&B-themed holiday tunes.”

The new album was recorded at Hopkins’ own Brighter Shade Studios — a stunning and expansive 2500 square feet, includes an oversized, flexible-use main recording space large enough to hold a 30-piece orchestra. The space also boasts a voice-over booth, machine and mixing room, lounge and full-service bar — made of Sapele (from Taylor Guitars) with customized song lyrics carved into the wood. The space is garnished with hallmarks of Hopkins esteemed career, including guitars, awards, photos and mementos from his musical journey.

HOLIDAY CONCERTS
PUDDLES’ PITY PARTY HOLIDAY JUBILEE
Friday, November 29 | 7:30 p.m.
Center Stage
1374 W Peachtree St NW
Atlanta, GA 30309

CAMP TRACH ME AWAY HOLIDAY CONCERT
FEATURING JOHN DRISKELL HOPKINS
Sunday, December 1 | 3:00 p.m.
Heritage Sandy Springs
610 Blue Stone Road
Sandy Springs, GA 30328
Holiday Music featuring John Driskell Hopkins

BALSAM RANGE ART OF MUSIC FESTIVAL
Saturday, December 7 | 7:00 p.m.
Lake Junaluska, North Carolina
John Driskell Hopkins and the Atlanta Pops Orchestra

JOHN DRISKELL HOPKINS’ SOUNDS OF THE SEASON
Saturday, December 14 | 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Olde Towne Athletic Club 
4950 Olde Towne Pkwy
Marietta, GA 30068
John Driskell Hopkins And The Joe Gransden Big Band — both performances will feature an evening benefiting the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.

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