Birrell on proposed East Cobb city: ‘I don’t support it’

East Cobb city forum
Mindy Seger of the anti-city East Cobb Alliance debates David Birdwell of the Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb. (East Cobb News photo by Wendy Parker)

After learning that the proposed City of East Cobb map would include areas she represents, Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell gave an emphatic answer Tuesday about what she thinks about it.

“I don’t support it,” Birrell said after pro- and anti- cityhood representatives debated before the East Cobb Business Association.

‘I don’t see how you’re going to provide better services for the same taxes you’re paying now.”

That’s what anti-cityhood advocates have been saying after the group leading the cityhood push has claimed a new municipality can deliver better services at the same tax rate East Cobb residents are paying now to the county.

For the first time, opposing forces in the cityhood issue faced one another in a forum format that included opening and closing statements and questions from the audience.

Among the crowd of nearly 200 at the Olde Towne Athletic Club was Birrell, whose District 3 includes some of east and northeast Cobb. The original proposed city boundaries included only parts of District 2, represented by commissioner Bob Ott.

But at a town hall meeting Monday, the Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb announced that the map had expanded to include the Pope and Lassiter school attendance zones.

Birrell said she has not heard anything from the cityhood group about revising the map, and that the only information she learned came from visiting the cityhood committee’s website.

“They’re encroaching in my district,” she said. “So now I’m being outspoken.”

Ott, whose town hall meeting in March was the first public event for the cityhood committee, has not taken a position on the issue.

There’s been speculation he would be interested in running for mayor of East Cobb if a city is created, but he hasn’t responded to that, nor has he indicated if he will be running for re-election or another office in 2020.

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During the debate, David Birdwell of the cityhood group repeated many of the same points he had given at the Monday town hall meeting: That a new city, with around 115,000 residents, would give citizens more local control of their government, improve public safety, not raise taxes and develop a stronger civic identity in East Cobb.

Mindy Seger of the East Cobb Alliance, which opposes cityhood, mentioned the current staffing and retention issues facing Cobb public safety agencies and wondered “how a new city just getting its legs would be able to solve this problem better than any other city has.”

She also pressed Birdwell to reveal the identities behind those funding cityhood expenses that include a Georgia State University feasibility study ($36,000) and more recently, two high profile lobbyists for next year’s legislative session (both at more than $10,000 each).

He said three of the 14 members of the cityhood committee have real estate backgrounds (including himself). Those names are not currently listed on the group’s website, but he said he “would be glad to share it.”

“It raises suspicions about what people are doing” behind the scenes in the pro-cityhood group, Seger said.

She pressed him to name names, saying the cityhood committee has issues with a “lack of transparency.”

Birdwell said a”large group” of East Cobb residents have made donations, but he didn’t identify anyone during the forum. He said in addition to town hall meetings in the spring and Monday’s at Wheeler High School, the cityhood committee has met with homeowners associations, business groups and others.

Seger also said she had heard nothing from State Rep. Matt Dollar, the East Cobb Republican who sponsored a cityhood bill in the 2019 legislative session, in regards to the revised city maps.

“We don’t need a new city for this area,” said Seger, an accountant who has lived in East Cobb since 2006.

Birdwell argued that if real estate interests wanted to pursue high-density development in East Cobb, “they would want to keep it like it is,” meaning having zoning cases decided by county commissioners.

“If you love East Cobb the way is is,” Birdwell said, borrowing the Alliance’s slogan and holding up the opponent’s business card, “the best way to keep doing that is with incorporation.”

Birdwell said after the forum the cityhood group would like to have some more town hall meetings, ideally in December, before the legislative session begins in January.

Dollar’s bill would have to pass both houses next session for a referendum on East Cobb cityhood to take place.

Although originally eyed for the primaries next May, Birdwell said it would be “virtually impossible” to put a cityhood referendum on the ballot then, and that it would more likely be on the November 2020 general election ballot.

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Expanded East Cobb city map includes Pope, Lassiter districts

Expanded East Cobb city map, David Birdwell
East Cobb Cityhood committee leader David Birdwell unveils a revised map of the proposed city at a town hall meeting Monday. (ECN photos by Wendy Parker)

Many of the familiar talking points about East Cobb cityhood were made Monday night at a town hall meeting at Wheeler High School.

So were many of the objections to a City of East Cobb that also have been heard for many months.

What was new at the meeting organized by the Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb was the proposed map for a City of East Cobb that would be larger than the original, and would include the Pope and Lassiter high school attendance zones.

Cityhood committee members said they just got the map earlier Monday from the state legislative office that draws up such boundaries.

The revision comes several months after a lobbying effort that also included citizens from the Sprayberry High School community, which for now is being left out.

“It could be added now or through annexation,” cityhood leader David Birdwell said.

The original map included most of unincorporated Cobb in Cobb commission District 2 east of I-75. That covered the Walton and most of the Wheeler attendance zones, but only a sliver of the Pope and Lassiter areas and had a population of nearly 90,000 people.

State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick, East Cobb city map
State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick

The new population figure wasn’t immediately available, but it could boost a potential City of East Cobb to the second-largest city in metro Atlanta.

‘Wait and see’

The map is part of legislation sponsored at the end of the 2019 session by State Rep. Matt Dollar (R-East Cobb), and that must pass in 2020 for a referendum to be called next fall.

(Read the bill here.)

Among the more than 100 people in attendance at the Wheeler auditorium was State. Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick, a Republican of East Cobb who is a critical player in the process.

State law requires cityhood bills to have local sponsors in each chamber of the legislature. Kirkpatrick and State Rep. Sharon Cooper, who also was in attendance Monday, have said they have not formed an opinion on East Cobb cityhood.

East Cobb cityhood legislation
The original proposed East Cobb city map.

Kirkpatrick told East Cobb News she’s been getting plenty of anti-cityhood sentiment from constituents, and that she wants to give the pro-cityhood forces a chance to “make their case.”

Her perspective, she said for now, remains “wait and see.” During the town hall, she said she would do some polling near the end of the year and said she continues to welcome feedback from citizens, no matter how they feel about the issue.

The cityhood committee also has retained two high-profile lobbyists for the 2020 legislative session.

When a citizen asked Kirkpatrick about Dollar’s whereabouts, she said he had been out of the country and would be returning Tuesday.

The crowd occasionally grew boisterous during a question-and-answer period. Questions were to have been written on note cards, but some shouted out questions or made statements, often in opposition to cityhood.

New EC City Map
The revised map would include the northeastern corner of East Cobb.

Others were concerned about how East Cobb cityhood would affect public schools. When Birdwell repeatedly said there would be no effect on schools—including the Cobb senior tax exemption—some citizens still interrupted.

By Georgia law, new cities cannot create school districts. School districts remain in such cities like Marietta, which have had them for many years.

We’ll have more from Monday’s meeting and other cityhood news after a forum on Tuesday between Birdwell and Bill Simon of the East Cobb Alliance, which opposes cityhood.

That forum will take place at a luncheon of the East Cobb Business Association.

And as soon as we get a better map of the revised City of East Cobb proposed boundaries, we’ll post that here too. Birdwell said it may take time for the state legislative office to make that available to the public.

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Mabry Middle School student diagnosed with measles

A student at Mabry Middle School in East Cobb has been diagnosed with the measles in a case that was announced over the weekend by the Georgia Department of Public Health. Mabry Middle School

On Saturday, Georgia DPH issued a statement saying that an “unvaccinated Cobb County resident” may have exposed others between Oct. 31 and Nov. 6, and that it was “notifying individuals who may have been exposed to the virus and may be at increased risk for developing measles.”

A Cobb County School District spokeswoman said Monday the district had been notified by Georgia DPH that it was a Mabry student and that:

‘Mabry parents have been communicated with and any student who is at risk will not be allowed in school through November 22nd. The unaffected teachers and students remain focused on teaching and learning while affected students and families are supported by Public Health.”

Here’s what public health officials said in a note that went out to Mabry parents over the weekend:

“It is very unlikely that your child will get measles if they have been vaccinated with the MMR vaccine, but if he/she becomes sick with a fever, cough, runny nose or red eyes, with or without rash, before November 22, contact your healthcare provider immediately. At this time, it has been advised that if your child is not vaccinated, he/she should not return back to school until November 25. If your child is up to date on their vaccinations, they are safe to return back to school on Monday, November 11.”

(Read the letter here.)

The Cobb school district declined to provide information to follow-up questions from East Cobb News about how many students and staff may be held out, nor would it explain how the unvaccinated student was allowed to attend school.

“To comply with federal laws which protect student confidentiality, no further details will be available,” the district spokeswoman said, referring those questions to Georgia DPH.

We have asked the Georgia DPH to comment and will update.

The Cobb school district requires immunization for students in kindergarten and seventh grade and newly enrolled students, and allows for waivers due to religious beliefs or for health reasons.

Here’s more from the Georgia DPH about the measles:

“Measles can be prevented with the MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) vaccine. The vaccine is safe and effective. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends children receive their first dose of MMR vaccine between 12-15 months of age and a second dose between 4-6 years old. More than 95% of the people who receive a single dose of MMR will develop immunity to all three viruses. A second dose boosts immunity, typically enhancing protection to 98%.”

 

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Wreaths Across America seeks donations to honor veterans

Thanks to Tom Wilder, an East Cobb real estate agent, for passing along the following information about Wreaths Across America, which seeks donations to place wreaths on gravestones for veterans, including those buried at Georgia National Cemetery in Canton:

Wreaths Across America

More information can be found by clicking here.

On Sunday, the Cobb Wind Symphony is having its annual Veterans Day concert at the Lassiter Concert Hall, 2601 Shallowford Road. Admission is free, but donations are accepted.

On Monday, the city of Marietta and the Kiwanis Club of Marietta will be honoring veterans with its annual parade from Roswell Street Baptist Church to the Square, starting at 11 a.m. A ceremony follows at noon. For more information, click here.

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4 East Cobb teams reach high school football playoffs

When the Georgia High School Association football playoffs start on Friday, four East Cobb teams will be participating.

Sprayberry football, East Cobb football

(You can view the playoff brackets here.)

Three of them have been familiar faces in the post-season in recent years, while the other will be returning to the playoffs for the first time in a long while.

Sprayberry pounded River Ridge 40-7 Friday to close out the regular season at 6-4, and earn the No. 3 seed in Region 6 of Class 6A.

It’s the first playoff bid since 2011 for the Yellow Jackets, whose third-year head coach, Brett Vavra, is a former Sprayberry player and graduate.

Sprayberry must travel in the playoffs, visiting Lanier of Gwinnett County. The Bulldogs are 9-1 on the season and are ranked 8th in Class 6A. The Yellow Jackets’ star player, running back Damarion Owens, ran for more than 300 yards Friday, and is the leading rusher in Cobb County with more than 1,500 yards.

Comeback for the Wildcats

Wheeler’s last season in Class 7A will come with a playoff appearance. The Wildcats came from behind late on Friday to defeat Pebblebrook 21-14, getting the winning touchdown with one second remaining on the game clock.

Wheeler (5-5) earned the fourth and final playoff spot from Region 2 of Class 7A, its first post-season berth in four years. On Friday, Wheeler, under first-year coach Bryan Love, will play at Roswell.

Earlier this week the GHSA announced that Wheeler and Lassiter would be dropping to Class 6A next season, based on enrollment projections.

A Longhorn stampede

Kell had already nailed down the No. 3 seed from Region 7 of Class 5A before Friday’s regular season finale at winless Woodland, but didn’t let up in a 51-7 win to improve to 8-2.

The Longhorns’ high-powered offense led by quarterback Corbin LaFrance was clicking from the outset. Two early-season losses to Rome and Carrollton, however, have prevented them from starting their playoff run at home.

Kell, ranked No. 11 in Class 5A, travels to DeKalb County on Friday to play Columbia, which is 5-5.

A familiar foe for the Raiders

Walton was hoping to close out the regular season as champion of Region 4 of Class 7A. For most of Friday’s game at Raider Valley against Woodstock, the game was close.

But the teams were tied at 22-22, forcing overtime. Walton scored first to lead 29-22, then Woodstock tied the game with a touchdown. Then the Wolverines, who had only two wins on the seasons, went for a two-point conversion and got it to win 30-29.

It was the third heartbreaking loss of the season for the Raiders, who are 5-5 but get to play at home in the playoffs. They will be playing host on Friday to Newnan, 6-4, which defeated Walton earlier in the season in one of those close games, by a 10-7 score.

The loss also prevented an all-East Cobb contest in the playoffs, since Walton, and not Roswell, would be facing Wheeler.

 

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Walton volleyball seniors chosen to play in state all-star game

Walton volleyball seniors

Thanks to Jeff Barrett for the photo and information about Walton’s seniors, who will appear in Saturday’s Georgia Volleyball Coaches Association all-star game at Providence Christian School in Lilburn:

All Five Walton Volleyball Seniors were named to the Georgia Volleyball Coaches Association (GVCA) Senior All Star Team. From left to right Phoebe Awoleye MB, Kendall O’Brien Libero/DS, Coach Suzanne Fitzgerald, Katie Strickland MB/OH, Madison Morey Libero/DS, Sydney Barrett OH. 

The match starts at 3 p.m., and afterward the GVCA will announce its all-state teams and player and coach of the year.

Also on Friday, Awoleye was named to the 2019 Under Armour national high school volleyball All-American team. Awoleye, who will be attending the University of Georgia, was named to the Under Armour second team and is one of two players from the state of Georgia on the three teams selected.

 

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Wheeler leads eight Cobb schools in national STEM rankings

Wheeler High School, STEAM program

From the Cobb County School District:

Honoring excellence in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, Newsweek announced its ranking of the top 5,000 STEM high schools for 2019. The top schools include eight from the Cobb County School District.  

Wheeler High School broke the top 100 securing the ranking of 64 out of all the high schools across the country. Earlier this year, Study.com named Wheeler High School the #2 STEM Program in the nation.  

Wheeler’s Principal, Paul Gillihan, praised his excellent staff for the school’s continued success. “This year Wheeler is celebrating their 20th year as a STEM Magnet during which time our graduates have gone on to amazing careers in STEM industries and beyond. At Wheeler, it is our dedicated faculty and staff that has made our school one of the top STEM schools in the nation. When you give students a chance to explore, question, and expand their creativity in a safe and supportive environment – you have fashioned an environment where growth, achievement, and understanding thrive.”

In addition to Wheeler, Newsweek also ranked Walton High School high at #309. (U.S. News and World Report ranked Walton High School as #161 among all high schools in the nation and #99 for STEM schools.)  

According to Newsweek, some of the other top STEM high schools in the nation include Kennesaw Mountain High School (#1,024); Lassiter High School (#1,105), Pope High School (#1,518), Harrison High School (#2,712), Hillgrove High School (#4,287), and Allatoona High School (#4,308).   

With its long history of reporting on scientific breakthroughs, technological revolutions, and societal challenges, Newsweek partnered with STEM.org to rank America’s Best STEM High Schools. The list includes schools in every region of the country that offer skilled teachers who keep up with developments in these fields and who create dynamic learning environments to engage their students.   

The top 5,000 schools were curated from STEM.org Educational Research™ (SER) using a proprietary scoring logic that took into consideration a broad set of quantitative and qualitative data inputs collected from Q2 2015–Q3 2019.  

The purpose was to determine which primary and secondary institutions in America offer students the best STEM experiences as defined by the Congressional Research Service—while preparing them for post‐secondary outcomes. Additional factors, including affluence and median household income, were taken into consideration in compiling the rankings. 

“Children don’t realize it, but they’re natural STEM students,” says Nancy Cooper, Newsweek Global Editor in Chief. “We need to make sure that innate drive, curiosity, and creativity aren’t lost along the way. These high schools are helping to ensure America’s future in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics is in good hands.”   

The Cobb County School District does not wait until high school to introduce students to STEM. In fact, the district recently recognized 11 teachers for their commitment to STEM education. Many of the teachers honored teach at the elementary or middle school level. Schools across the district stand out for their commitment to STEM education. Together, Cobb Schools carry almost 50 STEM and STEAM Certifications.  

 

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East Cobb weekend events: Mt. Zion Craft Show; Veterans Day Concert; more

Mt. Zion UMC Craft Show, East Cobb weekend events
The Mt. Zion UMC Craft Show is back for its 34th year (ECN file).

The weekend before Veterans Day is always filled with a wide variety of events, and in East Cobb there’s quite a bit to choose from in our calendar listings, indoors and outside.

Already underway, and continuing through Friday, is the 34th annual Mt. Zion UMC Holly Jolly Craft Show. Shop early for the holidays, enjoy breakfast, lunch and baked goods, have a shot at winning raffle and door prizes, as well as a silent auction and quilt drawing. The proceeds benefit the United Methodist Women’s children’s and women’s charities. The sale goes until 5 p.m. Friday, and from 9-4 Saturday (1770 Johnson Ferry Road).

The high school football regular season ends Friday, with several East Cobb schools either trying to solidify playoff spots or clinch a post-season berth. Walton can win Region 4AAAAAAA at home against Woodstock. Sprayberry will play host to River Ridge for a possible playoff shot, and so will Wheeler, which visits Pebblebrook. Kell, which is playoff-bound, visits Woodland in Cartersville. Lassiter’s one just once this year but will try to double its win total as the Trojans close out their season at home against Cherokee. All kickoffs are at 7:30 p.m.

Very early on Saturday morning is the 9th annual Free Dental Day at Mansouri Family Dental Care (4720 Lower Roswell Road). They’ll be providing free dental cleanings, fillings and extractions on a first-come, first-served basis, and you’ve got to be at least 18 years old. More than 100 patients are expected, and some arrive Friday overnight. Tickets will be given out starting at 5 a.m., and parking is at Johnson Ferry Baptist Church (955 Johnson Ferry Road).

More holiday shopping continues this weekend at the Good Mews Holiday Decor Market, which is open from 10-5 Saturday and 12-5 Sunday. (1860 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 202).

Friday and Saturday, The Art Place is staging “Piece of My Heart,” which portrays the stories of six women who served as nurses in the Vietnam War and how they were affected by the experience.

The show will benefit the new Emory Veterans Healthcare program, which is eligible to anyone who served a day after 9/11.

The performances will be at 7:30 p.m, on Friday and Saturday, and the suggested donation of $10 (3330 Sandy Plains Road).

As it gets dark on Saturday, step out and get some exercise to help out a high school band. It’s the Dead Band Running 5K, a Day of the Dead-themed glow race to support the Pope High School Band. The race takes place at the school (3001 Hembree Road) from 5-7, and you’ll start off to the beat of the band’s drumline. Register at: https://www.active.com/marietta-ga/running/distance-running-races/dead-band-running-5k-2019.

Another East Cobb Veterans Day weekend tradition continues Sunday. It’s the Cobb Wind Symphony Veterans Day Concert, which starts at 3 at the Lassiter Concert Hall (2601 Shallowford Road). Admission is free.

You’ll find more details about those events and can check out more of our calendar listings for this weekend and beyond.

Send your events to us and we’ll post ’em here: calendar@eastcobbnews.com.

 

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Freeze warning in Cobb Friday; sunny, warmer for the weekend

Cobb freeze warning

Thursday night’s pouring rain is the start of some erratic weather over the next few days, starting with a freeze warning in Cobb and metro Atlanta tonight.

It’s partly sunny on Friday morning, and will be for most of the day, with high temperatures reaching the mid 50s.

But if you’re headed outdoors tonight, especially to football games, bundle up: Lows are forecast to dip to around 40 by mid-evening, and into the mid 30s overnight.

The freeze warning issued by the National Weather Service begins at midnight and extends until 10 a.m. Saturday. The weekend is expected to be sunny, but colder than it’s been this week, with highs on Saturday in the mid 50s and back to warmer weather Sunday, with highs in the mide 60s.

Lows also will be colder, in the mid 30s Saturday night and around 40 on Sunday night.

Monday’s high also will be in the mid 60s, but rainy, much colder weather will be coming in after that. On Tuesday, it’s supposed to be very wet and only in the mid 40s, with lows in the high 20s. Sunny skies return Wednesday, but with highs also in the mid 40s and below-freezing lows.

The rest of next week will get only a little bit warmer than that.

 

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East Cobb cityhood group hires two high-profile lobbyists

Don Bolia, East Cobb cityhood lobbyist
Don Bolia

The group pressing for cityhood in East Cobb has hired two of the best-known lobbyists in state government, and both have deep connections in Georgia Republican politics.

According to filings with the Georgia Government Transparency and Campaign Finance Commission, the Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb retained Don Bolia and Laura Norton on Oct. 29.

They are being paid more than $10,000 each to lobby on behalf of the East Cobb cityhood committee, according to the filings.

Bolia and Norton are the principal and senior associate, respectively, of Peachtree Government Relations, an Atlanta firm specializing in executive and legislative branch lobbying in Georgia.

Bolia, Norton and the firm have been named among the most influential in the state by JAMES, a magazine published by Phil Kent, CEO of the political consulting firm Insider Advantage and who previously served as a public relations representative for the cityhood group.

Laura Norton, East Cobb cityood lobbyist
Laura Norton

The East Cobb cityhood committee is holding a town hall meeting Monday at Wheeler High School and is taking part in a debate Tuesday sponsored by the East Cobb Business Association.

That forum also will include a representative of the East Cobb Alliance, a citizens group that opposes cityhood.

Legislation sponsored by State Rep. Matt Dollar (R-East Cobb) calling for an East Cobb cityhood referendum and proposed city charter is slated to be taken up next year in the Georgia General Assembly.

That bill, introduced on the next-to-last day of the 2019 session, calls for a city of nearly 100,000 people to be created out of unincorporated East Cobb in Cobb commission District 2.

Bolia was an aide to former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich and served as political director and executive director of the Georgia Republican Party. He also was chief of staff to the Fulton County Commission.

Norton was a fundraiser for former Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue (now the U.S. Agriculture Secretary) and the Georgia Republican Party. Her husband is Smyrna City Council member Derek Norton, who is in a Dec. 3 runoff to succeed long-serving mayor Max Bacon.

The East Cobb cityhood group hired three lobbyists before the 2019 legislative session: John and Cynthia Garst, who have extensive experience with cityhood issues, and Jared Thomas, a partner in the Garst Thomas Public Affairs firm of Atlanta.

Thomas is another veteran Georgia GOP operative and was chief of staff and press secretary to current Gov. Brian Kemp when he was Georgia Secretary of State. Thomas also ran former Christian Coalition leader Ralph Reed’s unsuccessful bid for lieutenant governor in 2006.

Although any city of East Cobb government would have non-partisan elections, the cityhood issue has sparked some partisan fire. In February, Kent, a conservative pundit, wrote on his Facebook page that “it will be a sad day when tax-and-spend Democrats take over the Cobb County Commission. East Cobbers need to protect themselves and their neighborhoods.”

Those comments, reported in various media outlets, came as cityhood leaders were planning for their first town hall meeting, and right before Dollar filed the East Cobb bill.

Cityhood leaders distanced themselves from Kent’s remarks, and since then, the cityhood effort has been publicly led by David Birdwell and Rob Eble, who came on board earlier this year.

According to files with the Georgia Secretary of State’s office, Birdwell is listed as the CEO and Eble is the secretary of the East Cobb cityhood committee. The chief financial officer is Chip Patterson, who had been identified as a member of the committee earlier this year.

Patterson is a partner in an Atlanta real estate development firm who lives in the Atlanta Country Club area and is a former president of the Walton Touchdown Club.

The names of other members are no longer listed on the cityhood committee’s website, which has a different domain address than the original.

The East Cobb cityhood bill must pass both houses of the Georgia legislature in order for a referendum to be called.

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Cobb Parks honored by Georgia Recreation and Park Association

Mabry Park Opening
Mabry Park opened this summer on Wesley Chapel Road. (ECN file).

Submitted information:

Cobb County PARKS received the Georgia Recreation and Park Association (GRPA) Agency of the Year Award during the GRPA awards banquet on Wednesday, Nov. 6. The award was presented to five population groups within the state, with Cobb County falling into the largest population category – 150,000 and over.

The GRPA Agency of the Year Award recognizes excellence and leadership in providing quality recreation programs, parks and facilities that enhance the quality of life in communities.

Nominees are judged on staff development, staff involvement in park organizations, park facilities, new and outstanding programs, and major accomplishments over the past year.

The department had a monumental 2018-2019 year. Some of the highlights included opening a new 44,000 square foot event center at Jim R. Miller Park, cutting the ribbon on Mabry Park and adding 406 acres of Cobb PARKS inventory. In late 2018, Cobb became the first Georgia county to establish an Emergency Locator Marker (ELM) Program. The mission of the ELM project is to provide trail markers at every quarter mile on Cobb County’s Trail System.

Cobb PARKS is responsible for 239 buildings and 6045 acres of park land. The department offered a total of 108 new programs this fiscal year and held hundreds of classes, activities and events, including the first annual Cobb International Festival.  

“Cobb County PARKS is very proud to receive the GRPA Agency of the Year Award for the largest population category,” said PARKS Director Jimmy Gisi. “Our staff, with the support of the Board of Commissioners, has worked extremely hard during 2019 to provide quality recreational programs and exceptional facilities. We were in competition with several excellent large agencies from across the state but our year was just a little better.” 

The Georgia Recreation and Park Association was formed in 1945 as a private, non-profit institution to support and promote the recreation and park industries within the state of Georgia.

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East Cobb food scores: Bay Breeze; Merchants Walk Cinema; more

Merchants Walk Cinema, East Cobb food scores

The following East Cobb food scores from Nov. 4-8 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing to view details of the inspection:

Baskin Robbins
4811 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 232
November 4, 2019 Score: 97, Grade: A

Bay Breeze Seafood Restaurant
2418 Canton Road
November 6, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Brumby Elementary School
815 Terrell Mill Road
November 8, 2019 Score: 96, Grade: A

Captain D’s
2811 Canton Road
November 4, 2019 Score: 85, Grade: B

Dodgen Middle School
1725 Bill Murdock Road
November 7, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Eastside Baptist Church Cafeteria
2450 Lower Roswell Road
November 4, 2019 Score: 98, Grade: A

J. Christopher’s East Lake
2100 Roswell Road, Suite 500
November 7, 2019 Score: 98, Grade: A

Longhorn Steakhouse of East Cobb
4721 Lower Roswell Road
November 7, 2019 Score: 88, Grade: B

GTC Merchants Walk Cinema
1301 Johnson Ferry Road
November 4, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Moe’s Southwest Grill
4401 Shallowford Road, Suite 100
November 4, 2019 Score: 91, Grade: A

Mr. Wonton
3595 Canton Road, Suite 328
November 4, 2019 Score: 93, Grade: A

Tropical Smoothie Cafe
2960 Shallowford Road, Suite 102
November 8, 2019 Score: 93, Grade: A

 

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Georgia Metropolitan Dance Theatre presents ‘The Nutcracker’

Georgia Metropolitan Dance Theatre The Nutcracker

Submitted information:

A not to be missed holiday tradition is back to delight audiences of all ages. The Nutcracker presented by Georgia Metropolitan Dance Theatre, Thanksgiving weekend. Immerse yourself in the magical tale of Clara and her Nutcracker Prince on a journey through the delectable Kingdom of Sweets with the Sugar Plum Fairy.

Audiences will enjoy the gorgeous sets, updated costumes, magical special effects, and original choreography set to Tchaïkovsky’s timeless music. Prepare to be thrilled by exquisite solo performances from youth company dancers. The Nutcracker includes performances from our ten high school seniors in lead roles and the full company of over 120 local dancers, ranging in age from seven to eighteen, who train at Georgia Dance Conservatory on the Marietta Square.

Professional dancers D Patton White as Godfather Drosselmeyer and  Raul Peinado as the Cavalier join our cast. We are pleased to welcome back former company dancers, Scott Reed and Michael Duncan, returning to perform from Cincinnati Ballet’s Professional Training program.

With four performances on Thanksgiving weekend, this awe-inspiring holiday classic promises to captivate audiences of all ages. Tickets on sale now!

Tickets: $15 to $35  www.georgiametrodance.tix.com

The dates are as follows:

  • Friday, November 29, 7:30 p.m.
  • Saturday, November 30, 2:00 p.m.
  • Saturday, November 30, 7:30 p.m.
  • Sunday, December 1, 2:00 p.m

The venue is the Jennie T. Anderson Theatre at the Cobb Civic Center (548 S. Marietta Pkwy SE, Marietta).

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Cobb Master Gardeners to hold open garden on winter birding

Submitted information about Thursday’s Cobb Master Gardeners open garden session on winter birding. It’s at the Wright Environmental Education Center (2661 Johnson Ferry Road): Cobb Master Gardeners winter birding session

Master Gardener and Chattahoochee Nature Center Docent Thea Powell will speak at 9:30 on “Winter Birding in Your Backyard.”

She will teach us how to create a bird friendly winter garden with native plants, bird feeders and habitat tips. You may also walk the lovely trails, enjoy a picnic on our tables, inspect our invasive plants jail, and check out our active frog pond.

Park at Chestnut Ridge Church, 2663 Johnson Ferry Road, Marietta– at the intersection of Johnson Ferry Road and Post Oak Tritt Road. Easy access to parking off of entrance on Post Oak Tritt Road.

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GHSA reclassification calls for Wheeler and Lassiter in Class 6A

Walton-Lassiter volleyball
Lassiter played Walton last weekend in the Class 7A state volleyball finals, but Trojans teams and those from Wheeler may compete next year in Class 6A. (ECN file)

After competing in sports in Class AAAAAAA (7A)—with the biggest high schools in the state—Wheeler and Lassiter may be dropping down for the next two school years.

The Georgia High School Association on Tuesday announced its reclassifications for 2020-22, and changes are proposed for those two East Cobb schools.

The listings that were made public (you can read them here) have Wheeler and Lassiter in Class AAAAAA (6A), where Pope and Sprayberry have been competing.

Kell would remain in Class AAAAAA (5A), and only Walton would be in Class 7A from East Cobb.

Currently, Walton and Lassiter are in the same Region 4 in Class 7A. Wheeler has been in a more far-flung region with Pebblebrook, Campbell, Newnan and East Coweta.

The GHSA reclassifies schools every two years, and it’s based strictly on enrollment figures. New region alignments also will be drawn.

Wheeler’s full-time enrollment in 2019-19 was 2,179, with a classification count of 2,654, which would be the largest school in Class 6A. Lassiter’s enrollment is 2,340.

They would be among 56 schools in Class 6A. Pope would remain there, with an attendance of 2,082, as would Sprayberry, which has 1,881 students.

Class 5A also would have 56 schools. Kell’s attendance last year was 1,502.

Walton’s attendance had held steady at 2,655 last year. Class 7A would have 47 schools.

The Walker School and Mt. Bethel Christian Academy would remain in Class A, private school division.

Schools can appeal their reclassification assignments until Nov. 11, and the GHSA will begin hearing any challenges the following day.

 

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UPDATE: East Cobb cityhood opponents cancel secret meeting

UPDATED, 8:37 P.M.:

Bill Simon of the East Cobb Alliance contacted East Cobb News to report that the meeting on Thursday has been cancelled.

ORIGINAL STORY:

The anti-cityhood group East Cobb Alliance, which has been critical of pro-cityhood efforts conducted in secret, is meeting on Thursday to prepare for cityhood-related events next week.

But the Alliance meeting at a public facility is not open to the public. The meeting is scheduled from 7:30-9:30 p.m. at the East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road).East Cobb Alliance logo

The purpose of the meeting is to help formulate questions and responses before two cityhood-related events next week.

The Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb is holding a town hall on Monday at Wheeler High School, and next Tuesday, the cityhood group and the East Cobb Alliance will appear at a forum organized by the East Cobb Business Association.

The e-mail urged recipients not to post the meeting notice on Nextdoor or to forward the message, because “we do not want the press or the media or the pro-cityhood people to see what we’re up to. Nothing nefarious, mind you, but we’re trying to serve our members of ECA to help with planning and execution of our team strategy with as little interference as possible.”

When East Cobb News asked Bill Simon, a leader of the East Cobb Alliance, why the meeting isn’t open to the public, he said that it’s “because it’s a private meeting, paid for by private funds.”

(The cost to reserve the meeting room at the East Cobb Government Service Center is $25, the standard fee for any group wishing to meet there. The room has a capacity of 85 people.)

The East Cobb Alliance, which was formed this summer, has been critical of the Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb for what it calls a lack of transparency. The proposed City of East Cobb, according to the Alliance, “is a concept secretly planned by a small group of people for nearly a year before there was public notice of it. Since this group is being rather secretive about several things regarding the PCEC (including their professional backgrounds & why they might be involved), ECA has a page dedicated to exposing (via public records) who is who, and what does who do.”

(East Cobb News last year published stories along similar lines, including the resignation of a citizen from a cityhood ad hoc committee because he was told “it’s none of anyone’s business” who’s all behind the cityhood effort.

While some private, closed groups on Facebook do appear in search results, Residents Against East Cobb City Task Force is completely hidden.

In the e-mail, the message stated that “if you are on Facebook, there is a Closed FB Group that, upon you answering the two entry questions, you will be allowed to join: Residents Against East Cobb City Task Force Group. If the questions are ignored, you cannot gain entry.”

The East Cobb Alliance does have a public Facebook page that updates with links and financial analysis of proposed city services but does not include information about the group’s innerworkings.

In a followup response to an East Cobb News request to attend the meeting, Simon said he would “politely decline your request. . . . There is a stated maximum room limit of the number of people who can attend, thus the reason why it is specifically NOT a public meeting accessible to the public, regardless of the subject matter we are discussing. . .

“Also, if you feel you have some First Amendment right on your side to crash this event, and you appear there on Thursday, just be aware of the potential consequences to your reputation if you are proven wrong.”

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East Cobb Senior Center holding Veterans Day event Friday

The Tunnel Rats
The Tunnel Rats, a local string band, will perform at the East Cobb Senior Center on Friday. (ECN file)

Over the weekend we posted a story about how an East Cobb-based organization is providing assistance to veterans, including community outreach at a cookout on Saturday.

This coming Friday, representatives from United Military Care will be at the East Cobb Senior Center for an official Cobb County government salute to veterans.

The event is from 11-2 p.m., and includes a catered meal from Carraba’s Italian Grill. Also performing will be a Woodstock-based string band that appeared at Saturday’s cookout. The Tunnel Rats, named after the Vietnam War troops who performed underground missions, will play tunes from that era.

The East Cobb Senior Center event is free for veterans and their spouses. Space is limited and registration is required. For event contact info call 770-509-4900. (3332 Sandy Plains Road).

The Tunnel Rats will be playing Tuesday in a Veterans Day concert at the Jennie Anderson Theater at the Cobb Civic Center, starting at 6 p.m. It’s a fundraiser for the Georgia Vietnam Veterans Association, and will include a film screening, “In the Shadow of the Blade.” The cost is $10, $5 for veterans and seniors age 62 and older.

On Friday, the McCleskey-East Cobb Family YMCA Veterans Day event is from 5-8 p.m. at the Piedmont Church (570 Piedmont Road).

The cost is free for veterans and family of those who have served. Registration is open for those ages 18 years and older.

Please contact Gayle at 770-977-5991, or by email at GayleB@ymcaatlanta.org.

On Sunday, the Cobb Wind Symphony Veterans Day Concert will take place starting at 3 p.m. at the Lassiter Concert Hall (2601 Shallowford Road). Admission is free.

Also this weekend, The Art Place is staging “Piece of My Heart,” which portrays the stories of six women who served as nurses in the Vietnam War and how they were affected by the experience.

The show will benefit the new Emory Veterans Healthcare program, which is eligible to anyone who served a day after 9/11.

The performances will be at 7:30 p.m, on Friday and Saturday, and the suggested donation of $10 (3330 Sandy Plains Road).

Piece of my Heart, East Cobb Veterans Day events

Veterans Day is next Monday, Nov. 11, and on that day U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath will hold a ceremony at 2 p.m. at American Legion Post 201 (201 Wills Road, Alpharetta).

This ceremony will honor Vietnam veterans, who will receive a commemorative lapel pin and certificate of special recognition.

 

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East Cobb Business Association cityhood forum limited to 250

Some more details on next Tuesday’s East Cobb Business Association forum on the subject of East Cobb cityhood that we first noted a couple weeks ago:East Cobb Business Association cityhood forum

The ECBA says that to ensure you get a seat, you must make a reservation online, ideally by Sunday, when the cost goes up.

The forum featuring representatives from the Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb and the anti-cityhood East Cobb Alliance is part of the ECBA’s monthly luncheon event, from 11-1 on Nov. 12 at the Olde Towne Athletic Club (4950 Olde Towne Parkway).

Seating will be limited to the first 250 people (most ECBA luncheons are around 100) who register and pay online. You can pay at the door, but the cost does go up and there’s no guarantee you’ll be able to get in.

Jen Starks of the ECBA said 78 people have registered thus far.

This is the only time pro- and anti-cityhood groups have appeared together in a forum-style event; the cityhood group is having a town hall meeting on Nov. 11 at Wheeler High School.

The advance registration cost (click here to sign up) is $20 for ECBA members and $25 for guests. After midnight Sunday and up to the door, the respective costs are $25 and $30.

The same event will honor the ECBA’s 2019 business person of the year, which was started last year. The finalists are:

  • Cindy Trow, health coach, Wellness Now
  • Tom Gonter, development officer, MUST Ministries
  • Butch Carter, owner, Honest-1 Auto Care East Cobb
  • Ann Lafferty, owner, Rakers Junk Removal

NCBA Events

The Northeast Cobb Business Association is holding two events this month, a Nov. 14 Alive After Five networking event from 5:30-8:30 p.m. at the Governor’s Gun Club (1005 Cobb Place Blvd., Kennesaw) that’s free to attend with registration.

The NCBA monthly luncheon is Nov. 20 from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Piedmont Church (570 Piedmont Road), and the guest speaker is Sharon Mason, CEO of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce. For details and to sign up, click here.

East Cobb Citizen of the Year breakfast

On Dec. 3 the East Cobb Area Council of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce will  have its annual East Cobb Citizen of the Year breakfast.

Last year’s winner was Brenda Rhodes of Simple Needs GA, and the award goes to individuals who demonstrate exceptional leadership and community service.

The breakfast is from 7:30-9 a.m. at Indian Hills Country Club (4001 Clubland Drive). The cost is $25 for Chamber members and $25 for guests. To sign up, click here.

 

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Walton volleyball team downs Lassiter for 5th consecutive state title

Walton volleyball state title
Walton players and coach Suzanne Fitzgerald (standing at right) savor another GHSA state championship. (East Cobb News photos and video by Wendy Parker)

The first few minutes of Walton’s state volleyball title game were very un-Waltonlike.

Lassiter got off to a hot start, leading the first set 5-0 before Walton coach Suzanne Fitzgerald called a timeout to settle down her team.

“I just reminded them why they’re here, what they’ve been playing for,” Fitzgerald said. “They responded very aggressively.”

The Lady Raiders were able to come back with such a flourish several times as they downed their East Cobb rivals 25-18, 25-17 and 25-14 Saturday night at Marietta High School.

For Walton (32-8) to win a fifth consecutive Georgia High School Association Class 7A title was not a surprise.

The dynasty Fitzgerald has maintained—nine state titles in the last 10 years, and the school’s 13th in all—is as strong as ever.

But after last year’s seniors departed—and they were an integral part of Walton’s 2017 team that won the MaxPreps national title—some new leaders and a good number of new starters had to step forward.

“Every team is so different,” Fitzgerald said. “With this team, we had a lot of kids who have been in the program a long time. They were representing something larger than themselves, and they showed it tonight.”

Walton volleyball team

Some of those players have been part of Walton’s feeder system since the third grade. That experience, and that sense of togetherness, paid off when the Lady Raiders needed to separate themselves from Lassiter.

In the second set, Lassiter (32-8) also led early, with Fitzgerald calling another timeout. Walton responded in a similar fashion, roaring to a 20-15 lead that the Trojans could not match.

During the break, Fitzgerald said was overcome with some emotion as she prepared her team to try and close out Lassiter in a sweep.

“I saw that they realized they really were playing for each other,” she said. “We played a very clean match today.”

In the final set, Walton never trailed, taking a 6-1 lead, then 13-4, before putting Lassiter away for the third time this season.

Like the senior class before them, this class of Walton seniors has never known anything but winning a state title: Madison Morey, Kendall O’Brien, Phoebe Awoleye, Sydney Barrett and Katie Strickland.

“This senior class has left a legacy of selflessness,” Fitzgerald said.

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East Cobb veterans aid group reaches out to those in need

Ed Reynolds, East Cobb veterans aid group
“It’s real nice to know that there are people who want to appreciate veterans,” Vietnam vet Ed Reynolds said. (East Cobb News photos and videos by Wendy Parker)

Amid the aroma of grilled hamburgers and hot dogs, and with the sounds of his generation playing in the background, Ed Reynolds talks a little about his days serving in the Vietnam War, but mostly about what’s happened since then.

The Connecticut native, who’s lived in Kennesaw for the past couple of decades, served in the U.S. Marine Corps during the early years of full American ground operations.

That was in 1965 and 1966, before hundreds of thousands of troops came over in military transport planes, like the C-5 manufactured at Lockheed’s Marietta plant.

“Got there before the big guns came,” Reynolds recalls. “We landed by boat.”

His combat experience was intense, and being a radio operator “was not a healthy occupation to have.”

The retired building construction supervisor said he didn’t endure the wrath of anti-war protestors like some Vietnam veterans. However, as the years continued, so did the frustrations of dealing with a system designed to help veterans like him.

East Cobb veterans aid group

Reynolds says he suffered a heart attack in 1992, and thinks it could stem from exposure to Agent Orange in Vietnam. Other maladies have added up, and he noted he came back with one that lingers—ulcers.

“I was 20 years old,” Reynolds said. “Imagine that.”

On Saturday, an East Cobb non-profit that helps veterans in need treated Reynolds and other veterans to food, music and to give thanks for their service, with Veterans Day being observed in the coming week.

United Military Care, which moved to a building on Old Canton Road near Roswell Road 11 years ago, entertained a few dozen veterans on a sunny, blustery afternoon.

UMC helps veterans who are in danger of experiencing, or who have experienced, hunger, homelessness and lost hope.

“When you leave the military, you lose two things,” said Leenie Rubin of United Military Care, which began assisting active-duty personnel but has expanded to reach out to veterans.

“Your rifle, and your buddy. Our mission is to serve as a ‘battle buddy’ ” for veterans who often don’t know where to turn for help.

The Tunnel Rats
The Tunnel Rats, a local string band that includes Vietnam veterans, performed Vietnam-era pop tunes as well as country/bluegrass songs.

UMC served more than 8,000 veterans in 10 counties across metro Atlanta last year, and expects to serve more this year, according to President Kim Scofi.

That’s because word’s growing about how the organization is trying to fill the gaps in veterans’ assistance.

UMC has two food pantries, and delivers food regularly at Fort McPherson for distribution around the Atlanta area.

The assistance includes help with clothing, government and agency referrals, home visits and phone calls and special events, such as Saturday’s cookout.

Making human connection is often the most important thing UMC does, Scofi said.

“It’s offering hope.”

She said she got a call several months ago from a staffer at the East Cobb Senior Center, about a regular visitor there who’s a Vietnam veteran and who was threatening suicide.

Scofi got in phone contact with the man, and offered up some tough love—military-type directives about getting help, and how to do it.

“Now he’s living in Mississippi, near his family,” and isn’t in deep isolation any longer, she said.

United Military Care event
Raffling off items for veterans that were donated by local businesses and organizations.

Reynolds has stayed involved in Marine League and other veterans events. But as he got older, and as his health declined, he grew frustrated in getting health care and other veterans benefits for himself. He had to quit work to care for his wife for six years (she died in 2012), while he was seeking to 100 percent disability payments from the Veterans Administration.

“It took me 14 years,” he said.

His experience is common. Scofi said that some so-called “blue water” Navy veterans—those who transported Agent Orange to Vietnam—are only now getting VA benefits. That’s because of bureaucratic red tape that denied them to veterans who literally didn’t step foot on Vietnamese soil.

While much is made of the suicide rate of veterans from the Iraq War, Scofi said the largest percentage of veterans who take their own lives is in an age group of 50 and older—from Vietnam to those who served during the first Iraq War, in the early 1990s.

Reynolds noted that it’s groups like UMC, more than those from the larger civilian world, that are reaching out to veterans.

“It’s real nice to know that there are people who want to appreciate veterans,” he said.

If you’re a veteran or know of a veteran who needs assistance with food, housing or just need someone to talk to, you can reach United Military Care by clicking here or calling 770-973-0014.

UMC also accepts donations to carry out its services. You can donate online by clicking here.

 

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