Marietta Museum of History returns to pre-COVID operating hours

Marietta History Museum hours

Submitted information:

In March of 2020, like so many other businesses, the Marietta Museum of History shut its doors to the public due to the ongoing public health crisis caused by Covid-19. The Museum reopened to the public in June 2020 with modified hours. We are pleased to announce that we will expanding our hours back to our original 10am till 4pm, Tuesday thru Saturday, beginning Tuesday, October 6, 2020. The Museum will remain closed on Mondays. 

To maintain social distancing, the Museum will allow 4 “family units” but not exceed a total of 25 people in the Museum galleries at one time. The Museum will also accept tour groups of up to 10 people, with a prearranged reservation. The URL below can be used to visit the Museum’s website where a document will further detail the plans and procedures being implemented.

 URL: https://www.mariettahistory.org/safety-at-the-museum

Sharing history has not stopped during this pandemic. The Museum staff understands that some individuals might not be comfortable visiting in person at this time, therefore they have been diligently creating new content for various social media platforms including Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube. A follower favorite is History Loves Company, which is shown live on FaceBook Friday afternoons and features Museum staff giving tours of local history, locations, buildings and more! Past episodes of History Loves Company are available on the Museum’s YouTube channel. 

The Marietta Museum of History is also dedicated to capturing what is currently happening in the community. The staff is collecting history related to the Covid-19 pandemic by gathering pictures, stories, and physical artifacts from Marietta and Cobb County to document this time for future generations. Below is link to a document where people can share stories, upload images, and let the Museum know about possible artifact donations.

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfPw83PKWNZ8Ep76xCG7qA_hOwMibUaVo_8GpXdX3QblCdZ-Q/viewform?fbclid=IwAR2cK6P_ySys113js8WWO5_NSkO2Pv9XoTrElCfGdwae4hCCeTsqyPtw9CA

The Marietta Museum of History uses ordinary objects to tell the extraordinary stories of Marietta and Cobb County.  Galleries and exhibits cover topics such as military history, home life throughout the centuries, technology, and local businesses from our past.  Current temporary exhibits include, The Man with the Camera: Photographs by Raymond T. Burford, Made by Her Hands: The Beauty, Warmth and Stories of Local Quilting, and Votes for Women: A Portrait of Persistence. 

Questions or want more info? Contact the Museum at 770-794-5710 or www.MariettaHistory.org.

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Candidate profile: Fitz Johnson, Cobb Commission District 2

Fitz Johnson, Cobb Commission candidate

After winning the Republican primary and runoff by a nose this summer, Fitz Johnson is facing a different challenge as he campaigns in the general election for the District 2 seat on the Cobb Board of Commissioners:

An energized Democratic electorate in the county that could yield historic gains in November.

Johnson, a retired Army officer, entrepreneur and civic leader with strong ties to Cobb establishment institutions, is facing political upstart Jerica Richardson.

Although she was unopposed in the Democratic primary, she received more votes (24,126) than the three Republican primary candidates combined (18,371).

Neither has been elected to public office before. Johnson ran for Georgia School Superintendent in 2014. Richardson is a first-time candidate who has worked on recent local Democratic campaigns, including that of Cobb school board member Jaha Howard, who’s been a firebrand in his two years in office.

Johnson, who serves on the board of the Wellstar Health System and is a trustee of Kennesaw State University, has been touting what he calls “experienced leadership” in the military, business and community service.

Here’s Johnson’s campaign website. Richardson has been contacted by East Cobb News seeking an interview.

The winner will succeed retiring three-term commissioner Bob Ott, a Republican who’s endorsed Johnson.

“The message is the same,” Johnson said. “The target is different.”

District 2 includes much of East Cobb as well as the Cumberland-Vinings area and part of Smyrna.

Johnson is touting an emphasis on public safety, traffic improvements, fiscal conservatism on taxes and spending and protecting neighborhoods.

As he did during the primary campaign, Johnson is stressing his opposition to East Cobb Cityhood, limiting high-density development and boosting salary and incentives for police officers and firefighters.

He said he’s best situated to attend to those ongoing matters, as well as possible budget challenges due to the economic fallout from COVID-19 closures, because of his background.

“What stands out is my experience compared to my opponent,” he said. “I worrying about me and running my own campaign, but when you stack it all up, I’m the clear choice.”

During the primary Johnson campaigned extensively in East Cobb, which was unfamiliar to him but traditionally has been strong Republican territory. He admits that the district is diverse, but the message he’s hearing from East Cobb voters is a desire to maintain a suburban atmosphere of single-family communities.

The county budget that began on Oct. 1 maintained the same property tax millage rate, but the longer-term financial implications could pose some unpalatable budget decisions in the future.

Johnson admitted that “while we’re in an unprecedented” time, he will never support a tax increase to address budget shortfalls.

“That’s a no-compromise issue,” Johnson said, acknowledging that some hard decisions will have to be made.

Also off-limits would be any interruption in continuing a step-and-grade compensation program for public safety employees begun last year by commissioners.

“I will make sure we don’t take a step back,” Johnson said, adding that he thinks commissioners have “done a good job” handling the immediate financial impact of COVID-related revenue drops.

The District 2 winner would become the second African-American on the board, and if current commissioner Lisa Cupid wins her race to become chairman, the five-member board would have a black majority.

Earlier this summer commissioners adopted an anti-racism resolution that caused some consternation, and they voted last month to create a new community diversity council.

Johnson said “this is a very good start they’ve put on the table,” in reference to the latter, whose members include citizen members chosen by commissioners.

Racial concerns and disparities won’t go away, he said, just by appointing people to serve. “What we need now is results. We’re not going to let this go.

“It’s important to the entire quality of life in Cobb County” to address racial and cultural disparities, he said.

“I don’t have a scorecard, but I feel I’m being treated well as an African-American in Cobb County,” Johnson said.

“But we’re not finished by any means,” in reference to making greater progress in racial relations. “We need to make it better so it doesn’t continue to be an issue.”

Johnson said while he’s working to get his based energized, he acknowledges a need for crossover votes from independents and what he calls “soft Democrats.”

An appeal to that kind of open-mindedness, he said, will be important as he seeks to fill “some very big shoes” being left behind by Ott.

“I believe there are many voters out there who willing to zig-zag down the ballot.”

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Motorcyclist dies after Canton Road crashes with two cars

Canton Road motorcyclist dies

A Kennesaw man died Monday night when he lost control of his motorcycle on Canton Road and crashed into two cars, according to Cobb Police.

Police said Patrick Penner, 32, was speeding while heading north on Canton Road near Chance Road around 8:32 p.m. Monday and lost control.

Cobb Police said in a release that his  purple 2013 Honda CBR600 entered the center turn lane and struck a silver 2007 Honda Civic that was in the turn lane facing a southbound direction.

The motorcycle then entered the southbound lanes of Canton Road and hit black 2015 Honda Civic that was heading south, police said.

Police said Penner was pronounced dead at the scene. They said that Josie Lofasso, 21, of Marietta, and Amed Tentori, 27, of Marietta, the drivers of the cars hit by the motorcycle, did not require medical attention.

The incident is still being investigated and anyone with information is asked to call the Cobb County Police Department’s STEP unit at 770-499-3987.

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The Art Place-Mountain View presents ‘Bard in the Yard’

The Bard in the Yard The Art Place

Live performances at The Art Place-Mountain View have been halted since the COVID-19 closings in March, but this weekend there will be an outdoor production of a Shakespeare classic, with a modern twist for the times.

A retelling of “The Comedy of Errors” presented by the Mountain View Arts Alliance—the non-profit that helps sustains The Art Place—as “Bard in the Yard.”

Here’s the contemporary backdrop for the story:

The Syracuse Flu Pandemic has spread throughout the Mediterranean and all citizens are wearing face covering and distancing in 1920s Ephesus.

The Black and White movie scene is laced with laughter and fun in this family friendly production of The Comedy of Errors.

Two sets of twins, two Antipholuses and two Dromios are both wandering the city unknown to the other! The confusion is delightful!

OH—and there are PIES !

The productions are Friday-Saturday from 7:30-9:30 p.m. and Sunday 3-5. The cost is $10 for a group. Essentially, it’s a “pod” of up to four people who will be seated in a socially distanced manner on the lawn.

All staff and actors will be wearing masks, and guests will be required to wear them as well, except when seated at their pod.

There won’t be an intermission and concessions won’t be sold, but you can bring your own food and drink (alcohol prohibited).

More information and ticket ordering can be found here. The Art Place is at 3330 Sandy Plains Road.

In May, CenterStage North Theatre, which has staged live performances at The Art Place for years, cancelled its entire 2020 season, and said it would transfer any purchased tickets to the 2021 season:

“These are challenging and difficult times for many reasons, but we have confidence in the power of art and the resilience of the human spirit. We will keep a light on for our beloved theater and its celebration of our shared experiences. We eagerly await the moment when we can all be together again.”

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Gritters Library opens for weekday curbside service

The last library branch in East Cobb that had been fully closed since March opened on Monday for curbside service only.East Cobb Library

The inside of Gritters Library (880 Shaw Park Road) remains closed to the public, but patrons can order checkout materials as follows:

  • Monday: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
  • Tuesday-Friday: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Mountain View Regional Library, East Cobb Library and the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center are open for limited purposes Monday-Friday and also have curbside pickup.

Per the Cobb County Public Library System, patrons seeking to pick up curbside should schedule an appointment at least an hour in advance.

The form for scheduling the curbside appointments and more details are available at www.cobbcat.org/libraryexpress.

 

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More than 63% of East Cobb elementary students returning

East Cobb elementary students returning
A Cobb GIS map shows public schools in East Cobb by ZIP Code, with the colors indicating the level of COVID-19 cases. Click here for details.

On Monday the Cobb County School District begins the first phase of opening campuses up for in-person instruction when K-5 and special education students resume classes.

Earlier this week we posted a school-by-school breakdown of who’s coming back, who’s staying remote and who hadn’t responded, and noting that 58.7 percent of elementary school students around the county would be coming back to campus.

In East Cobb, a little more than 63 percent of students enrolled in 20 elementary schools will be heading back to their schools.

According to CCSD figures, the parents of 8,797 students at those East Cobb grade schools have chosen the in-person option. That compares to 4,537 students, or 32 percent, who will continue remotely.

The parents of another 557 students, or four percent, had not provided a response as of earlier this week.

The figures are subject to change, but the choices parents have made are not. The decisions reported to the district near the end of September are good through the end of the fall semester, and the district anticipates remote learning remaining an option for the rest of the school year.

The figures don’t include special education students, who also can come back to school at K-12 levels.

Late this week the district produced a back-to-school video laying out what students, teachers and parents can expect, in terms of academics, safety and other protocols.

Students will be required to masks at all times, including on school buses, and the district announced guidelines last week that include possible disciplinary action for students who don’t follow them.

A positive COVID-19 case was reported at Kincaid Elementary School in East Cobb on March 11, and the district closed all schools “until further notice” on March 12.

The following day, Gov. Brian Kemp issued a shelter-in-place order, and on April 2, he closed all public schools in Georgia for the rest of the 2019-20 school year.

Cobb schools began the current school year online-only, and on Sept. 3 Superintendent Chris Ragsdale announced dates for classroom return.

Middle schools students can return starting Oct. 19, and the district data shows that 54.2 percent of those students will be coming back.

The high school return date is Nov. 5, and as of now 42.7 percent have indicated a choice of heading back to classrooms.

Ragsdale made his decision based on public health data reflecting the level of community spread, targeting a 14-day average of between 100 to 200 COVID-19 cases per 100,000 people.

As of Friday, Cobb’s figures were 102 cases per 100,000, which is considered high community spread but the lowest that number has been since late June. That average was in the 400s in early August, at the start of the school year, and has gradually been falling.

Cobb and Douglas Public Health breaks down cases and deaths by ZIP Code (click hover map here), and here’s the latest for the East Cobb area:

  • 30062: 1,335 cases; 21 deaths
  • 30066: 1,202 cases; 22 deaths
  • 30067: 1,179 cases, 11 deaths
  • 30068: 659 cases, 30 deaths
  • 30075: 115 cases, 2 deaths

According to the Cobb GIS office, which keeps county-related COVID data at this hub, 29 of those deaths have occurred at long-term care homes.

GIS also produces a hover map with those details and a swipe function that also shows the proximity of public schools in a ZIP code.

More than three-quarters of all COVID deaths in Cobb are people aged 70 and older, and school-age children have the fewest cases for people under the age of 60.

The latest figures show 1,828 cases for youths age 19 and younger. That includes 307 between the ages of 6-11, 257 between 12-14 and 984 between 15-18.

The two fatalities in Cobb involving someone under the age of 18 were a female and a one-year-old boy who died in late August with an underlying health issue.

The Cobb school district has been updating COVID cases every Friday, and this week indicated that 287 students or staff members have tested postive since July 1.

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Salvation Army Marietta Women’s Auxiliary to hold annual coffee

Submitted information:Marietta Salvation Army Women's Auxiliary

The Salvation Army’s Marietta Corps will host this year’s annual membership coffee of the metro area’s Salvation Army Women’s Auxiliary on Thursday, October 8, from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. Any women who are interested in volunteering and learning more about how The Salvation Army and the Women’s Auxiliary work together “Doing The Most Good” throughout metro Atlanta are invited to this free event at the Marietta Corps, 202 S. Waterman St., Marietta.

For questions about the event, please contact Tonya Cheek at 404-578-2345. To RSVP, email Sheronda Anthony at sheronda.anthony@uss.salvationarmy.org.

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Daughter of Tommy Nobis appointed to Tommy Nobis Center board

Tommy Nobis Center board
From left: Tommy Nobis III, Devon Jackoniski, Lynn Nobis, Kevin Nobis.

Submitted information and photo from the Tommy Nobis Center:

Tommy Nobis was an extraordinarily talented football player, but he was also an extraordinarily good man whose service off the field had an immeasurable impact on the lives of so many individuals with disabilities. When he was approached in 1977 to support a new vocational training and placement program for students with disabilities, he not only lent the strength of his name, but also passionately served on the board of directors for the next 40 years with the same tenacity he exhibited on the football field. His passion, support, and personal involvement until his death in 2017 helped change the lives of thousands of people with disabilities.

Tommy’s wife, Lynn, was also deeply involved and when Tommy’s health began to fail, she took a more active role and joined the Tommy Nobis Center Board of Directors. Carrying on Tommy’s legacy of service after his death became a very important and meaningful pursuit.

After seven years of service on the board and a lifetime of dedication to Tommy Nobis Center, Lynn is now passing the torch to her daughter Devon Jackoniski, who was recently appointed to the board.

Lynn said, “I am so proud of our daughter.  She has great enthusiasm for the Center much like Tommy did and I am thrilled that she is following in her father’s footsteps.”

Devon is Director of Clinical Affairs for ModusOne Health and a busy mother of three. She holds a Bachelor of Applied Science degree from University of Georgia and a Bachelor’s Physician Assistant degree from Medical College of Georgia School of Medicine. 

“We are extremely proud to welcome Devon to our board of directors. Her willingness to carry on her family’s legacy of service is inspiring and meaningful,” President & CEO, Dave Ward said. “She will bring the same tenacity and will to win that her father had.”

Having already served as chair of the Tommy Nobis Center Galaxy of Stars event, Devon will continue in that role again this year. She will carry on the strong Nobis family legacy of service through her incredible level of passion and dedication to the mission of Tommy Nobis Center.

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Candidate profile: Lisa Cupid, Cobb Commission Chairwoman

Lisa Cupid, Cobb Commission Chair candidate

In serving as the lone Democrat on the Cobb Board of Commissioners for the last eight years, Lisa Cupid has become accustomed to going against the political grain.

But says her decision to run countywide as the chair of the commission comes from a desire to unite citizens, groups and areas of the county that haven’t always felt properly represented on the county’s five-member governing board.

“I know I have the ability to bring people together,” said Cupid, who is challenging Republican incumbent Mike Boyce on the Nov. 3 general-election ballot. East Cobb News profiled Boyce earlier this week.

(Here’s Cupid’s campaign website.)

She was unopposed in the Democratic primary, and worked to support Monique Sheffield, who will succeed her in representing District 4 in South Cobb.

“We need a chair who’s going to move the entire county forward,” Cupid said. “I love the connections I’ve made in the community I serve, and this wasn’t something I was considering when the current chairman took office.”

But Cupid said while she has been an ally of Boyce on a number of votes, and has served as his vice chair, she doesn’t think the board as a whole has worked together like it could.

She said the county has historically fostered good partnerships with organizations and citizens in the community, “but that’s not something I see occurring” now.

A most recent example was her vote in September against the formation of the Council for Peace, Justice and Reconciliation, which Cupid said was done with little community input.

Another was her only opposing vote against the Atlanta Braves stadium deal in 2013, in which she also protested what she said was a rushed process.

Cupid says the board has suffered by not having had any full-fledged retreats since she took office. There have been some day-long meetings, but she said nothing expanding into a format in which commissioners sit down with elected officials from across the county.

“We’re just not building bridges and relationships,” Cupid said.

What’s changed most of all since Cupid won a second term in 2016, when Boyce ousted then-chairman Tim Lee, is the shifting political winds in Cobb County.

Democrats have been highly energized and are seeking all levels of public office, following countywide-wins by Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential race and Stacey Abrams in the 2018 governor’s race.

Democrats have made some inroads in Republican East Cobb, winning a school board seat and having a Democratic member of Congress for the first time in 40 years. For the second election in a row, there’s a Democrat running in every race for a seat representing East Cobb.

In the primary, Cupid received 90,446 votes to 45,257 for Boyce, who easily defeated two GOP opponents.

She has raised $161,000 in campaign contributions, and had more than $80,000 in cash on hand at the end of June, according to her latest financial disclosure report.

Boyce by comparison has raised around $102,000 overall for his re-election bid and had nearly $40,000 on hand shortly after the primary.

A native of the Detroit area, Cupid had ambitions of a career in the automotive industry, and came South to earn a mechanical engineering degree at Georgia Tech.

Instead, she stayed, receiving degrees in English, public administration and law from Georgia State University. She lived for a while in East Cobb while at Tech when her parents moved into a home of Johnson Ferry Road.

Cupid and her husband Craig have two sons who are home-schooled.

She said many of the issues she has been championing for her district resonate across the county, including affordable housing, land use, transit, public safety and economic development.

“We’re in such a unique time, and we need to have a strategic foundation as a board” in the county’s long-term response to the economic fallout from COVID-related closures. “We need to have a level of trust.”

Her philosophy on land use matters includes not only the traditional issues of density and traffic but also looking at individual projects “that can be transformational” in promoting the health, safety and welfare of citizens.

Those include incorporating quality-of-life amenities, affordability and transportation components that make sense in a given area.

While Cupid said District 4 area has “led the realm” in terms of affordability, “housing values don’t lend themselves to amenities” that are just as much of an attraction for homeowners.

“It’s an issue that resonates the same way across the county,” she said.

Cobb’s vote in 2019 to implement a step-and-grade salary and retention system for public safety employees “is one of the most significant measures we’ve put into place,” and Cupid said “it’s a very important step forward.”

She’s an advocate of community-policing initiatives, and has worked to include home-based business owners in the county’s CARES Act relief grant program.

A supporter of Boyce’s 2018 property tax increase, Cupid said hiking the millage rate again to address a possible COVID-related budget gap would be problematic.

“Our efforts are to keep the same level of service without adding to the monetary burden of citizens,” she said. “A lot of people are hurting right now.”

Cupid said she’s campaigning the same way in all areas of the county and tries to include local leaders when doing events in a particular community.

“I try to be consistent, because we all want the same things,” she said.

There hasn’t been a Democrat to serve as county commission chair since Ernest Barrett, who led Cobb into its initial phase of suburbanization from 1965-1984.

She also would be the first female and black head of the county government if elected. Her background “makes me sensitive to anyone who feels they don’t have a seat at the table.”

But Cupid said while she understands the symbolism of her campaign, that’s not why she’s running.

“I am more than that,” she said. “This could be an historic election, but I don’t want to get elected to make history.

“I want to get elected to make a difference.”

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Cobb & Douglas Public Health urges public to get flu shots

 

Cobb flu shots

Submitted information from Cobb and Douglas Public Health about flu shots:

This season, a flu vaccine is more important than ever. Cobb and Douglas Public Health staff urges you to get an annual influenza vaccination to reduce the chance of getting the flu and spreading it to others during this critical COVID-19 pandemic.

According to the CDC, getting a flu vaccine is not only important because it protects yourself, your family and your community from flu, but a flu vaccine this season can also help reduce the burden on our healthcare systems responding to the COVID-19 pandemic.

To decrease the chance of getting the flu simultaneously with COVID-19, it is imperative that our community get vaccinated with the flu vaccine.

“We want everyone to be properly protected from the flu, so we are encouraging community members to either call us to make an appointment or to walk in to one of our convenient health center locations,” Priti Kolhe, CDPH district immunization director, said.

CDPH Immunization Clinic staff is offering annual flu vaccines to everyone six months and older at the Acworth, Marietta, Douglasville and Smyrna Public Health Center locations. CDPH staff is also offering onsite vaccinations to local businesses and community events for groups of 20 or more people.

Recommendations for Senior Patients:
In addition to the flu vaccine, CDPH staff also recommends pneumonia shots for anyone over 65 years old, or anyone with a chronic illness or weakened immune system. Medicare pays for the flu and pneumonia vaccines. The shingles vaccine is also recommended for anyone over 50 years of age.

For more information about the flu vaccine or to schedule an appointment, call 770-514-2300 or visit cobbanddouglaspublichealth.org.

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Cobb Public Safety Week observations include Chamber honors

Submitted information:Cobb public safety appreciation

As part of the 20th annual Public Safety Appreciation Week (Oct. 5-11), the Cobb Chamber will honor Cobb County’s finest during a special recognition program at the Public Safety Appreciation luncheon event held at the Coca-Cola Roxy Theatre on October 5. The luncheon will kick off a weeklong effort to celebrate public safety personnel in Cobb County.

Preparations for the event began months in advance, with a nomination process for the Public Safety Employee of the Year Award, in addition to other awards, such as the Medal of Valor, Award of Merit, Distinguished Achievement Award and Outstanding Community Contribution Award. Residents, government officials, public safety agencies and business officials are given the opportunity to nominate public safety personnel for these honors. The 2020 Public Safety Appreciation Committee Chairman is Chief Bill Westenberger, with Kennesaw Police Department.

The Cobb Chamber would like to congratulate the following personnel and public safety units on their nomination for a public safety recognition award:

Individuals

  • Paramedic Malcolm Defleice, MetroAtlanta Ambulance Service
  • Lieutenant Michael Goins, Marietta Police Department
  • Shift Supervisor Christopher Hayes, Cobb County 911
  • Paramedic Michael Jordan, MetroAtlanta Ambulance Service
  • Engineer Ryan Knechtel, Smyrna Fire Department
  • Detective Brian Moon, Kennesaw Police Department
  • Firefighter Ron Presley, Marietta Fire Department
  • Deputy Sheriff Tyrone Reid, Cobb County Sheriff’s Office
  • Police Officer Matthew Smith, Kennesaw Police Department
  • Field Intelligence Officer Greg Stacy, Kennesaw State University Police Department
  • Training Manager Krista Tillman, Puckett EMS
  • Detective Evan Wallace, Acworth Police Department
  • Battalion Chief Stephen Westbrook, Smyrna Fire Department

Public Safety Units

  • Cobb Fire EMS Division, Cobb County Fire Department
  • Officers Quinius Lyles & Andrew Abernathy, Cobb County Police Department
  • CCPD Community Affairs Unit, Cobb County Police Department
  • KSU Office of Victim Services, Kennesaw State University DPS & University
  • Police Department
  • MPD Crime Interdiction Unit, Marietta Police Department
  • Officers Taylor Elliott, Robert Pfeiffer & Jake Prough, Smyrna Police Department

Award winners will be announced and celebrated at the October 5 Public Safety Appreciation luncheon. Sponsors include, Platinum Sponsors, Cobb EMC and Wellstar Health System; Award Sponsor, LoRusso Law Firm; Gold Sponsor, Genuine Parts Company; Silver Sponsors, C.W. Matthews Contracting, GLOCK, Governors Gun Club, Marietta Family Catering, Marietta Wrecker, MetroAtlanta Ambulance Service, Puckett EMS, Six Flags Over Georgia and Vinings Bank; and Patriot Sponsors, All Roof Solutions, E. Smith Heating & Air, Firehouse Subs, Gregory Doyle Calhoun & Rogers, LLC, Georgia Power, LGE Community Credit Union, Northside Hospital, T&T Uniforms, and Walton Communities Apartment Homes.

For more information on Public Safety Appreciation Week, visit cobbchamber.org/publicsafety, or contact Katie Guice at [email protected].

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East Cobb Food Scores: East Cobb Tavern; Reveille Cafe; more

East Cobb Tavern

The following East Cobb food scores from Sept. 28-Oct. 2 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Arby’s
2161 Roswell Road
October 1, 2020 Score: 99, Grade: A

Clean Juice
1205 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 124
October 1, 2020 Score: 96, Grade: A

Delray Diner
2475 Delk Road
October 1, 2020 Score: 85, Grade: B

East Cobb Tavern 
4401 Shallowford Road, Suite 138
October 1, 2020 Score: 87, Grade: B

El Rodeo Mexican Restaurant
2719 Canton Road
September 28, 2020 Score: 82, Grade: B

Fresh to Order
1333 Johnson Ferry Road
September 30, 2020 Score: 92, Grade: A

Marlow’s Tavern
1311 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 208
October 1, 2020 Score: 91, Grade: A

Planet Smoothie/Tasti D Lite
4805 Canton Road, Suite 300
September 29, 2020 Score: 83, Grade: B

Reveille Cafe
2960 Shallowford Road, Suite 114A
October 1, 2020 Score: 87, Grade: B

Vespucci’s Pizza & Pasta Tavern
4805 Canton Road, Suite 100
September 29, 2020 Score: 92, Grade: A

WZ Tavern East Cobb
3052 Shallowford Road, Suite 104
September 30, 2020 Score: 80, Grade: B

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Sprayberry Crossing rezoning case continued to November

Sprayberry Crossing rezoning

For the second time, the Sprayberry Crossing rezoning case is being continued.

Atlantic Realty Acquisitions LLC, an Atlanta-based apartment developer that is proposing a mixed-use project on the grounds of the downtrodden Sprayberry Crossing retail center, asked for the continuance until November.

The case, initially filed for the September zoning calendar, was to have been heard Tuesday by the Cobb Planning Commission.

(A summary of Tuesday’s meeting agenda can be found here.)

Another site plan is in the works for the Sprayberry Crossing project, which would include 61,500 square feet of office and retail space (30,000 for a major grocer), 178 apartments, 122 senior-living apartments and 50 townhomes on more than 17 acres.

The developer also wants to build an open-air entertainment and food hall and incorporate walking trails and greenspace around an existing family cemetery.

Atlantic Residential is seeking a rezoning category called  redevelopment overlay district (ROD), for the first time since it became a category in 2006.

The ROD use allows for redevelopment of blighted properties, and specified that any development would not set a precedent for the surrounding area.

Residents in the Sprayberry Crossing area have organized to urge redevelopment for years, and have been working with Atlantic Residential, which conducted a Zoom town hall meeting in August.

But opponents have objected to the apartment units, saying they’re incompatible with a community that’s overwhelmingly made up of neighborhoods with single-family homes.

More recently, questions have arisen about whether apartments can be included in the Sprayberry Crossing project at all.

The minutes of the Cobb Board of Commissioners’ April 27, 2006 meeting reflect a 4-0 vote to include ROD stipulations specifically pertaining to the Sandy Plains/East Piedmont corridor in the county’s comprehensive land-use plan.

(You can read those here, on the last two pages).

Those stipulations include limiting residential development to no more than four units an acre, and to no more than 60 percent of a proposal’s land use.

The majority of the Sprayberry Crossing’s proposal is residential, and the 350 proposed living units on the 17-acre property would come to 20.5 units an acre.

In addition, the stipulations limit building height to 35 feet; the current Sprayberry Crossinng site plan calls for two five-story buildings that would exceed that height.

The only commissioner not to vote on those measures, ironically enough, was the late Tim Lee, then the District 3 representative for the Sandy Plains/East Piedmont area, and who later became the county chairman.

Tim Carini, leader of a Facebook group opposing apartments at Sprayberry Crossing, wrote in a letter to planning and county commissioners last month that those stipulations must stand, even though they were not included in the 2007 Comprehensive Plan.

He said that was an error since there wasn’t a vote by commissioners to remove the stipulations.

“The residents of this area worked diligently with the BOC in 2006 to create a smart plan for this area, much like the residents who worked with the BOC on the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford master plan recently,” Carini wrote in a letter dated Sept. 17, before the latest continuance was requested. “A vote approving ROD-1 will diminish the trust Cobb County residents have for their elected officials.”

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Georgia public health emergency extended through Nov. 9

Kemp lifting shelter-in-place order

Gov. Brian Kemp has again extended a public health emergency in Georgia first ordered in March, and is continuing certain safety precautions related to COVID-19 mitigation.

On Wednesday he extended the public health emergency for another month, through Nov. 9, that sets provisions to enhance coordinated response from government and the public sector for supplies, testing and health care capacity.

The “Empowering a Healthy Georgia” provision goes through Oct. 16 and “continues to require social distancing, bans gatherings of more than 50 people unless there is six feet between each person, outlines mandatory criteria for businesses, and requires sheltering in place for those living in long-term care facilities and the medically fragile, among other provisions.”

Those orders were set to expire at midnight Thursday.

One of the changes in the new order allows restaurant employees who have tested positive for the virus to return to work if they are symptom-free for 24 hours. Previously, that period was three days.

Georgia has had 318,026 COVID cases as of Wednesday, and 7,021 deaths. In Cobb County, there have been 19,740 cases and 427 deaths.

But the rate of new cases has dropped steadily since the summer. Cobb County now has a 14-day average of 126 cases per 100,000. Public health officials consider 100 cases per 100,000 “high community spread.”

In Cobb County, public health officials continue to urge citizens to observe hand-washing, mask-wearing and social distancing practices.

They’re also suggesting that people get flu shots before the winter sets in, and that people aged 65 and over get pneumonia shots.

Of Cobb’s COVID 427 deaths, nearly 75 percent have been people 70 or older, and nearly 94 percent have been 50 and older. Eighty-two percent of those who have died have had known underlying health conditions regardless of age.

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Census deadline extended; Cobb response rate 70%

Cobb census response rate

Sept. 30 had been the deadline for returning U.S. Census forms, but that’s been extended to Oct. 31 by a federal judge for COVID-19 reasons.

The Secretary of Commerce had asked the deadline be pushed only to next Monday, Oct. 5, and collection operations still could be halted before the end of the month.

We posted a couple weeks back that the self-response rate in Cobb County was 66 percent; it’s now risen to 70 percent, both via traditional mail and online.

You can check response rates via Census tracts, Congressional districts and more by clicking here; the darker colors indicate higher response rates, as some in East Cobb are in the high 80s.

Federal funding for hospitals, schools, transportation and other services is based on Census data that’s done once in a decade.

Cobb GIS has more Census information here, including a link to complete a form; you can also visit the Census website here to fill out a form.

 

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Candidate profile: Mike Boyce, Cobb Commission Chairman

Cobb budget town hall, Mike Boyce, Cobb public safety bonus, Cobb millage rate

As the county’s Republican standard-bearer in the Nov. 3 general election, Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce has made it clear for several weeks that party turnout has to be better than it was during the June 9 primary that he won with ease.

Even though he dispatched two GOP candidates with 68 percent of the vote, Boyce got only half the overall vote as the unopposed Democratic candidate, Cobb commissioner Lisa Cupid, his general-election foe.

She received 90,446 votes to 45,257 for Boyce, whose absentee votes (28,493) trailed Cupid’s election-day results (36,145).

In a year in which absentee balloting is looming large, those numbers look especially ominous for Republicans against an energized base of Democratic voters at all levels.

Cupid’s also outraised Boyce with more than $161,000 in campaign contributions, and had more than $80,000 in cash on hand at the end of June, according to her latest financial disclosure report.

Boyce by comparison has raised around $102,000 overall for his re-election bid and had nearly $40,000 on hand shortly after the primary.

“We still need more Republican votes,” said Boyce, an East Cobb resident, “but we can’t do this alone.”

That helps explain why he’s been campaigning a lot in recent weeks in South Cobb, Cupid’s home turf, where she has been the District 4 commissioner since 2013.

After knocking off incumbent chairman Tim Lee in the 2016 GOP runoff, Boyce didn’t have a Democratic opponent.

But the Democratic surge in Cobb began that November, when Hillary Clinton edged Donald Trump to become the first Democratic presidential candidate to win the county since Jimmy Carter in 1976.

Two years ago Stacey Abrams’ Democratic gubernatorial campaign won in Cobb and several Democrats were swept into office, including Lucy McBath in the 6th Congressional District and Charisse Davis for the Post 6 school board seat in East Cobb.

“What I saw in 2018 in the governor’s race is that there are a lot of Democrats in Cobb County,” Boyce said. “Democrats have done a better job of developing a base and getting out the vote. But I’m not conceding anything.”

Boyce said he’s proud of his record that he said has restored financial stability, increased popular services and begun to improve salary and benefits for public safety employees.

(Here’s Boyce’s campaign website.)

East Cobb News has interviewed Cupid and her profile can be found here.

Boyce defends his 2018 property tax increase, pointing to the commissioners’ vote two years before—on the day he beat Lee in a runoff—to lower the millage rate. He said that resulted in a $30 million deficit before he took office.

The tax hike didn’t sit well in some GOP circles, including the Cobb County Republican Party, which spoke out against it. He’s been called a RINO (Republican In Name Only) by some, but Boyce said in looking out for the interests of citizens countywide, “you have to be based in reality.”

He said the additional revenue boosted the county’s budget contingency, which now stands at around $100 million. Boyce said he heard loud and clear from residents about quality-of-life matters like more parks and longer library hours.

“The people are owed the truth,” he said. “You have to tell them, ‘If this is what you want, then this is what it’s going to cost.’ ”

Boyce maintains that his fiscal practices area in line with his Republican predecessors, but that “people love their amenities.”

In 2019, Cobb public safety employees and their advocates began pressing for better pay and retention policies, and commissioners responded with a step-and-grade system that includes regular salary increases for qualified workers.

Cupid was his strongest backer for the tax increase, which he said enabled the public safety step-and-grade to be implemented. She also served as Boyce’s vice chair for two of the four years he’s been in office.

Lately, however, he’s been campaigning Austell and South Cobb, a Democratic stronghold where Cupid had no opposition in the 2016 primary or general election.

“You have to see what I’ve been seeing,” Boyce said, explaining his reasons for making a concerted presence there.

“She’s had no competition. What I’m hearing is that they don’t know who she is.”

Of his campaign funding differences with Cupid, Boyce said he’s raised more than $10,000 in July and maintains that “we have exactly the amount of money we need to run the kind of campaign we need to have.”

Boyce said he’s pressing what’s essentially a non-partisan message, to reach “those who will hear what you’re saying and doing. They’re willing to cross party lines.

“This time you have to go for the November voter,” he said. “A lot of them know me but we’re giving them my record. We’ve responded to what the needs of the county have been.”

Unlike 2016, however, he’ll be on a general-election ballot with Trump in a county that’s a clear suburban battleground at the local, state and federal levels.

“I’m a Republican and I believe in loyalties,” Boyce said, deflecting a question about his level of support for the president. “What I focus on every day is, ‘Have I done all I can for Cobb County?’ ”

He said he’s hearing some from citizens about the challenges the county faces in the aftermath of economic fallout from COVID-related lockdowns, but he can’t make any projections now.

“Nobody knows what the impact is going to be,”  Boyce said. “I don’t know what the future holds, but the future has not looked better.”

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Ga. Secretary of State’s office creates absentee ballot tracker

Cobb Absentee Ballot Envelope

If you’ve filled out an absentee ballot or will be doing so for the November elections, you can keep track of what happens when you turn it in.

The Georgia Secretary of State’s office has created an absentee ballot tracker that lets you follow the status of that ballot.

The tracker was launched over the weekend, and you simply fill out your date of birth and ZIP Code (just like you do when you check your voter registration status), and you’ll be asked to register to receive e-mail or text message updates.

Those notifications will come when a ballot application is accepted, when the ballot is sent and if and when that ballot is accepted or rejected. 

According to a statement from the Secretary of State’s office, “voters whose absentee ballots are rejected will be provided with the contact information to fix the issue so they can be assured their vote will be counted.”

Last week Cobb Elections officials added absentee ballot dropboxes, including the Gritters and Mountain View libraries, bringing to 16 the number of dropboxes around the county. 

They also are at the East Cobb Government Service Center and the Sewell Mill Library. 

The dropboxes are secured and have surveillance cameras installed, and will be collected daily by multiple Cobb Elections staffers.

Absentee ballots can be deposited there 24/7 up through 7 p.m. on the Nov. 3 election day.

Absentee ballot applications can be requested from Cobb Elections by clicking here, and you can also get a prompt to a customized application that will be mailed to you.

The deadline for registering to vote is Oct. 5, and you can do that and check your registration status, polling location and get sample ballots by clicking here. More information about registering can be found here.

Advance voting begins Oct. 12, and one location in the East Cobb area that had been designated for that purpose, Noonday Baptist Church on Canton Road, will be unavailable.

Cobb Elections said anyone who had been planning to vote early at Noonday can go to The Art Place-Mountain View (3330 Sandy Plains Road) from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday-Friday from Oct. 12-30 and from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 17 and 24.

Those same advance voting dates and times will take place at the East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road).

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‘Voices for America’ rally in Cobb to support local police

Submitted information about an event taking place Saturday morning:

America is at a crossroads. As citizens we have been shamed into silence. We will be SILENT NO MORE! We will DEMAND that our Law Enforcement is funded. We will take a stand against racism! We will rise up in support of Law Enforcement and America? This rally gives you the opportunity to support our brave law enforcement officers who put their lives on the line every single day for our safety.
“Voices for America – Silent No More” is about everyday citizens speaking out in support of Law Enforcement. They are The Thin Blue Line that keeps society from descending into violent chaos. Under current policy, police often are prohibited from defending themselves and protecting our communities. We must stand against tyranny and hold our politicians accountable. We invited all elected officials and candidates from both sides to sign a pledge in support of law enforcement. Those who signed the pledge are invited to join us. (Click link to View / Sign the pledge) https://heritageaction.com/policepledge
We hope you will join like-minded American Patriots who are willing to stand up, showing our Police Officers that CITIZENS BACK THE BLUE and honor the THIN BLUE LINE!
For caravan and more event info click on this link.
https://www.dropbox.com/…/VFA-SNM%20Rally%20FLYER.pdf… 

Voice of America rally Cobb

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Blackjack Mountain water main replacement getting underway

Blackjack Mountain Water Project

On Monday construction crews began the Blackjack Mountain water main replacement, which stretches from I-75 and Barnes Mill Road to the Quarles treatment plant on Lower Roswell Road.

A new 36-inch main will replace the 30-inch piping that’s there now. There are some traffic closures that also started Monday as well, as explained below by the Cobb County-Marietta Water Authority:


Garney Construction is the contractor for the project and is already in progress of mobilizing and performing clearing operations for the replacement that will occur from Holt Road working westbound towards Barnes Mill Road inside of CCMWA’s utility easement. We are expecting to start replacement of the water main near the intersection of Barnes Mill Rd. and Hwy 41 on Monday 9/28, and continue working east along Barnes Mill towards the dead end at I-75. We have lane closures that will also occur in this reach inside the City of Marietta limits, within the 9AM to 4PM timeframe.

We also expect to start jack and boring operations under Roswell Road (GA-120), just south of Wood Trail Lane, within the next two weeks. Any clearing/above ground disturbance work related to the jack and bore should be outside of the existing GDOT Right-of-Way, and have no impact to traffic on Roswell Road.

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Cobb school-by-school lists of face-to-face, remote choices

Pope High School, Cobb SAT scores
Around 70 percent of Pope students have opted for in-person learning, the highest for a Cobb County School District high school.

More than half of all Cobb County School District students have indicated they will be returning to classrooms.

As of late Saturday, a total of 56,284 students have opted for face-to-face learning, or 52.3 percent, compared to 41,036 students, or 38.1 percent who will remain with the remote option for the rest of the fall semester.

That’s when updated district-wide, grade-level and school-by-school breakdowns were distributed by Cobb Board of Education member David Banks in his e-mail newsletter.

Another 10,296 students, or 9.6 percent, had not responded. Earlier last week, the district said around 49 percent of students opted for going back to school, but had no school-by-school figures.

Banks said in his newsletter those figures will be subject to change since they are being updated.

A total of 58.7 percent of elementary school students will be returning Oct. 5, after this coming week’s fall break. The middle school return date is Oct. 19, and 54.2 percent will be going back. On Nov. 5, high school students can learn in-person, and as of now 42.7 percent have chosen that option. But more than 15 percent of students have not responded.

Elementary schools

Several elementary schools in East Cobb are reporting more than 70 percent of their students chose face-to-face schooling.

Those include Garrison Mill (78.1), Mt. Bethel (77.1), Tritt (76), Davis (75,1), Timber Ridge (71.1) and Rocky Mount (70.2).

Schools that will have more than 40 percent staying remote include Brumby (47.2) and Sedalia Park (41.4), and Powers Ferry is at 38.5 percent for now. Powers Ferry (12.9) and Brumby (11.7) are in double-figures in the no-response rate.

Middle Schools

Nearly three-quarters of all students at Mabry Middle School in East Cobb have selected in-person learning. At East Cobb Middle School, 42.9 percent will be returning, 41.2 will remain remote, and 15.9 percent have not responded.

High Schools

Pope tops the high school face-to-face list, with 70.6 percent saying they’ll be coming back to campus in early November. Lassiter is at 63.3 for face-to-face and Walton is at 52.2 percent. Kell and Sprayberry are nearly even, but 17.1 and 18.5 percent of students there have not responded.

Thus far 53 percent of Wheeler students chose the remote option, but 11.3 percent have not responded.

The Cobb school district has said that students who have not made a choice must do so through the principal at their assigned school. For information visit the Cobb schools Learning Everywhere portal.

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