East Cobb Food Scores: IHOP; Suburban Tap; Los Bravos; more

East Cobb Food Scores, Suburban Tap

The following East Cobb food scores from Sept. 17-25 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for details of the inspection:

IHOP 
3130 Johnson Ferry Road
September 22, 2020 Score: 97, Grade: A

J.J. Daniell Middle School
2950 Scott Drive
September 24, 2020 Score: 100, Grade: A

Jersey Mike’s Subs
2960 Shallowford Road, Suite 106
September 23, 2020 Score: 90, Grade: A

Los Bravos
2125 Roswell Road, Suite B-40
September 21, 2020 Score: 75, Grade: C

Mazzy’s Sports Bar & Grill
2217 Roswell Road, Suite A-200
September 25, 2020 Score: 100, Grade: A

Starbuck’s Coffee
2424 Roswell Road, Suite 1
September 24, 2020 Score: 99, Grade: A

Suburban Tap
1318 Johnson Ferry Road
September 21, 2020 Score: 92, Grade: A

Wellstar East Cobb Health Park Parkside Bistro
3747 Roswell Road
September 25, 2020 Score: 100, Grade: A

Zeus Greek Street Food
2022 Powers Ferry Road, Suite 130
September 17, 2020 Score: 42, Grade: U

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The Avenue East Cobb presents Date Night Dinner and a Move

The Avenue East Cobb Date Night

Submitted information:

Create a magical evening together at our Dinner & Drive In Movie Friday September 25th – featuring one of the following: Sleepless In Seattle, Pretty Woman or When Harry Met Sally. Vote for your favorite by commenting on The Avenue East Cobb facebook page https://www.facebook.com/avenueeastcobb/.

The Avenue East Cobb restaurants and eateries will be offering either Curbside Pickup or Car Delivery. RSVP by purchasing a $15 ticket PER VEHICLE/parking space. https://datenightdrivein.eventbrite.com.

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Cobb public safety agencies welcome additions to K-9 corps

New Cobb K-9 dogs

From Cobb government about Tuesday’s Cobb Board of Commissioners: meeting that “went to the dogs” with the introduction by commissioner JoAnn Birrell of new K-9 additions for public safety agencies:

“‘Vinny’ is a 2 ½ year old black Labrador Retriever who works with Lee Maness. Maness has been with Cobb for 17 years as both a Police Officer and a Firefighter. He is currently an Investigator II assigned to the Fire Investigations Unit with Vinny, who is trained to detect ignitable liquid accelerants.

“Officer Barlett was accompanied by ‘Brave,’ a brindle colored Dutch Shepherd. Barlett has served with the Cobb County Police Department since November of 2004. K9 Brave was purchased with a donation from the Atlanta Braves. We thank them all for their service to our community.”

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Let East Cobb News know what your organization is doing, or share news about what people are doing in the community—accomplishments, recognitions, milestones, etc.

Pass along your details to: [email protected], and please observe the following guidelines to ensure we get everything properly and can post it promptly.

Send the body of your announcement, calendar item or news release IN TEXT FORM ONLY in the text field of your e-mail template. Reformatting text from PDF, JPG and doc files takes us longer to prepare your message for publication.

We accept PDFs as an accompaniment to your item. Images are fine too, but we prefer those to be JPG files (more than jpeg and png). PLEASE DO NOT send photos inside a PDF or text or any other kind of file. Of course, send us links that are relevant to your message so we can direct people to your website.

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Cobb COVID case counts falling close to spread threshold

Cobb COVID case counts fall

For the last two months the rate of new COVID-19 cases has been falling steadily in Cobb County.

After high spikes during the early summer in the number of cases, test positivity rates and other metrics, those numbers have reached levels that public health officials have targeted for reopening of schools, among other things.

Cobb is closing on 20,000 cases, with 19,283 as of 3 p.m. Wednesday, according to the Georgia Department of Public Health.

That’s the third-highest total in the state, trailing Fulton County (27,247) and Gwinnett County (26,931). Cobb’s death count of 423 is second only to 568 in Fulton County.

But the downward shift in slowing the spread of the virus is one of the more encouraging trends in Georgia.

The chart above is the Cobb case progression according to the date of onset (meaning the day a positive test was confirmed).

Compared to the single-day high in terms of seven-day moving average of 296 on July 11, that rolling total was down to 79 as of Sept. 9, two weeks ago from today.

Georgia DPH issues a 14-day rolling average line (at the far right in the graphic above), indicating that data in that window is likely to be added due to lags in reporting.

One of the key metrics noted by Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale in his decision to phase in classroom return starting in October is the cases per 100,000 people figure.

The Cobb Geographic Information Systems unit released the graphic below earlier Wednesday showing another steep drop in that figure.

Cobb GIS COVID 140-day per 100k chart

Public health advisors have said that anything more than a 14-day average of 100 cases or more per 100,000 is considered high community spread.

When Ragsdale announced the Cobb schools reopening, he said he was aiming for an average of between 100 and 200.

After Cobb’s two-week rolling number topped out close to 500 in early August (noted on blue line) it’s now down to 146 per 100,000.

That’s a trend that’s occurring through metro Atlanta and a good portion of the state.

At Tuesday’s Cobb Board of Commissioners meeting, Chairman Mike Boyce noted the numbers and thanked Cobb citizens for doing their part to slow the spread of the virus.

He has been reluctant to issue a mask mandate, but asked citizens to continue following what he has called a “nice mask ask,” as well as regular hand-washing and physical distancing practices.

Some Georgia cities and counties have imposed mask mandates, but Gov. Brian Kemp has not made a statewide edict. The current hot spots with high averages of cases per 100,000 people are in various rural areas.

A total of 309,678 confirmed cases of COVID-19 have been reported in Georgia, with 6,773 deaths.

Those include 1,577 cases and 98 deaths reported on Wednesday. Cobb reported 95 new cases and no new deaths.

Another positive metric for Cobb is a drop in the percentage of positive tests. On Wednesday, for the first time since early June, that number in the county was five percent. Anything over that is considered is a high figure according to public health officials.

In Cobb that seven-day moving average topped out around 30 percent in late March and was in double figures until mid-July.

The Cobb and Douglas Public Health agency updates those and other county figures, including the pie chart below breaking down Cobb COVID cases by age group.

While more than three-quarters of those who have died in Cobb are 70 and older, the biggest age groups with positive tests are younger.

Cobb cases by age CDPH 9.23.20

 

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East Cobb man charged with 8 counts of aggravated assault on police

A man who Cobb Police said barricaded himself at a home in East Cobb for several hours Tuesday after firing gunshots has been charged with eight counts of aggravated assault on police officers.Northeast Cobb car crash, Cops on Donut Shops

Cobb Sheriff’s Office records show that Donald Terry Welborn Jr., 57, is being held without bond at the Cobb County Adult Detention Center.

He is accused of shooting at officers after he fired a weapon in a bedroom where his wife was sleeping, and striking the homes of neighbors with gunfire.

Welborn was booked Tuesday on the aggravated assault charges, which are felonies, and three misdemeanor counts of reckless conduct for the other shootings.

Welborn, whose home address is listed as 2518 Kingsley Drive, off Post Oak Tritt Road and near Johnson Ferry Road, was apprehended there shortly after noon on Tuesday, according to Cobb Police.

According to a criminal warrant taken out against Welborn, he was at that address around 5:30 a.m. and went into a bedroom where Susan Welborn was sleeping, then shot at a ceiling fan.

According to Cobb court records, she is Welborn’s wife, but they had been separated. Susan Welborn filed for divorce in Cobb Superior Court later Tuesday afternoon. The filing states they had been married since 1994, but the marriage was “irretrievably broken” and that they had been living in a “bona fide state of separation.”

The warrant also states that Welborn was inside the residence when he shot at the homes of two neighbors, one next door and another across the street, striking their homes.

A statement issued Wednesday afternoon by Sgt. Wayne Delk, a Cobb Police spokesman, said the first officers who arrived at the scene said they heard shots coming from a residence at 2518 Kingsley Drive and that were fired in their direction.

The warrant alleges that eight officers were shot at by Welborn outside the home.

The Cobb Police SWAT team and a crisis negotiation team later arrived and “after an extended negotiation” the suspect, identified as Welborn, was arrested without injuries to him or the officers.

Delk further said that a police bomb squad checked the house and no explosive devices were found.

Police said a 911 dispatcher got a call from Kingsley Drive in the New Castle neighborhood around 5:30 a.m. of gunshots being fired, both inside a home and outside in the neighborhood.

Police blocked off the New Castle and nearby Arthur’s Vineyard neighborhoods while negotiators attempted to get a man to come out of his home.

Delk said Wednesday that the incident remains under investigation and anyone with information is asked to call the Cobb County Police Department’s Crimes Against Persons Unit at 770-499-3945.

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Tim D. Lee Senior Center reopening delayed due to renovations

East Cobb Senior Center
Three Cobb County senior centers will be reopening Oct. 5 after being closed since March due to COVID-19 restrictions.

But the Tim D. Lee Senior Center in East Cobb will remain closed for an unspecified time because of ongoing renovations.

County spokesman Ross Cavitt said the renovations are extensive, and are related to roofing issues caused by water leaks, and that “COVID has made the progress slower than we had hoped.”

He said Cobb Senior Services has retained an engineering firm to work on a redesign to direct water away from the north side of the building, which has had water retention issues after rain. Cavitt said a reopening date hasn’t been determined.

The senior centers are the last county facilities to reopen from COVID-19 closures. Those reopening on a limited basis Oct. 5 are the Freeman Poole Senior Center in Smyrna, the Cobb Senior Wellness Center in Marietta and the West Cobb Senior Center. The North Cobb Senior Center will reopen on Nov. 5.

Those centers will be subject to additional safety protocols and and other measures which can be found here:

“Everyone must be registered in advance before coming to a center, temperature screenings will be conducted at the door, and rooms will be setup to allow social distancing. While there will be some in-person activities, we will continue to offer virtual programs on our Facebook pages and via online links. We have given much thought and care in preparing for seniors to return and are eagerly looking forward to seeing them.”

Kathy Lathem, strategic partnership manager for Cobb Senior Services, said the department continued to provide transportation for seniors for medical appointments, shopping and banking, and also continued Meals on Wheels. Here’s more about what’s been happening over the last seven months:

“We began partnering with local organizations and the community for donations of shelf stable items and toiletries; WOW, did they ever respond!! From April thru mid-July, we were able to hold weekly food giveaways for Cobb residents age 60+, resulting in:

  • 2,677 people served
  • 1,260 produce/dairy boxes given
  • 2,335 restaurant meals provided

“After a break to secure more donations, the food giveaway resumed on September 3rd. The next one takes place this Thursday, September 24 at our office, 1150 Powder Springs St, Marietta, 30064 from 11am until Noon, or while supplies last. An ID showing birth date and Cobb County home address is required upon arrival for each senior being served. Visit www.CobbSeniors.org for upcoming dates and locations.”

There’s a continuing food drive with needed items listed below.

 

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Cobb schools issue mask guidance; 49% of students returning

Cobb schools mask guidanceThe Cobb County School District has issued specifics on face masks that will be required for everyone when students begin returning to classrooms on Oct. 5.

That includes teachers, staff, students and any visitors in district school buildings at all times.

The guidance instructs parents to provide a mask for their children that fully covers the mouth and nose, is “secure under the chin” and “fits securely against both sides of the face.”

The guidance said the Centers for Disease Control does not recommend masks that have an exhalation valve or vent, and face shields are not a substitute for masks.

If students don’t wear a mask, they will be asked to do so, and a disposable mask will be provided.

If the student still refuses, the parent will be called to pick up their child “and a conference will be held to discuss the option of digital instruction.”

Any students who continue to refuse to wear a mask will be considered “insubordinate” and will be subject to the district’s student code of conduct.

The district guidance allows for some exceptions that include medical conditions and students with disabilities.

The district says in its guidance that students uncomfortable wearing masks should wear them for short periods before returning to school “so that they become accustomed to wearing a mask.”

The district’s face mask policy includes extracurricular activities, including sporting events, even outdoor football games.

More guidance about masks can be found here.

At last week’s Cobb Board of Education meeting, two board members tried to get a face mask requirement in the district’s dress code policy. Their attempts were turned down, but they said the would bring the matter up for discussion in October.

The period for choosing in-person or remote learning ended Sunday, and 52,000 of the district’s 112,000 students, or 49 percent, will be coming back to their schools.

Another 37,000 students, or 35 percent, will continue remote learning through the end of the fall semester.

There also are 18,000 students, or 16 percent, whose parents had not made a choice as of Sunday. They will have to notify their child’s home school of their decision.

Elementary school and special education students will be returning on Oct. 5, followed by middle school students Oct. 19 and high school students Nov. 5.

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Cobb commissioners narrowly approve new diversity council

Cobb diversity council approved

By a 3-2 vote the Cobb Board of Commissioners Tuesday approved the creation of what will be called the Council for Peace, Justice and Reconciliation, a citizens’ body that will report to the county manager.

The objective of the appointed body will be to “develop proactive solutions embracing diversity by collaborating with government and community stakeholders to make Cobb County a more inclusive and enjoyable place for all citizens to live, learn, work and visit.”

(See previous ECN post here.)

The council was proposed by Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce, who was one of the votes in favor, along with commissioners Bob Ott and JoAnn Birrell of East Cobb.

But Lisa Cupid, the commission’s only black member, and its only Democrat, was one of the votes against the measure, saying it “was difficult to digest this with any seriousness.”

Not only was there not a work session, she said the resolution expressing the board’s sentiment in reaching out to the diverse communities of the county isn’t backed up by recent votes.

Among them was the board rejecting her proposal earlier this month for three county non-profits to provide rental assistance with federal CARES Act funding. That program will instead be administered by an out-of-county non-profit that’s also working with Cobb homeowners affected financially by COVID-related closures to make mortgage payments.

“This board doesn’t foster that kind of collaboration,” she said in reference to the Cobb non-profits, further objecting to the resolution initially being put on Tuesday’s consent agenda.

Cupid, who is challenging Boyce in the chairman’s race in November, said that while she supported the resolution in spirit, she understood how it might look if she voted against it. She said she first heard about the proposed council on Aug. 27, and at one point said she “just got tired of playing along.

“What’s the detriment to me if I say no right before an election?”

Republican commissioner Keli Gambrill of North Cobb opposed the resolution for other reasons, saying she thought it would be a “quasi-shadow government in the name of diversity.”

She also didn’t like that there wasn’t a work session and thought the council “would have a direct bearing on county policy.”

Birrell said she had some initial reservations but thought there had been ample time for commissioners to express their concerns about the resolution.

Ott, who is retiring at the end of the year, said he has been involved in three previous attempts to re-form what had been the Cobb Community Relations Council.

That body, formed in the early 1990s, has dissolved, and he said it’s important for there to be continuing dialogue in Cobb across racial, religious and cultural lines.

“We can’t just sit back while Rome burns,” Ott said. “Is this perfect? No.”

But he said “it’s more healthy when there is disagreement because it opens discussions and dialogue. It allows things to change.”

Ott said he was pleased that Ben Williams of the Cobb chapter of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, an occasional critic of the county on racial issues, endorsed the resolution.

During a public comment before the vote Tuesday, Williams said the language is “clear, strong and resolute, reflecting where this board is.”

Cupid said in reference to Williams’ remark that “I’m not convinced of that.”

Boyce was the only commissioner who did not take part in the discussion.

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Canton man arrested in hit-and-run death of I-75 worker

Marietta Police said Tuesday they’ve charged a Canton man with the hit-and-run death of a construction worker on Interstate-75 near Delk Road on Sept. 13.Marietta Police

Police said in release Tuesday that Daniel Broder, 20, was booked into the Cobb County Adult Detention Center on felony charges of first-degree vehicular homicide and another felony count of hit-and-run resulting in serious injury or death.

According to Cobb Sheriff’s Office records, Broder is being held without bond.

Police said Martin Rivera, 30, of Chicago, was hit twice by vehicles as he was placing signage on the I-75 shoulder just north of Delk Road near 9 p.m. on Sept. 13.

Police said the first vehicle, a black Volkswagen Golf GTI, hit Rivera and drove away from the scene. The force of the first collision threw Rivera into the path of another vehicle, which police said stopped and the driver cooperated with the investigation.

Police said at the time that the Volkswagen may have “abruptly” exited I-75 at the South Marietta Parkway.

Police said they got an anonymous tip on Monday and worked leads to identify the suspect and his vehicle, and made the arrest at Broder’s home.

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Update: Man barricaded in East Cobb home taken into custody

Cobb Police SWAT East Cobb home

UPDATED, WEDNESDAY, 12:30 P.M.

Police have charged Donald T. Welborn Jr., of 2518 Kingsley Drive in East Cobb, with eight counts of aggravated assault on police officers. He is being held without bond.

UPDATED, TUESDAY, 12:40 P.M.

Cobb Police said they have taken the barricaded man into custody and that the standoff ended peacefully with no injuries.

They said the neighborhood will be reopening soon.

ORIGINAL STORY, POSTED 11:07 A.M.:

Residents of two East Cobb neighborhoods were ordered to shelter-in-place Tuesday morning while Cobb Police SWAT officers responded to a call of a barricaded man in his home.

Police said around 7:30 a.m. Tuesday that shots were “actively being fired” at a home on Kingsley Drive in the Newscastle subdivision, near Post Oak Tritt Road.

Police also ordered residents of Kingsley Drive between Castle Lane and Vineyard Court to remain in their homes. The entrance to the New Castle and Arthur’s Vineyard neighborhoods also have been blocked off by police.

Police were called to the scene after neighbors reported shots around 5:30 a.m.

Sgt. Wayne Delk, a Cobb Police spokesman, said in a statement around 9:30 a.m. that a man was shooting both inside and outside the home, but no injuries have been reported.

Delk said police believe the man is home alone, but he didn’t have any information about what type of weapons were used in the shootings.

“Obviously we’re taking this very seriously in shutting down the neighborhood for the safety of everyone,” Delk said in a press briefing.

He said Cobb Police SWAT team members and negotiators have been in contact with the man, but he wouldn’t elaborate.

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Tokyo Valentino business license revocation hearing delayed

Tokyo Valentino East Cobb

A due cause hearing for revoking a business license for the Tokyo Valentino adult retail store in East Cobb is being delayed until Oct. 27.

The hearing was to have taken place Tuesday night before the Cobb Board of Commissioners.

The county said that the delay is taking place because Tokyo Valentino lawyers have submitted open records requests for information.

The county notified Tokyo Valentino Sept. 8 it was suspending a business license granted in March because of what the Cobb Community Development Agency said was false and misleading information provided in the application.

Those details included the name listed on the application, 1290 Clothing Co. LLC, the store’s inventory and misrepresentations it said Tokyo Valentino owner Michael Morrison made to the news media about his intentions for the East Cobb store.

Tokyo Valentino opened in a vacant Mattress Firm store space in June without needing rezoning or any action from the county, other than a business license that was granted in March.

Considerable opposition came from nearby residents before the store opened, as first reported in May by East Cobb News.

Commissioner Bob Ott of East Cobb said at the time there wasn’t anything the county could to stop the store from opening.

Last month, he proposed an overhaul of the county’s sex shop ordinance that would further restrict such businesses, and those measures passed unanimously without much public discussion.

In June, the Marietta City Council revoked the business license of a Tokyo Valentino store on Cobb Parkway for 180 days, saying the store inventory didn’t match what was on its application.

Tokyo Valentino is appealing that decision in Cobb Superior Court.

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Cobb schools Class of 2020 tops national, state SAT averages

Walton High School, East Cobb SAT scores

Despite disruptions due to COVID-19 closures, the Class of 2020 of the Cobb County School District surpassed both the U.S. and state averages in scores on the Scholastic Aptitude Test.

The district said in a news release Monday that the “nationwide mean score on the college-entrance test was 1030 out of a possible 1600. Statewide, Georgia students beat the national score by 13 points with an average score of 1043.”

Four East Cobb schools led the way in the 16-high school district, with Walton’s 1,272 overall average (635 verbal/637 math) at the top of the list.

Pope and Lassiter tied with 1,195 overall (Pope: 606/589, Lassiter: 602/593), and Wheeler with an 1,160 overall (581/579).

Kell’s overall score was 1,061 (539/522) while Sprayberry’s was 1,040 (539/501).

The Cobb average score was 1107, which is down from 1114 in 2019, and that reflects a slight drop across the country.

The district said 1,350 fewer tests were given in 2020. A total of 5,283 Cobb school district students took the test, second in the state to Gwinnett. That 1,107 score is better than the averages of the top five school districts in the state, including Gwinnett, DeKalb, Fulton and Clayton.

Here’s more from Georgia school superintendent Richard Woods:

“The class of 2020 has faced unprecedented adversity and uncertainty due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Given all they have overcome, I am so proud of these students for becoming the third graduating class in Georgia history to beat the national average on the SAT. I continue to be optimistic about the future of Georgia public schools as our students, teachers, and schools continue to surpass expectations and outperform their peers nationally.”

Scores were down slightly across the entire country in 2020. Cobb’s overall score was 1,114 in 2019.

Cobb school district students averaged 564 in verbal sections and 544 on math, compared to 520/510 nationwide, and 532/511 in Georgia.

Walton’s 1,272 score was third in Georgia, trailing only the Gwinnett School of Math, Science and Technology (1,361), Northview in North Fulton (1,282).

The scores released Monday were only for public schools. Full school-level and district-level results can be found here.

Earlier this month the Georgia Department of Education said it would be eliminating half of the Georgia Milestones end-of-course requirements for current high school students, given the varying start dates and virtual learning operations of districts due to COVID-19 measures.

More high school testing information for the 2020-21 school year in Georgia can be found here.

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East Cobb restaurant update: Five Guys, Panera Bread opening soon

Five Guys East Cobb opening

We’re still waiting to get official word on a specific date but the new Five Guys location in East Cobb is a step closer to opening.

The former Del Taco space at the East Cobb Crossing Shopping Center (4269 Roswell Road) has been converted over the past weeks, and the final stages of the project are in progress.

That includes getting a business license, which the Cobb Community Development Agency said was issued Sept. 16.

Typically restaurants get business licenses right before opening their doors. We’ve left several messages with Five Guys for more details and will pass that along when we get them.

East Cobb Crossing also will be the location for the newest Publix store in East Cobb, with plans underway to occupy space next to Dick’s Sporting Goods. That was to have taken place this fall but there’s not an opening timetable forthcoming.

Five Guys, which specializes in gourmet hamburgers, has 48 other locations in Georgia, including Austell, Smyrna, Kennesaw, Sandy Springs, Roswell and Woodstock.

Also last week, a business license was granted for a Panera Bread location at the new MarketPlace Terrell Mill (1430 Terrell Mill Road).

It will be the second East Cobb location, along with The Avenue East Cobb. A Panera Bread location closed several years ago at the Pavilions at East Lake, on the site of a new Kroger gas station.

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Cobb Diaper Day drive being held virtually through September

Cobb Diaper Day

Submitted information:

The Cobb Diaper Day Committee announces that it is holding its 12th Annual Diaper Day virtually, due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The annual community-wide effort to collect diapers for low-income families is occurring throughout the entire month of September. Organizations, companies and individuals are encouraged to donate to the Barbara Hickey Children’s Fund (managed by Cobb Community Foundation), purchase diapers through their Amazon Wish-list and hold diaper drives, especially during Diaper Need Awareness Week, being held September 21 – 27. All diaper donations will be given to the Cobb Douglas Public Health Teen Pregnancy Program, Communities in Schools of Georgia in Marietta/Cobb County, liveSAFE Resources, MUST Ministries, Ser Familia, Simple Needs GA and Sweetwater Mission for distribution to help ease some of the burdens of the thousands of families in critical need.

Through the efforts of the Cobb Diaper Day Committee, founded by the late Barbara Hickey, more than one million diapers have been donated to assist low-income families in Cobb County. The goal this year is to donate more than 110,000 diapers.

Low-income families often have the daily stress of choosing between food and diapers. Prolonged wearing of a wet diaper causes diaper rash, and a crying baby leads to more stress in the home. Low-income families also face the facts that:

  • Food stamps do not include hygiene products, such as diapers.
  • On average, the cost to purchase diapers is approximately $100/month.
  • Day care centers require parents to provide their own diapers.

Barbara Hickey reminded us all that, oftentimes, it is the little things in our lives that make the biggest difference, when she envisioned the community coming together to support local families in need.

For more information, visit www.cobbdiaperday.com.

Send Us Your News!

Let East Cobb News know what your organization is doing, or share news about what people are doing in the community—accomplishments, recognitions, milestones, etc.

Pass along your details to: [email protected], and please observe the following guidelines to ensure we get everything properly and can post it promptly.

Send the body of your announcement, calendar item or news release IN TEXT FORM ONLY in the text field of your e-mail template. Reformatting text from PDF, JPG and doc files takes us longer to prepare your message for publication.

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PHOTOS: Enjoying a sunny end to summer at East Cobb Park

East Cobb Park summer end

After a heavy rains temporarily closed down East Cobb Park last week, the park was a very popular place to be on Sunday.

Sunny skies and temperatures near 70 degrees marked the final weekend of the summer, and that weather will continue into Tuesday, when fall begins.

The autumnal equinox is scheduled for around 9:30 a.m. Tuesday. The forecast calls for highs in the low 70s and lows in the high 50s and low 60s for most of the week, with rain moving in from Wednesday through Saturday.

The first full week of fall, starting a week from today, is expected to be like it is now: sunny and warm, up to the high 70 during the day.

In addition to the recreational and sporting activities in the quad, there was also live music at the East Cobb Park concert shell, and a Rosh Hashanah celebration along the banks of Sewell Mill Creek.

East Cobb Park summer end

East Cobb Park summer end

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Cobb schools release more K-5 reopening details, video

Cobb K-5 reopening plans
A demonstration of an elementary school class. K-5 students and special ed students can return Oct. 5.

After Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale explained some of the scenarios for classroom instruction to the school board Thursday , the district released further details and a video Friday showing what they might look like.

What the district calls its “Learning Everywhere” plan calls for the teaching of students in classes and remotely simultaneously, with grades K-5 and special education students at all levels forming the first reopening phase Oct. 5.

The technology-focused approach, Ragsdale said, “is the only way we can minimize disruptions if a school or a class needs to quarantine.”

Teachers will be instructing in their classrooms in the traditional fashion, and will have a large video screen and connect with remote students via a computer. Students also will be expected to complete their classwork at the same time.

The district said that all lessons will be archived on its Cobb Teaching and Learning System portal for future review if that’s needed.

Cobb K-5 reopening plans
A demonstration of a virtual student completing classwork in real-time from home.

“This won’t be a normal school day like it was in 2019,” Ragsdale said to the school board about face-to-face learning.

Cobb schools began the school year Aug. 17 in an all-remote environment, with class days on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday.

When students return, the four-day instructional schedule will remain, with Wednesday reserved for independent study, teacher-student consultations and small group discussions.

The reopening plans call for middle school students to return Oct. 19 and high school students on Nov. 5.

Parents of students at all grade levels have until Sunday to make their choice of either in-person or remote learning for the fall semester.

Once that choice is made, that student will have to stay in the chosen learning environment for the rest of the semester.

Ragsdale said it’s likely similar options will be available for the spring semester after the new year.

“I think this is going to be the environment for the entire school year,” he said.

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Cobb proposes Council for Peace, Justice and Reconciliation

East Cobb anti-Semitic incidents
Faith leaders in East Cobb attended an event at Temple Kol Emeth in August following the discovery of anti-Semitic graffiti scrawlings in nearby neighborhoods. (ECN file)

An effort to reconstitute a dormant human relations commission in Cobb County will come before county commissioners on Tuesday.

Chairman Mike Boyce is proposing the creation of the Cobb Council for Peace, Justice and Reconciliation, with the intent to “develop proactive solutions embracing diversity by collaborating with government and community stakeholders to make Cobb County a more inclusive and enjoyable place for all citizens to live, learn, work and visit.”

Council members would be appointed by commissioners, and several organizations also would have appointed members, including the Cobb Chamber of Commerce, the Cobb chapter of the NAACP, the Cobb chapter of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the Cobb County Bar Association and Kennesaw State University.

Additional members who “represent the diversity within Cobb County” would be chosen by council members, and those in county government leadership positions “will serve as subject matter experts as issues/opportunities arise.”

The proposal to create the council comes after commissioners approved an anti-racism resolution in June, following protests sparked by the death of George Floyd, a black man, at the hands of Minneapolis police.

Last month, faith and community leaders gathered to offer a message of hope and love after anti-Semitic graffiti was found spray-painted in neighborhoods in East Cobb.

It was at that event, at the Temple Kol Emeth synagogue in East Cobb, that commissioner Bob Ott said a new appointed body was in the works.

The former human relations commission dissolved due to what he said was veering away from its mission.

That panel was formed after Cobb commissioners approved a resolution condemning “the gay lifestyle” in 1993. That came about when then-commissioner Gordon Wysong of East Cobb objected to county arts funding that included the Theater in the Square, which had been showing a play about a gay relationship.

The anti-gay resolution caused a national media frenzy and prompted Atlanta Olympic organizers to pull volleyball matches slated for the Cobb Galleria Centre and a torch relay route in the county before the 1996 Olympics.

The issue dogged Bill Byrne, the county chairman at the time, as he ran for his old seat in 2012 and he had to answer to it when he ran for commissioner in 2014.

Among those involved with the human relations commission was Rabbi Steven Lebow, recently retired from Kol Emeth, who organized a protest against the anti-gay resolution on the Marietta Square.

The proposed Council for Justice, Peace and Reconciliation would serve under the direction of Cobb County Manager Jackie McMorris and included in its mission is the following:

” . . . identify opportunities across a broad spectrum to assist in the education and mitigation of systemic, institutional, and structural racism. It shall provide opportunities for members of the community to participate in small group discussion, anti-racism training, and access resources to foster and improve open and honest communication among governmental entities, Cobb County residents and employees. It shall inform the community about the goals of CJPR and encourage organizational and community partnerships through conferences, workshops, and special events.”

You can read the agenda item here and the proposed resolution here.

The Cobb commissioners meeting starts at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the second floor board room of the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., in downtown Marietta.

You can watch online on the county’s website, as well as its Facebook and YouTube pages and on Cobb TV23 on Comcast Cable.

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Rotary Club of East Cobb delivers food to MUST Ministries

East Cobb Rotary MUST Ministries

Submitted photo and information:

Members of the East Cobb Rotary Club met socially for about 15 minutes in September when they brought nearly $1,000 worth of canned goods and mac and cheese for MUST Ministries. MUST is a volunteer organization in Cobb County dedicated to helping homeless and struggling individuals for food, housing, clothing, and employment. Check them out at WWW.MustMinistries.org.

Send Us Your News!

Let East Cobb News know what your organization is doing, or share news about what people are doing in the community—accomplishments, recognitions, milestones, etc.

Pass along your details to: [email protected], and please observe the following guidelines to ensure we get everything properly and can post it promptly.

Send the body of your announcement, calendar item or news release IN TEXT FORM ONLY in the text field of your e-mail template. Reformatting text from PDF, JPG and doc files takes us longer to prepare your message for publication.

We accept PDFs as an accompaniment to your item. Images are fine too, but we prefer those to be JPG files (more than jpeg and png). PLEASE DO NOT send photos inside a PDF or text or any other kind of file. Of course, send us links that are relevant to your message so we can direct people to your website.

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Cobb requests revocation of Tokyo Valentino business license

Tokyo Valentino East Cobb

The Cobb Board of Commissioners will consider a request to revoke the business license of the newly opened Tokyo Valentino adult retail store on Johnson Ferry Road in East Cobb.

UPDATED: The hearing has been postponed until Oct. 27.

At the end of Tuesday’s meeting is an agenda item from the Cobb Community Development Agency that would revoke the business license on the grounds that the applicant provided false and incomplete information.

Technically, what will be conducted is a “due cause hearing,” similar to attempts to revoke alcohol licenses, with the licensing agency making its case and allowing the license holder to present a defense.

Tokyo Valentino opened in a vacant Mattress Firm store space in June without needing rezoning or any action from the county, other than a business license that was granted in March.

Considerable opposition came from nearby residents before the store opened, as first reported in May by East Cobb News.

Commissioner Bob Ott of East Cobb said at the time there wasn’t anything the county could to stop the store from opening.

Last month, he proposed an overhaul of the county’s sex shop ordinance that would further restrict such businesses, and those measures passed unanimously without much public discussion.

In June, the Marietta City Council revoked the business license of a Tokyo Valentino store on Cobb Parkway, saying the store inventory didn’t match what was on its application.

A Sept. 8 letter from Ellisia Webb, the Cobb Community Development Agency’s business license division manager, to Tomika Hugley, the Johnson Ferry Road store’s applicant, charges that she applied for the license under the business name of 1290 Clothing Co. LLC.

“That is false information because the business at 1290 Johnson Ferry Road has never done business or held itself out to the public as ‘1290 Clothing,’ ” the letter states. “It is instead doing business as ‘Tokyo Valentino.’ ”

(You can real the full letter here.)

Webb also charges that Hugley did not fully state what the inventory in the store would contain, as required in the business license application, listing only retail clothing merchandise, including undergarments, shoes and games.

The top three items in the store, Webb said, citing an Aug. 28 listing from Hugley, are “lotions & lubes,” “toys” and “smoke products.”

Webb said those products constitute 70 percent of the store’s inventory, but the application didn’t mention them at all. The only product mentioned in the application that was later included on the inventory list was lingerie, which Webb said constituted only 14 percent of what’s in the store.

Webb also charges that Hugley is improperly listed on the business license application as the president and manager of the store, when state incorporation papers list Scott Morrison, the owner of several Tokyo Valentino and other adult stores in Atlanta, as the store’s organizer.

The other grounds for business license revocation in Webb’s letter include Hugley claiming the applicant had no delinquent taxes due. According to Webb, Morrison owes back business occupation taxes in several jurisdictions, including Gwinnett County.

Webb further details what she said are numerous misrepresentations made by Morrison to news media outlets and even to Hugley about his intentions for an East Cobb store.

Until his Marietta store was closed, Morrison had six adult retail stores in metro Atlanta, and has had legal battles in various jurisdictions.

His main store, on Cheshire Bridge Road in Atlanta, has been the subject of a legal dispute lasting two decades and that includes a civil rights lawsuit he has filed.

In late May, a DeKalb County judge ordered Morrison jailed in a longstanding matter involving his Stardust adult store in Brookhaven.

Morrison has vowed to appeal that ruling and the business license revocation in Marietta.

The Cobb commissioners meeting starts at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the second floor board room of the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., in downtown Marietta.

You can watch online on the county’s website, as well as its Facebook and YouTube pages and on Cobb TV23 on Comcast Cable.

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Cobb to live-stream Monday information event on rental assistance

Submitted information:Cobb County Government logo

The Cobb Board of Commissioners approved $6 million in emergency funding to provide rent and mortgage relief grants for county residents affected by COVID-19. These programs are administered by Star-C and HomeFree-USA.
To help you understand the programs and application process, we will host a virtual open house 6-8 p.m., Monday, Sept. 21.

You can watch at any of the following CobbTV outlets:

Margaret Stagmeier of Star-C and Earnest Davis of HomeFree-USA will be on hand to share all the information you need about these relief programs. You can also submit your questions to [email protected].
Watch the open house online or at the following locations:
  • North Cobb Regional Library – Community Room, 3535 Old 41 Highway, Kennesaw
  • Sewell Mill Cultural Center – Black Box Theater, 2051 Lower Roswell Road, Marietta
  • The Earl and Rachel Smith Strand Theatre, 117 N Park Square, Marietta
  • South Cobb Recreation Center – Gym, 875 Riverside Parkway, Austell
IMPORTANT NOTE: We are NOT completing applications on-site at the open house. Limited seating available at streaming locations. Attendees must wear masks and observe social distancing guidelines.

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