How a popular East Cobb restaurant responded to a failed health inspection

Zeal Kitchen & Bar, East Cobb restaurant, health inspection

Ever since Scott Sawant opened Zeal Kitchen & Bar in late 2013, his debut East Cobb restaurant on Johnson Ferry Road never had much to worry about when health inspectors arrived.

The twice-a-year inspections had resulted in three perfect scores of 100, a few more in the 90s and just one below that, an 86.

The graduate of Wheeler High School and its culinary program had carved out a niche in an East Cobb restaurant scene suddenly brimming with high-end options, focusing on what he calls a “chef-driven” menu catering to a decidedly suburban palate.

When Zeal’s familiar inspector from Cobb and Douglas Public Health showed up unannounced (as all inspectors do) on April 5, however, something very different was about to transpire.

Instead of the usual half-hour or so it took to conduct the inspection, this one lasted longer, more than two hours, by his accounting. It took place between lunch and dinner, he said, before staff could conduct a post-lunch cleaning.

Several violations, in the kitchen and around it, even regarding the menu and where the health inspection reports were posted, began to pile up. The result: A score of 61 for Zeal, a failing grade. This had never happened before.

Here’s a link to the full report, which included citations for improper storage of food, unlabeled chemical spray bottles, and one that was made especially public, a buildup of mildew in the front kitchen area.

“Mildew is a word that’s so scary for customers,” said Sawant, who added that he didn’t smell any, and that he has long contracted with a company that does such hygiene-oriented cleaning on premises weekly.

Sawant was shocked and upset. He thought some of the violations were technicalities, such as a container of grits not being warmed at a proper temperature, although he said he explained to the inspector that the container wasn’t in the kitchen area and the grits weren’t going to be served. However, that was good for a nine-point deduction.

Another violation indicated that Zeal’s bar menu didn’t disclose that one of the cocktails is made with egg whites, although that information is on the main restaurant menu.

“We fixed everything right away,” Sawant said.

When inspectors arrived several days later (as they do to follow up a failed inspection), Zeal received a perfect score of 100 (here’s the link to that report).

More restaurant news

Sawant said he was alternately relieved but also still concerned about what his regular customers, as well as potential new customers, would think. Zeal has won several awards, including at the Taste of Marietta, and for its gluten-free options.

“It feels like you failed somebody in a relationship,” he said. “We’ve had good relationships with so many of our customers for nearly five years.”

He decided that being forthcoming about the inspection was the best way to go. He sent out an e-mail to “friends and community supporters” (East Cobb News also received a copy) explaining what had happened. He said that while he disagreed with the score, “my goal is to continue to focus on doing the right things and the right outcomes will follow.”

Sawant told us in an interview this week that failing a health inspection is far worse than getting bad reviews, since the latter “are so subjective.” He said he estimates the lost business to the restaurant since the failed inspection has cost him around $36,000.

But fixing the problems, he said, are paramount. A second failed inspection could result in at least the temporary closure of a restaurant.

“If you fail again, you don’t deserve to serve the public,” Sawant said. “I’m fine with that.”

It’s been a difficult month or so for Sawant and his Zeal staff of 28 for other reasons, too. One of their fellow employees, Alexander Seidnitzer, died in a motorcycle accident on Johnson Ferry Road in late March, and Zeal held a special event at the restaurant in his memory.

Sawant, who got his start in the restaurant industry by working at LaMadeleine at Providence Square and then by serving that company as a corporate trainer, said he’s tapped into that background, and by tightening food storage and cleaning procedures, during what’s been his most challenging time as a business owner.

He said a number of customers have sent him messages of support, and only one has been negative.

“We’re going to continue to do what we do,” Sawant said, “because we’ve been doing so well.”

 

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EAST COBB WEEKEND EVENTS: Taste of East Cobb; Sope Creek Garden Club Plant Sale; Art in the Park; more

East Cobb this weekend, Sope Creek Garden Club Plant Sale

The flowers outside Eastside Baptist Church aren’t officially part of Friday’s Sope Creek Garden Club Plant sale that kicks off a full slate of East Cobb Weekend Events, but it’s certainly an enticing invitation to get and stay outdoors.

The weather’s going to be splendid most of the weekend, with cloudy skies and a chance of rain showers on Saturday.

The plant sale mentioned above takes place from 11-6 Friday at Eastside Baptist (2450 Lower Roswell Road), and there’s free admission. In addition to the plants, they’ll be selling decorative garden items, containers, plant stands and related items as part of one of their primary fundraisers;

A first-time 5K race and fun run takes place early Saturday at Mt. Bethel UMC (4385 Lower Roswell Road). It’s the Project 82 Kenya 5K Race for Good, a ministry of the church that works to provide education and health care services for orphaned children in Kenya. The registration cost is now $40, and sign-in starts at 6 a.m. on race day. It’s also a USATF qualifier and age-group winners will receive beaded necklaces made in the East African nation and brought back for the race;

One of the community’s tastiest days is Saturday, with the 13th annual Taste of East Cobb from 11-5, rain or shine, at Johnson Ferry Baptist Church (955 Johnson Ferry Road). Admission is free for the Walton HS band fundraiser, and sample tickets vary from $1-$5, with nearly 30 local restaurants participating. There’s also live entertainment from the Walton Jazz Band, a Kids’ Zone, other vendors, a raffle and silent auction and a chance to vote on your favorite flavors;

Needle felting with a floral theme is the subject of a 2D Felted Spring Tulip Workshop from 2-4 Saturday at the Mountain View Regional Library (3330 Sandy Plains Road). The cost is $25 plus a $10 supply fee;

On Sunday morning, get up bright and early with the inspirations of Claude Monet’s gardens at an Art in the Park session at East Cobb Park (3322 Roswell Road). The session for all ages lasts from 8:30-11:30 a.m. (rain or shine) and is conducted by ABC Easel, which wants you to register beforehand by calling or texting 678-478-3002 or via email at abceasel@gmail.com.

Did we miss something? Do you have calendar item to share with the public? Send it to us, and we’ll post it. Our e-mail address is: calendar@eastcobbnews.com.

Check out our full calendar listings for more things to do, this weekend and beyond. Have a great weekend!

 

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Bells Ferry Road murder suspect arrested; police seeking another man

Jemarquis Wright, Bells Ferry Road murder suspect
Marietta Police are looking for Je’marquis Wright 

An update to a shooting on Bells Ferry Road last Friday that left a man dead: One suspect has been taken in to custody, and police are looking for another man they’re saying is “wanted for questioning.”

Marietta Police said Thursday afternoon that Mehki Hilali, 18, has been charged with murder, aggravated battery, possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime and aggravated assault with intent to murder.

Tyon Demeko Gorman, 19, was found shot at a small strip shopping center on Bells Ferry near Williams Drive and later died at a hospital, according to police. They said that a white vehicle with a rear spoiler was seen leaving the area after the shooting and was heading north on Bells Ferry Road.

According to Cobb Sheriff’s Office records, Hilali has a Dallas, Ga., address, and was booked in the Cobb County Adult Detention Center Wednesday night and is being held without bond.

Police also have released the accompanying photo of another man, Je’marquis Wright, 17, (shown above), who is wanted for questioning about the shooting.

Marietta Police said anyone with information is asked to call their detectives line directly at 770-794-6990) or contact Crime Stoppers Atlanta at 404-577-TIPS if they wish to remain anonymous.

 

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East Cobb Restaurant Update: Jason’s Deli coming to former Sage/Chequer’s/Houlihan’s space

Jason's Deli, East Cobb

Some readers have asked, and we’ve been been able to get an answer: Jason’s Deli is coming to East Cobb, where Sage Social Kitchen, Chequers Seafood and Houlihan’s have come and gone.

But it won’t be for a while.

The Texas-based fast casual eatery chain operates 275 restaurants in 28 states, including 16 in Georgia and two in Cobb, near Cumberland and Town Center malls.

Brandi Alexander, a spokeswoman for Jason’s Deli, told East Cobb News only that “this location is planned to open in fall of this year. Unfortunately, that is all of the information we can provide at this time.”

The Merchants Festival location (1401 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 334) has been empty for nearly a year since Sage Social Kitchen closed in April 2017, after only a few months in business.

In addition to traditional deli-style menu options, Jason’s Deli also serves burgers, salads (and a salad bar), vegetarian dishes, soups, pasta entrees and a kid’s menu.

More restaurant news

 

 

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East Cobb-based e-commerce retailer Magnolia Ann wins small business award

Susie Simpkins, Magnolia Ann

Press release:

Local e-commerce retailer, Magnolia Ann has been named a winner of The 2018 American Small Business Championship by SCORE, the nation’s largest network of volunteer,expert business mentors. The Championship awarded this title to 102 entrepreneurs (2 per state) for their dedication to the success of their small businesses, awarding them an all-expense-paid trip to a training and networking event, SCORE mentoring and publicity throughout the year, and a chance to win one ofthree $15,000 grand prizes, made possible with the support of Sam’s Club.

Magnolia Ann earned the title of American Small Business Champion by submitting an online application describing what makes their business one of the best small businesses in their community, and how they plan to use the prizes to grow their business. Nominations that garnered at least 100 votes were then presented to a judging panel of small business experts that determined 102 winners including Magnolia Ann.

“We are so grateful to receive this recognition for the obstacles we have overcome as a small business.Thank you to our wonderful community both locally and online for supporting us and helping us succeed.This would not have been possible without you,” says Susie Simpkins, owner of Magnolia Ann.

Magnolia Ann is also eligible to win one of three additional $15,000 grand prizes, by being named Grand Champion. A judging panel of small business experts will select three Grand Champion from the group of small business champions this summer. Selection will be based on how effectively Champions utilize their prizes to grow business revenue or operations, as well as how effectively the winners promoted the Championship in the media and social media.

 

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Fundraising drive continues for funeral expenses for Powers Ferry Road crash victim

A reader who saw Sunday’s fatal Powers Ferry Road crash alerted us to this GoFundMe page that has been started to pay for the funeral expenses for Miraylla Sousa, a 23-year-old woman who died in that wreck. 

Her car was struck by a car driven by Ryan Michalski, 31, who also died. Thus far the fundraiser has exceeded the $10,000 goal set by organizers, just a day after the appeal went out. They noted that Sousa was on her way to visiting her mother when the crash took place.

Sousa, who is from Brazil, also leaves behind a brother and a two-year-old nephew. We’re working to get more information about that as Cobb Police continue investigating the wreck.

Police said witnesses told them the car driven by Michalski had been speeding in the northbound lane of Powers Ferry Road, and was passing other cars in the center turn lane, then veered into a southbound lane and crashed into Sousa’s car at Meadowbrook Lane, just north of Powers Ferry Elementary School.

Michalski’s car caught fire, according to police, who said he and Sousa were pronounced dead at WellStar Kennestone Hospital.

According to an obituary for Michalski, who lived in the East Cobb area, he was a guitarist and musician. Donations are being accepted in his memory to the Shepherd Center in Atlanta.

 

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Cobb commission District 3 candidates discusses taxes, budget deficits and more at civic forum

Three of the four Cobb commission District 3 candidates on the May 22 primary ballot turned out Tuesday night for a wide-ranging forum in Marietta, and explained their views on the county budget, spending and taxes, traffic and transit, zoning and development and other issues.

Tom Cheek, Cobb commission District 3 candidates
Tom Cheek

The only candidate not present was the person who currently holds that Northeast Cobb seat. Republican JoAnn Birrell, who is running for her third term, was a no-show at the forum, which was sponsored by the Cobb County Civic Coalition.

The other sitting commissioner seeking re-election, Republican Bob Weatherford of District 1 in West Cobb, also was absent.

The event was moderated by Dick Yarbrough, a columnist for The Marietta Daily Journal.

The two Democratic District 3 candidates, James Smith and Caroline Holko, said they favored raising the millage rate to solve the county’s estimated $30 million budget deficit for fiscal year 2019.

Birrell’s primary opponent, civic activist and software account manager Tom Cheek, who described himself as a “ferocious taxpayer advocate,” said he wants to see more detailed figures about how big the budget gap really is.

“No one has convinced me of the accuracy” of the projected budget deficit, he said in response to an audience question posed to all the candidates. “Until we get a grip on proper budgeting . . . I’m not ready to give up the millage rate we have now.”

Cheek advocates taking unused SPLOST dollars for lower-tier projects and placing them in the general fund budget (via a referendum process), looking to privatize some government functions and getting out of “the parking deck business . . . the golf course business . . . and the [Braves] stadium security business.”

Caroline Holko
Caroline Holko

The Cobb general fund millage rate is currently 6.76, a figure that was lowered in 2016. Birrell, who has said she does not favor increasing property taxes, voted for that reduction.

Smith, a retired Cobb County-Marietta Water Authority manager who’s involved with the Canton Road Neighbors civic group, frequently cited the lack of pay raises and benefits for county workers in his remarks about taxes.

He noted that salaries for Cobb firefighters and police officers are 12 and 17 percent, respectively, below the national average. “We’re trying to do more with less,” he said. “We’re not giving people a living wage and benefits to keep them here.”

While Cobb rightfully touts itself as having one of the lowest tax rates in the metro Atlanta area, Smith said, “but at what cost?”

Cheek also noted that a starting full-time police officer’s salary in Cobb is less than the pay for a part-time county commissioner, and he would work to change that.

Holko, a former non-profit administrator and home-schooling mother with liberal views, admitted she doesn’t come from a “traditional political background” in a conservative district. She advocates more transit options for Cobb citizens, and opposes proposed cuts in the Cobb library system and increases in fees for senior services.

James Smith, Cobb commission District 3 candidates
James Smith

Holko said raising the property tax rate one mill would cost an average Cobb homeowner around $100 more a year. “I can blow that in Target in about five minutes,” she said.

She and her family moved to Cobb from New Orleans several years ago, attracted by the tax rate but also the services they provide.

However, she said, “to watch that continued to be chipped away at is heartbreaking.”

When asked to specify how she would cut the budget, she said “I don’t really support any significant budget cuts.”

Smith said he would like to see the line items in county government departments, and it’s “darn near impossible” to get that information now.

Cobb commission chairman Mike Boyce, a Republican from East Cobb, has suggested a 1.1-mills increase but hasn’t released a full budget proposal. He’s scheduled budget town hall meetings for next month, with budget adoption in July.

Related stories

On the subject of transit, Holko urged the marketing budget for CobbLinc be increased “so people know it exists.”

Smith said that “whatever we do needs to go to a referendum.” Cheek is more doubtful increasing transit, citing heavy costs and a small ridership for commuting. He’s also skeptical of a new state law to create a new Atlanta-area regional transit authority.

The candidates agreed on the need for greater transparency and on zoning and development and sticking to the land use plan, and concurred that stipulation letters agreed to by developers should not be used to circumvent the county code.

District 1 challengers Kelli Gambrill and Forrest Shealy also participated in the forum.

Advance voting began in Cobb on Monday, and continues through May 18.

 

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Long-delayed Wigley Road rezoning case held again until July

Wigley Road rezoning case, Provence Estates, Oak Hall Companies
A rendering of homes in the proposed Provence Estates development.

A Wigley Road rezoning case that has been delayed for months is being held up again after major revisions to the application that have prompted traffic and stormwater concerns.

The Cobb Planning Commission on Tuesday voted for a 60-day hold on a rezoning application by Atlanta-based Oak Hall Companies, LLC, which wants to build 92 single-family homes on 96 acres currently zoned R-30, low-density residential.

Here’s the agenda item packet for what would be called Provence Estates, with homes ranging from 3,000 to 4,000 square feet. Oak Hall had requested zoning to R-20 OSC, a low-density residential designation with open-space provisions.

Cobb zoning staff is recommending that the land be rezoned R-30 OSC to include more conservation easements because of the hilly terrain of the property.

The land is from the estate of Audra Mae Wigley and was part of the Wigley Farm in Northeast Cobb. Initially, the Oak Hall application was for 55 acres. Parks Huff, an attorney for Oak Hall, said Tuesday that his client “wanted to bring in both pieces of property at the same time.”

The land is north of Sweat Mountain and has a steep topography that has prompted concerns about stormwater runoff. Plans call for nearly half of the tract to be open space, and there would be 50-foot undisturbed buffers on the eastern and southern edges of the property.

Dave Evans, who lives on Wigley Road, said 40 percent of runoff from the property flows into a lake near his home, and worries that additional stormwater would overwhelm capacity.

The other stormwater routes are into neighboring Cherokee County and the nearby Falcon Crest subdivision.

Dave Breaden of the Cobb Stormwater Management Department admitted that “we’ve got a challenge to control runoff on this site.” Several retention ponds are included in the Oak Hall site plan.

Included in the staff comments is a request for the developer to provide a preliminary rough grading plan.

Others noted traffic issues. Cobb DOT currently estimates around 40 daily traffic trips in that area, a figure some residents said would jump to around 1,000.

The Oak Hall site plan (see illustration) also would cut off an adjacent cluster of homes that abut the Cherokee County line from Cobb-provided public services, including traffic access to Wigley Road.

In order to sort through all those issues, Planning Commission chairwoman Judy Williams, who represents the area in District 3, asked for the vote to hold the application until July. The vote was 4-0, with Thea Powell, also of Northeast Cobb, absent due to what Williams said was a family emergency.

Tony Garcia, who lives on Summitop Road, said given the housing that’s already in the area, the homes that would be built in Provence Estates don’t “fit into the character of Wigley Road.”

But planning board member Skip Gunther said that the land “is going to get developed one way or another,” and that the R-30 OSC designation is a “no-brainer.

“It’s going to generate traffic, but it’s going to be less than it otherwise would be.”

 

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2 killed in Powers Ferry Road accident Sunday afternoon

Powers Ferry Road accident, April 29 2018
via OpenStreetMap

The drivers of two vehicles that collided in a Powers Ferry Road accident on Sunday were killed, Cobb Police said.

Ryan Michalski, 31, and Miraylla Sousa, 23, both of East Cobb-area addresses, died after being taken to WellStar Kennestone Hospital, Cobb Police Officer Sarah O’Hara said.

O’Hara said the crash took place at 4:10 p.m. Sunday on Powers Ferry Road, at Meadowbrook Lane, when a black 2006 Ford Fusion driven by Michalski collided with a white 2013 Kia Optima driven by Sousa.

The intersection is just south of Powers Ferry and the South Marietta Parkway, and just north of Powers Ferry Elementary School.

Police said the Ford was traveling northbound on Powers Ferry when it veered into the southbound lane and into the path of the Kia. O’Hara said witnesses told police the Ford had been speeding and passed other vehicles in the center turn lane before the crash.

The Ford caught fire and was heavily damaged in the collision and landed on a shoulder, while the Kia came to a stop in the intersection, O’Hara said.

She said the accident remains under investigation and that anyone with information should call the Cobb County Police Department’s STEP Unit at 770-499-3987.

 

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EAST COBB THIS WEEK: Candidates forum; Canton Road open house; library events and more

It’s back to school (but only for a few more weeks!) and work, but not after a glorious weekend with spring-like weather that will continue as April turns into May in East Cobb this week:

Advance voting begins Monday in Cobb, with the East Cobb Government Service Center holding advance voting the week of May 14-18. As we posted over the weekend, Cobb Elections is looking for poll workers for the May 22 primaries. You’ll be paid for the days you work at the precincts, as well as required training;

This is the final week for the “In Her Father’s Eyes” exhibit at East Cobb Library, a tribute to a Holocaust victim by her surviving father. The panels are located just inside the entrance to the library branch, and can be viewed during regular opening hours;

From 5-7 p.m. on Tuesday, Cobb DOT is holding an open house for upcoming Canton Road transportation projects at Blackwell Elementary School. There’s no formal presentation, just ask-and-answer availability with staff;

District 3 Cobb Commission candidates have been invited to a forum at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the commissioners meeting room in downtown Marietta that’s being organized by the Cobb County Civic Coalition. Here’s more about the candidates with links to their websites;

Also on Tuesday, take your questions about local law enforcement from 6-8 p.m. to the Chick-fil-A Eastlake. It’s the latest Cobb Police Coffee with a Cop session, which is becoming a regular event in East Cobb and around the county;

Knitters, crocheters, quilters and others who enjoy needlework can bring their projects to the Mountain View Regional Library from 1-3 Thursday. I’d Rather Be Stitching is a weekly drop-in event for those who enjoy visiting with other crafters while they work. It’s free and no registration is required.

Check out the rest of our calendar listings, for this week and beyond, and send us calendar items you’d like to share with the public. E-mail us at: calendar@eastcobbnews.com.

The weather is going to be magificent all week, with sunshine and temperatures in the mid-70s to low-80s, and cloudy skies moving in Thursday through the weekend.

Whatever you’re doing this week, make it a great one!

 

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Cobb commission candidates forum slated for Tuesday

This week may be your only occasion to hear all Cobb commission candidates in one place, in both parties, before the May 22 primaries.

There’s a forum sponsored by the Cobb County Civic Coalition Tuesday, and Democratic and Republican candidates for District 3 in Northeast Cobb and District 1 in North Cobb have been invited to attend. Cobb County Civic Coalition, Cobb commission candidates forum

The forum lasts from 7-9 p.m. and will be held on the second floor of the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., in downtown Marietta.

That’s the meeting room for the Cobb Board of Commissioners, and if you can’t attend the forum it will be shown on the Cobb government access channel, TV 23 for Comcast subscribers.

The District 3 seat is being contested in both parties. Republican incumbent JoAnn Birrell is seeking her third term.

She is being opposed by Tom Cheek, a civic activist who filed ethics complaints against former Cobb commission chairman Tim Lee for his handling of the Atlanta Braves stadium deal. A software account manager, Cheek is a first-time candidate for public office.

On the Democratic side, two first-time candidates are running as well: retired Cobb water system employee James Smith, and Caroline Holko, a stay-at-home mother.

Here are the District 3 candidates websites:

Advance voting for the primaries begins on Monday, and Cobb Elections is looking for poll workers to help out on May 22 and beyond.

Here’s a rundown on East Cobb-area public offices that will be on the ballot, and we’ll have more shortly on those races that have contested primaries.

 

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Canton Road transportation improvements subject of open house next week

Canton Road transportation improvements

Major Canton Road transportation improvements are coming, and the public is invited to learn more about them and ask questions of Cobb DOT staff at an open house on Tuesday.

The open house is from 5-7 p.m. at Blackwell Elementary School (3470 Canton Road), which is about the midway point along a route on Canton Road for the biggest project in this corridor.

The project, numbered X2602 (details here) includes the addition of turn lanes and sidewalks from the Cherokee County line to Kurtz Road, and also involves changes at the Canton Road-Piedmont Road intersection. It’s estimated to begin early next year, with a completion date in mid-2020 at a cost of $2.6 million.

Another project, X2304 (details here), will add a northbound right turn lane onto Canton Road at the intersection of Highland Terrace, just south of Shallowford Road. Construction is expected to begin late next year and the cost estimate is $696,000.

Both projects are being funded with collections from the Cobb 2016 SPLOST.

Tuesday’s open house will not have a formal presentation.

 

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Police investigating Bells Ferry Road fatal shooting Friday night

 

 

Bells Ferry Road fatal shooting, Marietta Police
Marietta Police say a 19-year-old man was shot at a gas station and convenience store at 1750 Bells Ferry Road and Williams Drive Friday, and later died. (Marietta Police photo)

UPDATED, Thursday, May 3, 4:30 p.m.: Marietta Police have charged an 18-year-old with murder in this case and are looking for another teenager.

Marietta Police say a Bells Ferry Road shooting on Friday night has left a 19-year-old man dead, and that they’re searching for a vehicle that left the scene.

Tyon Demeko Gorman, 19, died after being transported to WellStar Kennestone Hospital, police said.

Police said that a white vehicle with a rear spoiler was seen leaving the area and was heading north on Bells Ferry Road.

Police said officers were called to a small strip shopping center at 1750 Bells Ferry Road, just north of Interstate 75, at 6:22 p.m., and found that a black male had suffered at least one gunshot wound.

He was lying on the ground in front of the businesses when police, Marietta Fire and Metro Ambulance units responded, Marietta Police said.

Marietta Police said they had no other details available, but that anyone with information is asked to call contact Detective Mark Erion at 770-794-6990.

 

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Man dies after Bells Ferry Road shooting Friday evening

Here’s more information about the shooting that left a 19-year-old man dead.

UPDATE, 9:15 P.M.

Police said the male shooting victim has died.

ORIGINAL REPORT, posted at 7:50 p.m.

An unidentified person has been taken to WellStar Kennestone Hospital Friday evening after a Bells Ferry Road shooting, according to Marietta Police. Marietta Police, Delk Road motel shooting

Police said officers were called to 1750 Bells Ferry Road, just north of Interstate 75, at 6:22 p.m., and that someone had been rushed to the hospital with a gunshot wound.

Police have not released information about that individual’s condition or more details about the shooting.

A number of apartment complexes and small business are located around the scene of the shooting, and it’s also near the intersection of Bells Ferry Road and Williams Drive.

 

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Cobb Elections recruiting poll workers for primaries; advance voting starts Monday

Less than a month remains before local, federal and state primary elections, and Cobb Elections is looking for individuals to work at the polls for the May primaries and beyond.Georgia State Senate special election

Advance voting begins on Monday at the Cobb Elections office in Marietta. The East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road) will have advance voting the week of May 14-18.

According to Cobb Elections supervisor Janine Eveler, there are 144 precincts that will be in operation on May 22, the formal primary election day. Any runoffs will take place on July 24, and the general elections are Nov. 6.

Here’s more from her about how to apply to be a poll worker and how much you’ll be paid, including required training.

If you want to vote before May 22 or before the East Cobb advance voting week, you’ll have to go the Cobb Elections office (West Park Government Center, 736 Whitlock Ave.) from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Monday-Friday between April 30 and May 18.

In addition, there will be Saturday advance voting on May 12 at the same location, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

For more information, call Cobb Elections at 770-528-2581.

In case you missed it, here’s the Cobb consolidated ballot for the primaries, as well as customizable ballots for your precinct.

And here are the primary and general election candidates who’ve qualified in East Cobb races, from U.S. Congress, Georgia governor and other statewide positions to legislative, county commissioner, school board and county judgeships.

 

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Revised Johnson Ferry-Shallowford master plan questionnaire to go out next week

Johnson Ferry-Shallowford master plan

After an outcry by some respondents to high-density choices in a questionnaire that’s part of a new Johnson Ferry-Shallowford master plan, county officials overseeing the project will send out a revised survey next week.

(Here’s our post from earlier this week about the pushback).

An “image preference survey” designed to get public feedback about possible residential and commercial buildings will be reworked to include more “suburban-style” options (as seen above), especially for housing, according to Jason Gaines.

Gaines, the planning director for the Cobb Community Development Agency, told members of the East Cobb Civic Association on Wednesday that he’s prepared a new survey that’s in draft form.

Many of the buildings shown in the survey were several stories high, alarming some residents who felt that their choices may be limited to structures that are better suited for urban areas.

“The goal was to learn whether people like or don’t like” the styles of buildings, Gaines said. “We’ve got to a little bit more to do but that’s okay.”

Gaines, who is spearheading a series of public meetings about the master plan (called “JOSH” to indicate the main street name in the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford corridor), said around 200 people have responded to the survey online, and the feedback has been wide-ranging.

The image preference survey has been a similar component of other master plan updates. Cobb commissioner Bob Ott, whose District 2 now includes the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford area, asked for a new survey to be drawn.

He told East Cobb News that the original survey was approved by a 20-person stakeholders committee that includes citizens and business owners in the JOSH area.

Ott said there are no outside consultants influencing the survey options, and that the work preparing the materials is all being done by county staff.

This is the fourth master plan project he has requested for his district, including Vinings, Powers Ferry and Johnson Ferry (whose design guidelines were adopted this week).

“We’ve done this three other times, and every time the community has been supportive,” Ott said. “It’s not about what we or the staff thinks. It’s what the community thinks.”

He admitted that sometimes the staff selections for a survey are “a shot in the dark,” but they’re done as much to learn what a community doesn’t want as much as what it prefers.

The final JOSH public input meeting was supposed to have been May 9 but Gaines said there will be another meeting, on May 23, to give citizens time to respond to the new survey.

In addition, Gaines said two stakeholders meetings will take place in June to analyze all of the public response before any formal action is taken to update the master plan.

 

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East Cobb Biz Notes: Planned Regions Bank Johnson Ferry Road branch seeking variances

Regions Bank Johnson Ferry Road

The former location (and only briefly) of a Pollo Tropical restaurant on Johnson Ferry Road is being eyed by Regions Bank, and the banking company is seeking two variances that will be considered in May.

Regions Bank has applied for a waiver to the landscaping enhancement strip next to a public street from the required minimum of eight feet to two feet, and also wants to increase the maximum allowable impervious surfacing from 70 percent to 86 percent.

The freestanding building at 680 Johnson Ferry Road, located next to Moe’s Southwest Grill and in front of Parkaire Landing Shopping Center, has been empty since October 2016.

The Regions Bank variance request (agenda item packet) goes before the Cobb Board of Zoning Appeals on May 9. The land is zoned for general commercial use and doesn’t require rezoning.

Earlier this week, Cobb commissioners adopted Johnson Ferry Road Design Guidelines that had sat dormant since they were unveiled in 2013.

McDonald's Lower Roswell Road

Renovations at McDonald’s

Just around the corner from the planned Regions Bank you may have noticed the McDonald’s location on Lower Roswell Road is closed, with lots of work crews on hand.

That fast food store is one of the businesses on the north side of Lower Roswell that will be impacted by planned transportation improvements between Davidson Road and across Johnson Ferry to Woodlawn Drive.

Commissioners also voted this week to spend $160,000 in further engineering design work for that project, which has been delayed since 2012 for those and other reasons.

The improvements will include a frontage road between the McDonald’s and Davidson Road to provide access to businesses on the northern side of Lower Roswell, including several medical offices.

Now open

The following new businesses in East Cobb have received their licenses since March:

  • Aegis Group Practice (4401 Shallowford Road), physical therapy
  • Apex Imaging (1070 Woodlawn Drive), medical clinic
  • Court America (3115 Roswell Road), legal services
  • Enwhite Bridal (3660 Canton Road), bridal shop
  • Erin Westmoreland (255 Village Parkway), family and individual counseling
  • Everything Burger (3372 Canton Road), restaurant
  • Fareba Stylist (2145 Roswell Road), beautician
  • Fletcher Law Firm (2993 Sandy Plains Road), lawyer
  • Graham & Kapp (3650 Canton Road), CPA
  • Japan City (4400 Roswell Road), restaurant
  • Judah the Salon (2000 Powers Ferry Road), beauty shop
  • L & Y Massage (2520 East Piedmont Road), health club
  • Mondosa Motors (2501 Piedmont Road), auto dealer
  • Natures Heaven (4750 Alabama Road), restaurant
  • Northside Urgent Care (4800 Olde Towne Parkway), medical
  • Pedis and Potions (4101 Roswell Road), beauty shop
  • PBM Records (2481 Canton Road), recording studio
  • Pur Skin Bar (4101 Roswell Road), beauty shop
  • Renewed You (2993 Sandy Plains Road), psychotherapist
  • Sandalwood Yoga (2440 Sandy Plains Road), health services
  • Souvonyx Salon (4101 Roswell Road), beauty salon
  • Spoken Images (3778 Canton Road), theater
  • Stockyard Burgers (4475 Roswell Road), restaurant
  • Taqueria Tsunami (1275 Johnson Ferry Road), restaurant
  • Tropical Smoothie Cafe (2960 Shallowford Road), restaurant
  • Wayfare Counseling (1640 Powers Ferry Road), counseling
  • Works Auto Group (2501 Piedmont Road), auto dealer

 

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PHOTOS: Students of all ages have a blast at Wheeler STEAM Symposium

Wheeler STEAM Symposium
Students at the ‘Winglets of Aviation’ project get a release of pressurized air in their faces. (East Cobb News photos and slideshow by Wendy Parker)

For the first time in its six-year history, the Wheeler STEAM Symposium invited elementary school students to take part in its wide-ranging collection of class and laboratory projects.

Students from many Wheeler feeder schools toured the Wildcat Arena Wednesday morning to learn from their high school counterparts, who were more than happy to explain how they’ve blending high-level science and engineering knowledge with concepts from the creative arts.

For the last three years, the STEAM concept has been on display at the symposium, and earlier this school year Wheeler became the first high school in the state to receive official STEAM certification from the Georgia Department of Education.

Wheeler STEAM Symposium

Wheeler STEAM Symposium

Wheeler STEAM Symposium

Wheeler junior Ryan Davis was literally wearing his project, a lit multi-colored strap he calls Reactive LED Hoodie. He can change the colors and “make it a rainbow,” said Davis, who also has set the project to music streaming through a nearby laptop.

“I enjoy doing electronics for fun and am interested in wearable technology,” he said, as the device changed from yellow to green to blue to red and other colors.

Ryan Davis, Wheeler STEAM Symposium

Another Wheeler junior, Abigail Ochal, said her engineering class semester project, 3D Printing Plastic Filament Extruder, is designed to extract recyclable plastics from 3D printing materials. She couldn’t turn on the device with a big crowd around, however, since temperatures flare up in excess of 500 degrees Fahrenheit. Instead, Ochal demonstrated on her laptop how the plastic pellets stream out.

Abigail Ochal, Wheeler STEAM Symposium

Abigail Ochal, Wheeler STEAM Symposium

More familiar robotics contraptions were also tooling around on the gym floor, and Wheeler’s F1 in Schools students drew a big crowd with their speed demonstrations down a 16-meter aluminum track.

Wheeler STEAM Symposium

Wheeler STEAM Symposium

Wheeler STEAM Symposium

Wheeler junior Poojan Mehta, who’s part of the AeroFlow Racing team, said recent test runs have averaged around 1.1 seconds. But while we watched, we saw what he said was the best time they’ve seen thus far, 0.996 seconds. He said the cars are designed with computer technology, and the runs are examined there as well for insights as to how to make them run even faster.

Wheeler STEAM Symposium

In previous years, the Wheeler STEAM Symposium was held at night, and initially it featured the work of students within the Wheeler Magnet School.

Now, says assistant principal Cheryl Crooks, head of the magnet school and Wheeler STEAM Symposium, the event has expanded to the entire school body, with outreach to students and lower school levels.

“Let’s make it inclusive, and let’s invite everybody from the school,” she said. STEAM, Crooks added, can be for “every student, every teacher and at every level.”

Wheeler STEAM Symposium

Elementary students also were recognized for their projects, another first for the symposium.

“Our students looked like they enjoyed it more” seeing their visitors react to their projects, Crooks said. “It really validates what they’re doing.”

Wheeler STEAM Symposium

Wheeler STEAM Symposium

 

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Some Johnson Ferry-Shallowford residents can’t picture suggestions of their community’s future

Johnson Ferry-Shallowford residents, JOSH image survey
One resident quipped in reference to the question and photo above included in an image survey about future development in the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford community: “Did Cobb lose a war to Romania?” 

When Cobb community development officials recently asked Johnson Ferry-Shallowford residents to respond to an “image preference survey” of potential future development in the area, the blowback was swift, angry and occasionally sarcastic.

Suggested photos contained in the lengthy survey (see examples below) included plenty of high-rise residential and commercial buildings that are typical in urban areas, sunny resorts and even other countries.

Residential high-rise building.

What they didn’t look like to a good number of those responders was anything like what’s in the suburban Johnson Ferry-Shallowford area now, or what they want to see in the future.

We reported last week about the “JOSH” community meetings that have been underway this spring, and in particular stormwater issues that have been plaguing the nearby Loch Highland community for years.

That’s just one of the many subject areas that community development staff is surveying. A final public input session is scheduled for May 9 at the Chestnut Ridge Christian Church (2663 Johnson Ferry Road).

To be sure, the image preference survey did include some photos of single-family dwellings and low-rise office and retail space that looks fairly typical for what’s in the East Cobb area that’s the subject of an ongoing evaluation by county officials.

Residential development.

But many posts over the weekend at the East Cobbers Against High Density Development Facebook group  (which has around 1,000 members) tore into much of what the survey was serving up, fearing that there weren’t going to be many other choices besides the high-density options they were asked to comment on.

A few examples of the sharp replies:

“Basically they’re saying we don’t have a choice in the sense of no traditional housing on normal sized, decent lots. They are steering us in their direction, none of which is desirable to the vast majority of us who prefer no high density and more neighborhood like.”

“Even the single family options were right on top of each other.”

“I don’t know why there is a question about what people want. We want what we had when we chose to move here. Single family homes, large lots with room for kids to play, good schools and low crime, libraries that were open etc., and that is slowly disappearing.”

“I tried to make sure they knew they were reaching: ‘Did Cobb lose a war to Romania?’ “

Office/retail/commercial building.

Cobb commissioner Bob Ott, whose District 2 now includes the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford community, weighed in on the Facebook group page, saying he had nothing to do with the survey selections and that what was being suggested was only to solicit feedback.

“This is not some consulting firm telling you what you have to accept. Let’s give staff some credit for taking this to the public for their thoughts,” he said.

To which a resident replied: “Then please give us choices that reflect homes on one acre lots. Nothing remotely resembling that was offered in the pictures presented.”

Similar image preference surveys have been done in previous corridor studies in Ott’s district, including the Powers Ferry Road area and Johnson Ferry Road.

We posted yesterday about the Johnson Ferry design guidelines that are coming up for commission adoption tonight, five years after they were presented. Those guidelines incorporate community feedback, and some of the generic photos in that presentation were included in the JOSH image preference survey.

Public space.

Some of the image survey responders simply asked that future development conform to the current and future land use plans in the area.

Ott said he would have the image survey redone. The original still exists, for now, and includes suggestions on sidewalks, cycling paths, greenspace, public space, stormwater retention ponds and more.

He also reminded citizens who thought their feedback was being sought for political reasons with primaries next month that he’s not up for election this year.

 

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After years of inaction, Johnson Ferry Design Guidelines adopted by Cobb commissioners

Johnson Ferry Design Guidelines

It’s been nearly five years since the Johnson Ferry Design Guidelines were unveiled and revised following numerous public hearings.

As part of the Johnson Ferry Urban Design project from 2009-11, the guidelines were to meant to foster greater aesthetic unity along one of East Cobb’s busiest commercial corridors, ranging from standards for streetlights and sidewalks to landscaping, park benches and other public amenities.

However, those guidelines have never been acted upon by the Cobb Board of Commissioners. That may change at Tuesday’s commission meeting, which includes an agenda item to adopt the guidelines. The meeting begins at 7 p.m. in the second floor meeting room of the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., in downtown Marietta.

UPDATED: The guidelines, which were part of the consent agenda, were passed by a 5-0 vote Tuesday night.

Here’s a brief description of why this is coming up now:

“Recently, discussions between the District Commissioner, staff, and members of the community have occurred to bring the Design Guidelines forward for formal consideration by the Board of Commissioners. If approved by the Board of Commissioners, staff will use the guidelines as recommendations to work with property owners when zoning applications, variance applications, and site plans are submitted for review and/or consideration.”

As was the case when the guidelines were made public in 2013, they would apply to commercial property owners who go through the rezoning process and variance applications, as noted above. The design evolution could take many years.

The corridor area is along Johnson Ferry between Roswell Road and the Chattahoochee River (see below streetscape map from the final urban design guidelines).

What’s on Tuesday’s agenda doesn’t look substantially different from where the issue was left in 2013. According to the introduction, the guidelines are “intended to assist architects, engineers, planners, developers and community members to make more informed design decisions based on community preference.”

They also had the support of the East Cobb Civic Association. The design study was prompted by East Cobb commissioner Bob Ott, who also commissioned corridor studies for the Powers Ferry area and, currently, in the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford community that is now part of his District 2.

Ott said after the vote that the guidelines were held up because “some folks had issues” back in 2013 but said he wanted to get them adopted with upcoming rezonings and variances to consider.

The guidelines will be incorporated into the design plan’s developmental standards.

 

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