Sunshine Week: Filing open records requests for Georgia, U.S. government

Citizens of Georgia can request public records under the Georgia Open Records Act, which governs the distribution of state records, as well as those of local public agencies in Georgia. Georgia open records requests, Sunshine Week, Georgia First Amendment Foundation

In previous posts, we explained how to file open records requests for Cobb government and Cobb schools. As the final part of this Sunshine Week series, this post will focus on state open records requests and those covered by the federal Freedom of Information Act.

The Georgia Attorney General’s Office has published and periodically updated its Citizens Guide to Open Government, in conjunction with the Georgia First Amendment Foundation and the Georgia Press Association.

The guide was last updated in 2014, following the passage of updated Georgia sunshine laws that lowered the cost of records from 25 cents to 10 cents a page (when there are fees that are charged) and stiffened the fines for violating the Georgia Open Records Act.

The 2012 update also allows the Attorney General to bring criminal as well as civil charges. Recently AG Chris Carr filed a criminal citation for the first time in a GORA case, against a former press aide to ex-Atlanta mayor Kasim Reed.

Georgia state government agencies have three working days to respond to requests for open records, and it is preferred they be made in writing, whether it’s print or online.

(Here’s a link to the state open meetings laws.)

There also are several types of records that are exempt from the law, meaning that they can be withheld or redacted. Other exceptions beyond the scope of the law are included here.

The Georgia First Amendment Foundation encourages requesters to “be specific about exactly the information you want,” including citations of state laws, and includes that in a sample form letter.

The GFAF also monitors transparency legislation and holds a legislative breakfast each session.

The open-government organization MuckRock notes that if an open records request is denied, there is no appeals process except through state superior courts.

The U.S. Freedom of Information Act became law in 1966 and covers federal government records requests.

The main website, FOIA.gov., provides research links, FAQs and background information, including the federal statute. It also includes information on requests previously submitted and submits annual reports on FOIA requests.

The General Services Administration also has a produced a brochure, Your Right to Federal Records.

Like state open records laws, the federal FOIA has exemptions, nine to be exact, which are summarized here.

Numerous independent and non-profit watchdog organizations monitor federal FOIA developments and conduct legal and other advocacy (see the list at the bottom of this post).

There also are numerous organizations that provide assistance and sample forms for filing FOIA requests from the U.S. government. They include:

  • iFOIA.org, from the Reporters Committee for the Freedom of the Press;
  • MuckRock, an open-government non-profit that allows users to file directly from its platform;
  • FIOAMapper, which tracks what it calls “hidden” public data.

More federal resources here from the FOI Center at the National Freedom on Information Coalition.

The National Freedom of Information Day wraps up Sunshine Week each year, and falls around the birthday of James Madison.

General resources

Sunshine Week

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

East Cobb cityhood legislation expected to be filed before end of 2019 session

A group pushing for East Cobb cityhood is eyeing the end of the current Georgia legislative session to have local legislation filed that would call for a referendum, probably by 2020.

A notice of intent to file local legislation was published Friday in The Marietta Daily Journal, Cobb’s legal organ.East Cobb cityhood legislation

The legislature has only eight days remaining in its 2019 session. For a referendum to take place next year, it would at least have to be introduced this year.

As of the close of business Friday, no such bill had been filed.

The group, known as the Committee for Cityhood for East Cobb Inc., hired a lobbyist before the General Assembly session but has been quiet since then.

Commissioner Bob Ott told East Cobb News that they’ve been invited to speak at his next town hall meeting, on March 28 at the Catholic Church of St. Ann.

Related coverage

The group has been reluctant to reveal much information about who’s behind the cityhood effort and has cited general “local control” and public safety concerns.

It did pay $36,000 for a financial feasibility study that made a favorable conclusion. The proposed city map would include only a portion of what’s considered East Cobb, all of it within Ott’s District 2. The population would be around 96,000.

(Here’s the cityhood group’s website.)

The MDJ reported Friday that David Birdwell, an East Cobb resident, is also involved in leading the group. Joe Gavalis, an appointee of Ott’s to the Cobb Neighborhood Safety Commission, is the president of the group, and real estate developer G. Owen Brown of Retail Planning Corp. is listed as having paid for most of the study.

No other individuals have been publicly named, and when the group asked an ad hoc citizens committee to look over a feasibility study, one of those citizens, Joe O’Connor, quit in protest, citing a lack of transparency.

Birdwell, like Gavalis, lives in the Atlanta Country Club area. According to the Cobb Chamber, he’s also in the real estate industry and has gone through the organization’s Leadership Cobb development program.

State Rep. Matt Dollar
State Rep. Matt Dollar (R-East Cobb)

Local incorporation legislation must be introduced by at least one Senator and one House member who represents at least a portion of the proposed city.

Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick and Reps. Sharon Cooper and Matt Dollar are the three lawmakers who could do that. They have been contacted for comment by East Cobb News.

UPDATE: Kirkpatrick told East Cobb News that “I haven’t taken a position on this but the bill will get the conversation started.”

The notice of intent to file the bill indicates the sponsor is Dollar; cityhood bills are initially filed in the House.

A cityhood bill for Mableton was filed last week by State Reps. Erica Thomas, Erick Allen and David Wilkerson of South Cobb. The South Cobb Alliance citizens group has been seeking incorporation but has not yet had a feasibility study done.

Unlike the East Cobb group, the Mableton group has gone to the public with a number of town halls and other events in the community over the last couple of years.

The earliest a Mableton referendum could take place also would be next year. That proposed city would have a population of more than 87,000.

Some of the reasons cited for cityhood there are similar to East Cobb, in particular more localized control of services.

Cobb hasn’t had a new city in more than a century. Mableton was briefly a municipality, from 1912-1916.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Mt. Bethel Christian Academy withdraws sports stadium request

The lawyer representing Mt. Bethel Christian Academy in its request to allow a sports stadium on its campus at 2509 Post Oak Tritt Road has withdrawn the application.

The letter sent to the county zoning office on Tuesday by attorney Jim Ney did not give a reason for the withdrawal (you can read it here), but it had been strongly opposed by nearby residents.

Cobb commissioners were scheduled to hear the Mt. Bethel application next Tuesday at their monthly zoning hearing. The case has been delayed since it was first scheduled to be heard in December.

The letter by Ney beat the deadline for having the application withdrawn without the commissioners having to vote on whether to do so. That deadline is the Wednesday before the following Tuesday.

Mt. Bethel operates grades 9-12 on what it calls its Upper Campus (with K-8 classes on the Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church grounds on Lower Roswell Road).

When Mt. Bethel purchased the Post Oak Tritt property from the Marcus Jewish Community Center of Atlanta in 2013, it said it had no intention of building out a stadium. Some neighbors were concerned then about noise and lighting, and those concerns were raised anew when Mt. Bethel applied for the land-use permit revision last fall.

(Here’s the full case file.)

In an e-mail letter sent to the county zoning office and commissioners the same day as Ney’s withdrawal letter, Becky Carlin, a resident of nearby Marneil Drive, complained that if a stadium is allowed, “I will be able to hear every single word announced at every game played there, as I already can hear noise from Sprayberry High School which is further away.

“This is was one of my concerns when it was first proposed that Mount Bethel purchase this property. The church essentially lied to us, saying they wanted to be part of the community and they would minimize the impact to the neighbors nearby.”

She said the area around the high school, which opened in 2014, has become a nuisance due to increased traffic. (Read her letter here.).

Another resident told East Cobb News she was upset that the stadium would include a 90-foot light tower and loudspeakers “less than 200 feet” from homes.

She was among several who said they intended to speak against the Mt. Bethel request on Tuesday.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Sunshine Week: Filing open records requests for Cobb schools

Obtaining public records from the Cobb County School District is similar to requesting them from Cobb County government, but there are some differences due to federal laws governing student privacy.

Anyone may request public records from the CCSD at following addresses below:Cobb schools open records requests

Dr. Darryl York
Open Records Officer
Cobb County School District
514 Glover Street, Marietta, GA 30060
770-514-3870
openrecords@cobbk12.org

Like Cobb government, Cobb schools are also subject to provisions of the Georgia Open Records Act, and the CCSD also must reply to open records requests in three working days.

If open records requests are denied, school officials must cite a specific provision in the law that exempts that information from being released.

The information that’s available to the public from Cobb schools includes general administrative and operations records, school board proceedings, contracts and purchasing, budget and finance, curriculum and instruction, some hiring and personnel records, campus public safety records, SPLOST records and more.

These records include those in printed and electronic form, including tapes, computer records and correspondence, maps and photographs.

The exemptions are significant and are complicated, due to the federal law mentioned above. It’s called the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), first passed in 1974 (and also known as the Buckley Amendment), that governs the disclosure of student educational records.

The Georgia Attorney General’s Office produced this guide to the Georgia law and school records in conjunction with the Georgia Department of Education, the Georgia Press Associaiton and the Georgia First Amendment Foundation.

For students in K-12, the rights to educational records belongs primarily to their parents. They have the right to inspect educational records kept by school districts, and to request that information be revised for corrected if deemed inaccurate.

They also may request a formal hearing if those requests are denied. Likewise, K-12 parents must consent to any educational records of their children being released.

Certain non-educational information, such as a student’s name, address, date of birth and when they attended school, is generally considered public. So are records created after a student leaves a school.

After the age of 18, students have the rights to their educational records.

Test score information for individual schools and school districts is publicly available, but individual test scores of specific students are not.

Records produced by a school’s law enforcement department (Cobb schools has its own police force) are not protected from disclosure by the federal privacy law.

According to a revision of the law in the 1990s, “education records” subject to FERPA provisions do not include those “maintained by a law enforcement unit of the educational agency or institution that were created by that law enforcement unit for the purpose of law enforcement.”

However, FERPA does apply to records about internal student disciplinary matters.

Records that don’t need a parent or student’s consent to be released include “information necessary to protect the health or safety of the student or other individuals” and regarding a student whose “conduct poses a significant risk to the safety of that student, other students, and the school community.”

The Georgia Attorney General’s office notes, however, that in the case of the latter, another state law keeps most of that information confidential.

School employees, including teachers, may request that certain portions of their personnel records, such as Social Security number, date of birth, credit reports, financial data and insurance and medical information, be redacted.

The state guide to FERPA and schools includes more detailed appendices of what information is subject to open records laws and what may be exempted from disclosure.

There’s also a sample letter format. As with any other open records requests, the more specific, the better. There may be some fees that are charged for researching, retrieving and preparing documents for disclosure and for some copying expenses.

The Georgia First Amendment Foundation has published a guide to Georgia’s Sunshine Laws, which has further resources on open government.

Later this week East Cobb News will post similar information about obtaining public records from state and federal government agencies.

It’s all part of Sunshine Week, which is being observed March 10-16 by news organizations and open-government advocates.

Through Saturday, East Cobb News invites you to send your questions about how to get public information. E-mail: editor@eastcobbnews.com and we’ll get some answers for you.

General resources

Sunshine Week

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Chick-fil-A Woodlawn Square now hiring; TBA reopening in mid-April

Chick-fil-A Woodlawn Square

Another periodic update on the reopening of the Woodlawn Square Chick-fil-A, since we do get inquries: The store is now accepting job applications, but the tentative reopening has slid back into mid-April.

That’s the word from a Chick-fil-A spokeswoman, who said a grand reopening date hasn’t been scheduled.

If you’re interested in applying, here’s the link to the online application process.

Related story

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

East Cobb Food Scores: Frankie’s; La Madeleine; Stockyard Burgers; public schools; and more

The following East Cobb restaurant scores from March 4-15 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing to view details of the inspection:

Arbor Terrace of East Cobb 
886 Johnson Ferry Road
March 7, 2019 Score: 86, Grade: B

Blackwell Elementary School
3470 Canton Road
March 7, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Brewster’s Neighborhood Grille
3595 Canton Road Suite 325
March 8, 2019 Score: 84, Grade: B

Buddha Delight
2731 Sandy Plains Road, Suite A
March 13, 2019 Score: 80, Grade: B

Dickerson Middle School 
855 Woodlawn Drive
March 14, 2019 Score: 91, Grade: A

Frankie’s Italian Restaurant
3125 Roswell Road
March 7, 2019 Score: 96, Grade: A

Garrison Mill Elementary School
4111 Wesley Chapel Road
March 15, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

House of Ming
3101 Roswell Road, Suite 116
March 12, 2019 Score: 99, Grade: A

Kell High School
4770 Lee Waters Road
March 4, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

La Madeleine French Bakery & Cafe 
4101 Roswell Road, Suite 812
March 6, 2019 Score: 89, Grade: B

Lassiter High School
2601 Shallowford Road
March 11, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

McCleskey Middle School
4080 Maybreeze Road
March 4, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Mountain View Elementary School
3151 Sandy Plains Road
March 4, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Nichsolson Elementary School
1599 Shallowford Road
March 4, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Pizza Hut
2520 E. Piedmont Road, Suite 124
March 14, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Sprayberry High School
2525 Sandy Plains Road
March 15, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Stockyard Burgers and Bones
4475 Roswell Road, Suite 1700
March 6, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A
February 6, 2019 Score: 76, Grade: C

Tritt Elementary School 
4435 Post Oak Tritt Road
March 7, 2019 Score: 100, Grade: A

Waffle House
4797 Canton Road
March 7, 2019 Score: 95, Grade: A

The Walker School Main Dining Room
700 Cobb Parkway North
March 14, 2019 Score: 90, Grade: A

The Walker School Gatti Hall
700 Cobb Parkway North
March 14, 2019 Score: 99, Grade: A

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Brush fires close part of Paper Mill Road Tuesday evening

Paper Mill Road brush fire

Reader Julia has these photos of Paper Mill Road being blocked off after 6 p.m. Tuesday due to brush fires near the Sibley Forest subdivision.

That’s located between Sope Creek Elementary School and the Cochran Shoals Unit of the Chattahoochee National Recreation Area.

James Kapish, public information officer for Cobb Fire, said Engine 3 was dispatched to the scene at 6:18 p.m.

He said the fire was controlled quickly and there were no injuries or evacuations and that roads were reopened to traffic at 7:17 p.m.

The cause of the fire is under investigation.

Paper Mill Road brush fire

Paper Mill Road brush fire

Send us your news!

• Call/text East Cobb News 24/7 for breaking and emergency news tips: 404-219-4278

• E-mail: editor@eastcobbnews.com

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Lyft driver sentenced to 35 years for raping female passenger in Cobb

Jerome Booze, Lyft driver sentenced Cobb rape
Jerome Antonio Booze

A Cobb Superior Court Judge sentenced a Lyft driver to 35 years in prison Tuesday for raping a female passenger near her apartment in Cobb County in late 2016.

The Cobb District Attorney’s office said Jerome Antonio Booze, 40, of Decatur, was convicted by a Cobb Superior Court jury on Monday. Kim Isaza, a spokeswoman for the DA’s office, said the sentence was handed down by Judge Ann Harris.

Booze was charged in January 2917 after driving a female college student from a night of drinking at a bar in Atlanta to her Vinings apartment on Dec. 10, 2016. According to testimony at the trial, the woman’s friends called for a Lyft around 4 a.m. because she had become intoxicated and they didn’t want her driving home. They had been celebrating a friend’s 21st birthday.

According to prosecutors, the woman said she had flashbacks the next morning of having sex with someone, but said she had no memory of the Lyft ride or of getting home. She told her parents she had been raped and went to Grady Memorial Hospital for medical treatment before filing charges with Atlanta Police, who transferred the case to Cobb Police.

The attack occurred in the back seat of Booze’s car near her apartment building, according to prosecutors. Booze was indicted in February 2017.

Prosecutors said Booze initially told Cobb Police that he denied he had sex with the woman, then later said he did have sex with her but said she initiated it and that he didn’t know she was intoxicated.

During the trial, Booze testified that the woman held down his arm and climbed on him and reiterated that he didn’t know she was drunk.

That didn’t convince the jury, which convicted him on the sole charge of felony rape, Isaza said. Harris told Booze before sentencing that trial evidence showed the woman was incapable of giving consent.

“This predator exploited a position of trust and targeted a vulnerable, intoxicated female. This verdict demonstrates that those who prey on women who do not have the capacity to consent will be held accountable,” said Courtney Veal, Cobb assistant district attorney.

After his release from prison, Booze will serve the rest of his life on probation as a registered sex offender, Isaza said. 

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Sunshine Week: Filing open records requests for Cobb County government

All citizens—and not just journalists—have the right to obtain public information about their federal, state and local governments. In Cobb, the county government has several designated custodians of public records to handle those requests. Cobb County Government logo

Local authorities in the state are subject to provisions of the Georgia Open Records Act.

The county has set up the Cobb Government Open Records Center as a portal to introduce the public about its process.

Open records cover most of the workings of government: commissioners’ decisions, including zoning; contracts; personnel records; public safety incidents; court records; voter registration and elections information; tax information; permits and licenses and more.

Most Cobb government public records requests are handled by the Cobb County Attorney’s Office, which is the custodian of public records for 22 county government agencies and offices:

  • Animal Control; Board of Commissioners; Communications; Community Development; County Attorney; County Clerk; County Manager; Department of Public Safety (including Internal Affairs); Economic Development; Emergency Management Agency; Finance; Human Resources; Information Services; Internal Audit; Libraries; Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs; Property Management; Purchasing; Senior Services; Storm Water Management; Department of Transportation; Water System.

The easiest way to obtain information is online, though you’ll be asked to establish an account the first time you use the electronic system.

To submit an open records request in writing for the offices above, contact:

Cobb County Attorney Deborah Dance
100 Cherokee Street
Marietta, GA 30090
770-528-4000

Several other departments and agencies have their own public records custodians, and they also respond to online requests at the above link. Here are the mailing and e-mail addresses for obtaining information in writing:

Cobb Voter Registration and Elections
Janine Eveler
736 Whitlock Ave, Suite 400
Marietta, GA 30064
770-528-2581
info@cobbelections.org

Cobb Emergency Communications (911)
Records Custodian
140 N. Marietta Pkwy
Marietta, GA 30060
770-499-4106
911openrecords@cobbcounty.org

Cobb Fire and EMS Records
Ellen Black
1595 County Services Pkwy
Marietta, GA 30008
770-528-8000
ellen.black@cobbcounty.org

Cobb Police Department 
(Incident and Accident Reports, Alcohol Permits, Dash and Body Cam Videos)
Lt. Leo Scherer
140 N Marietta Pkwy
Marietta, GA 30060
770-499-3900
policeopenrecordsofficer@cobbcounty.org
Also: Cobb County Crash Reports

Cobb County Sheriff
Robin Clements
Open Records Custodian
Administrative Division
770-499-4728
robin.clements@cobbcounty.org

Cobb Tax Assessor
Stephen White
736 Whitlock Ave
Marietta, GA 30064
770-528-3100
stephen.white@cobbcounty.org

Cobb Tax Commissioner
Carla Jackson
736 Whitlock Ave
Marietta, GA 30064
770-528-8600
tax@cobbtax.org

In addition, the Cobb State Court Clerk’s Office and Cobb Superior Court Clerk’s Office keep civil and criminal court records, as well as marriage certificates, deed information, real estate transactions and more.

Public records custodians in Georgia have three working days to reply to requests that are subject to the Georgia Open Records Act.

This means that they must notify you by that time of the status of your request, whether it’s approved or denied, and if it’s the former, how much time it may require to provide the information, and what the cost may be.

In many cases there is no charge for documents and records, but fees can be charged for requests that involve some time for custodians to retrieve, research and prepare records.

According to the Cobb Open Records Center, fees that are charged “are based on the hourly rate of the lowest paid employee, minus the first 15 minutes.”

The county also keeps a searchable archive of open records requests that have been made.

The Georgia Open Records Act is part of a broader set of statutes called “Sunshine Laws” that include the provisions for open meetings.

The Georgia First Amendment Foundation has published a guide to Georgia’s Sunshine Laws, which has further resources on open government.

Later in the week East Cobb News will post similar information about obtaining public records from public schools and state and federal government agencies.

It’s all part of Sunshine Week, which is being observed this week by news organizations and open-government advocates.

Through Saturday, East Cobb News invites you to send your questions about how to get public information. E-mail: editor@eastcobbnews.com and we’ll get some answers for you.

General resources

Sunshine Week

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

East Cobb shooting survivor recovering; homeowner charged with murder

Gordon Montcalm, East Cobb shooting survivor

The electrical contractor who survived a shooting allegedly committed by an East Cobb homeowner last week is beginning what appears to be a long recovery, according to information posted with a fundraising appeal for medical and other expenses.

In a GoFundMe page, friends and family of Gordon Montcalm (center, above) said he was shot five times: Once in the face, once in the chest, twice in the arm and once in the back.

Montcalm, 37, of Buchanan, Ga., was taken to WellStar Kennestone Hospital after he and his apprentice, Jake Horne, 21, of Kennesaw, were shot at the end of their working day at a home on Wellington Lane on Wednesday.

Horne, who was shot in the head, was taken off life support and died on Thursday, according to his family members.

The homeowner, Larry Epstein, 69, of 1963 Wellington Lane, was initially charged with two counts of aggravated battery and two counts of aggravated assault.

After Horne died, Epstein also was charged with one count of felony murder, according to the Cobb Sheriff’s Office. He remains in the Cobb County Adult Detention Center without bond, and is scheduled to have a hearing March 26.

Police previously said Montcalm was in serious condition at Kennestone. The fundraising note said the man who’s known as “Donnie” will be out of work indefinitely, his wife is taking off work to care for him and the couple has a daughter in high school: “There is so much financial struggle going on right now. . . . and there are many expenses that go along with that they are not going to be able to afford.”

The fundraising goal is $4,000.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Final Johnson Ferry-Shallowford master plan meeting is Tuesday

Johnson Ferry-Shallowford master plan

After two open house-style meetings, Cobb community development leaders and commissioner Bob Ott will be unveiling a draft plan on Tuesday for the Johnson Ferry-Shallowford master plan.

The meeting starts at 7 p.m. at Chestnut Ridge Christian Church (2663 Johnson Ferry Road).

Previous East Cobb News coverage here.

For more information visit the county’s community development project page.

Related stories

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

East Cobb Business News: Ribbon-cuttings, luncheons and more

East Cobb Business Update, Explore Chiropractic Ribbon Cutting

The East Cobb Business Association is helping new businesses introduce themselves to the community by sponsoring ribbon-cutting events.

Saturday was the grand opening for Explore Chiropractic (above), which has opened its doors at Parkaire Landing Shopping Center (4880 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 20, next to Earthwise Pet Suppy).

The owner is Dr. Dan Ruitenbeck (holding scissors), a graduate of Life University. In addition to general chiropractic care, services also cater to pregnancy and pediatric needs. Explore Chiropractic serves the East Cobb, Roswell and Sandy Springs areas.

On Thursday from 12-3 the ECBA will hold a ribbon-cutting for Weddington Realty (3020 Roswell Road, Suite 200) with owner Sarah Weddington, who’s specialized in residential and commercial properties in Georgia, Florida and Texas.

This Saturday from 11-1 is another ECBA ribbon-cutting for the grand opening of a Farmers Insurance office at 3225 Shallowford Road, Suite 120. The proprietor is Pamela Johnson.

Next Tuesday, March 19, the guest speaker at the ECBA’s monthly luncheon is Michael J. Cole, an Atlanta business executive and entrepreneur, who was the founder of the Great American Cookie Co., former CEO of Caribou Coffee and was a Congressional candidate. The Kennesaw State University business school is named after him.

The ribbon-cuttings are free events; the luncheon is $20-$30. Visit the ECBA website to sign up and for information for other events.

Also, every Friday morning the ECBA sponsors the East Cobb Open Networking breakfast, which starts at 7:30 a.m. at Egg Harbor Cafe (4719 Lower Roswell Road). There’s no registration; you just pay for your own meal and network with other local business professionals.

Boyce to speak to NCBA

Cobb Commission chairman Mike Boyce is the guest speaker at the March 20 luncheon of the Northeast Cobb Business Association, which goes from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Piedmont Church (570 Piedmont Road).

The NCBA’s signature event is the 5K-9 Race on June 8, also at the Piedmont Church, and registration is underway. Sponsorships are also being sought for the event, which raises funds for ongoing K-9 assistance efforts in Cobb.

Last year the NCBA raised funds for K-9s for an autistic child and for the Cobb Sheriff’s Office.

This year’s 5K-9 proceeds will be used to purchase a specially-trained comfort dog for the Cobb County District Attorney’s office to assist victims of child and elderly abuse.

Recently the Cobb Board of Commissioners recognized the NCBA for its $2K contribution to purchase oxygen masks for cats and dogs rescued by the Cobb Fire Department.

Northeast Cobb Business Association, K-9 oxygen masks

East Cobb Area Council Breakfast

The Cobb Chamber of Commerce’s first community event of the year is the April 23 East Cobb Area Council breakfast April 23 at Indian Hills Country Club.

The guest speaker is Dana Johnson, new executive director of SelectCobb, the chamber’s economic development office, and the former director of the Cobb Community Development Agency.

For information and to register, visit the Chamber’s events page.

Tell us about your business

Do you have business news to share? We’ll post your openings and non-sales events here, including charitable activities. E-mail us at editor@eastcobbnews.com.

If you want to promote your business (including sales and specials other than grand openings), email us at advertising@eastcobbnews.com and we’ll be glad to send you a media kit.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Sunshine Week: Cobb government information and your right to know

The week of March 10-16 is Sunshine Week across the United States, and a number of news media and open-government organizations are encouraging the public to get educated and take part in demanding transparency from local, state and federal government bodies.Cobb government Sunshine Week

Much has been made of President Donald Trump’s combative relationship with the news media. In many respects, however, what’s more important to your everyday life is how open the government closest to you operates.

All this week, East Cobb News will be providing links to resources to help you—homeowner, taxpayer, citizen and voter—get the answers you’re looking for from county government agencies, law enforcement, courts, appointed boards, public schools, state and federal government and other public entities.

We’ll point you to where you can file open records requests, explain what’s exempt from those laws and show how to track policies, legislation, court rulings and other developments pertaining to the accessibility of public information.

We’ll also give you a chance to ask East Cobb News if there’s something we can find out for you from local government agencies.

If there’s information you’ve been trying to learn without success, because you’ve been stonewalled or just don’t know where to look, we want to help you get access to those public records.

Sifting through the layers of government even at the local level can be complicated and frustrating for journalists, so we understand how bewildered citizens may feel.

Through Saturday, East Cobb News invites you to send your questions about public information. E-mail: editor@eastcobbnews.com and we’ll get some answers for you.

Public records laws are just that—laws that must be followed by public agencies. They’re not optional, as a city of Atlanta employee is finding out the hard way in a rare criminal charge filed against her for allegedly directing department heads to withhold public records.

Sunshine Week culminates on Saturday, March 16, the birthday of Founding Father James Madison, one of the stalwarts of a free press and open government.

While there’s much to celebrate, there’s also much to keep fighting for. Sunshine Week has been around for 14 years, but the battle for public information is year-round and timeless, as is the vigilance required to demand full and transparency from government agencies.

It’s your government, and you can help it make it more responsive by making it more transparent to you. Sunshine Week is one way to demand the accountability you’re entitled to as a citizen.

General resources

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Update: 2 teen pedestrians hit by car, seriously injured at Wheeler HS

Holt Road at Monterrey Drive, 3.9.199ó

UPDATED, 12:55 P.M. SUNDAY:

Cobb Police said two teenage pedestrians were seriously injured Saturday night, one of them with life-threatening injuries, after being struck by a car in front of Wheeler High School on Holt Road.

Officer Neil Penirelli, a spokesman for Cobb Police, said they were hit at 7:01 p.m. Saturday in the crosswalk between Wheeler and the former East Cobb Middle School by a black 2007 Mercedes Benz SLK350 driven by Nancy Valentine, 73, of Marietta.

She was traveling northbound on Holt Road when the accident occurred, Penirelli said. He added that the teenagers, who were not identified, were taken to WellStar Kennestone Hospital.

He said the accident is still being investigated and that anyone with information is asked to contact  Cobb Police at 770-499-3987.

ORIGINAL REPORT, 7:54 P.M SATURDAY:

Shortly after 7 p.m. Saturday a reader contacted us to say that several police cars were spotted heading up Holt Road northbound, from Eastvalley Elementary School and toward Wheeler High School, and that emergency sirens also could be heard.

We got over there around 7:30 p.m. and police had blocked off Holt at Monterey Drive and Beckwith Trail, which is just above the Wheeler campus.

Cobb Police said there is an accident investigation that’s underway.

If you head southbound on Holt from Robinson Road, you’ll be diverted onto Monterey or Beckwith.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

 

Sweat Mountain Dog Park closing temporarily for renovations

Sweat Mountain Dog Park

On Wednesday the dog park at Sweat Mountain will be closed to undergo renovations that will take about 4-6 weeks to complete.

You can use a temporary dog area at Noonday Park (550 Shallowford Road, Kennesaw) while that work is ongoing, or visit two other county dog parks, in Acworth or Austell.

Sweat Mountain has the oldest off-the-leash dog park in Cobb, which opened in 2006. It has separate areas for large and smaller dogs.

The renovations will include improvements to the sidewalks, fencing, parking lot, pet foot washes and fountains and drainage areas.

For a larger view of the above map, click here. Cobb Parks said the estimated completion time for the renovations may change due to weather.

Related stories

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Cobb Wind Symphony performs free concert Sunday at Lassiter HS

This weekend’s going to be absolutely dreary, but the Cobb Wind Symphony is offering up an ideal get-out-the-house respite: a free concert for the public on Sunday afternoon at the Lassiter Concert Hall.Cobb Wind Symphony

The Season 20 Winter Concert features symphonic selections from George Gershwin, as well as excerpts from the Candide Suite.

No ticket is required, and the music begins at 3 p.m. Donations are accepted.

The Lassiter Concert Hall is located on the Lassiter HS campus, 2601 Shallowford Road.

Related story

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

East Cobb STAR students and teachers honored at banquet

Catching up with some news from earlier this week, about some talented students who were honored as STAR students and teachers in Cobb. East Cobb STAR students

They were recognized at a banquet sponsored by the Kiwanis Club of Metro-Marietta and Professional Association of Georgia Educators. 

STAR stands for Student Teacher Achievement Recognition, and the program honors students from each Georgia public and private high school. According to the Cobb County School District, “the 2019 STAR Students stood out for having the highest SAT score on a single test and also having a grade point average in the top 10 percent of their graduating class. Several Cobb students tied for the STAR student recognition at their school and so share the honor for 2019.”

Multiple winners from a school reflect a tie vote.

The following East Cobb STAR students, and their respective STAR teachers in parenthesis, were honored. In addition, Cobb Board of Education members David Chastain and David Banks of East Cobb were in attendance at the banquet:

  • Kell High School: Anabelle Colmenares (Davan Silva) and Reilly McLean (Lauren Forbes);
  • Lassiter High School: Peter Jacobson (Dianne Adams);
  • Pope High School: Hannah Rose Grant (Luisa Munar);
  • Sprayberry High School: Yllona Coronado (Scott Grant);
  • Walton High School: William Ellsworth (Doug Wolfe), Albert Tingand (Brian Wilson) and Jayson Wu (Laura Speer);
  • Wheeler High School: Andrew Koo (Nicole Ice) and Daniel Zhou (Susan Phillips).

Later this month, Cobb’s 2019 STAR students will compete against the students from the north metro Atlanta region for the chance to advance to state. 

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

East Cobb Weekend Events: Marching band fundraisers; consignment sale; and more

Walton Band Garage Sale, East Cobb Weekend Preview

With a little bit of spring in the air, there are some shopping opportunities aplenty this weekend in East Cobb, with many of the proceeds to help good causes.

Starting off first thing Saturday morning is the Tritt Trot, a 5K and 1-mile fun run that’s raising funds that go directly to Tritt Elementary School. The event starts at 7:30 and takes place on and around the school grounds (44355 Post Oak Tritt Road).

The Walton Band Garage Sale will be filling up the original school gym (1590 Bill Murdock Road) for the last time from 8-3, and it’s free to attend. Band members have been collecting items for months, and there’s just about any type of household item you could imagine or want, at bargain prices.

From 9-3 Saturday is the Wheeler Band Recycling Event, in the parking lot of the former East Cobb Middle School (380 Holt Road), and they’ll take your items for $10 a car. Additional fees apply for computer monitors, televisions and paint; there’s a flyer with more detailed information on the link;

Consignment Sale season is getting underway, and from 9-2 Saturday is the NOWAMOM Spring Sale at Sandy Plains Baptist Church (2825 Sandy Plains Road). Clothing, cribs, books, toys and many other items for young children are featured.

Check our full calendar listings for more things to do in East Cobb this weekend, and beyond.

Did we miss anything? Do you have a calendar item you’d like to share with the community? Send it to us, and we’ll spread the word! E-mail: calendar@eastcobbnews.com, and you can include a photo or flyer if you like.

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

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Former Wheeler hoops star to host ‘In the Layne’ all-star game

Some of the best high school basketball players from Cobb and Atlanta will be gathering at Wheeler High School’s Wildcat Arena next Friday, March 15, in an event organized by ex-Wildcat great D.A. Layne.In the Layne

He got in touch with us earlier this week to let us know about what he’s calling “In the Layne,” which features top male and female seniors who will get a final sendoff for their prep careers.

Some of them play for East Cobb schools: Jaire Eastmond and Malachi Rhodes of Wheeler, C.J. Henderson of Kell, Justin Day of Sprayberry and Micah Paulk of Pope are on the East boys roster coached by Larry Thompson of Wheeler. D.J. Patrick of Sprayberry is on the West roster.

Layne, who played for Wheeler from 1994-98, also starred at the University of Georgia and played pro basketball abroad for several years.

The ticket and other event information is above. Check out the full rosters below.

In the Layne Boys Roster

In the Layne Girls Roster

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

 

East Cobb shooting victim, 21, has died; family raising funds for funeral

Jake Horne, East Cobb shooting victim dies
Photo of Jake Horne courtesy Lisa Watkins Godsey

A man who was working on an electrical project at an East Cobb home on Wednesday has died after a double shooting there, Cobb Police said Thursday afternoon.

Lisa Watkins Godsey and Jessica Godsey Smith, the aunt and cousin, respectively, of Jake Allen Horne, 21, of Kennesaw, left messages with East Cobb News earlier Thursday saying that he had died.

(Previous ECN story here.)

Police didn’t initially confirm that information. They said that Horne, who was shot in the head, and his boss, Gordon Montcalm, 37, of Buchanan, Ga., who was shot multiple times, were taken to WellStar Kennestone Hospital after the shootings Wednesday afternoon at a residence in East Cobb.

They were listed in serious condition, police previously said.

Larry Epstein, 68, the homeowner of a residence at 1963 Wellington Lane, is being held without bond in the Cobb County Adult Detention Center, charged with two counts of aggravated assault and two counts of aggravated battery, police said.

In a statement issued around 3:30 p.m. Thursday Cobb Police said the department’s “Crimes Against Persons Unit will be working with the District Attorney’s Office to upgrade the offense appropriately.”

Horne and Montcalm were at Epstein’s home, located in the Kensington neighborhood off Johnson Ferry Road, and had completed work for the day, around 2:25 p.m., when there was an argument between them and the homeowner, according to police.

The argument escalated, and police said Horne and Montcalm were shot by the homeowner. Sgt. Wayne Delk of Cobb Police said they still don’t know what led to the dispute.

Cobb Police sent a heavy presence into the community, located between Sewell Mill Road and Oak Lane, including a SWAT team, mobile command unit and helicopters, after someone called 911 about an active shooter there.

A Wellington Lane resident told East Cobb News the street was blocked off and she and other neighbors were ordered to stay inside for a time.

Epstein was taken into custody around 3 p.m. Wednesday afternoon and was booked overnight, according to Cobb Sheriff’s records.

Godsey said Horne was declared brain-dead Wednesday and life support was turned off Thursday morning.

Lisa Godsey, who lives in California and formerly resided in Cherokee County, told East Cobb News that her nephew was an apprentice electrician who was working for Montcalm. He had turned 21 only in January, she said.

“This is a boy that would give you the shirt off of his back. He had a heart of gold,” Godsey said about Horne in a message to East Cobb News. “He thought of everyone else before himself.”

Horne lived for a while in California, Godsey said, and “was best friends with my sons,” and later returned home to Georgia to be near his sister Sadie, who is a few years younger.

“My cousin was one of the victims,” Jessica Godsey Smith said. “Hope the man rots in jail for what he did to him.” She also left Horne a message on her Facebook page Thursday morning:
“We made plans for tomorrow night. My heart hurts so unbelievably much right now. You had such a great heart. You always had a smile on your face, to know you was to love you. And you were truly like a brother to me.”

Friends and family members said the Horne siblings lost their mother and father in recent years, and now Sadie Horne is planning her brother’s funeral.

Lisa Godsey said a Go Fund Me page has been set up for Horne’s funeral expenses.

“This is a very unfair thing,” Godsey said. “We demand Justice for Jake. Please show the world what has been taken. I pray that he is high in the heavens with his new wings.”

Cobb Police said their investigation into the shootings is continuing and that anyone with information should call 770-499-3945.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!