The Cobb outdoor burn ban that runs from May 1-Sept. 30.each year has been moved up due to the statewide shelter-in-place order. The ban now will start next Friday, April 10.
Here’s more from the county:
Leaves, pine straw, and other yard debris may NOT be burned starting that date, and the Fire Marshal’s Office will also stop the issuance of Large Yard Waste and Bonfire permits during this time. Please note there is no ban on fire bowls, chimineas, or similar devices as long as clean wood (not pressure treated, and no varnish) is being burned.
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The Avenue East Cobb management announced late Friday afternoon that its stores that are non-essential will be closed through April 13, due to the Georgia shelter-in-place orderissued by Gov. Brian Kemp.
The order begins is effective from 6 p.m. Friday through 11:59 p.m. April 13.
“Select restaurants” at The Avenue will remain open, with takeout, pickup and delivery service only. They are Kale Me Crazy, Olea Oliva, Menchie’s, Panera Bread, Smallcakes and Tin Lizzie’s.
Other restaurants at The Avenue, including Drift Fish House & Oyster Bar and Stockyard Burgers & Bones, closed before the state order and a Cobb state of emergency declaration that goes through April 24.
The Michael’s craft store and the Simply Mac Apple computer store will remain open with reduced hours.
Non-essential “personal touch” businesses have been ordered to close, although many in East Cobb—hair salons, spas, barber shops, etc.—had already closed before that order.
During the shelter-in-place period, citizens are asked to stay at home, except to do essential shopping for groceries, food and medicines, to help with the care of children and the elderly in their families and act on behalf of the health and safety of those in their households.
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The district has been keeping a running update at this link, and the following are the important bullet points added about grades, etc., at all school levels:
No students’ grades at the end of the second semester can be lower than the grades received on Friday, March 13, 2020.
Give students a choice to accept their grades as of Friday, March 13, 2020 as final grades for 2019-2020 OR continue to earn grades for the remainder of the 2019-2020 school year to improve their grade(s).
Report grades as pass/fail for all students in all K-8 courses. High school courses will be reported as grades for GPA calculation purposes.
Continue to provide academic, emotional, and social support for student needs for the remainder of the 2019-2020 school year.
Allow work submitted after March 13th to be used for grades or to measure what students know. Specific directions will be provided by your principal. Any work submitted will only have a positive impact on a student’s grade(s).
Allow any student who was on track to graduate on Friday, March 13, 2020 to receive credit for all courses for which they were enrolled on or before March 13th.
That guidance, the district said, is based on recommendations from the Georgia Department of Education.
Cobb Board of Education member Charisse Davis, who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters, said in her e-mail newsletter Friday that “our efforts to move school to home should not be additional stress for our families nor the teachers. Please just do your best and we acknowledge that that will look different for each family.”
The district also indicated it was “actively evaluating all options related to graduation ceremonies,” but didn’t indicate what those options might be.
Next week is spring break, and the district had announced earlier there will be no distance learning next week.
“We often wish that we could have school for the sake of learning and we now have an opportunity to have great discussions with our kids as you make decisions as a family on how to proceed in individual classes. Regardless of whether your child chooses to improve their grade(s) or take their grade(s) as of March 13, the skills, curriculum, and learning opportunities they are exposed to will benefit them in future courses. Teachers can notify your child of their grade as of March 13. All graded assignments added to the gradebook after that date will only benefit the student’s overall final average. Any assignment not submitted after March 13 will be left blank in the gradebook. We will continue to instruct and assess until grades close out on May 20.”
He said starting the week of April 13—when spring break is over—digital learning will be reduced to four days a week, Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. Wednesdays are for students to catch up on classwork and for teacher planning.
He also expressed sorrow for the Lassiter seniors who won’t be having a traditional commencement exercise:
“How do we say goodbye to 500 plus seniors to let them know how much we all appreciate their work, their community service, and celebrate them as the graduating class of 2020? We all truly hurt for our seniors who were looking forward to so many awesome Lassiter senior traditions. How do we properly end the school year for our exceptional freshman, sophomore, and juniors and let them know how much we are all looking forward to their leadership next school year?”
One more thing he noted, and the district has stressed this as well, is to consult the Emergency Crisis Hotline for those having difficulties adapting not only to the new learning process, but in coping with the effects of the Coronavirus crisis.
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Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce on Thursday extended an emergency declaration he ordered last week until April 24, ordered certain non-essential businesses to close and clarified the county’s “shelter in place” provisions.
Grocery stores and other essential businesses also must follow further guidelines to observe social distancing measures to help prevent the spread of Coronavirus.
Effective immediately, the following types of businesses must close:
Gyms, fitness and recreation centers;
Hair salons;
Barber shops;
Nail salons;
Waxing salons;
Tanning salons;
Spas;
Tattoo parlors;
Massage-therapy establishments and massage services;
All other nonessential businesses in which “social distancing” minimums of six feet between persons cannot be maintained at all times.
Many of those kinds of businesses in East Cobb—commonly called “personal touch” businesses—closed before Boyce’s emergency declaration last week, which initially was scheduled to last until April 15.
But in his order Thursday, (you can read it in its entirety here), Boyce said more businesses that stay open need to do more to help combat the contagious virus and more time needs to transpire for social distancing and other guidelines to have an effect.
Cobb’s confirmed Coronavirus case count now stands at 320, with 17 deaths, and both of those numbers are among the highest in Georgia.
In his order, Boyce also expanded the emergency declaration to require families and individuals to shelter in place at their homes, except to purchase food and to take care of the health and safety of those in their households.
They can leave to work at businesses that are deemed essential during the emergency, to go outside for exercise while maintaining social distancing guidelines, and to visit immediate family members to help with child care or elderly care.
“I want to make absolutely sure that all of our measures help slow the spread of the virus,” Boyce said in a statement released by the county late Thursday afternoon. “Our healthcare system in the county still has capacity, still has available ventilators, so it is important rather than filling those beds and using those ventilators we take all necessary measures to not use up those resources.”
Dr. Janet Memark, director of Cobb and Douglas Public Health
Essential retail businesses that stay open, including grocery stores, will have to post signage and provide public-address updates outlining and reminding customers of social distancing mandates.
Those include maintaining a distance of least six feet between people, discouraging those who are sick from coming to the stores, and coughing into a tissue instead of the open air.
Stores must also regularly disinfect common areas and provide cleaning and disinfecting products in employee areas.
Those businesses also are being encouraged to provide “contactless” points of interaction and purchase, including placing plexiglass around cashier stations (this is happening at Publix stores) and discouraging customers from bringing reusable bags.
Grocers also are being told not to offer product samples and to prevent customers from using self-service items that are food-related.
The other essential retail stores defined in the order include that “support repair or construction work for businesses and homes, and businesses that sell products to support persons working from home, including computers, audio, electronics, IT and telecommunications equipment.”
At a commissioners’ work session Tuesday, Cobb and Douglas Public Health officials urged that county parks remain closed. They were closed before the emergency declaration, and Boyce announced on Friday they would remain so at the direction of the county manager.
Some state parks also have closed, and most federal parks are closed, including the Chattahoochee National Recreation Area.
Also on Thursday, Gov. Brian Kemp provided details of a statewide shelter-in-place to take effect at 6 a.m. Friday. Georgia’s caseload and death count has risen dramatically in the last week, to 5,348 and 163 respectively, with nearly 20 percent of confirmed cases involving hospitalization.
Both Boyce and Kemp had been reluctant to shut down businesses, and the governor had come under increasing pressure, with only a few states not already having shelter-in-place orders.
The order he signed Thursday restricts all business and other activities to 10 people or less, observing social distancing measures. Families and individuals must also shelter-in-place except for essential travel and business or immediate family reasons.
Those businesses or operations not deemed to be part of the “critical infrastructure” will be limited to what the order calls “minimum basic operations,” also following social distancing and hygiene and sanitation practices.
Other “personal touch” businesses also must close, including bowling alleys, cinemas and live performance theaters.
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!
The Georgia Department of Public Health is gradually revealing more details about those who contract and die from Coronavirus.
As of noon Thursday, the number of people in the state who’ve died from COVID-19 was 163, with 5,348 confirmed cases. The number of hospitalizations is 1,056, a rate of nearly 20 percent.
Cobb County remains among the hotspots in Georgia, with 320 cases and 17 deaths, along with Fulton, DeKalb and Dougherty.
A new statistical line being provided now is a breakdown of those who’ve died from the virus. The report indicates the age and sex of each person, and whether they have any underlying medical issues.
For the 17 Cobb victims, the average age is 72.3 years, and 13 of the deceased are males. The oldest was a 92-year-old woman, and the youngest was a 33-year-old man. The report states it’s unknown whether they had other medical issues.
Five are in their 80s, three are in their 70s, three are in their 60s and one is in his 50s. The age of one of the Cobb victims is unknown.
Cobb COVID cases mapped out by Cobb & Douglas Public Health on March 30.
Various states have been providing different information to the public; in Georgia, the exact locations of victims below the county level generally haven’t been released.
But during a special meeting of the Cobb Board of Commissioners Wednesday, Dr. Janet Memark, director of Cobb and Douglas Public Health, showed heat maps of the increase in COVID-19 cases over the month of March.
She said the heat maps are not exact, but the cases are spread out fairly evenly through the county.
Memark and deputy director Lisa Crossman stressed to commissioners that what they’re seeing is what’s occurring all over the country—widespread community transmission.
They’re asking for non-essential “personal touch” businesses to be closed, and for parks and pools to remain closed.
Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce is expected to tighten the restrictions of a county emergency declaration he issued last week.
That may be superseded, however, by what happens statewide.
Later Wednesday, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp is expected to announce details of a shelter-in-place order that takes effect Friday through April 13. Schools also have been closed for the rest of the academic year; the Cobb County School District is expected to provide further academic guidance on Thursday.
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!
Pictured from left to right: Pat Smith, East Cobb Quilters’ Guild Community Service Committee, Kristie Naylor, Volunteer Services Coordinator, Cobb County Senior Services, and Lynda Bussolar, East Cobb Quilters’ Guild Community Service Committee member .
Submitted information and photo:
East Cobb Quilters’ Guild has a long history of community service. Members give freely of their time and energy to create great quilts and other items for donation to area charities, including Meals on Wheels. This past year, the East Cobb Quilters’ Guild donated 597 placemats to Meals on Wheels.
March for Meals on Wheels is a nationwide month-long celebration of Meals on Wheels and the millions of seniors who rely on the nutritious meals, friendly visits and safety checks to remain independent at home.
Hundreds of older adults and disabled individuals are served by the Cobb County Meals on Wheels Program staffed by volunteer drivers. Lunch is a lot more fun with a pretty placemat, especially with all of the beautiful designs.
An additional note: The group delivered 76 placemats in January, 32 in February and 108 total thus far in 2020.
Let us know what you, your neighbors or others you know are doing to help one another and those in need in East Cobb.
Just e-mail us: [email protected] with text, photos and other relevant information, and we’ll share it with the community.
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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!
Gov. Brian Kemp announced Wednesday that public K-12 schools in the state of Georgia will be closed for in-person instruction for the rest of the 2019-20 school year.
He also said he would issue a statewide shelter-in-place order, effective Friday through April 13, to combat the spread of COVID-19.
UPDATED, Thursday, April 2: The details of the statewide shelter-in-place order can be found here, along with the extension of a state of emergency in Cobb County to April 24.
Shortly after Wednesday’s announcement, the Cobb County School District put out a notice that it would provide further academic guidance by the end of the day Thursday.
Cobb schools closed March 13, shortly before Kemp ordered a statewide closure at least through April 24.
The shelter-in-place order will formally be issued on Thursday, including more details about what those restrictions may entail.
Georgia is one of the few states that has not issued such an order. Other nearby states in the Southeast, including Florida, are starting to do so.
Earlier Wednesday, the Cobb Board of Commissioners heard recommendations by the top two officials of Cobb and Douglas Public Health to continue an emergency declaration until April 24 (it’s set to expire April 15) and to close “personal touch” businesses, like hair salons, barber shops and and personal care salons.
The emergency declaration limits the hours of non-essential businesses. Cobb and Douglas Public Health leaders also urged Cobb to keep parks and pools closed for now.
The number of Georgia’s confirmed COVID-19 cases have risen dramatically over the last week, to 4,638 as of noon Wednesday, with 139 deaths. Cobb is reporting 293 cases and 15 deaths, the fourth-highest total in Georgia.
Earlier this week, Kemp activated the Georgia National Guard to nursing homes, senior-living facilities and long-term care homes where COVID-cases have been confirmed.
On Monday the Sterling Estates senior community in East Cobb announced one of its residents had tested positive, and that all residents there are on lockdown.
During his press conference Wednesday, Kemp said state tracking models showed major increases in the rate of community transmission.
The same trends trends were occurring in Cobb, said Dr. Janet Memark of Cobb and Douglas Public Health, at Wednesday’s commissioners’ meeting.
The governor has been reluctant to order all but essential businesses across the state, since some areas of Georgia don’t have that many cases of the virus.
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!
Both Cazadores Mexican Restaurant (Johnson Ferry Road location only) and Mezza Luna Pasta and Seafood have reopened for takeout, curbside pickup and delivery.
Cazadores is open at 3165 Johnson Ferry Road from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., phone 770-641-8625. The Sandy Plains Road location is remaining closed for now.
Mezza Luna Pasta & Seafood (2100 Roswell Road) began takeout, curbside and delivery service Tuesday with a limited menu. Hours are Starting March 31, curbside pickup, takeout and delivery from a limited menu Monday-Saturday 5-10 p.m. and Sunday 12-9 p.m., call 678-214-5856;
On Friday, Marietta Coffee Company (1598 Roswell Road), will start walk-up and takeout orders daily from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m., call 678-765-8885.
Williamson Bros. Bar-B-Q was among the restaurants that has closed and was planning to reopen Tuesday, but is saying now that a mid-April “grand reopening” is being planned.
Send Us Your News!
If your business closed and is reopening, please e-mail us: [email protected] and we will place it in our East Cobb Open for Business Directory. We want to help local businesses get back on their feet with this free listing!
Contact us at the same e-mail address for news about efforts to assist those in need, health care workers, first responders and others on the frontlines of combatting Coronavirus in East Cobb.
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!
A few April events we’d normally promote on our Events Calendar are being called off, and we expect more to come in.
Among them is the Walton Chorus Spring Concert scheduled for April 21. All public schools in Georgia are closed at least through April 24.
According to the Walton Chorus Facebook page:
“We are hopeful that we will still sing these pieces and perhaps make in-class videos of these great arrangements to share once we return to school. Our student officers did a terrific job of coming up with this year’s theme and with song ideas. Hopefully, we will still be able to make this concert a reality, but perhaps in a different format.”
The organizers of the Pope Band Recycling Event slated for April 25 sent us word that that event too, is being cancelled.
We’re going to temporarily suspend updating our Events Calendar for the time being, until public outings are allowed to resume.
But, we do want to know if you have cancellations/postponements/reschedulings of events, so we can share them with the community.
Please e-mail: [email protected] and we will post those changes in our news blog as part of our continuing coverage of our community’s response to the Coronavirus crisis.
If your business closed and is reopening, please e-mail us: [email protected] and we will place it in our East Cobb Open for Business Directory (see the link below). We want to help local businesses get back on their feet with this free listing!
Contact us at the same e-mail address for news about efforts to assist those in need, health care workers, first responders and others on the frontlines of combatting Coronavirus in East Cobb.
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!
The YMCA of Metro Atlanta announced13 of its locations across metro Atlanta stand ready to provide high-quality childcare services for first responders, hospital employees, police department staff and other frontline workers.
“Our childcare program is open to the brave individuals who are working to meet the needs of the community, including medical professionals, law enforcement, grocery workers, and others who cannot work from home at this time,” said Lauren Koontz, YMCA of Metro Atlanta president and CEO. “In many ways this is our moment to truly deliver on our promise of service to those who turn to us for community and to those who turn to us for survival.”
Childcare is available Monday through Friday from 5:30 am to 8 pm. at the below locations. Limited space is available. Those interested in enrolling their child can visit spiritonline.ymcaatlanta.org to login or register. Once a location has reached capacity, the registration system will indicate that it is full.
McCLESKEY-EAST COBB FAMILY YMCA
Ages 5–12
1055 East Piedmont Rd, Marietta, GA 30062
Parents are encouraged to drop off their child between 5:30 a.m. and 9 a.m. and pick them up between 5pm and 8 pm. No children will be allowed to be dropped off or picked up between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., except in the case of an emergency. Safety protocols set forth by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will be closely followed, and children and the person who drops them off daily will have their temperature checked upon arrival. Children with a temperature of 100 degrees Fahrenheit or higher will not be allowed to stay.
Children are asked to bring a water bottle and their own peanut-free breakfast, lunch, dinner and snacks. Children are also encouraged to bring books and homework to complete during the day. For more information, visit www.ymcaatlanta.org/firstresponders.
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On Monday Smita Daya delivered 45 meals she prepared for health care workers at the Wellstar East Cobb Health Park.
The owner of the Olea Oliva! gourmet shop at The Avenue East Cobb, is staying open for customers who want to shop for her variety of olive oils, vinegars, spices, teas and related artisanal products.
But she’s also donating her time and resources to give a boost to those who are working around the clock to tend to those sick with COVID-19.
Another East Cobb resident, Alison Estella, who runs Rua Marketing, a digital agency, is donating her services for a fundraising drive that also is helping to feed medical professionals, at Kennestone and elsewhere.
Her GoFundMe drive started last week with a goal of raising $5,000, and she told East Cobb News Monday the outreach has netted close to that.
On Tuesday, more than 40 meals were delivered to the Kennestone ICU.
Lunches provided by Smita Daya of Olea Oliva! to East Cobb Health Park workers.
But she’s not stopping now.
“We’re just trying to get Cobb County residents to donate,” said Estella, who’s also coordinated efforts to feed workers at the Wellstar North Fulton emergency unit and the Northside Forsyth Women’s Center.
The donations are used to place orders with several local restaurants, including Paradise Grill, XenGo Fusion Sushi and WZ Tavern in East Cobb (see video below).
When the meals are ready, Estella coordinates their deliveries to the medical locations.
“There’s a dual purpose here,” she said. Medical workers are fed, and “it keeps small businesses afloat. They need the business.”
Proceeds from the GoFundMe drive are also used to provide a 20 percent tip to the restaurant staffers.
“These guys are still alive, and they want to be able to pay their staff.”
What Estella ideally is looking for is not necessarily a few major donors, but many donors offering a few dollars in smaller amounts.
“This is so easy,” she said.
You can also nominate local essential medical facilities to receive the meals, and restuarants to prepare them.
The Cobb Chamber of Commerce has launched what it calls its Operation Meal Plan, which also solicits donations. Restaurants provide meals to be delivered to various non-profit organizations around the county associated with the Cobb Community Foundation.
The selected restaurants include Kouzina Christos in East Cobb. Here’s more from the Chamber about how to get involved in that effort:
For restaurants interested in participating in Operation Meal Plan, contact Nate Futrell, with the Cobb Chamber, at [email protected] and include the following information: point of contact for the restaurant, contact information and what the restaurant’s capacity is per meal request.
For non-profits in need of food for their clients, contact Melanie Kagan, with the Center for Family Resources, at [email protected]. After non-profits and restaurants sign up to participate, Kagan will coordinate orders between the groups, scheduling all orders the day prior.
For community members, groups or organizations that would like to contribute to Operation Meal Plan, all contributions are made through the Cobb Community Foundation and are tax deductible. Contribute here: https://bit.ly/2QNq6aB. Upon service delivery, restaurants provide an invoice so the Cobb Community Foundation can reimburse the at-unit cost.
Send us your news!
Let us know what you, your neighbors or others you know are doing to help one another and those in need as part of the Coronavirus response.
Just e-mail us: [email protected] with text, photos and other relevant information, and we’ll share it with the community.
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 County government is asking for the public’s help in collecting resources using its Geographic Information Service (GIS) mapping tools about grocery store inventories and open businesses during the Coronavirus crisis.
A message that’s been sent out explains the purpose, and asks that you submit what you see at grocery stores when you go shopping, or use an open restaurant for takeout/curbside/delivery service:
“We want to help as many Cobb businesses to survive as possible, and we’re using the power of the people to spread the word!
“Which restaurants are offering take out? Go to our special map and let others know which restaurants are cooking up take out orders. Visit it here.”
Other links to be found there include what customers are noticing in their stores from the previous 24 hours in terms of paper products, breads/foods, produce, and crowds/social distancing.
Thus far more than 400 people have filled out the survey, and results obviously will change frequently.
Here’s the link to survey about to available restaurant options, with answers also to be folded into a countywide data source.
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!
While deadlines have been extended for such things as income tax filings, the Cobb Tax Commissioner’s office is getting out word that the April 1 deadline for applying for a homestead exemption remains the same.
No fooling.
April 1 is Wednesday, and although the tax commissioners offices are closed due to a limited operations status in Cobb County, you can apply in the following ways:
Applying online for basic Homestead Exemption (only)
Downloading an application to apply for any and all Homestead Exemption types such as Age 62, State Senior, Veterans, etc.
Visiting one of our drop box locations to pick-up and complete a blank form
Visiting our East tag office to pick-up a blank form (available at the front door)
If you want to drop your application in the mail or at drop box locations around the county, here’s where and how to do that:
Mailing Address:
Cobb County Tax Commissioner PO Box 100127 Marietta, GA 30061
Drop Box Locations:
WEST PARK GOV’T CENTER 736 Whitlock Ave Marietta, GA 30068 Blank applications available at this location
SOUTH COBB GOV’T CENTER 4700 Austell Rd Austell, GA 30106 Blank applications available at this location
If you need to conduct other business with the Tax Commissioner’s office (including car tag renewals and property tax transactions, staff is addressing calls, e-mails and social media communications. For online options:
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 County government is getting out word this afternoon that the Board of Commissioners will be holding another special called meeting Wednesday for an update on the county’s response to COVID-19.
The meeting is at 2 p.m. in the second-floor board room of the Cobb government administration building (100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta), but the public is encouraged to watch via the following outlets:
Last week commissioners meet in a special called meeting (above, observing social distancing guidelines) at which Chairman Mike Boyce outlined his intent to declare a state of emergency.
He did so later in the day, through April 15.
Monday’s message about the Wednesday meeting wasn’t any more specific than a general update, and nothing further has been posted yet to the commission’s meeting agenda page.
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!
The Sterling Estates senior living community on Lower Roswell in East Cobb is reporting that it has a positive test for Coronavirus.
The Sterling Estates website posted a message Monday saying that a resident who reported abdominal pain on Thursday but did not have a fever was tested “out of an abundance of caution” and that the person’s test for COVID-19 came back positive on Sunday.
That individual remains hospitalized in stable condition, according to the Sterling Estates management, which continued:
“We are in regular contact with the resident’s family. It is critically important that we treat this situation with the utmost confidentiality. We must adhere to patient privacy laws but will be as transparent as laws allow. Please be assured that we can and will take the necessary steps to prevent any virus spread while also adhering to these laws.”
The posting also indicated that any staff members with known exposure to the infected person are being asked to self-isolate. That individual’s apartment is being cleaned and common areas of Sterling Estates also will be cleaned.
Residents have been ordered to stay in their apartments until further notice. Their temperatures will be taken twice a day and they will be provided in-room meal services.
Staff members will be wearing gloves and masks and will have symptom screenings three times a day, including a temperature check.
Numerous senior living facilities in Cobb and elsewhere have been taking measures to stop the spread of COVID-19 because older people are more vulnerable to the disease.
The Solana East Cobb on Johnson Ferry Road has moved into “full apartment quarantine,” according to a message posted on its website Saturday.
The facility is owned by The Arbor Company, which has imposed a company-wide policy that includes cancelling group activities and classes and delivering meals to each resident’s apartment.
Senior living communities in Marietta also have had positive test results.
As of noon Monday, 245 positive COVID-19 cases have been reported in Cobb County, with nine deaths.
In Georgia there are 2,809 confirmed cases and 87 deaths. Only Dougherty County (17) and Fulton County (14) have more deaths than Cobb.
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!
In response to school closures during the COVID-19 pandemic, the daily hours for availability of TutorATL’s online tutors expanded to 9 a.m.-11 p.m. TutorATL features personalized homework help and expert tutors in more than 50 subjects with bilingual offerings. On-demand access to tutors has doubled with morning and early afternoon sessions added.
Cobb County Public Library offers TutorATL for free to kindergarten-12th grade students with regular Cobb library cards or through Library Public Library Access for Student Success accounts. Library PASS accounts are offered to all Cobb County and Marietta City students. Student numbers are the keys to Library PASS access. For information, visit tutoratl.org.
Powered by Tutor.com, TutorATL is a service of ATL PBA and is made possible by the generous support of the Chick-fil-A Foundation.
Library PASS (Public Library Access for Student Success) accounts are offered to all Cobb County and Marietta City students. Student numbers are the keys to Library PASS access.
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!
Kavita Kar, a sophomore at Wheeler High School, has gotten in touch to let the public now about a fundraising drive she’s started to purchase N95 masks for hospital workers in the Atlanta area treating those with COVID-19.
She’s set a fundraising goal of $6,300, and on Sunday morning told us she’s more than halfway there—with around $3,300 in pledges.
Kavita says the masks, which are coming from China, will be given to staffs at both Wellstar Kennestone Hospital in Marietta and Northside Hospital in Atlanta.
“We will be shipping the masks from the Guangzhou port. These masks will take 9 days to ship to our hospitals, and the sooner we can ship them, the sooner our doctors and nurses are able to use them.
Each mask costs $1.30 and $6,000 will help us provide for hospitals in our area. Each dollar that is raised will help a doctor or a nurse get through a day at work, a little bit safer than they were.”
Send us your news!
Let us know what you, your neighbors or others you know are doing to help one another and those in need as part of the Coronavirus response.
Just e-mail us: [email protected] with text, photos and other relevant information, and we’ll share it with the community.
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!
Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger has announced that all 6.9 million registered voters in the state will be mailed absentee ballot applications in response to COVID-19.
In a release sent out this week, Raffensperger said this is a temporary measure that applies only to the now-delayed May 19 primaries. Voters aged 65 and older and those with disabilities can apply to vote absentee through the primary and general elections and any runoffs during the 2020 election cycle.
A few more items to note from the Secretary of State’s release:
Poll workers will receive additional resources to clean the equipment regularly. In-person voters who show up to vote in person will be instructed to maintain a safe distance when waiting to vote.
These measures will protect poll workers as well. Understanding the extra risk Georgia’s generally elderly poll workers face, Raffensperger is working to help counties hire more and younger poll workers. Extra staff will allow those who feel sick to be absent from the polls without significantly impacting continuity while a younger pool of workers will increase resiliency in the face of the COVID-19 threat.
On Friday, Georgia House Speaker David Ralston sent a letter to Raffensperger asking him to delay the primaries again, to a month or more, as the state grapples with a rising caseload of COVID-19 cases.
But Raffensperger has said the primary, which was to have taken place on Tuesday, will go on as rescheduled for May 19.
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The Cobb Chamber of Commerce has started an Economic Recovery Taskforce to develop and implement a strategic approach to proactively drive our community’s economic recovery from COVID-19. Taskforce members will meet weekly via video conference starting on Monday, March 30th.
“Many businesses are struggling with the impact COVID-19 has had on their organizations and their employees,” said John Loud, 2020 Chairman of the Cobb Chamber’s Board of Directors and president of LOUD Security Systems. “We want to drive initiatives that will lead the recovery that this community needs.”
“The Cobb Chamber has been focused on providing resources, advocacy and support to help our businesses and community through this difficult time,” said Sharon Mason, Cobb Chamber President & CEO. “This taskforce will help us take additional steps for a proactive strategy for economic recovery.”
Cobb Chamber Chair-Elect Britt Fleck will serve as the Chair of the Cobb Chamber’s Economic Recovery Taskforce. “We have brought together a diverse group for this taskforce that represents different organizations and industries in our community, especially sectors most impacted by COVID-19,” said Britt Fleck, Cobb Chamber Chair-Elect and Regional Director for Georgia Power. “We look forward to working with this taskforce for a strategic and thoughtful approach for overcoming this.”
In addition its kick-off meeting on March 30th, the taskforce’s first program is a webinar, “How To: Business Recovery from COVID-19” on Tuesday, March 31st at 10:30 a.m. Any business is welcome to join this free webinar by registering through the Cobb Chamber’s website at cobbchamber.org/events. There are up to 500 attendee spots available.
The March 31st webinar will be moderated by 2020 Chairman John Loud and with participants, such as Georgia Small Business Development Center Area Director Drew Tonsmeire. The webinar will focus on walking businesses through the recovery resources available, including the Small Business Administration loan application process, the federal stimulus CARES act and more.
And here are the task force members:
· John Loud, Cobb Chamber 2020 Chairman & LOUD Security Systems President
· Britt Fleck, Taskforce Chair, Cobb Chamber Chair-Elect, Georgia Power Regional Director
Don’t forget to support local businesses in East Cobb that are remaining open. Many of those listed in our East Cobb Open for Business Directory are restaurants, and many are adapting on the fly to provide takeout/curbside services.
We’re constantly adding to this listing, so if you’d like to add yours please e-mail us the information: [email protected]. Please include links to your website, social media platforms, etc.
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!
NW Metro Atlanta Habitat for Humanity found a pallet of more than 1,000 N95 masks used in Habitat house construction in the affiliates’ Smyrna warehouse. Today, they were able to donate and deliver them to Cobb & Douglas Public Health today to help with their shortages!
Pictured is Bonnie Willis, from the affiliate’s construction team.
Send us your news!
Let us know what you, your neighbors or others you know are doing to help one another and those in need as part of the Coronavirus response.
Just e-mail us: [email protected] with text, photos and other relevant information, and we’ll share it with the community.
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!