Georgia State Senate runoff culminates successful elections for female candidates

State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick
Kay Kirkpatrick of East Cobb won a special election runoff in June to succeed State Sen. Judson Hill. (East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

Atlanta attorney Jen Jordan won a Georgia State Senate runoff special election Tuesday that includes a portion of Cobb County. Her election also wound up a successful year of political campaigns in metro Atlanta and Georgia by female candidates.

In an all-Democratic race, Jordan easily defeated Jaha Howard, a Vinings dentist, to claim the Georgia State Senate District 6 seat vacated by Republican Hunter Hill, who is running for Georgia governor. Jordan received 10,681 votes, or 64 percent, to 6,017 votes for Howard, or 36 percent (full results here).

The district includes south Cobb, the Terrell Mill precinct in the Powers Ferry area and part of the city of Atlanta. Howard won the Cobb portion by a 60-40 margin, but Jordan, a self-described progressive, won her home base in Fulton by a 74-26 percent margin.

She was endorsed by former Cobb state representative Stacey Evans, who also is running for governor.

Tuesday also saw the second female elected mayor of Atlanta, as city council member Keisha Lance Bottoms edged fellow council member Mary Norwood in a hotly-contested runoff. Norwood, who was supported by Shirley Franklin, Atlanta’s first female mayor, has asked for a a recount.

Felicia Moore was elected president of the Atlanta City Council on Tuesday, and Roswell’s new mayor is Lori Henry, who succeeds longtime mayor Jere Wood.

Smyrna elected its first black member of the city council, Maryline Blackburn, and Cheryl Richardson won a seat on the Marietta City Council.

In conservative East Cobb, Republican women also won special elections this summer. Kay Kirkpatrick, a retired surgeon at Resurgens Orthopedics and a longtime civic leader with the East Cobb Rotary Club, won a special election to succeed State Sen. Judson Hill in District 32.

He resigned to run for the 6th District Congressional seat won by former Georgia Secretary of State Karen Handel. She downed heavily-financed Democratic novice Jon Ossoff in a race watched around the nation.

U.S. Rep. Karen Handel
U.S. Rep. Karen Handel got strong support in East Cobb in her bid to succeed Tom Price.

Handel earned some of her biggest margins in East Cobb, where she was strongly supported by Cobb commissioners Bob Ott and JoAnn Birrell.

Birrell, who represents District 3 in Northeast Cobb, is up for re-election next year, and has already drawn Republican primary opposition from Tom Cheek, who sued Cobb County and filed an ethics complaint against former commission chairman Tim Lee over the Atlanta Braves stadium vote.

Handel and Kirkpatrick also have to run for re-election in 2018, as does East Cobb Republican State Rep. Sharon Cooper, a longtime member of the state house. All seats in the legislature will be on the ballot, as well as governor and other statewide offices.

Two East Cobb posts on the Cobb Board of Education will also be up for election in 2018. They are currently held by Republicans Scott Sweeney of Post 6 (Walton and Wheeler high school districts) and David Chastain of Post 4, which includes the Kell and Sprayberry districts.

 

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Cobb Planning Commission votes to hold Terrell Mill Towne Center rezoning case

Terrell Mill Towne Center
The Terrell Mill Towne Center, proposed as a major boost for the Powers Ferry corridor, has drawn strong and mixed reaction from nearby residents.

After nearly two hours of discussion that included heated opposition from residents in a nearby townhome complex, the Cobb Planning Commission on Tuesday voted to hold the long-delayed rezoning request for the proposed Terrell Mill Towne Center.

By a 3-2 vote, the Planning Commission—which is an advisory board to the Cobb Board of Commissioners—requested more time to sort out a major, complex application that was filed in January.

Traffic and density issues were the primary concerns raised by Thea Powell, Galt Porter and Skip Gunther, the three planning board members who opposed the proposal to rezone nearly 23 acres at Powers Ferry Road and Terrell Mill Road. The mixed-use project, which would be anchored by a Kroger superstore, was to have gone before Cobb commissioners Dec. 19.

The latest delay will push back a formal vote until at least February, since Cobb zoning cases are not heard in January.

The $200 million Terrell Mill Towne Center (agenda packet item) also would also contain restaurants, retail shops, and most controversially, a 310-unit luxury apartment complex abutting the Salem Ridge townhomes on Terrell Mill Road.

Related coverage:

Cobb Planning Commission Chairman Mike Terry of East Cobb, who represents District 2, where the Terrell Mill Towne Center would be located, was in strong support of the development by Eden Rock Real Estate Partners. So was Judy Williams of District 3 in Northeast Cobb, who said the project “would be good for the neighborhood, but will have to be tweaked.”

While the Powers Ferry Corridor Alliance—formerly known as the Terrell Mill Community Association—overwhelmingly supported the rezoning, Salem Ridge homeowners expressed strong opposition, especially to the residential component they say is excessively dense for the area.

“Why do we have [zoning] codes at all if we are going to ignore them?” asked Amy Patricio, who represented the opposing Salem Ridge residents.

She argued that the multiple variances requested by developers amounted to “taking the code and rewriting it to serve their purposes.”

Although Terry and Garvis Sams, the attorney for the developers, pointed out that the full proposal is suitable under the Cobb future land use plan and Power Ferry Master Plan, it was the residential component and a self-storage facility that opponents objected to the most.

In particular, Patricio said the UC zoning category sought for the apartments—Urban Condominium—was far more dense than should be allowed, and that there were an “egregious” number of variances as part of the project.

Porter, of South Cobb, agreed about the density issue, pointing to the project’s proposed 60 units an acre, as compared to the current nearby maximum of five units an acre.

“This just doesn’t match Salem Ridge or anything else around here,” he said, calling it “the definition of spot zoning.”

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PHOTOS: Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center opens its doors

Sewell Mill Library opens
The main browsing area of the new Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center. (East Cobb News photos and slideshow by Wendy Parker)

With a whiff of asphalt greeting patrons—the parking lot isn’t quite finished—the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center opened to the public on Monday, and quite a few people were waiting to have a look around.

Adult patrons, as well as toddlers, babies and home-schooled students and their parents, were the first to get a public tour of the 28,000-square-foot facility at 2051 Lower Roswell Road. It replaces the East Marietta Library, which was demolished last month after 50 years in service.

Related Coverage:

Sewell Mill Library opens

Sewell Mill Library opens

Built at a cost of $10.6 million, the facility is a joint project of the Cobb County Public Library System and the Cobb Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs Department.

In addition to a large adult browsing room, there’s also a roomy children’s section. The first event at the new library was a pre-school storytime session, and it was well-attended.

Sewell Mill Library opens

Sewell Mill Library opens

One of the parents watching her children was Kara Sutton, who grew up not far from the old East Marietta Library. She and her family live off Canton Road, and she brings her 4-1/2-year-old twins and a two-year-old to public libraries at least twice a week.

“We live closer to Gritters, and love it there,” she said. “But it’s great to have a newer space to visit.”

Sewell Mill Library opens

Sewell Mill Library opens

But the new branch is much more than a library with traditional library services. The “cultural center” component features visual and digital creative space, including a black box theater and an outdoor amphitheater where concerts and film screenings will be presented.

Sewell Mill Library opens

Sewell Mill Library opens

The opening events reflect that commitment to multi-media, including a photography class on the first evening, a comics workshop, enrichment sessions about classic filmmakers and classical music composers, as well as meetups for filmmakers and writers.

Sewell Mill Library opens

The cultural art space also includes “a digital maker space commons” with small recording rooms, an art gallery and art classrooms, conference and study rooms, a public computer room, a separate room for teenage-themed materials and a cafe.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

There will be a formal ribbon-cutting for the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center at 2 p.m. on Jan. 9. It has the same hours as the former East Marietta Library:

  • Monday-Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.;
  • Thursday-Friday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.;
  • Saturday, 1-6 p.m.;
  • Closed Sunday.

Parking is available behind the building, as work crews finish paving the parking lot and complete the new entrance for Sewell Park Drive at the site of the former East Marietta Library.

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East Cobb Biz Notes: Chick-Fil-A Woodlawn Square expansion would include double drive-through

Chick Fil A Woodlawn canopy rendering

The congested layout for the Chick-Fil-A Woodlawn Square location on Johnson Ferry Road will be getting a makeover.

According to documents filed with the Cobb Zoning Division, Interplan LLC, which operates the Chick-Fil-A store at 1201 Johnson Ferry Road, wants to redo the parking lot and drive-through layout as part of an overall restaurant expansion.

In order to do that, it wants to add an adjacent .15 acres of vacant land that’s zoned community retail (CRC). A proposal to rezone from CRC and neighborhood shopping, the freestanding restaurant’s current category, to all neighborhood shopping (NS) will be heard Tuesday by the Cobb Planning Commission.

The applicant’s information packet and zoning staff analysis can be found here, and includes the above rendering and site plan modifications shown below.

What Chick-Fil-A wants to do is construct two lanes winding around the back of the restaurant, along the current route of the current single-lane drive-through, with a canopy at the order station.

If you’ve been in that drive-through lane, you’ve noticed that cars parked next to the building are essentially blocked in because of the long lines. Employees are often manually taking orders standing next to the line to speed up the process.

Chick Fil A Woodlawn site plan

In the new configuration, customers would give their order, then proceed into a single line to the window. It’s a set-up similar to other Chick-Fil-A stores with this feature.

In the Cobb zoning staff analysis, it was noted that a variance is being sought for the front setback from 50 feet to 15 feet in order to accommodate the new canopy. Staff is recommending approval with several conditions, including approval of the architecture of the building and canopy plans by the district commissioner (Bob Ott).

The NS zoning classification is consistent with the rest of Woodlawn Square, which includes Muss & Turner’s, Fresh Market, J. Christopher’s and other retail stores at the shopping center. The adjacent Starbuck’s, also freestanding, is zoned CRC.

In other East Cobb business news, Drift Fish House & Oyster Bar (The Avenue East Cobb, 4475 Roswell Road) has appointed Thomas Hill as its new executive chef.

According to Eater Atlanta, Hill moves over from Seed and Stem Wine Bar, where he worked under Drift owner Doug Turbush. Hill also has also worked at restaurants in Alaska and Oregon.

The following new businesses in East Cobb were granted licenses last week by the Cobb Community Development Department:

  • Atlanta Eco Tree, 1651 Smithwood Drive (tree trimming service);
  • Braemar Partners LLC, 1642 Powers Ferry Road, Suite 250 (land development);
  • East Cobb Embroidery, 895 Fairfield Drive (printing and embroidery services);
  • M V Auto Body Repair, 1991 Powers Ferry Road (auto repair);
  • Nest Interiors, 3411 Ebenezer Road (interior design);
  • Southland Partners, 2100 Powers Ferry Road, Suite 300 (building contractor);
  • Studio Glamoureux, 2550 Sandy Plains Road (cosmetics);
  • Treestone Touring, 1000 Johnson Ferry Road (entertainment services).

 

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PHOTOS: Holiday Lights at East Cobb Park

Holiday Lights East Cobb Park
(East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

Several hundred East Cobbers—many of them young children happily dancing with glowsticks and awaiting the arrival of Santa—gathered around the pavilion at East Cobb Park Sunday for the annual Holiday Lights celebration.

Holiday Lights East Cobb Park

Holiday Lights East Cobb Park

Sponsored by the Friends for the East Cobb Park, the event also has the support of WellStar East Cobb Health Park, the East Cobb Rotary and other community organizations and businesses.

Related Coverage

Holiday Lights East Cobb Park
The crowd was warmed up right before dusk by the Dodgen Middle School Pops Band.

Holiday Lights East Cobb Park

Holiday Lights East Cobb Park

Holiday Lights East Cobb Park
The East Cobb Rotary Club provided refreshments while the crowd waited for the tree lighting and Santa.
Holiday Lights East Cobb Park
Santa Claus arrived, and parked his sleigh right in front of the newly lighted tree.
Holiday Lights East Cobb Park
Lines of children waited their chance for a visit and photo with St. Nick.

Holiday Lights East Cobb Park

Holiday Lights East Cobb Park

Holiday Lights East Cobb Park

Holiday Lights East Cobb Park
The walking paths around East Cobb Park also were adorned with lights for the rest of the holiday season.

To see more East Cobb holiday events, please consult our Holiday Guide. Send your holiday news (including photos) to: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

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Terrell Mill Towne Center rezoning goes before Cobb Planning Commission

Terrell Mill Towne Center

We posted back in October some details about the proposed Terrell Mill Towne Center development that’s finally coming up for rezoning this month after months of delays.

The first step in the process comes Tuesday, when the developer, Eden Rock Real Estate Partners, gets a hearing before the Cobb Planning Commission for its 23-acre plan at the northwest corner of Terrell Mill Road and Powers Ferry Road.

The meeting starts at 9 a.m. in the 2nd floor commissioners meeting room, 100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta.

The Cobb Zoning Staff packet and analysis includes a general recommendation of approval of the application with quite a few stipulations related to traffic, including that the developer conduct a traffic study.

The staff document also contains photos of landscaping and lighting plans submitted by the developer, as well as signage height dimensions for the Kroger superstore that’s the anchor component of the project.Kroger sign Terrell Mill Towne Center

Eden Rock (the formal applicant is SSP Blue Ridge, LLC) wants to convert land presently zoned for general commercial, neighborhood shopping and low-density residential (including the present location of Brumby Elementary School) to community retail commercial and urban condominium categories.

In addition to the 100,000-square-foot Kroger, Terrell Mill Towne Center would include restaurant and retail space and 340 luxury residential units.

Here’s Eden Rock’s prospectus it posted in October.

Also in October, the developers and Cobb government and school officials outlined the project at a meeting of the Powers Ferry Corridor Alliance, a civic group formerly known as the Terrell Mill Community Association. That group has expressed general support for the Eden Rock project as a boost for the Powers Ferry area.

The development also is timed for the opening of a new Interstate 75 interchange at Terrell Mill Road.

In its analysis, the Cobb Zoning staff recommended that the developer donate right of way for traffic improvements, including a minimum of 50 feet on the west side of Powers Ferry Road, and a similar distance on the north side of Terrell Mill Road.

Terrell Mill Towne Center landscapingThe traffic study recommendation includes a long-term build-out assessment of 10 years, as well as the installation of traffic signal on Powers Ferry Road at least that’s at least 1,000 feet from the intersection of Terrell Mill Road.

Eden Rock also has proposed a traffic signal on Terrell Mill Road that would partially shut off access to the Terrell Mill Plaza (where the LA Fitness Center is located).

Zoning staff is recommending that a new access point be created at the rear of Terrell Mill Towne Center to coordinate with the Terrell Mill Plaza entrance, and that the developer build raised concrete islands on Powers Ferry Road and Terrell Mill Road.

The rest of Tuesday’s Cobb Planning Commission agenda can be found here, along with preliminary staff analysis.

Staff recommendations and the planning commission’s votes are advisory; the final say comes from the Cobb Board of Commissioners on Dec. 19.

 

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Lower Roswell Road accident near Sewell Park kills pedestrian

Lower Roswell Road accident

An 81-year-old Marietta woman died Thursday when she was struck by a minivan on Lower Roswell Road.

Cobb Police said Qinxian Fu was pronounced dead after being taken to WellStar Kennestone Hospital after the accident.

According to police, the victim was a pedestrian who stepped off the north side of Lower Roswell Road between Pioneer Trail and the entrance to Sewell Park Drive, and into the road, and was hit by the minivan.

The area of the accident was also near Faith Lutheran Church.

The vehicle, a gray 2007 Honda Odyssey, was driven by Vevodova Ladislava, 41, of Acworth, who was traveling westbound on Lower Roswell when she struck Fu with her right fender, police said.

The motorist was not injured, according to police, who are still investigating the case. Anyone with information is asked to call 770-499-3987.

PHOTOS: Apple Annie Arts & Craft Show at Catholic Church of St. Ann

Apple Annie Arts & Crafts Show
(East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

The 37th Apple Annie Arts & Craft Show takes place Friday from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. and on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Catholic Church of St. Ann (4905 Roswell Road), and on Thursday, we swung by the volunteer and VIP event to get a glimpse of what’s on store for the weekend.

It’s part of a big holiday weekend of events in East Cobb. See our earlier post here, as well as our full Holiday Guide for more.

More than 120 artisanal artists and craftsmakers are selling their wares at Apple Annie—some, but not all of it—with a Christmas theme. This is one of the bigger juried arts and crafts shows in the area, and vendors are lined up not only in the fellowship area but downstairs and in classroom and meeting room space.

Apple Annie

Apple Annie

Apple Annie

Apple Annie

Apple Annie

In addition to the arts and crafts sales, a bake sale will be available and the Apple Annie Cafe will serve soups, sandwiches and beverages, with the proceeds going to the St. Ann’s preschool.

Apple Annie

Apple Annie

There also will be continuous raffle prizes every 15 minutes from show artisans and there will be a separate raffle for a handmade 98″ x 98″ quilt.

Admission is $3 (no strollers), and proceeds go to church parish and local charities. Free parking is in the church lot, with overflow space and shuttle service available at the Episcopal Church of St. Peter and St. Paul (1795 Johnson Ferry Road).

To see more East Cobb holiday events, please consult our Holiday Guide. Send your holiday news (including photos) to: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

 

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EAST COBB WEEKEND: Holiday Lights; Apple Annie; Bethlehem Walk; Santa visits; concerts and more

Bethlehem Walk, Mountain View UMC, East Cobb weekend
Bethlehem Walk at Mountain View UMC is marking its 25th anniversary.

The first full week of the holidays in East Cobb culminates with a weekend schedule bursting with seasonal activities. Our continuously updated Holiday Guide has plenty more, but here are a few highlights of what’s going on through Sunday:

  • Apple Annie Arts & Crafts Show: Fri 9-7, Sat 9-2, admission $3; Catholic Church of St. Ann (4905 Roswell Road), now in its 37th year, with more than 100 artisan vendors, bake sale, raffle, overflow parking at and shuttle service from Episcopal Church of St. Peter & St. Paul. We’ll have extended coverage on Friday;
  • Carriage Rides & Santa Visits: Back again at The Avenue East Cobb (4475 Roswell Road) from 3-7 on Friday, as well as Dec. 8 and 15;
  •  “The Story” Christmas at Eastside Baptist Church: A theatrical production with a full orchestra, choir and ballerinas; shows Friday 7 p.m., Saturday 1 p.m. and Sunday 3 p.m. are free; 2450 Lower Roswell Road;
  • Breakfast With Santa & East Cobb Lions Club: From 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. Saturday at Powers Ferry UMC (245 Powers Ferry Road); cost is $7 a person;
  • St. Nick’s Cafe: The Art Place-Mountain View’s annual holiday program, with this year’s show entitled “What Could Go Wrong the Night Before Christmas?” Saturday 9 & 11 a.m., 1 and 3 p.m.; tickets are $15 and include Chick-fil-A meals to follow; 3330 Sandy Plains Road;
  • Holiday Fine Arts Showcase: Two shows with the combined bands, chorus and orchestra of Wheeler High School start at 2 and 4:30 Saturday (375 Holt Road); Tickets are $5 students/$10 adults and are good for both shows;
  • Bethlehem Walk: In 1992, Mountain View UMC (2300 Jamerson Road) began these self-guided tours of the scene of Jesus’ birth, featuring local citizen/actors, and followed by cider and baked goods. Saturday, Sunday and Dec. 8 & 9 from 7-9 p.m. Admission is free, but donations are accepted;
  • Christmas Packages: Johnson Ferry Baptist Church’s annual holiday celebration, with games, music, carriage rides, crafts, and more; Sunday 4-7:30 p.m., 955 Johnson Ferry Road;
  • Holiday Lights at East Cobb Park: The community-wide tree lighting festival, with music from the Dodgen Middle School band and a grand entrance from Santa Claus. Hot chocolate and snack sales to benefit the Friends for the East Cobb Park; Sunday 5-7 p.m., 3322 Roswell Road. Overflow parking at Fullers Park.

Did we miss anything? Have a holiday calendar item to share? E-mail it to: calendar@eastcobbnews.com and we’ll post it.

Have a great weekend!

 

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East Cobb Real Estate: Modern Chimney Springs ranch sells for $340K

2584 Fieldstone Path, East Cobb Real Estate

The following deeds for recent residential East Cobb real estate sales were filed with the Cobb Superior Court Clerk’s Office Real Estate Department last week. They include a one-story modern ranch on Fieldstone Path in Chimney Springs for $340,000.

The addresses are in Marietta ZIP Codes, unless otherwise indicated:

Nov. 20

4350 Stockton Way, 30066; A. Moravitz to Michael Rabbitt; $248,000

2584 Fieldstone Path, 30062; Kevin Condon to Christian Shockley; $340,000

308 Indian Hills Trail, 30068; Geoffrey Green to Roark Homes LLC; $365,000

558 Spring Creek Way, 30068; Joseph Tomberlin to Laura Engelbrecht; $245,000

3010 Octavia Circle; 30062; Barc Holdings LLC to Jason Pearson; $619,500

4890 Tremont Drive, 30066; Walter Gordon Sr. to Michael Zeidler; $233,000

1680 Little Willeo Road, 30068; Chris Stewart to Abegboyeba Awoleye; $790,000

2106 Pawnee Drive, 30067; Benjamin Bedont to Hashem Mahzoon; $204,600

199 Sentinel Place, 30067; Jeffrey Farr to Hugh Markey; $790,000

2706 Twin Leaf Trail, 30062; Danyelle Paul to Patrick Abbott; $489,000

1430 Castlebrooke Way, 30067; Adam Moody to Pierre Lucien; $138,000

Nov. 21

4038 River Ridge Chase, 30067; David Menna to Lester Strech; $925,000

2921 Cobb Street, 30068; Mark Welker to Alexander Heide; $273,000

2814 Benson Drive, 30062; Tyler Chandler Homes LLC to Craig Camasta; $865,000

5241 Shasta Way, 30068; Kari Blodgett to Olga Sagalovskaya; $435,000

3595 Lassiter Road, 30066; Abbas Letafat to Alex Rajabi; $300,000

967 Richmond Hill Drive, 30068; Joanna Poynton trustee to J & I Properties LLC; $317,500

Nov. 22

2734 Okawana Drive, 30067; Timothy and Susan Torchia to Jordan Raus; $250,000

1823 Chondra Drive, 30062; Shahnaz Abadi to Avani Patel; $221,000

4823 Old Timber Ridge Road, 30068; Cyril McGuire to Manise Singh; $820,000

5315 River Mill Circle, 30068; Donald Dye Jr. to Maria Puig Mancini; $577,000

1757 E. Lake Drive, 30062; Carol Kimbrell to Jeffrey Gaines; $265,000

1389 Waterford Green Drive, 30068; Waterford Green Subdivision LLC to Mohammed Rafiei; $570,000

3310 Indian Hills Drive, 30068; Christopher Riehn and Raymond Biernacki to Darcy Prins and Kelly Putnam; $380,000

990 Overbrook Circle, 30062; Elizabeth Carmichael to Thiana Elias; $180,000

2313 Bent Pine Overlook, 30066; Victoria Roberts to Michael Henry; $302,500

 

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Santa Claus lights tree at WellStar East Cobb Health Park holiday celebration

East Cobb Health Park holiday celebration

Santa Claus just couldn’t wait until December. Neither could Mrs. Claus. As they descended the main stairwell during the WellStar East Cobb Health Park holiday celebration Tuesday, young children gasped with delight.

A few moments later, they lit the tree and Old St. Nick allowed youngsters—and even a few grownups—on his lap to hear their Christmas wishes.

Related coverage:

Tuesday’s free event was among the first of many scheduled holiday activities around East Cobb, and as we noted on Monday, there are several others through the first week of the season.

East Cobb Health Park holiday celebration

East Cobb Health Park holiday celebration

East Cobb Health Park holiday celebration

There will be many more times to see Santa Claus, too. On Friday, he’ll make the first of three visits to The Avenue East Cobb (also on Dec. 8 and Dec. 15). On Sunday, he’ll turn on the lights at another major community event, Holiday Lights at East Cobb Park.

East Cobb Health Park holiday celebration

East Cobb Health Park holiday celebration

We’ll update Santa’s East Cobb itinerary as we discover more of his whereabouts. Until then, please visit our Holiday Guide for many more events, services and celebrations. And please feel free to send your holiday photos and news to: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

 

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Studio Movie Grill Marietta location opens on Powers Ferry Road

Studio Movie Grill Marietta

The Studio Movie Grill location at the old Harry’s Plaza shopping center on Powers Ferry Road has opened.

The 49,000-square-foot facility is where a Sports Authority store was located years ago, features 11 dine-in auditoriums and nearly 1,300 luxury seats, a bar and a patio.

This is the third Georgia location for the Dallas-based Studio Movie Grill, which operates 30 theatres in Arizona, California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Texas.

Construction plans for the Marietta venue were underway before the closure of Harry’s Farmers Market was announced (previous East Cobb News post here).

The movie-and-dinner concept offered first screenings on Nov. 16, and has scheduled a holiday-oriented promotion through Thursday to benefit the Atlanta Community Food Bank.

In what’s it’s calling the “Cans Film Festival,” patrons who donate four or more canned goods or non-perishable items will receive a free movie ticket to any film on that day at the Marietta location.

The current slate of movies includes “Coco,” “Justice League,” “Wonder,” “Murder on the Orient Express” and “A Bad Moms Christmas.”

The Studio Movie Grill in Marietta also has a special needs screening each Saturday morning for families with special needs children, who receive matinee pricing.

Through Dec. 6, online-only tickets cost $3 with the code SMGMARIETTA. Box-office prices are $9 for adults, $6 for children and $7 for matinees.

The Studio Movie Grill is located at 40 Powers Ferry Road. The phone number is 678-273-3558.

 

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Early voting continues this week in Georgia State Senate special election runoff

A handful of East Cobb voters are eligible to cast a ballot in next Tuesday’s Georgia State Senate special election runoff. Early voting continues through this week for the District 6 race between Democrats Jaha Howard and Jon Jordan.Georgia State Senate special election

The voting location through Friday for this race is the Cobb Elections main office, 736 Whitlock Ave., Marietta. The hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

District 6 covers some of Cobb, Buckhead and Sandy Springs, and includes a portion of the Powers Ferry Road corridor in East Cobb. The seat was vacated by Republican Hunter Hill, who is running for Georgia governor.

There is no early voting on Monday. On Tuesday, District 6 voters in the Terrell Mill 1 precinct will be able to vote at Eastvalley Elementary School, 2570 Lower Roswell Road.

In the Nov. 7 jungle primary, Jordan, an Atlanta attorney, got 5,860 votes, or 24 percent. Howard, a Vinings dentist, got 5,398 votes, or 22 percent.

 

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More details about Cobb Senior Services membership program

Cobb Senior Services membership program
The East Cobb Senior Center celebrated its 22nd anniversary in August. (East Cobb News file photo)

The Cobb Board of Commissioners voted on Nov. 15 to create a membership fee structure for use of Cobb Senior Services, including centers such as the East Cobb Senior Center (previous East Cobb News post here).

The charges go into effect on Feb. 1, 2018, and will be implemented for spring 2018 class registration (but not winter, which is still going on. Here’s also a schedule of December and holiday activities at the East Cobb Senior Center, 3332 Sandy Plains Road).

Here’s what the county sent out earlier today, with more details and contact information about the new membership program:

Membership Fees

  • Cobb residents: $60/year
  • Non-residents: $90/year

You may create your yearly membership online at CobbSeniors.org or by visiting any senior center. Cash, check and credit cards (MasterCard/Visa/American Express) are acceptable forms of payment.

  • Included in the yearly membership are free, evidence-based health programs (Cooking Matters, Matter of Balance, etc.), access to workout facilities and free coffee.
  • If you can’t afford the membership fee, call 770-528-5355 to discuss possible options. You must be within the federal poverty guidelines for consideration.

Class Registration

Registration for winter 2018 classes will begin Monday, Jan. 22, for everyone. Both in-person registration and online registration will start at 9 a.m. Although class fees will remain the same for winter 2018 classes, the new fee structure will be in place for spring registration beginning in April. You must have a valid 2018 Senior Services membership BEFORE you register for any spring 2018 and beyond classes.

The fee schedule is available at each senior center. To view a question-and-answer fact sheet on the new membership program, click here.

Please call 770-528-5355 with questions not addressed above.

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East Cobb holiday events lead off with WellStar celebration, Johnson Ferry concert

East Cobb Holiday Events

Usually we wait until a little later in the week for this, but the first full week of the holiday season has some early- and mid-week activities, as well as some on the weekend worth noting:

  • On Tuesday, WellStar East Cobb Health Park (3747 Roswell Road) is having a free public celebration from 5:45-7:45 p.m., with a visit from Santa, tree lighting, entertainment from the Dickerson Middle School chorus and refreshments;
  • On Thursday, the Georgia Festival Chorus will present the Carols by Candelight service (“Love Came Down at Christmas”), kicking off a busy slate of holiday events at Johnson Ferry Baptist Church (955 Johnson Ferry Road). It’s free and open to public. The doors open at 6:45 and the concert begins at 7:30;
  • The 37th Apple Annie Arts & Crafts Show returns Friday (9-7) and Saturday (9-2) at the Catholic Church of St. Ann (4905 Roswell Road). Admission is $3 and overflow parking is at the Episcopal Church of St. Peter and St. Paul (1795 Johnson Ferry Road), from which shuttle service will be provided. More than 120 artisan vendors, a bake sale, lunch items and more will available, and it’s suggested that you plan ahead and plan to make something of a day about it;
  • At 7:30 p.m. Friday, Eastside Baptist Church (2450 Lower Roswell Road) will have a weekend-long presentation of “The Story,” a theatrical production for the whole family (with full choir, orchestra and ballerinas) that will be reprised on Saturday at 1 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m.;
  • On Saturday, the Holiday Arts Showcase at Wheeler High School (375 Holt Road) will feature the school’s Band choral and orchestral groups with shows at 2 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. Tickets are $5 for students and $10 for adults, and they’re good for both programs. Proceeds benefit Wheeler’s fine arts programs.

To check out more East Cobb holiday events, check out our Holiday Guide calendar listings. We’ll have another update later in the week that will post to the East Cobb News main news column. If you have an item to share, please e-mail: calendar@eastcobbnews.com.

If you have stories/photos of an event that’s already taken place and would like to share it with the public, e-mail to: editor@eastcobbnews.com and we’ll post it.

 

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East Cobb Biz Notes: Ming’s Asian Kitchen coming soon; what’s new at The Avenue; Walmart grocery closing on Canton Road

Ming's Asian Kitchen, East Cobb biz notes

We’ve heard from readers about the forthcoming Ming’s Asian Kitchen, and passed by the other day and saw this sign out front.

Ming’s will be located in the former Niecy’s Cafe space (4665 Lower Roswell Road, at Woodlawn Drive), which has been the site of a number of restaurants in recent years. Niecy’s opened in 2015 but closed earlier this year.

There’s no other readily available information yet about when Ming’s is slated to open, but we’ll post that here when we get more details.

In other East Cobb business news, there are two new food spots coming or have opened at The Avenue East Cobb (in addition to the Stockyard Burgers & Bones slated for next spring):

  • WhatNowAtlanta is reporting that Smallcakes, which once was open on Roswell Road at East Piedmont Road, will be opening soon at The Avenue (4475 Roswell Road), and will be located next to the Hand & Stone store;
  • Kale Me Crazy, a Atlanta-based chain of healthy food cafes and juice shops, got its business license last week and is open at The Avenue. The menu features salads, wraps, toasts (yes, avocado!) and açaí bowls, and the store sells a full line of juice-based “cleansing packages” and does catering. Hours are Monday-Friday 7 a.m.-8:30 pm; Saturday 9 a.m.-8 p.m; Sunday 9 a.m.-6 p.m.;
  • This is the last week of business at the Walmart Neighborhood Market, 3372 Canton Road, in the Blackwell Square Shopping Center, after it was announced last month that the store is closing on Dec. 4. It’s the second Walmart grocery to leave the East Cobb area this year; the Sandy Plains Village location closed in March. The only such store remaining close by is at 3101 Roswell Road, in the Olde Mill Shopping Center.

The following new businesses were granted licenses by the Cobb Community Development Department in the last week:

  • Agape Remodeling, 2694 Lower Roswell Road (handyman);
  • Healthy Smoothies, 2550 Sandy Plains Road (health food store);
  • Heyward Accounting, 3837 Courson Street (accounting services);
  • Perks Coffee, 3000 Windy Hill Road, Suite 176 (restaurant);
  • Siding Pro, 2100 Wood Court (Siding contractor).

 

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The East Cobb ‘shop local’ movement, with a touch of generosity

Challise and Company, East Cobb shop local
Shelbie Fredericks (left) and Terry Yagadics took part in Small Business Saturday at Challise and Company. (East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

In one part of the Challise and Company salon on Canton Road, it’s business as usual: Haircuts and spa services.

When a visitor looks to the left upon entering, however, there are cookies and refreshments neatly laid out on a table, and vendors displaying their wares in an adjoining room.

They’re all women, and they’re all local, selling just about anything a shopper might have on a holiday gift list: Monogrammed glasses and shirts, clothing, handcrafted items and food and cooking services.

It was another Small Business Saturday at Challise and Company, which was among the East Cobb businesses taking part in a burgeoning movement to promote local shopping.

And not just for one day, or even for the holiday season, but year-round.

Ever since 2010, Small Business Saturday has been designated (ironically enough, by a big corporation, American Express) to get consumers to think, and shop local.

Coming the day after “Black Friday,” SBS, as it’s called by many, has helped raise awareness of locally-owned, independently operated business.

For owner Challise Copeland, “shop local” is more than just a one-day promotion. It’s a commitment to helping other local business owners—especially women-owned businesses—gain visibility.

East Cobb shop local
Laura Stevenson of Whimsy Girl Creations, which specializes in mongrammed goods and other handmade crafts.

“For us, it’s traffic flow,” she said. “But we really do it to help start-up business get their names out there.”

Among them is Laura Stevenson, a Northeast Cobb resident and owner of Whimsy Girl Creations, who designs handcrafted items, including a range of monogrammed goods.

Like many artisanal entrepreneurs, promoting her business, which is a couple years old, is “word of mouth. You bring something to somebody and their friends see it.”

Stevenson said that getting into larger craft fairs can be hard—she was offered a spot in last weekend’s Sprayberry PTSA Arts & Crafts Fair at the very last minute—and she often finds herself on a waiting list.

She appreciated the generosity of another business providing space and exposure, even if on a smaller scale.

Copeland, who took over what had been the Studio 5 salon in 2003, said having these kinds of events predated the advent of Small Business Saturday. She and her co-owner Carrie Cox, both of whom are active in the Northeast Cobb Business Association and the Cobb Business Women’s Association, see what they’re doing as promoting not only small business owners, but a sense of community.

“The more you can give back to the community, the better,” Copeland said.

Some newcomers also took part on Saturday: Shelbie Fredericks of Where the Willows Grow, who makes handcrafted watercolor art, and Terri Yagadics, a local fashion consultant for the LuLaRoe line of clothing.

Online-focused businesses also appreciate the chance to have a physical presence on an occasional business. One of them is run by Heather Stafford, who does social media and promotions for Challise and Company and has her own handcrafted business, GeminiRed Creations, which began as an Etsy site.

East Cobb shop local
Handcrafted items from Heather Stafford’s Gemini Red Creations.

For local consultants Cherie Beasley of Pampered Chef and Meredith Smiles of Tastefully Simple, having an appearance like this helps with their word-of-mouth promotions. They occasionally partner on events: Beasley with her in-home cooking demonstrations, and Smiles with her inventory of meal kits.

They do occasional vendor events, but smaller ones like this are also ideal for expanding their network of potential clients.

“You have to be patient to get started,” Beasley said. “But it’s not that different from having a brick and mortar store.” She said she’s reached a point where “none of my calls are cold. They’re all warm.”

The greater satisfaction, Beasley said, is helping busy clients solve meal issues.

“I’m more interested in helping you have a successful kitchen experience, with what you’ve already got.”

East Cobb shop local
Terri Yagadics started her Lula Roe fashion consulting business this spring.

 

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Cobb budget process, greenways and and trails master plan on commissioners work session agenda

Cobb greenways and trails, Cobb budget process
The Noonday Creek Trail Head at Bells Ferry, which opened in 2014. (East Cobb News photo by Wendy Parker)

On Monday afternoon the Cobb Board of Commissioners will hear a number of presentations, including an update from Chairman Mike Boyce on the Cobb budget process, at a regularly scheduled work session.

The work session begins at 1:30 p.m. in the second floor boardroom of the Cobb BOC Building, 100 Cherokee St., in downtown Marietta.

Cobb commissioners have been holding initial discussions on what’s become a projected $30 million budget hole for fiscal year 2019.

The Cobb government fiscal year runs Oct. 1 to Sept. 30, but Boyce has said he wants to get an early start on tackling that deficit. He has said he will be holding town hall meetings around the county in early 2018 to solicit public feedback.

Boyce has had a rocky first year in office, in terms of budgeting and taxes. His proposal to raise the millage rate to fund the 2008 Cobb parks referendum was rejected by commissioners, especially after a heated town hall meeting at the East Cobb Senior Center.

In passing Boyce’s $402 million FY budget in September, commissioners used nearly $20 million in contingency money and temporarily delayed funding county non-profit agencies and the new Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center.

Another item on Monday’s work session agenda includes updated information on the county’s first-ever master plan for greenways and trails.

Cobb DOT commissioned an Atlanta engineering, architectural and design firm to conduct public meetings around the county, including the East Cobb Library and Covenant Presbyterian Church, to find ways to connect assorted bike and pedestrian paths and other multi-use trails (see previous East Cobb News post here).

The DOT was expected to report back near the end of the year with results from “stakeholder” and citizen surveys and recommendations.

On Tuesday, the commissioners will hold a business meeting, also at 7 p.m. in the same room. The top items on the agenda include a proposal to charge for Saturday parking at the county-run decks in downtown Marietta.

Cobb government charges a flat $5 rate Monday-Friday to use the lots at 115 Waddell Street and 191 Lawrence Street. The proposal would charge the same $5 rate for Saturday parking, but Sunday parking would remain free. The changes would go into effect Jan. 8, 2018.

Also on the agenda is a proposal to formally adopt the 2040 Cobb County Comprehensive Plan.

The recognitions at Tuesday’s meeting include the Dickerson Middle School Percussion Ensemble, which has been selected to perform in the Music For All National Percussion Festival in Indianapolis in March 2018.

 

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Lassiter Band Christmas tree sale underway at Highland Plaza

Lassiter Band Christmas tree sale

Quite a few vehicles were leaving the Highland Plaza Shopping Center on Saturday with Christmas trees fastened. That means one thing: The Lassiter Band tree sale is underway.

The tree sale takes place through mid-December (see the band’s Facebook page for updated hours) in the corner of the shopping center near the intersection of Sandy Plains Road and Gordy Parkway.

The proceeds benefit Lassiter band programs in one of their major fundraisers of the year. The trees are Carolina firs, and wreaths and other holiday items are for sale. The purchase of a tree includes complimentary trimming, wrapping and vehicle loading.

If you’ve got a holiday event to share that’s already happened, please e-mail story and photos (if you have those) to: editor@eastcobbnews.com. If you have a calendar item for an event that’s upcoming, send that information to: calendar@eastcobbnews.com.

Lassiter Band Christmas tree sale

Lassiter Band Christmas tree sale

St. Nick’s Cafe leads off holiday events at The Art Place

St. Nick's Cafe, What Could Go Wrong the Night Before Christmas?, The Art Place-Mountain View

This coming Saturday, Dec. 2, the St. Nick’s Cafe family holiday show returns as The Art Place-Mountain View (3330 Sandy Plains Road) unveils its seasonal schedule.

This year, the St. Nick’s Cafe presentation is “What Could Go Wrong the Night Before Christmas?” It’s a retelling of “The Night Before Christmas” in which the narrator, according to to the program description, “must deal with every interruption imaginable.”

The shows, which are presented by The Art Place and the Mountain View Arts Alliance, take place at 9 a.m., 11 a.m., 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. Tickets are $15 and can be purchased online (a $1.75 service charge applies to each ticket). Catered meals from Chick-fil-A will be provided after every program.

On Sunday, Dec. 10, The Art Place will hold its Empty Bowl Brunch to benefit MUST Ministries. Visitors can come from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., purchase a handmade soup bowl and enjoy a hearty meal. Tickets are also $15 each (advance purchase here).

The Artist Attic, which has been underway since Nov. 9, continues through Dec. 14. The Art Place gallery is selling original pieces made by students, teachers and local artists. Gift ideas also include gift certificates and holiday shows.

Sales are available during regular opening hours (Monday-Thursday 10-5); for evening and weekend hours call 770-509-2700.