Top East Cobb stories for 2018: Cobb property taxes increased in ‘restoration budget’

Cobb property taxes increased
Commission chairman Mike Boyce holding a budget town hall meeting at the East Cobb Senior Center. (ECN file)

East Cobb citizens spoke out strongly on both sides of a proposed property tax increase that was approved in July as part of the Cobb fiscal year 2019 budget.

The general fund budget of $454 million includes a boost in the millage rate of 1.7 mills to 8.46. Services like fire and water are included in separate millage rates.

The boost came in spite of a record Cobb tax digest, but the county was facing what Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce said was a $30 million deficit.

The current budget is funding the hiring of additional police and public safety positions, additional road work crews and increased library hours. Boyce calls it a “restoration budget,” as some of those services had been cut back during the recession.

A contentious, months-long public discussion about the budget, including town hall meetings, came after proposed or possible cuts in county services were made public.

They included the proposed closure of the East Cobb Library and the possible closing of other facilities, including The Art Place-Mountain View, the Mountain View Aquatic Center and Fullers Park.

A number of citizens groups formed, including Save Cobb Libraries. East Cobb resident Rachel Slomovitz galvanized countywide support for libraries, as advocates were vocal at town hall meetings.

Boyce, an East Cobb resident and a Republican completing his second year in office, was adamant that taxes had to go up to keep Cobb “a five-star county.”

After the outcry from those fearing further cutbacks in services, Boyce revised the budget to include the preservation of parks and library services, and said “We’re not closing anything.”

But Boyce struggled to find a third commissioner (along with South Cobb’s Lisa Cupid) to vote for a tax increase.

At a summer budget retreat, he grew openly frustrated with his colleagues.

“I get it. You don’t want to stick your neck out. But this isn’t hard. It’s $30 million in an economy of billions. You would think we’re living in Albania! I just don’t understand.”

Cobb budget
East Cobb commissioners Bob Ott, left, and JoAnn Birrell voted against the FY 2019 budget. (ECN file)

East Cobb commissioners Bob Ott and JoAnn Birrell voted against the final budget proposal. Commissioner Bob Weatherford of North Cobb, in a re-election battle, indicated ahead of his runoff that he would support the increase. The day after he lost convincingly to Keli Gambrill, an opponent of a tax hike, he cast the decisive vote in favor of Boyce’s budget, and said he had no regrets.

“The only thing I’m running for now is the hills, but I do not want to leave the county worse than than when I got here,” he said.

A few weeks after the vote, Ott said the only benefit of the tax increase for his constituents in District 2 was a Cobb DOT work crew.

Among other things, he said he didn’t like the way the proposed budget cuts were presented to the public, which he heard plenty about from citizens: “I tell them that the services that are being threatened to be taken away were never proposals that came before the board.

“A borrowed quote from William S. Buckley sums up this tax increase and budget: ‘What do we care how much we—the government—owe so long as we owe it to ourselves? On with the spending. Tax and tax, spend and spend, elect and elect . . .’ ”

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Top East Cobb headlines for 2017: Taking a look back

Walton High School, Top East Cobb headlines 2017
Students, teachers, staff and parents at the official opening for the new Walton High School building in July. (East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

East Cobb News launched in July, but most of the most notable stories in the community took place during those last six months of 2017.

With just a few days left before the start of a new year, here’s a more-or-less chronological compilation of the stories, events and people who were the biggest newsmakers in East Cobb in 2017.

Handel elected in nationally-watched Congressional race

Karen Handel

When Karen Handel defeated Jon Ossoff in a June runoff to win the 6th Congressional District special election, she got a strong turnout in East Cobb that aided her victory. Among her biggest supporters were East Cobb commissioners JoAnn Birrell and Bob Ott, at whose August town hall meeting Handel spoke shortly after taking office to succeed Tom Price. Story.

New classroom building opens at Walton High School

Walton High School ribbon-cutting

The new $48 million Walton High School classroom and administration building was officially opened in late July, right before the start of a new school year, as work on a new gymnasium and fine arts building was set to get underway. Story and Photos.

Cobb budget closes $20M deficit; millage rate hike rejected

Cobb commission chairman Mike Boyce

In his first year in office, Cobb Commission chairman Mike Boyce was defeated in his proposal to raise the property tax millage rate to fulfill the 2008 parks bond referendum. Story. A couple months later, he and his colleagues hammered out a fiscal year 2018 budget by using contingency funding to close a $20 million deficit. Story.

Wheeler High School becomes STEAM-certified

Wheeler High School STEAM

Shortly after the school year began, Wheeler High School was notified that it was the first high school in Georgia to earn STEAM certification. Story.

Lower Roswell Road crash kills two

Lower Roswell Road accident

Two young men escaping hurricane weather in Florida were killed in September when their car crashed into a brick wall at the entrance to the Gold Branch Unit of the Chattahoochee National Recreation Area on Lower Roswell Road. One of the victims was a Wheeler graduate. Story.

Dream season for Walton football team

Walton football team

With a first-time head coach and a losing record a year ago, the Walton Raiders weren’t expected to be a contending team in 2017. But they were one of the biggest surprises in all of Cobb and Georgia high school football with an 11-1 season that ended in the state playoffs. Story.

East Cobb water main replacement completed

East Cobb Water Main Project

After nearly two years of traffic delays on Lower Roswell Road, the $47 million East Cobb Water Main replacement project was completed in the fall and into the early winter, replacing the 54-inch, 6-mile pipes laid down 50 years ago. Story.

Funding for Mabry Park construction approved

After years of delays, Mabry Park is set to become a reality in 2019, as Cobb commissioners voted to spend $2.85 million to build the new facility on Wesley Chapel Road. Story.

A library opens, another eyed for closure

Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center

In December, the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center opened to replace the East Marietta Library. Story. However, the occasion was preceded by commissioner JoAnn Birrell’s suggestion to close the East Cobb Library, which drew heated opposition. Story.

A Winter Wonderland in East Cobb

Willow Ridge Christmas

In early December, an unexpectedly heavy winter storm dumped nearly a foot of snow in north Georgia, and most of East Cobb got several inches. Coverage. For one East Cobb family, however, the storm left them without power and heat for nearly four days. Story.

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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!