Cobb Commission Chairwoman to hold State of the County address

Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid will deliver the annual State of the County address next Thursday, May 4, at 7 p.m. at the Jennie T. Anderson Theatre (548 S. Marietta Parkway).Cobb transportation sales tax consultants

She will continue her theme of “ALL IN for Cobb,” during the address, introducing individuals “demonstrating integrity, inclusiveness, investment in others, innovation, and intelligent decision-making for the county,” according to an announcement for the event.

It will be preceded by a reception at the adjacent Cobb Civic Center from 6:15 —7 p.m.

The address is free and open to the public, you’re asked to RSVP by clicking here.

The event also will be shown via livestream on CobbTV and the county’s YouTube channel.

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Cobb Commission Chair to deliver State of County address

Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid will deliver the annual State of the County address on Thursday.Lisa Cupid, Cobb Commission Chair candidate

The event typically has been sponsored by the Cobb Chamber of Commerce but this year she opted for it to be conducted independently by county government.

The address begins at 7 p.m. at Jim Miller Park and will be aired live on the county’s website (cobbcounty.org/CobbTV) and its YouTube channel (youtube.com/cobbcountygovt.)

The address comes as Cobb commissioners and county government officials are preparing for budget season—Cobb’s fiscal year starts on Oct. 1—and with four cityhood campaigns on elections ballots this year.

County department heads have been submitting their budget requests in recent weeks, and their requests total around $1.2 billion, an increase of nearly $180 million more than the current fiscal year 2022 budget.

Much of that comes from combined requests to add nearly 700 county employees to address staff shortages in a number of departments.

Only four new full-time positions were filled in the current budget and none were approved for FY 2020.

Cobb officials also have been addressing the three cityhood referendums coming up on May 24, including East Cobb, Vinings and Lost Mountain, and a likely referendum in November in Mableton.

At a town hall meeting last week at the Sewell Mill Library, they repeated estimates that if all four cityhood referendums pass—affecting more than 200,000 people, more than a quarter of Cobb’s population—the county would lose an estimated $41 million a year.

In April, Cobb commissioners will get a preview of the 2022 county tax digest, which typically is formalized in July as they are completing budget adoption.

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Chairwoman urges Chamber audience to ‘think big for Cobb’

Lisa Cupid, Cobb Commission Chair candidate

In her first State of the County address as the Cobb Commission Chairwoman, Lisa Cupid laid out what she called her five “I” goals before the Cobb Chamber of Commerce on Monday.

While “Cobb’s future has always been bright,” Cupid, the first African-American to head the county government, said there are still parts of Cobb “that have not been included. We have what it takes to make sure our success reaches everyone.”

Cupid, who was a two-term commissioner from South Cobb before defeating incumbent Chairman Mike Boyce last November, said a desire to foster greater inclusion stretches across geographic, economic and cultural lines.

The other goals she discussed included “leading with integrity,” developing a framework for making “intelligent” decisions, innovation and “investing in Cobb.”

Above all, Cupid said, she wants to foster a climate to “think big for Cobb County, to think outside of the box.”

Of her leadership style, Cupid said it’s important to have “tough but honest conversations about the state of our county. We all want Cobb to move forward together.”

She conducted a board retreat in January and concluded that “it is when we have the tough conversations that we can begin to experience our breakthrough.”

She referenced issues such as transit, housing affordability and investing in a “robust capital maintenance plan” and “our county employees.”

Cupid, who leads a new Democratic majority on the commission, said she wanted to push for “fair and equitable elections,” responding to current Republican-sponsored legislation in Georgia to curtail voting availability.

Those measures include reducing early voting periods and to eliminate no-excuse absentee voting, as well as increase voter ID requirements.

“It’s heartbreaking to see all the work to get people to the polls is being eroded,” Cupid said, saying such “rollbacks to the past” harken back to a time when people like her were not welcome in the corridors of government and business power.

Speaking on International Women’s Day, Cupid noted not only her status as the first woman to head county government, but in leading Cobb’s first all-female Board of Commissioners and a county government staff headed by a woman, County Manager Jackie McMorris.

“Together, we have been making herstory,” Cupid said.

You can watch her full remarks by clicking here; they begin around the 32-minute mark.

At 7 p.m. Monday Cupid also is providing similar remarks for the general public in a socially-distanced address at the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center.

A limited number of people are attending in an invitation-only setting, but the address will be shown on Cobb County government’s Facebook and YouTube channels.

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Cobb State of the County address highlights Chamber breakfast

Cobb State of the County Address, Mike Boyce

Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce will give the annual “State of the County” address Monday at the Cobb Chamber of Commerce’s Monday breakfast meeting.

The breakfast starts at 7:30 a.m. at the Cobb Galleria Centre (info and tickets here), and Boyce’s comments can be seen in their entirety at this link later Monday.

The State of the County is an annual tradition for the chairman. Boyce, an East Cobb resident, begins his third year in office after commissioners voted narrowly last year to approve a property tax increase.

Boyce has defended this as a “restoration budget” to add services that had been reduced since the recession. Those include hiring more police officers and equipping them with body camera, Sunday library hours and hiring road work crews.

His East Cobb colleagues, Bob Ott and JoAnn Birrell, voted against that tax hike, and starting this month they will be joined by a new commissioner, Keli Gambrill of North Cobb, who also campaigned against the increase.

She defeated Bob Weatherford, who cast the deciding vote for the tax increase and defended his vote after his election loss.

At a budget retreat last month, Boyce indicated he will not be seeking a millage increase for the fiscal year 2020 budget.

Boyce also will be speaking at the East Cobb Business Association breakfast on Jan. 15. Tickets and info can be found here.

 

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