Cobb civic, business leaders to speak at ECBA, NCBA luncheons

John Loud, Cobb Chamber of Commerce
John Loud

Two of Cobb County’s leading business and civic leaders will be speaking to the East Cobb Business Association in November.

John Loud of LOUD Security and Jay Cunningham of Superior Plumbing will be the featured speakers at the ECBA’s Nov. 16 luncheon.

They’ll be speaking about “Short Cuts to Jump-Start Your Business.” They’ll be detailing their rise as owners of local start-up businesses to thriving companies in the Atlanta market.

According to the ECBA, they “will also address how they are dealing with the current worker shortages and supply chain challenges.”

Both are active in many business and civic endeavors. Loud is the current chairman of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce.

The luncheon is from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Nov. 16 at Rich Hart Global Studios (2030 Powers Ferry Road). The cost is $20 for members and $25 for non-members in advance, and $25 for members and $30 for non-members at the door. For information and to register, click here.

On Wednesday, Nov. 17, Cobb Chamber president and CEO Sharon Mason will the featured speaker at the Northeast Cobb Business Association luncheon.

That takes place from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Piedmont Church (570 Piedmont Road). Tickets are $15 for members and $20 for non-members. For information and to register click here.

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East Cobb business groups to hold August luncheon meetings

Scott Sweeney, Cobb school board, Cobb school calendar
Scott Sweeney

East Cobb resident Scott Sweeney, chairman of the Georgia Board of Education, will be the guest speaker at the August luncheon meeting of the Northeast Cobb Business Association on Wednesday.

The luncheon lasts from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Piedmont Church (570 Piedmont Road) and ticket information can be found here

Sweeney, who served on the Cobb Board of Education for two terms, is an advisor with East Cobb-based InPrime Legal, which provides legal services to businesses. He’s also involved in the revived effort to create a City of East Cobb.

On Tuesday, the East Cobb Business Association will hold its August luncheon from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Rich Hart Global Studios (2030 Powers Ferry Road) both in-person and online. To register, click here.

The guest speaker is Kimberly Jackson, a business coach. Before the meeting there will be a “cross coaching” session of peer-group networking that’s facilitator-led.

The ECBA also is resuming its annual Business Expo on Oct. 5 at Olde Towne Athletic Club. For information and to register as an exhibitor, click here.

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Revised Cobb public safety step-and-grade would cost $5.7M

Cobb County Chairman Boyce, revised Cobb public safety step and grade

With a new budget season on the horizon, Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce said this week his agenda for 2020 is clear-cut.

He told members of the East Cobb Business Association on Tuesday that his top budget priorities are to keep the current property tax millage rate in place, and continue reducing the amount of money the county borrows from the water fund.

Another major objective he’s bringing up next week is a revised step-and-grade salary proposal for public safety personnel that he said “is a really big deal” for police officers, firefighters, sheriff’s deputies, sworn personnel and others.

“There’s nothing else on my plate,” Boyce said during a luncheon at the Olde Towne Athletic Club.

After the Cobb Board of Commissioners approved a one-time bonus, a seven-percent pay raise and an outline for a step-and-grade plan last year, Boyce floated a more detailed proposal last fall that fell flat with some of his colleagues or public safety leaders.

On Tuesday, Boyce will present a revised proposal that would cost an additional $5.7 million annually: $2.1 million for police, $2 million for fire and $1.6 million for the sheriff’s office.

Boyce wants to fast-track this proposal as well, having it take effect for the pay period starting on March 22, if approved.

According to a summary of the proposal included in the commissioners’ meeting agenda, $3.3 million of that new revenue would come from state title and ad valorem tax (TAVT) collections, with $1.1 million coming from the county’s general fund, and another $1.1 million from the fire fund.

The step-and-grade structure is similar to what Cobb County School District employees receive—annual, incremental and automatic raises based on a combination of factors, including years of service, promotions and performance reviews.

Under the revised proposal, the starting salary for an entry-level police officer, sheriff’s deputy or firefighter would jump from around $41,000 a year to $46,000, with the highest salary at that position earning $70,840.

Salaries for the highest police officer and firefighter positions would range from $67,290 to $103,626. For rank-and-file sheriff’s deputies, that top-end range would be $48,435 to $74,590.

The pay raises would be around three percent; under the draft proposal, however, they would not have been automatic and the salary boost would be subject to a performance review.

The revised numbers are slightly higher than what was presented in October. (For the full step-and-grade breakdown chart, click here, and for other proposed public safety salary ranges, click here.

After the ECBA luncheon, Boyce told East Cobb News said he is confident the new formula “is the issue that will restore confidence” to current public safety personnel, and will help with recruiting and retention.

He said that “we’ve engaged the officers,” and that “the key to me is, can we do this without a millage increase?”

For those critical of the draft proposal in October, the revision may pose similar concerns. East Cobb commissioner Bob Ott said then that the plan wouldn’t be step-and-grade if it needed annual budget approval.

Included in the recommendation in Tuesday’s budget item is language that would “authorize the County Manager to proceed working with county staff to develop a policy to review the Step & Grade Plan on an annual basis to determine effectiveness including an annual step as a top priority in future adopted budgets.”

Boyce, a Republican from East Cobb, is seeking re-election in November. His declared opposition includes South Cobb Democratic commissioner Lisa Cupid and East Cobb Republican Larry Savage, who ran for chairman in 2012 and 2016.

Two years ago, Boyce angered fiscal conservatives with a millage rate increase that didn’t address public safety staffing shortages and morale problems over pay and retention.

During last year’s budget deliberations, public safety staffers and advocates, as well as community leaders, implored commissioners to take measures to address what they termed a “crisis.”

One-time bonuses approved in May were promised as a “first step,” and when commissioners approved the fiscal year 2020 budget in July, it included a seven-percent raise for public safety employees.

Tuesday’s commission meeting is at 7 p.m. in the second floor board room of the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta. You can read through the full agenda by clicking here.

 

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East Cobb Business Association cityhood forum limited to 250

Some more details on next Tuesday’s East Cobb Business Association forum on the subject of East Cobb cityhood that we first noted a couple weeks ago:East Cobb Business Association cityhood forum

The ECBA says that to ensure you get a seat, you must make a reservation online, ideally by Sunday, when the cost goes up.

The forum featuring representatives from the Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb and the anti-cityhood East Cobb Alliance is part of the ECBA’s monthly luncheon event, from 11-1 on Nov. 12 at the Olde Towne Athletic Club (4950 Olde Towne Parkway).

Seating will be limited to the first 250 people (most ECBA luncheons are around 100) who register and pay online. You can pay at the door, but the cost does go up and there’s no guarantee you’ll be able to get in.

Jen Starks of the ECBA said 78 people have registered thus far.

This is the only time pro- and anti-cityhood groups have appeared together in a forum-style event; the cityhood group is having a town hall meeting on Nov. 11 at Wheeler High School.

The advance registration cost (click here to sign up) is $20 for ECBA members and $25 for guests. After midnight Sunday and up to the door, the respective costs are $25 and $30.

The same event will honor the ECBA’s 2019 business person of the year, which was started last year. The finalists are:

  • Cindy Trow, health coach, Wellness Now
  • Tom Gonter, development officer, MUST Ministries
  • Butch Carter, owner, Honest-1 Auto Care East Cobb
  • Ann Lafferty, owner, Rakers Junk Removal

NCBA Events

The Northeast Cobb Business Association is holding two events this month, a Nov. 14 Alive After Five networking event from 5:30-8:30 p.m. at the Governor’s Gun Club (1005 Cobb Place Blvd., Kennesaw) that’s free to attend with registration.

The NCBA monthly luncheon is Nov. 20 from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Piedmont Church (570 Piedmont Road), and the guest speaker is Sharon Mason, CEO of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce. For details and to sign up, click here.

East Cobb Citizen of the Year breakfast

On Dec. 3 the East Cobb Area Council of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce will  have its annual East Cobb Citizen of the Year breakfast.

Last year’s winner was Brenda Rhodes of Simple Needs GA, and the award goes to individuals who demonstrate exceptional leadership and community service.

The breakfast is from 7:30-9 a.m. at Indian Hills Country Club (4001 Clubland Drive). The cost is $25 for Chamber members and $25 for guests. To sign up, click here.

 

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Business group to hold East Cobb cityhood forum in November

East Cobb cityhood forum
Bill Simon, left, a leader of the East Cobb Alliance, which opposes cityhood, talks with David Birdwell of Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb at an April town. (ECN file)

The East Cobb Business Association announced Tuesday it’s holding a forum in mid-November on the East Cobb cityhood issue.

The forum will take place on Tuesday, Nov. 12, during the ECBA’s monthly luncheon from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Olde Towne Athletic Club (4950 Olde Towne Parkway).

According to Rosann Hall, who heads the ECBA’s speakers and program committee, the forum will include representatives of the Committee for Cityhood in East Cobb, which supports incorporation, and the East Cobb Alliance, which opposes cityhood.

“Whether we become a city or whether we don’t, this is going to impact us a lot as business owners and as citizens,” ECBA president Jim Harris said at Tuesday’s luncheon.

Related coverage

The pro-cityhood group held two town hall meetings and spoke at another civic meeting in the spring, after State Rep. Matt Dollar (R-East Cobb) sponsored legislation (read HB 718 here) that, if passed next year, would call for a cityhood referendum, also in 2020.

The cityhood group wants to carve out a portion of unincorporated Cobb, mostly below Sandy Plains Road, and create a city of around 100,000, citing public safety and development reasons.

The proposal has been controversial from the beginning and has generated plenty of skepticism in the community. East Cobb cityhood forum

The East Cobb Alliance was formed recently to launch organized opposition, questioning a financial feasibility study conducted for the pro-cityhood forces and what it calls a lack of transparency by those pushing for a city.

In September, an independent group of finance and legal experts reviewed the feasibility study and concluded it was fiscally sound, but recommended any City of East Cobb not start with police services.

(The review group’s summary and full report).

David Birdwell, a leader of the cityhood committee, said the review confirmed that cityhood is financially viable, and that a new city can provide better services without raising property taxes.

The East Cobb Alliance hasn’t formally responded to the independent review report, but it has examined various portions of the feasibility study, including public safety, franchise fees and inter-governmental agreements.

Most recently, the group posted a graphic on its Facebook page of a hungry-looking raptor with the message that “while the Raptor is fictional….the ‘City of East Cobb’ is a government horror that will slowly eat you alive for years.”

The cityhood group has redirected its original website to one with the domain of communityofeastcobb.com that includes much of the same information it has been discussing in recent months:

  • East Cobb’s Precinct 4 police staffing of 53 patrol officers that is 24 fewer than has been allocated;
  • Claiming property tax rates wouldn’t be higher than they are now in unincorporated Cobb;
  • Promising more prompt road repairs;
  • And “passing zonings without interference of votes from outside the city.”

Rob Eble, another leader of the cityhood group, said it’s looking to have a town hall tentatively on Nov. 11, but a venue has not been confirmed.

East Cobb cityhood forum

 

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4th annual ECBA Expo celebrates East Cobb local businesses

ECBA Expo

For the fourth year, local and small businesses in East Cobb will gather to network and tell their stories to the public at the East Cobb Business Association Expo.

The expo takes place Tuesday, Oct. 1, from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the Olde Towne Athletic Club (4950 Olde Towne Parkway), and the event is open to the public.

In addition to learning about businesses in the area, guests can enjoy free food and beverages, door prizes, drawings, giveaways and more.

Bring plenty of business cards for networking and make sure to register (sign up at this link). At the door, admission is $1 with advance registration and $2 without advance registration. Admission proceeds go to the East Cobb Public Safety Appreciation dinner sponsored by the ECBA.

Each admission ticket comes with a raffle ticket for each of the grand prize drawings.

ECBA membership for the year 2020 is underway, along with year-end membership specials. Visit the ECBA website for information.

East Cobb News is a proud ECBA member and will be at the Expo, too, just as we were in 2018. Please make sure to stop by our table to say hello and learn more about East Cobb’s only daily all-local news source.

We’re grateful to serve East Cobb by providing local news and information and be part of an organization that supports and strengthens our community with a growing network of local businesses and entrepreneurs who really care about what happens here.

Come find out what we’re all about at the ECBA Expo!

ECBA Expo, East Cobb News table

 

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East Cobb health and fitness pros: ‘It’s never too late to get healthy’

ECBA health and fitness pros
“Every little choice adds up,” said Katie Rodgers (center) of Rove Fitness, flanked by Cindy Trow of Wellness Now (left) and Noelle Abent of Energetic Therapies. 

Imagine taking off 80 pounds with a diet that consists of six small meals a day.

Mix in a modest exercise plan customized for your level of fitness and what you want to achieve.

And address your physical and mental well-being with deep-breathing techniques that help reduce stress as you go about a busy daily routine.

Several East Cobb health and fitness pros insist anyone can incorporate these practices into their lives to improve their quality of life.

Speaking at a recent East Cobb Business Association luncheon, they offered up some sobering figures about the state of Americans’ health:

  • Six out of 10 Americans have been diagnosed with at least one chronic disease;
  • Four out of 10 have two or more;
  • By next year, chronic diseases will affect 157 million Americans;
  • That’s projected to be 171 million by the year 2030.

Those illnesses add up, financially too, to around $35 trillion in health costs.

“As our lifespans get longer, we are getting sicker,” said Katie Rodgers, a certified personal trainer with Rove Fitness Systems, and who works out of East Cobb.

That may seem paradoxical, but she said seven out of 10 Americans die from chronic diseases “that are preventable.

The U.S. is 34th in the world in health indicators, according to East Cobb chiropractor Dan Ruitenbeek. “We suck,” he said, but his native Canada “is not much better.”

“You’ve got the power to change your body,” Rodgers said. “Every choice counts, every little choice adds up.”

She was joined by Dr. Dan Ruitenbeek, a chiropractor who recently opened a practice at Parkaire Landing; health coach Cindy Trow of Wellness Now; and Noelle Abent of Energetic Therapies, on Johnson Ferry Road.

While their talk was geared to business professionals, their advice and the staggering health figures and trends they discussed can apply to anyone.

Better fitness starts with better food

Trow said you don’t have to be overweight or appear to be in poor health or eat unhealthy diets to have issues. The very thin former special education teacher realized how life-changing a diagnosis of Type 1 diabetes was, and she now helps others learn to eat in moderation as the stepping stone to better health.

“It’s not just how you eat but how you move, and sleep and handle stress,” she said.

Portion control is the key, and Trow pointed to weight-loss stories from clients who followed her six-meals approach. Their “sweet cravings went away” and they felt more satiated.

These are healthy snacks of course, and include a variety of 100-calorie options that include fruit, nuts, yogurt, vegetables, greens, tuna, whole-wheat pasta, hummus and some pasta and cheeses.

For dinner, she suggests you fill no more than a nine-inch plate, and emphasize fruits and vegetables and proteins.

And drink lots of water, starting the day with 24 ounces, and between 64-80 ounces a day total.

Get started with gradual steps

Abent, who formerly worked at a church, had the audience do some deep-breathing exercises, putting their hands on their stomachs while they breathed in for five seconds, and then exhaling for five seconds more.

It’s a standard relaxation technique, she said, but it also helps people get a more tactile sense of themselves.

“We’re not centered in our bodies,” said Abent, who offers therapy options that include Reiki healing, inner light therapy and spiritual counseling. The aim is to help individuals derive and sustain higher energy levels that also improve health outcomes.

“If you don’t have enough energy during the day, how is that going to flow into your business?”

Ruitenbeek said the key to getting started is to develop gradual habits that build up over time.

“It takes 21 days of consistent action to create a new habit,” he said.

Trow said “80 percent” of the formula for better health “is in your head,” with 10 percent each for food and exercise. “You’re not going to create everything in a New York minute.”

But the best news of all, Rodgers said, is that better health results are within reach of anyone who commits to those goals and who can sustain those habits, regardless of age.

“It’s never too late to get healthy,” Rodgers said.

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East Cobb Biz Notes: Jennifer’s Jewelry to hold ribbon-cutting

Jennifer Cortez, Jennifer's Jewelry, East Cobb Biz Notes

For those of you who may have noticed last fall, the Kaminski Jewelry store on Post Oak Tritt Road closed after around three decades in business. Just across the street, Jennifer Cortez, a former Kaminski manager, has opened her own store, Jennifer’s Jewelers.

Next Tuesday, April 23, she’s having a ribbon-cutting event with the Cobb Chamber of Commerce on hand. The ribbon-cutting takes place from 11-12 at her store, 2790 Sandy Plains Road.

She says she’s been in the business for 20 years, holds an accounting degree from Kennesaw State and is accredited by the Gemological Institute of America. Jennifer’s Jewelry provides bridal jewelry, precious metals, diamond jewelry, gemstone jewelry, loose stones, appraisal services, estate liquidation, watch services and jewelry repair:

“Being an independent jeweler is a very special business. I get joy out of knowing I had a big part of making life’s most memorable moments very special to so many people and I look forward to providing beautiful jewelry and great services for many many years to come.”

Credit Union of Georgia

The Woodstock-based Credit Union of Georgia has opened a branch at 1020 Johnson Ferry Road, and a ribbon-cutting is set for Wednesday, May 1, from 11-1 p.m. with the East Cobb Business Association.

The event will include refreshments, tours and networking.

CUG began as a financial institution serving teachers and private and public school employees.

Other branches are in Canton, Woodstock, Towne Lake, Kennesaw, Marietta and West Cobb.

ECBA Community Breakfast

Cobb Board of Education chairman David Chastain is the invited guest at the East Cobb Business Association’s Community breakfast April 30.

The breakfast is from 7:30-8:30 a.m. at J. Christopher’s at the Pavilions at East Lake, 2100 Roswell Road.

Chastain, who represents the Kell and Sprayberry clusters on the seven-member school board, is a graduate of Wheeler High School.

The breakfast is $10 in advance for ECBA members and $15 for non-members, and the fee increases by $5 at the door. For information and to register click here.

East Cobb C of C Breakfast

The first event of the East Cobb Area Council of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce is a breakfast Tuesday, April 23, from 7:30 to 9 a.m. at Indian Hills Country Club (4001 Clubland Drive).

The guest speaker is Dana Johnson, executive director of SelectCobb, the Chamber’s economic devleopment unit. He is the former director of the Cobb Community Development Agency.

Tickets are $25 for Chamber members and $35 for general admission. For details and to register, click here.

 

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

East Cobb Business Update, Explore Chiropractic Ribbon Cutting

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Boyce to speak to NCBA

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

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

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

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

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

Northeast Cobb Business Association, K-9 oxygen masks

East Cobb Area Council Breakfast

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

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

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

Tell us about your business

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

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

 

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Boyce repeats no tax increase pledge for Cobb 2020 budget

Boyce offered a “State of the County” address to the East Cobb Business Association members at their January luncheon Tuesday. (ECN photo: Wendy Parker)

In sharpening his fiscal year 2020 budget proposal he’ll take around the county starting this spring, Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce said Tuesday that he’s adamant he won’t be asking for a tax increase.

He also wants to give all county employees a pay raise, open all library branches on Sunday, begin drawing down the amount of money transferred from Cobb water system revenues and eliminate senior fees that were imposed during a contentious budget process in 2018.

And how to pay for all this without raising taxes?

“The county is on fire,” Boyce told East Cobb News Tuesday afternoon after addressing the East Cobb Business Association monthly luncheon at the Olde Towne Athletic Club.

That was a reference to a growing tax digest—2018 was a record year for that, at $36.7 billion—and what he said was the beginning of restoring some county services that had been cut back since the recession.

In order to do that, however, Boyce got an increase of 1.7 mills for the general fund, which pays for most county government expenses.

It was a grueling process, as he conducted a number of town hall meetings and got his $454 million general fund budget, but only by a 3-2 margin. His fellow East Cobb residents, commissioners Bob Ott and JoAnn Birrelll, voted against him.

But the additional funding closed what he said was a $30 million deficit and enabled the hiring of more police officers and road work crews, and the opening of regional libraries on Sunday.

His remarks were similar to those he made last week to the Cobb Chamber of Commerce. Boyce doesn’t have a formal budget proposal yet, and some details—such as how big an employee pay raise may be—also haven’t been included.

But he said he’s confident growth in the tax digest in 2019 would enable the county to continue adding services without a millage hike.

“I made a promise last year that I wouldn’t do it [in 2020],” he said, adding that the county is still finding other budget savings.

He received applause for that sentiment, as well as expanding library hours, additional nature trail acquisitions and the purchase of greenspace (including part of the Tritt property next to East Cobb Park).

Boyce also outlined for the ECBA audience of around 100 members and guests a number of business developments, including development around SunTrust Park, which will open its third season as the Atlanta Braves home venue in April.

The stadium, partly financed by the county—and with an annual general fund cost of $8.6 million—has been the magnet for so much more than that. The Battery Atlanta mixed-use project developed by the Braves has become a year-round hub of commercial, retail, restaurant and entertainment activity that’s attracting more business growth.

“Forget the stadium, it’s The Battery that’s driving development,” Boyce said. “It’s sparked a halo effect in the Cumberland CID area and beyond.”

He also predicted that the county would begin recouping that $8.6 million budget investment “sooner than I thought,” but didn’t offer a prediction of when that might be.

Looking ahead to 2019, Boyce said transit and transportation issues will loom larger. The county conducted a transit survey that was released in December that indicated that nearly 60 percent of respondents would support a sales tax for new projects.

(Read the Cobb DOT Transit Survey Summary here).

Before any transit options are decided, there will be town hall meetings and a likely referendum in 2021.

As for the next Cobb budget, Boyce said a total of 16 town halls coming in March and April—including two a day in some cases—will seek taxpayer feedback as was done last year.

“I just want you to enjoy your life,” Boyce said. “Cobb is in as good a place as it’s ever been.”

 

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East Cobb Biz Notes: More Sandy Plains Marketplace tenants include Bad Daddy’s Burger Bar

The teardown of the old Mountain View Elementary School is almost complete, and the construction signs around what’s left of it are hinting at what’s to come in what’s being called the Sandy Plains Marketplace mixed-use development.Bad Daddy's Burger Bar, Sandy Plains Marketplace

The anchor of the Fuqua Development project is a Publix GreenWise organic store, as noted here last month.

The Atlanta retail site ToNeTo is reporting that other tenants include several restaurants with growing presences in the metro area, including a Bad Daddy’s Burger Bar and MOD Pizza.

Food joints also include First Watch and Jim ‘N Nick’s Bar-B-Q and there’s going to be another Hollywood Feed, a boutique pet supply retailer, which also opened in East Cobb in January at Woodlawn Square.

Fuqua, which is the developer of The Battery Atlanta, developed a concept similar to the Sandy Plains Marketplace called the Kennesaw Marketplace. That’s recently opened and is anchored by a Whole Foods Market (prompting the closure of Harry’s on Roswell Road this time a year ago).

Last October Cobb commissioners gave the greenlight to rezoning the former Mountain View school grounds, on nearly 14 acres. Fuqua and East Cobb-based Brooks Chadwick Capital LLC also had to come back to the commission to get approval for a self-storage facility near the back of the property that was opposed by some residents of the adjacent Hunters Lodge neighborhood.

Grand opening

Flooring Atlanta has moved into East Cobb at 2214 Roswell Road, and is having a grand opening celebration Saturday from 11-3. There will be free food and drinks in addition to music, including a live Mariachi performance at 1.

Flooring Atlanta, the new name for what had been Carpet Surplus, also has showrooms in Kennesaw, Roswell and Norcross.

Business of the Year

The East Cobb Business Association has named EAST COBBER magazine its 2018 business of the year at a luncheon last week that surprised publisher Cynthia Rozzo.

She’s marking 25 years since beginning the monthly lifestyle magazine, and recently staged the 23rd EAST COBBER parade and community festival. Rozzo also will receive an ECBA Honorary Lifetime Membership.

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East Cobb Biz Notes: Marietta Coffee Company has grand opening

Marietta Coffee Company

A couple weeks back at the East Cobb Business Association Expo we met Robert Love, who’s the proprietor of a new locally-brewed shop called the Marietta Coffee Company, in the space that was Darwin’s Burgers and Blues on Roswell Road.

Robert has operated the Thrive Wellness Center, a chiropractic clinic, a few doors down, and he told us he’s always wanted to have a coffee shop. His landlord at the clinic also scooped up the old Darwin’s property and so he says he decided to take the plunge.

Marietta Coffee opened a few weeks ago, and over the weekend had a grand opening celebration over the weekend, starting on Friday.

You can find updates on the shop’s Facebook page. There will be coffee and bakery specials, along with live music and other events. Until then, the hours are 10-6, and after the grand opening, they’ll be open from 7 a.m. until midnight seven days a week.

Robert told me that the emphasis at the shop is local, from the locally roasted gourmet coffee to the entertainment to the neighborhood vibe he’s aiming to create.

On Wednesday, the shop will hold the latest Cobb Coffee With a Cop session from 6-8 p.m. Citizens can discuss their crime and public safety concerns with officers from Precinct 4 in an informal setting.

Marietta Coffee Company is located at 1598 Roswell Road. Phone: 678-765-8885.

ECBA Gala Event

The East Cobb Business Association is postponing its usual monthly luncheon on the third Tuesday to this coming Tuesday, Oct. 23, for its annual awards gala. The guest speaker is Cobb County Manager Rob Hosack, and the luncheon also will serve as a 25th anniversary tribute to EAST COBBER magazine.

The event is from 11-1 at Olde Towne Athletic Club (4950 Olde Towne Parkway), and tickets are $20-$30. Advance registration must be completed by 5 p.m. Monday.

Other business group news

  • The Cobb Chamber of Commerce recently issued its annual public safety awards at its monthly luncheon, and Marietta Police Officer Jayson Duncan was named public safety employee of the year. In March, he provided medical assistance to a stabbing victim after responding to calls about a fight on Powers Ferry Road. Duncan applied a hemostatic gauze to the wound and stayed with the victim until EMS crews arrived.

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

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

 

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Kennesaw State athletics director discusses ‘Flight Plan’ for post-college success

Milton Overton, Kennesaw State athletics director
“Your purpose in life is where your passion is,” said Milton Overton, who became KSU athletics director in the fall of 2017. (East Cobb News photo by Wendy Parker)

While Cobb County’s college football team continues to soar on the field, how those athletes prepare for what they do once they graduate is regarded as just as important.

Milton Overton, the Kennesaw State athletics director, pointed to himself as an example.

“I’m a guy who wouldn’t be here if it weren’t for being able to play football,” said Overton, the guest speaker at Tuesday’s East Cobb Business Association luncheon.

An offensive lineman for the powerhouse team at Oklahoma, he has also earned two master’s degrees and nearly completed his work on a doctorate.

“Education is the great equalizer, the vehicle for many Americans to have success.”

Overton, who arrived at KSU last fall, has enjoyed a 25-year career as a college sports administrator, and at some of the top programs in the country, including Alabama and Texas A & M.

Along the way, he’s been involved in nearly every aspect of what it takes for athletes to succeed on the field, as well as away from it.

Like many college athletic departments, KSU has a special program to help with the latter. It’s called “Flight Path,” and Overton stressed how good work habits and discipline for athletes now will help when they’re ready to begin their non-sports work careers.

In the Flight Plan program, KSU student-athletes work with a “career coach” to help them assess post-college working opportunities. Those coaches are local professionals who share information about their fields.

Current student-athletes also hear from KSU graduates who played sports, and who offer practical advice on what it’s like in the adult world.

The highly-regimented schedules of college athletes, Overton said, offer them an opportunity to enter the work world with an advantage.

He said the graduation rate for athletes is often higher than non-athletes at many universities because of additional tutoring and academic services.

If a young person is accustomed to “12-hour days over four years,” he said, he or she is “more than likely with an employer to have a good shot” at securing a good job.

Now the third-largest university in Georgia with nearly 35,000 students, KSU has quickly succeeded since beginning varsity football in 2015.

The Owls, who are ranked fifth nationally in the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), reached the national quarterfinals a year ago. Overton recently extended the contract of head coach Brian Bohannon through 2023, and KSU is trying to sell 30,000 tickets for a November game at SunTrust Park.

Overton was hired by then-KSU president Sam Olens after two years as athletics director at Florida A & M, which was undergoing financial struggles.

The FCS designation is just below the Football Bowl Subdivision, where Georgia and Georgia Tech play. Overton said that for now, there’s no desire for KSU to make a move up, as Georgia State has done.

“We want to be where we have a chance to complete,” he said. “If we keep doing what we’re doing, at some point” there may be some consideration. “This school is primed to do some good things,” he said, and not just in sports.

“KSU is a rocket ship,” Overton said. “I’m just trying to hold on.”

 

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East Cobb Business Association seeking donors, sponsors for public safety appreciation dinners

Precinct 4 officers honored at the East Cobb Business Association’s Public Safety Appreciation Dinner in 2017. (East Cobb News file photo)

The East Cobb Business Association is once again organizing public safety dinners for Cobb police and firefighters, and is asking for financial and prize donations and sponsorships.

The dinner for Precinct 4 police personnel is in the fall, and for county firefighters in April.

Susan Hampton and Kim Paris, co-chairs of the dinner, have sent out an appeal, and here’s more about the level of community involvement in the event:

We are blessed to live, work and raise our families in this wonderful community. We appreciate the continued support of The East Cobb Business Association, event host, and the presenting sponsor, WellStar East Cobb Health Park. Both are represented on the event committee that also includes individuals from East Cobb community-based groups including the Cobb Chamber’s East Cobb Area Council, East Cobb Citizen of the Year award recipients, area civic clubs, and representatives from both the police and fire departments.

We are delighted to continue to work together to plan these appreciation events, and to raise the funds necessary to insure their success. We are reaching out to individuals, businesses, civic and other nonprofit organizations, schools, neighborhoods and churches, and hope you will join us in support of our Public Safety heroes!

Monetary donations can be made in any amount, and for $25 individuals will be identified with a “Thank a Hero” card delivered to public safety honorees at the events.

Here’s more about donating and sponsoring, which run from $250 (silver), $500 (gold) and $1,000 (platinum). There’s also an online sign-up form and other information at that link.

Related coverage

 

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Biz Notes: East Cobb Pigskin Preview highlights August calendar

East Cobb Pigskin Preview
At the 2017 East Cobb Pigskin Preview, head coaches, L-R: Tab Griffin (Pope); Brett Sloan (Kell); Daniel Brunner (Walton); Brett Vavra (Sprayberry); Mike Collins (Wheeler); and Jep Irwin (Lassiter). They’re all back for 2018.

With August only a day away, local business groups are revving into back-to-school mode, including the East Cobb Area Council of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce. Its annual East Cobb Pigskin Preview breakfast is next week.

It’s on Thursday, Aug. 9 from 7:30-9 a.m. at Indian Hills Country Club (4001 Clubland Drive), and you can get registration information here. While last season was full of change, as four of the six public high schools in East Cobb had new coaches, for 2018 they will all be back.

The coaches will be answering questions and will bring some of their top players with them as pre-season practice is getting underway.

The highlight of the year was Walton reaching the second round of the state playoffs under Daniel Brunner, who was one of the rookie coaches.

On Thursday, the Sandy Springs-Cobb MeetUp networking group has its monthly breakfast from 9-10:30 a.m. at Egg Harbor Cafe (4719 Lower Roswell Road). Small business owners will meet to share trips and help find referrals in an open group setting. The group also meets for lunch the third Thursday at Tijuana Joe’s (690 Johnson Ferry Road).

The East Cobb Business Association is holding its next Lunch and Learn Session Aug. 7 at the Sewell Mill Library, with the program subject being identity theft protection strategies. The ECBA monthly luncheon guests on Aug. 21 at Olde Towne Athletic Club are Atlanta Braves marketing and partnership executives.

The ECBA’s East Cobb Open Networking breakfast is every Friday from 7:30-8:30 a.m. at Egg Harbor, and it’s drop-in event.

Congresswoman Karen Handel is the guest speaker at the Northeast Cobb Business Association monthly luncheon Aug. 15 from 11:30-1 at Piedmont Church (570 Piedmont Road).

The NCBA’s Five Alive business after hours event on Aug. 30 goes from 5:30-7:30 p.m. at the Fidelity Bank Canton Road branch (830 Old Piedmont Road) and also is themed for the upcoming football season.

 

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East Cobb Biz Notes: It’s luncheon week, and helping hands needed for MUST Ministries

The third week of each month means local business groups in East Cobb are holding their monthly luncheons. Jen Carfagno, East Cobb Biz Notes

It’s not too late to register for them, including the East Cobb Business Association luncheon that’s Tuesday from 11-1 at the Olde Towne Athletic Club (4950 Olde Towne Parkway).

The guest speaker is Jen Carfagno, meteorologist and host of AMHQ program at The Weather Channel.

This year the ECBA expanded its luncheon hours to include more networking (for the first half hour), and there’s an additional networking session built into the program.

The cost is $20 in advance for members, $25 in advance for visitors. The cost at the door is $30 for everyone. Click here to register.

The ECBA is also looking for volunteers later this week to help with one of its ongoing community initiatives. They’ll be assembling sandwiches for MUST Ministries’ summer lunch program for needy kids.

The lunch-packing takes place from 10-noon Friday at the Foothills Community Room (1407 Cobb Parkway North). Parking is behind the building, and you’ll enter at the blue and gold door marked for visitors and volunteers.

Here’s more on what MUST does in the summertime.

And don’t forget ECBA’s Friday East Cobb Open Networking breakfast at Egg Harbor Cafe. It’s a new location, but the same informal setting to meet and greet fellow local business professionals.

NCBA Luncheon Wednesday

At Wednesday’s Northeast Cobb Business Association luncheon the guest speaker is Mark Butler, the Georgia Commissioner of Labor.

The luncheon is from 11:30-1 at the Piedmont Church, 570 Piedmont Road. The cost is $15 for members and $25 for non-members.

Coming up in August

The next East Cobb Women in Business luncheon is Aug. 16 from 11:30-1 at the Paradise Grille (3605 Sandy Plains Road). No need to register; just pay for your lunch and bring plenty of business cards for networking. Visit their Facebook page for more.

The next East Cobb Area Council quarterly breakfast of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce is the annual East Cobb Pigskin Preview. It’s from 7:30-9 on Aug. 9 at the Indian Hills Country Club (4001 Clubland Drive), and features the six head coaches from Kell, Lassiter, Pope, Sprayberry, Walton and Wheeler football teams and selected players.

The cost is $20 for Chamber members and $30 for guests and you can register here.

 

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East Cobb Business Association panel to discuss ‘Why Non-Profits Are Good for Small Business’

Four members of local non-profit organizations will speak to the East Cobb Business Association next week. East Cobb Business Association

“Why Non-Profits Are Good for Small Business” is the title of the panel discussion at the ECBA’s monthly luncheon on Tuesday. It takes place from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Olde Towne Athletic Club (4950 Olde Towne Parkway).

The speakers are Dawn Reed of Aloha to Aging, Inc., Natalie Rutledge of the Cobb Schools Foundation, Tom Gonter of MUST Ministries and Mary Kay Boler of TAG-Ed Education Collaborative.

The cost for the luncheon is $20 in advance for ECBA members, $25 in advance for guests, and $30 at the door. Online registration can be done here.

A couple of stories related to these groups that we’ve posted recently: Aloha to Aging, the East Cobb-based non-profit that works with seniors and their caregivers, is holding a gala celebration at Kennesaw State in August as a fundraiser as it expands its services.

In January the Cobb Schools Foundation held a Casino Night fundraiser at SunTrust Park to benefit its programs that assist the Cobb County School District.

The Marietta-based MUST Ministries operates a homeless shelter and services for families and individuals in need.

The TAG-Ed Education Collaborative provides students with a gateway to STEM programs and opportunities in K-12.

Also next week, the Northeast Cobb Business Association will hold its monthly luncheon. It’s Wednesday from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Piedmont Church (570 Piedmont Road), and the guest speaker is Dana Johnson, director of the Cobb Community Development Department.

The cost is $15 for members and $25 for members and online registration can be done here.

 

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Burn Boot Camp East Cobb location opens at Pavilions at East Lake; other Biz Notes

Burn Boot Camp, East Cobb Biz Notes

Burn Boot Camp East Cobb, part of a national women’s fitness company, has opened at the Pavilions at East Lake, 2100 Roswell Road (website).

It’s the first of three planned Atlanta-area locations operated by the husband and wife team of Jayme and Chad Avrit. She’s from Marietta and both previously worked in the NASCAR stock car racing industry.

The Burn Boot Camp concept is a 45-minute circuit-style workout that includes 72 different styles and 15 different formats.

Members are not required to register for sessions in advance; all sessions before 5 p.m. are for women only, and free child care is available.

Cobb police meets with ECBA

Next Monday’s quarterly breakfast of the East Cobb Business Association features Cobb Police Precinct 4 commander Maj. Jerry Quan and his deputy, Capt. Everett Cebula. The breakfast takes place from 7:30-8:30 a.m. at the J. Christopher’s at the Pavilions at East Lake, 2100 Roswell Road.

The cost is $10 for ECBA members and $15 for guests; registration here.

Small business nominees sought

The Cobb Chamber of Commerce is accepting nominations for its small business of the year program. A total of 25 businesses from across the county will be selected by a panel of judges, with one of those finalists chosen as the small business of the year.

Last year, East Cobb businesses Ivy Lane Boutique, The Color Spot, Deluxe Athletics, ETA Creative Event Producers, IAG Forensics & Valuation, Seed Kitchen & Bar, Three-13 Salon, Spa & Boutique, Tuxedo Mosquito Control and Williamson Bros. Bar-B-Q were among the Top 25 small businesses honored by the chamber.

The program also includes a small business to watch honor, for those small businesses that have been open three years or less. Last year Dirty Deeds Junk Removal Service and Peachtree Hearing of East Cobb were among those businesses recognized in that category.

For information, and to apply, click here.

 

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Cobb budget deficit reveals ‘the painful truth,’ Boyce tells East Cobb business group

Cobb budget
Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce speaking to the East Cobb Business Association Tuesday. (East Cobb News photo by Wendy Parker)

In appearing before various constituent groups months ahead of time, Mike Boyce has been increasingly blunt about the Cobb budget deficit, which is expected to be at least $30 million for fiscal year 2019.

UPDATE: Cobb chairman proposes revised budget, keeping parks and libraries open

Earlier this month, the Cobb commission chairman told a few hundred (mostly) upset seniors at the East Cobb Senior Center about the need for rising fees for county services to the elderly, “because we’re all in this together.”

Earlier this week, Boyce met with members of the East Cobb Business Association and delivered a similar message. In what’s becoming something of a stump speech early in the budget season (the FY 2019 budget doesn’t go into effect until October), Boyce continued to sharpen his tone and implore citizens to be vocal and get engaged with the process.

“We have finally shown the reality of what the shortfall is,” Boyce said in remarks at the ECBA’s monthly luncheon at the Olde Towne Athletic Club.

Related story

Bringing pie charts and listings of wants and needs, Boyce reiterated his belief that the current general fund millage rate of 6.76—which yielded revenues of $405 million for the current fiscal year 2018—is not sufficient if Cobb is to remain what he calls “a five-star county.”

After Cobb commissioners used contingency money to close a $20 million gap for FY 2018, there aren’t many more sources to tap. Additional needs call for hiring more police officers, among other increases in spending.

Starting his second year in office, Boyce, an East Cobb resident, has said he “wants to get ahead of the story” in shaping the budget picture as clearly as possible.

“Now is the time we have to pay the bills,” he said.

Last year, he tried to get commissioners to approve a 0.13 mill increase to fund the 2008 Cobb parks bond referendum, but was rejected.

FY 18 Cobb Mandated Essential List
(Information and charts provided by Cobb County government.)

FY 18 Cobb Desired

Getting approval for a property tax increase to address the widening budget gap might seem unlikely, but on Monday East Cobb commissioner Bob Ott—who uniformly opposes tax increases—opened the door, at least slightly, to such a possibility.

In an article published for the InsiderAdvantage political newsletter, Ott said he opposed a millage rate increase “without cuts in services that are not mandated or essential to county operations.”

Those include senior programs, parks and libraries, which are on a long list of “desired” services that could face significant reductions for FY 2019.

During last year’s budget deliberations, Northeast Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell suggested closing the East Cobb Library, the second-busiest branch in the Cobb system. That never came to fruition, but East Cobb residents who spoke out against that proposal remain concerned.

One of those East Cobb Library supporters, Rachel Slomovitz, has started an online petition in support of a millage increase with the libraries in mind, and thus far has more than 600 signatures.

She estimates her proposal would cost taxpayers an additional $25 a year to avoid the possibility of up to $3 million in cuts (roughly a quarter of the library system’s entire budget) and closing multiple branches.

Ott further explained in the InsiderAdvantage piece that at a commissioners budget retreat last fall, he and a colleague worked up a budget solution with a $55 million deficit baseline and balanced that with non-essential program cuts, fee increases and a 0.5 millage rate increase.

That 0.5 mills would yield $14 million, by Ott’s calculation. He concluded by writing that after “desired” cuts were made and required spending was approved, and “if the essential list is not completely funded” with the present millage rate, “only then would I consider a tax increase.”

Boyce said he read Ott’s article and found it constructive and useful.

“How we’re going to get [to a resolution] is the next part of the problem,” Boyce told the ECBA attendees. “It’s a painful truth, but we’ve got to start telling the truth.”

Boyce will deliver his State of the County address to the Cobb Chamber of Commerce Monday morning.

 

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PHOTOS: East Cobb Public Safety Appreciation Dinner

East Cobb Public Safety Appreciation Dinner
(East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

More than 70 officers and staff from the Cobb Police Department’s Precinct 4 turned out Thursday night for the 5th annual East Cobb Public Safety Appreciation Dinner at the Olde Towne Athletic Club.

The event, sponsored by the East Cobb Business Association, featured a Western and casino theme, with line dancing and music, and tables with poker, blackjack, Texas Hold ‘Em and more.

Officers and staff received awards and gifts, including dinners and raffle prizes, and were invited to bring their spouses or significant others for a relaxing night away from the demands of their work.

East Cobb Public Safety Appreciation Dinner

East Cobb Public Safety Appreciation Dinner

While they were enjoying the evening, members of the Cobb Police Department’s Community Traffic Services Unit were holding down the Precinct 4 fort on Lower Roswell Road, and were served dinner courtesy of Sam’s BBQ-1 in East Cobb.

Maj. Jerry Quan, the Precinct 4 commander, said the appreciation dinner is eagerly anticipated by his officers. He also said the gesture by the ECBA and other groups and individuals who put on the dinner helps bolster strong community bonds with local police.

The ECBA is also organizing a similar dinner for all Cobb Fire and Emergency Services personnel next spring. For information, contact Susan Hampton: susan.hampton@lionbank.com or Kim Paris: kim.paris@wellstar.org.

East Cobb Public Safety Appreciation Dinner
Precinct 4 Commander Maj. Jerry Quan, left and field training officer Robbie New enjoying a meal and conversation.
East Cobb Public Safety Appreciation Dinner
Det. Paul Barnhill (center, with glasses), getting his East Cobb Officer of the Year award from Cobb Police Chief Mike Register.
East Cobb Public Safety Appreciation Dinner
Field training officer Tommy Burns, the East Cobb morning watch officer of the year, getting his sketch done.

East Cobb Public Safety Appreciation Dinner

East Cobb Public Safety Appreciation Dinner