Top East Cobb 2020 stories: Cobb schools go virtual as board feuds

Cobb school board anti-racism resolution delayed

For several months after the Cobb County School District shut down in March due to COVID-19, the Cobb Board of Education conducted public meetings via Zoom.

It didn’t reduce some existing disagreements among school board members on a number of issues, and the feuding got worse, including over pandemic response.

Superintendent Chris Ragsdale announced in July that the school year would start online-only. It didn’t require a board vote.

But the decision set in motion many public conversations before and by the board and elsewhere during the fall semester, which gradually went to optional face-to-face learning before concluding in virtual format only due to rising COVID-19 community spread.

After the George Floyd death in May, the school board was among many elected bodies around the country in drafting an anti-racism resolution. The Cobb Board of Commissioners approved such a measure in June.

But after three attempts, the seven-member school board could not come to a unanimous approval on language in the resolution.

Black Democratic board members Charisse Davis, who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters, and Jaha Howard of the Campbell and Osborne clusters, insisted on wording that the Cobb school district has had a history of “systemic racism.”

White Republicans David Banks and Randy Scamihorn objected, and said they wouldn’t support a resolution with that language.

As the year wore on, the racial and partisan divide on the board grew larger.

In an October East Cobb News candidate profile, Banks accused Davis and Howard of “trying to make race an issue where it has never been before.” He also said the Cobb school district’s biggest long-term challenge is avoiding the “white flight” of other metro Atlanta school districts.

Davis fired back, charging Banks of “spewing racist trash” and recounting Cobb’s history of segregated schools well into the 1960s.

Banks won a fourth term in November, and Scamihorn and chairman Brad Wheeler were also re-elected, preserving a 4-3 Republican school board majority for the next two years.

A few weeks later that same majority angered Davis and Howard by abolishing a newly formed committee to examine school naming policies.

The committee was to have considered such matters as an ongoing effort to rename Wheeler High School, named after a Confederate general (Davis signed that petition).

Howard, who began taking a knee during the Pledge of Allegiance when the board resumed in-person meetings in September, accused his Republican colleagues of “systemic racism.”

The four Republicans also voted to require a board majority for board members to place items on meeting agendas.

“What are you afraid of?” Davis asked her colleagues before the vote, which went 4-2.

Howard said the matter was no different than when the Republican majority voted in 2019 to prevent board members from offering comments during board meetings.

In December, the board bickered over a $12 million request from Ragsdale to purchase sanitizing products for elementary schools. The four Republicans voted in favor, but Davis and Howard said that was a lot of money to spend on a proof-of-concept basis and that there’s no evidence the new equipment is effective.

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Top East Cobb 2020 stories: Community response to COVID-19

Cobb Community Food Fleet

The COVID-19 pandemic and shutdowns stemming from it prompted a response from community, civic, business and governmental organizations like never before in 2020.

Even those groups in Cobb County whose work involves helping those most in need were stretched far beyond what they’re accustomed to doing.

MUST Ministries, a Marietta-based non-profit that serves the homeless and others in need in several metro Atlanta counties, was challenged in unprecedented ways.

Federal CARES Act funding received by Cobb County government was distributed to a number of non-profit and community organizations for broad-based needs, including food, rental assistance, and to help them stay operational.

Among those efforts was a joint response by the Cobb Chamber of Commerce and the Cobb Community Foundation, which launched Operation Meal Plan.

CCF later estimated that county non-profits delivered 8.3 million pounds of food since the pandemic began in March, and those needs will continue for months to come.

At the end of the year, CCF named Howard Koepka of the Noonday Association of Churches as the recipient of its James L. Rhoden Jr. Visionary Philanthropist Award, after the East Cobb resident who founded CCF and has long been involved in non-profit community service in the county.

Other efforts to aid those on the frontlines of the COVID-19 crisis include people took it upon themselves to lend a helping hand. Among them is Kirsten Glaser, a new East Cobb resident who’s been serving up “lasagna love” to health care workers, first responders, teacher and others.

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