A u g u s t 1 6 , 2 0 1 8 | N o r t h F u l t o n . c o m | A n A p p e n M e d i a G r o u p P u b l i c a t i o n | 5 0 ¢ | Vo l u m e 3 6 , N o . 3 3
Pr o SP vIS IK IO PA E IN NAL GE E B s LEC AL 8 L – 9 TIO OT N s
Residents seek clarity on future of Wills Park
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Roswell library closes for major renovations
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Patrick Fox/Herald
A salutary send-off Keynote speaker Brig. Gen. Reginald Neal, left, greets members of the American Legion Riders Aug. 4, as they prepare to kick off the 66th annual Old Soldiers’ Day Parade on Roswell Street. Neal is director of the Joint Staff, Georgia Army National Guard. Read more, Pages 20 – 21.
Fulton commissioner challenges millage rate
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2 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
Public Safety
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LUMPKIN COUNTY, Ga. — The Georgia Bureau of Investigation announced Aug. 8 that an Alpharetta man was arrested after an investigation involving threats made to a university professor. On Aug. 1, the University of North Georgia Police Department contacted the GBI asking for assistance into alleged threats of violence against one of the professors. The threats, made over emails and letters, alluded to gun violence not only to the professor, but also
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All crime reports published by Appen Media Group are compiled from public records. Neither the law enforcement agencies nor Appen Media Group implies any guilt by publishing these names. None of the persons listed has been convicted of the alleged crimes.
6 catalytic converters stolen from parked cars ALPHARETTA, Ga. — Six people discovered someone had stolen the catalytic converter from their vehicles. All of the victims had parked their cars at the Marta Park and Ride on Dryden Road the morning of Aug. 1. When they returned at 6 p.m., they discovered the theft when they attempted to start their cars. All were greeted with loud noises from under the hood. The affected cars included a gold 2002 Honda Odyssey, blue 2004 Honda CR-V, a silver 2003 Toyota Sequoia, a Toyota Tundra, a Lexus LX450 and a silver 2001 Honda Odyssey.
Man hangs up on fake IRS collector ROSWELL, Ga. — A man called police July 27 after two unknown people impersonating IRS officials attempted to scam him out of $40,000. The man received a call from a woman at 7:15 p.m. that day in reference to a past tax debt. The woman said she was from the IRS criminal investigations
to other staff and students if the professor did not resign. After an “extensive investigation,” Jose Gomez, 23, of Alpharetta was arrested Aug. 4 in his home by the Alpharetta Police Department. Gomez is charged with terroristic threats and acts. He was transported to Lumpkin County Jail where he will face the charge in Lumpkin County Superior Court. – Julia Grochowski
unit and that the man had incurred multiple infractions totaling $40,000. She then told him that he had to make a $3,950 payment or she was going to issue a warrant for his arrest. The man was then transferred to a man who claimed he was from the finance department. The unknown man then began screaming and cursing demanding that the man pay the money. The man hung up and called police instead.
Car window smashed in City Hall parking deck ALPHARETTA, Ga. — A man called police Aug. 1 after her car was damaged and iPad stolen from his parked car at the Alpharetta City Hall parking deck. The man had parked his 2010 Dodge Ram in that area at 2:30 p.m. that day and returned 15 minutes later. When he came back, the back passenger window was shattered and the iPad he had left on the center console was gone.
License plate stolen, tail light smashed ROSWELL, Ga. — Police responded July 25 to Holcomb Bridge Road after a man reported that his license plate had been stolen. The man parked his 2001 black Mazda between Pawn Express and Bet-
Gomez
ter Homes store at 10 a.m. and returned at 1 p.m. When he came back, the license plate was gone and the passenger side tail light was smashed.
Thief steals truck parked in driveway ALPHARETTA, Ga. — A man reported July 31 that someone had stolen his red 2007 Toyota Tundra. The truck had been parked on the man’s driveway at Kilminton Square overnight. At 8:15 a.m. the next morning, the truck was gone, even though the man still had both sets of keys to the truck. A neighbor did have security footage from that night, but the footage stopped at 9:30 p.m. and did not show the truck.
Woman takes action after identity theft tipoff ALPHARETTA, Ga. — A woman discovered Aug. 6 that someone was using her identity to open multiple fake accounts after she was sent a notice in the mail. The woman received two letters Aug.4 from Delta Community Bank. The first congratulated her on opening a new checking account, which she had not done, and the second was a bill for $175 from that account.
See BLOTTER, Page 24
NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 3
4 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
NEWS
Alpharetta to maintain ‘open carry’ hours on Sundays By PATRICK FOX pat@appenmediagroup.com ALPHARETTA, Ga. — If Alpharettans vote this fall to allow alcohol sales on Sunday mornings, they likely won’t be carrying the beverages around in public. Following through on earlier discussions, the Alpharetta City Council voted Aug. 6 to pass a revision within the city’s alcohol ordinance that would keep the “open carry” provision at 12:30 p.m. on Sundays, regardless of when the drink was served. Alpharetta’s alcohol ordinance allows patrons to carry open containers in select mixed-use districts, including downtown, where several churches hold services Sunday mornings. The City Council vote, which must be finalized on a second reading later this month, would guard against concerns several pastors expressed to city officials recently about having alcohol on the streets while services were letting out. Those concerns drew at least some criticism when the City Council was accused of ignoring the separation of church and state in weighing local legislation.
To me to hold off until 12:30 to walk around with open containers and alcohol when the families are getting out of church and walking to their cars, I think, is just a matter of basic respect, and I’ll stand by that every day of the week.” Donald Mitchell Alpharetta Councilman But council members were unapologetic at the Aug. 6 meeting. “It’s about mutual respect,” City Councilman Donald Mitchell said. “First Baptist has been here for over 100 years, and I know how First Baptist believes concerning alcohol.” Mitchell said two churches contacted him with concerns about the issue, first because they are already cleaning their parking lots of drinks left from Saturday night. The churches also share their lots with the city, he said. “It’s about being neighborly, to me,
and about being respectful to their beliefs,” Mitchell said. “To me to hold off until 12:30 to walk around with open containers and alcohol when the families are getting out of church and walking to their cars, I think, is just a matter of basic respect, and I’ll stand by that every day of the week.” Councilman Ben Burnett also weighed in on the issue. “I don’t think anyone up here has disputes [with] having a drink in a restaurant at 11:00 on a Sunday if that’s what your preference is,” he said. “The one thing I truly appreciate about
Alpharetta is that is really is big enough for everybody – and that includes them, too.” The so-called Brunch Bill passed the Georgia Legislature this spring. It allows local jurisdictions to hold referendums on whether to roll back the time permitted for alcohol sales on Sundays from the current 12:30 p.m. to 11 a.m. Surrounding cities of Milton, Roswell and Johns Creek have joined Alpharetta in placing the referendum on the ballot for November. The City of Cumming failed to consider the measure in time for its inclusion on this year’s ballot. In other action at the Aug. 6 meeting, the City Council: Approved $752,000 for the purchase of 20 police vehicles, two pickups and one motorcycle for the Public Safety Department. In addition, the council approved $256,000 for the cost of equipping the vehicles. Approved a five-year agreement with Southeastern Emergency Equipment for emergency medical supplies for $55,000. Approved the purchase of one 2019 Ford F-750 Box Dump Truck at $121,483 and an F-250 4X4 Crew Cab at $52,000 for the Public Works Department.
Proposed Roswell tennis center goes to Council vote By JULIA GROCHOWSKI julia@appenmediagroup.com ROSWELL, Ga. — The City of Roswell has announced a concept to create the largest clay court tennis center in the nation to be located on 60 acres in Big Creek Park. The proposal was scheduled to go before the Roswell City Council this week. For a full recap of the meeting and
Read the letter to the editor, “Save Big Creek Park” Page 16. decisions made regarding the tennis center, visit northfulton.com The 135-court project would be developed by Roswell residents Vernon and
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Marie Krause in honor of their daughter Angela Krause, who passed away at age 29 from a rare form of non-smokers lung cancer. Angela was an avid tennis player and member of the UGA club tennis team. The facility would cost $60-$70 million and would break ground in 2019. Development would occur in three phases and would include traditional hard and grass courts as well as a tournament-sized, 24-court pickleball facility.
Within 24 hours after the proposal’s announcement on Aug. 9, the plan had generated a lot of traffic on social media, especially among residents opposed to the facility. Criticism has centered around clearcutting in the park, which currently includes several bike trails. Comments also questioned how much use the facility would see. As of Aug. 10, a change.org petition against the proposed facility included more than 6,300 signatures.
Roswell church hosts consignment sale ROSWELL, Ga. — The Roswell United Methodist Church Preschool and Kindergarten will host its semi-annual children’s consignment sale from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Sept. 7, and from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. Sept. 8. The sale will be held in the Fellowship Hall of the church, located at 814 Mimosa Blvd. and will benefit the church’s preschool and kindergarten. Donated items will be given to the Foster Care Support Foundation. There will be three rooms from more than 200 consignors and low prices on gently worn fall and winter children’s clothing and accessories, maternity clothing, baby equipment, nursery décor, play sets, books, DVDs and toys. Strollers are not allowed before noon on Friday. Many of the items are half price on Saturday. All consignors must pre-register, even those who have consigned before. Major credit cards will be accepted with a $3 processing fee. Visit rumc.com/rumck to register to consign or volunteer.
NEWS
NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 5
Public feedback spurs clarification to Wills Park planning procedure By PATRICK FOX pat@appenmediagroup.com ALPHARETTA, Ga. — Patrons will get another crack at helping draft a master plan for Alpharetta’s green jewel, Wills Park, and its Equestrian Center. That’s good news to a large segment of residents who were not happy with what they thought the city was proposing. After months of workshops and online surveys, the city’s website had presented three options for upgrades that drew more than a little criticism. At an Aug. 6 City Council workshop on the subject, Parks and Recreation Director Morgan Rodgers said he wants to clarify where the process is at. “With only three options available online to choose from, I can understand how many people reasoned those proposals presented were the final design choices,” Rodgers said. “That simply was not true.” The parks director said he should have done a better job explaining the proposals and how they fit in with the ongoing process. Residents in attendance at the workshop said they were disappointed by the choices presented on the website which have subsequently been removed. Several residents spoke in favor of increasing the size of the dog park. “This is a great dog park. It’s a huge area,” said eight-year resident Kim Waitz, a dog owner who has helped form a citizens group to advocate for the amenity. Waitz thanked Rodgers for the clarification on the planning process and told council members she has had more than 400 people who have come forward to join their group in the past 10 days. She said the business community has also been supportive of the effort. She said she would like to see the dog park expanded, and she and her group were adamantly opposed to any effort to reduce its size. Rodgers said the park plan options were drawn up by project consultant Jacobs, and they included information garnered from a series of public input sessions and online surveys. The plan was begun, he said, because the park lacked a sense of cohesion with no set order to the many facilities sprinkled within its expansive confines. In addition, Rodgers said bathrooms are too small to meet current demand, the infrastructure is aging, wooded areas are not being used to their potential, the Equestrian Center is in need of major upgrades and both the recreation center on Wills Road and the Community Center are too small and limited for demand.
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The overriding response was that Wills Park is a great park, let’s just make it better.” Morgan Rodgers Alpharetta Parks and Recreation Director The three proposals presented by Jacobs were intended to be a starting point for discussion, Rodgers said. They also didn’t consider costs or the feasibility of moving some facilities to other parks. “As I’m sure you’re aware, a great deal of feedback has been generated by this process,” Rodgers said. “Well over 1,000 persons responded to the survey online, and there were a total 1,625 comments online about those proposals.” There weren’t many who liked the three drafts. “The overriding response was that Wills Park is a great park, let’s just make it better,” Rodgers said. “Let’s don’t necessarily move things around. Let’s don’t lose any of the things, like the dog park.” The Parks Department has set up a new schedule to refine the master plan to include the latest flurry of public sentiment. The next step will be for Jacobs to read the comments and use them to craft another draft plan that will be available in early September, Rodgers said. Residents will be able to post comments about the new plan for a minimum of two weeks. The plan will then go before the Alpharetta Recreation Commission for review on Sept. 13. A public hearing will be held on the document at 6 p.m., Sept. 20 at City Hall. Then, the Recreation Commission will formally consider the plan Oct. 9, and it will be brought before the City Council probably later that same month. “The staff has met with Jacobs and made sure they heard the citizens from this input,” Rodgers said. “I want to make sure that the citizens understand that there’s plenty of opportunity as we move forward for input.” Outside of the upcoming public meetings on the subject, Rodgers invited residents to contact the Parks and Recreation Department at 678-2976103 with their thoughts or concerns on Wills Park or email him at mrodgers@ alpharetta.ga.us.
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6 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
JULIA GROCHOWSKI/Herald
The Roswell Library will close Aug. 21 and is expected to open again in late February 2019 after renovations are complete.
Roswell library to close Aug. 21 for renovations By JULIA GROCHOWSKI julia@appenmediagroup.com ROSWELL, Ga. — It’s the last chance to use the Roswell Library before it closes for the rest of the year. The library will be inaccessible for approximately six months, starting Aug. 21, to undergo extensive renovations, after almost 30 years without any major updates. The facility is the third busiest library in the Atlanta-Fulton Public Library System based on book circulation. Patrons are urged to transfer any hold items a nearby library. Any checked out items can be returned to any open library in the Atlanta-Fulton Public Library System. The Sandy Springs, Southwest Atlanta, Kirkwood, Washington Park, Dogwood and West End locations will also close for renovation work. Through a library bond referendum approved by Fulton County voters in 2008, the library system has been engaging in a $275 million project to build new libraries and renovate existing branches. The Roswell Library at 115 Norcross Street is one of 23 library renovations slated for Phase II of the project. Phase I was completed in early 2017 and consisted of 10 renovations, eight new libraries and two expanded libraries. “The closing of the seven branches included in Group 1 of the Library Renovation Project is part of a two-year effort to redesign and modernize 23 of the County’s 34 libraries,” said Gabriel Morley, director of the Atlanta-Fulton Public Library System. “Upgrades will include items like new HVAC systems, roofing, upgraded technology, improved layouts, new shelving, study rooms, ADA accessible restrooms, and more. “While we know the closing of libraries will bring some inconvenience, the result will be well worth it. We look forward to completing the renovations as quickly as possible and reopening beau-
Nearby, alternate library locations • East Roswell Library, 2301 Holcomb Bridge Road, Roswell 30076 • Alpharetta Library, 10 Park Plaza, Alpharetta 30009 • Milton Library, 855 Mayfield Road, Milton 30009 • Buckhead Library, 269 Buckhead Ave. NE, Atlanta 30305 tifully renovated libraries that can serve their communities more efficiently.” The renovations will primarily concentrate on brick-and-mortar improvements such as new roofing, heating and air conditioning, safety equipment, carpeting, furniture, Wi-Fi and technology. It will not include any operational changes, such as altering the book catalogue, and it will not expand the 20,000 square-foot building. Design teams conducted several community meetings to gain public input on patrons’ needs and suggestions for the plans. Based on this feedback, the Roswell Library in particular will include new sections including a quiet room, group study area, cafe and a technology resource wing. The plans likewise call for a central help desk and several new self-checkout stations, including one at a new, secondary library entrance facing Norcross Street. Renovation plans are not just focused on the interior. Outside, at the new Norcross Street entrance, will be porch space for people to enjoy reading outdoors. It will be accompanied with new signage, sidewalks and bike racks. The library is expected to reopen in late February 2019. For up-to-date information on the renovation project, visit afpls.org or call the renovation hotline at 404-613-7323.
SCHOOLS
NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 7
Fulton Schools open doors for 2018-19 school year District leaders make school safety a priority By CANDY WAYLOCK candy@appenmediagroup.com NORTH FULTON, Ga. – A projected 95,000+ students in the Fulton County School System returned to class on Aug. 6 with many finding newly renovated and spruced-up buildings, and a greater emphasis on student safety. Fulton Schools continues to be the fourth largest school district in Georgia – behind only Gwinnett, Cobb and DeKalb school systems – although its projected 2018-2019 enrollment of 95,215 is roughly the same as last year’s numbers. Nearly 700 new teachers were hired over the summer, bringing the total teaching force to about 6,800 across Fulton’s 106 schools. Ronnie Wade, Fulton’s Talent director, said a handful of vacancies remain in some schools, primarily in those “hard to staff” positions including special education. Nearly one-quarter of all schools will open under new leadership this year, with system officials citing retirements and promotions driving the changes in principals and leadership. Three of the four area superintendents also changed from last year. Highlights of the 2017-28 school year include: Quick Tip safety hotline The “Quick Tip” app allowing students to report any safety matter quickly and anonymously is now loaded on all district-issued student devices, such as tablets and laptops. School officials note this app encourages students to support the concept of “If you see something, say something.” Safety Committee The newly-established Safety Advisory Committee will provide insight and perspectives to Superintendent Jeff Rose as the district looks to enhance school security. The committee is composed of school system staff, along with school leaders, partners, public safety personnel and parent representatives. The committee’s goal is to use a “research-based approach” to review current processes and identify any additional approaches to improve school safety. New police vehicles, body cameras and officers The Fulton School Police Department
added six new officers, as well as 19 vehicles to its fleet. The new staff and cars will improve the efficiency in patrolling schools, as well as provide a quicker response during emergencies. Officers are being outfitted, for the first time, with body cameras as part of each officer’s standard uniform. Report management system Fulton Schools Police implemented a new report management system that allows better sharing of information among metro police departments. Information includes access to criminal records, videos and photos so the departments can collaborate on cases with similarities and combine resources. New video surveillance systems Fulton Schools is upgrading camera systems in every school to Avigilon, similar to systems used at major airports and other highly secured environments. This system allows staff to monitor activities with greater accuracy, and allows users to find targets within a building based on a tagged “appearance search.” The district has partnered with the Sandy Springs and Johns Creek emergency call centers and Fulton County 911 Dispatch allowing direct access to view the Avigilon cameras in schools. Discussions are underway to share this capability with other municipalities’ police departments. CrisisGo communications tool CrisisGo is being phased into schools during the 2018-2019 school year. The program quickly distributes emergency operations plans to staff, via mobile devices, during emergency situations. Over a three-year cycle, this technology will replace the traditional paper emergency plans.
NCI Designated Designated Comprehensive Cancer Center
Construction and maintenance projects Through the SPLOST, the one-penny education sales tax, hundreds of large and small maintenance projects were completed over the summer including finish work, flooring, site work, roofing and fire alarm replacements. In North Fulton, turf and/or tracks were replaced at Alpharetta, Centennial, Chattahoochee and Roswell high schools, with major renovation work completed at Cogburn Woods, Lake Windward, Manning Oaks elementary schools and Holcomb Bridge Middle. WIN Appen Johns Creek.indd 1
7/5/18 10:40 AM
8 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com/Black_Box
BLACK BOX special report:
Registration shuffle rattles By JULIA GROCHOWSKI julia@appenmediagroup.com FULTON COUNTY, Ga. — When Alpharetta resident Ollie Wagner went to vote in the July 24 runoff election, he wasn’t expecting trouble. He’s lived at the same address and been registered to vote for more than 10 years, after all. Nothing had changed. But when he went to the Alpharetta Library at 9 a.m. to cast his ballot, he was told he would have to vote provisionally. Provisional ballots are usually issued when a voter’s eligibility comes into question, and the voter is later informed whether their vote was counted or not. There are several reasons why a person might be handed a provisional ballot — such as outdated or inaccurate information — but one of the most common reasons is that the voter’s name does not appear on the electoral roll for that precinct. But Wagner’s information, his address, hadn’t changed in years. The poll workers that morning didn’t fully understand what was going on, but they told Wagner that he had been placed on a list and flagged for some reason. “The word that I got was simply that I had to do a provisional ballot,” Wagner said. “Somewhere along the line, they said that this happened to somebody else this morning already, a longtime resident.” Wagner did end up voting provisionally, but he was not the only one who ran into trouble on Election Day. Roswell resident Shirley Filardi, likewise, was told that she had been flagged for some reason and would have to vote provisionally despite having lived in the same place for years. The poll workers Filardi spoke to were able to give her some more information: there had been some sort of glitch, they told her, and anyone who had renewed their driver’s license recently or changed their address had to vote provisionally. “I just felt very discouraged,” Filardi said. “They were all polite, they were apologizing. But, it just seems that there was something going on.”
Kathleen Sturgeon/Herald
Despite having lived in the same place for years, or even decades, hundreds of registered voters in Fulton County were forced to fill out provisional ballots in the July 24 runoff. Complying with a federal judge order Wagner’s and Filardi’s accounts were echoed across several North Atlanta counties that day. Almost 1,000 provisional ballots were cast in the July 24 elections in Fulton County alone — a sizable spike compared to past elections. In the past 10 elections prior to the July 24 runoff, provisional ballots made up anywhere between .02 percent and .28 percent of the total votes cast. That number shot up to 1.46 percent in the July 24 race, which featured GOP gubernatorial candidates Casey Cagle and Brian Kemp. The spike can be tracked to a 2017 ruling made by a federal judge, said Candice Broce, press secretary and staff attorney for the Georgia Secretary of State. Last year, during the heated 6th District congressional race between Karen
Handel and Jon Ossoff, U.S. District Judge Timothy Batten ruled in favor of civil rights advocacy groups by ordering Georgia to reopen voter registration that spring. The state complied with the order, Broce said. But its impact was felt July 24, 2018 when five counties – Cobb, DeKalb, Forsyth, Fulton and Gwinett – all held their first federal runoff election since Handel vs. Ossoff. To comply with the judge’s ruling extending voter registration, Broce said these counties used supplemental voter lists to show those who registered for the first time or changed their voter record between what would have been the “regular” April 24, 2018 registration deadline and the “new” June 25, 2018 deadline. Those who did were flagged for provisional voting. This measure would ensure that voters were only casting a ballot in races they were eligible to participate in, Broce said. “There was no issue with the voter registration database,” she added. “We worked together to find a way to accommodate this judicially imposed deadline,
and we agreed that this system would comply with the ruling.” An extra wrinkle “We knew that we were going to have more provisional ballots than normal,” said Richard Barron, Fulton County director of Registration and Elections. But the department wasn’t expecting an additional snarl in the process that arose that morning. Almost 20,000 people in Fulton County were placed on the supplemental voter list. It was the first time the county had ever been given such a list, and in order to deal with the unusual circumstances, Barron said that poll workers were trained before the election to be aware of the issue. But come Tuesday morning, poll workers were flooded with hundreds of cases like Wagner and Filardi – residents who lived at the same address for years, some for decades, were suddenly being flagged as someone who had recently moved. After some digging, election officials finally worked out a common denominator. These voters had renewed or applied for a driver’s license earlier this year at
NorthFulton.com/Black_Box | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 9
long-time voters the Department of Driver Services. If their plus-four digit ZIP code changed or was added to the license, the Secretary of State’s voter database flagged it. “It was flagged as a move because it was technically a change in address,” Barron said. “So all of those people were put on the green supplemental list as well.” Barron said the ZIP code issue was in part a “byproduct” of last year’s court order. “I don’t think anyone saw it coming,” he said. “None of the counties knew that was coming. The Secretary of State’s Office didn’t know either. No one knew.” So someone could have been living at the same address for decades with only the plus-four digit change, but for the computers, that was enough to count as an address change. The supplemental voters list the counties were given did not explain why people had been placed on the list. Election officials and poll workers only knew that a person’s name was on the list for moving recently and that they would have to vote provisionally. “We had a total of 978 provisional ballots in this election, 659 of them were because of voters that had moved,” Barron said. “How many of those 659 were affected because of the plus-four in the ZIP code? I don’t know. We’d have to research every voter’s registration history to figure that out. We do know that if it was a ZIP plus-four change, the database put them onto that supplemental list, and we processed everyone the same across the county so that no one would be treated differently…. “There’s nothing voters could have done about this.” Future elections For the immediate future, at least, voters need not worry. The supplemental voter list will not come into play in the November elections. The only time it could become an issue again, Barron said, is if there was another primary and primary runoff in two years. “I don’t know what the remedy is going to be for it,” he said. “If there’s a ZIP code plus-four change next time — I don’t think the DDS or the state or the county could have known that a ZIP plus-four was going to throw people onto the supplemental list.” The state’s old voting system technology contributed to the issue, Barron said. Making any changes to a voter’s information is “not an easy thing to do.” And when the judge ordered that voter
Race Fulton County elections July 2016 General Primary Runoff Election - Fulton Superior Court Judge - Shoob July 2016 General Primary Runoff Election - Fulton Superior Court Judge - Lane November 2016 General Election - US President Trump, Hillary, Johnson March 21 2017 Special Election - Roswell Council P4 - Henry, Sears, Willsey, Wright March 21 2017 Special Election - South Fulton Mayor - 9 candidates April 2017 Special Election - US House 6 - 18 candidates incl. Handel and Ossoff May 2017 Special Election - State Senate 32 Kirkpatrick (R) vs. Triebsch (D) June 2017 Special Runoff Election - US House 6 Handel vs. Ossoff November 2017 General Elections - Alpharetta Council P2 - Burnett, Easterling November 2017 General Elections - Atlanta Mayor 11 candidates incl. K. Bottoms November 2017 General Elections - Johns Creek Mayor - Bodker November 2017 General Elections - Milton Mayor Lockwood, Rencher November 2017 General Elections - Roswell Mayor Henry, Horton, Jenkins, Litten December 2017 Special Runoff Election - Atlanta Mayor - Bottoms, Norwood December 2017 Special Runoff Election - Roswel Mayor - Henry, Jenkins May 2018 General Primary - Governor R - Cagle, Hill, Kemp, Tippins, Williams May 2018 General Primary - Governor D - Abrams, Evans July 2018 Runoff - Governor R - Cagle, Kemp Statewide elections Statewide July 2018 Runoff - Governor R - Cagle, Kemp Statewide November 2016 General Election President - Trump, Hillary, Johnson registration be extended, several updates to voter information had to be made in that system before that primary runoff. “It’s just an inflexible system, because it’s old,” he said. “We bought it in 2002 – who knows when it was designed?” But, Barron predicts that it won’t be an issue again in two years if a new voting system is installed by then. “[It] would make this problem go
Total votes cast
Provisional votes
Percent provisional
34,579
53
0.15%
35,148
50
0.14%
438,751
1,201
0.27%
5,855
3
0.05%
11,630
9
0.08%
87,060
243
0.28%
2,461
1
0.04%
123,469
149
0.12%
3,731
3
0.08%
87,102
194
0.22%
4,229
1
0.02%
4,463
3
0.07%
13,626
5
0.04%
83,555
192
0.23%
12,024
5
0.04%
35,155
53
0.15%
91,095
234
0.26%
35,081
512
1.46%
588,307
2,650
0.45%
4,092,373
7,646
0.19%
away as well,” Barron said. “The technology is going to make it easier to make changes if it’s with a short-term issue. It won’t be so labor intensive to make a change on the fly. I fully expect that by the next primary that we’re going to have a new voting system in place that would render this a one-time thing as well.” Voters will be relieved to hear that all of the provisional ballots cast by people affect-
ed by the ZIP code change were counted. Only 39 provisional ballots from the July 24 election in Fulton County were rejected, an “extraordinarily low number,” Barron said. On average, around 50 percent of provisional ballots are counted. That was good news for Ollie Wagner. When he later checked, his ballot was among those counted.
OPINION
10 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
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My vacation show & tell I have always wanted for our readers to send us their vacation travel stories — especially when they are fun, interesting or special in some way. This column is my example of a “vacaRay appen tion show & tell” for Publisher ray@appenmediagroup.com you! Next, you write one and send it to us! Send to RayAppen@Gmail.com and in the subject line put: “show & tell.” Where: Every few years, Christina and I go to Washington D.C., to do the museums. We’ve gone a number of times and it never gets old. We stayed a week, and that was just about the right amount of time. How: We have started taking Amtrak out of Atlanta to D.C. We get a sleeper car. It’s not cheap and our tickets cost around $350 each — one way — because we are both traveling to other separate destinations after D.C. I am flying back to Atlanta and then out to California for a hike. Christina is continuing on to Charlottesville to visit an old college roommate. The train leaves Atlanta – or is supposed to leave — around 8 p.m. and arrive at Union Station in D.C., around 10 a.m. the next day. Amtrak was late and didn’t depart Atlanta until around 10 p.m. That is unfortunately not unusual. So we missed having dinner in the dining car that night, which has always been one of the coolest aspects of the trip. We were, however, able to eat in the dining car for breakfast, which we loved. The food is good, and the scenery out the window as the train rolls through the small towns in Virginia is better than a movie. The sleeper room we had was tiny but it just added to the sense of adventure, and it was comfortable enough and fun. Accommodations & Dining: We stayed at the Hydeaway Bed N Breakfast owned by Gary Hyde (202-462-1886) in the Logan Circle area of D.C. Gary has renovated an old brownstone-like, brick building and filled it with antiques, jazz, great light, white-tablecloth-dining for continental breakfasts and topped it off with a pool in the back courtyard surrounded by exotic foliage, fountains, statuettes and comfortable rockers. After breakfast each morning, we quietly drank our coffee, read and chatted poolside in no hurry to leave for the museums. Most nights we simply walked a few blocks in the vicinity of the B&B and had a wide selection of restaurants, bars and crowded sidewalks that provided the experience and engaging vibe of city
life. The environs reminded me of places I have known from the past — Chicago, Miami and Berlin. Travel in D.C. was so easy. You can get anywhere using the Metro, The U station was 3 blocks from our B&B. When we got tired, we just took Uber. One night we caught Tad Benoit performing at The Hamilton. Google this amazing Cajun guitarist who easily plays as well as Clapton and has the sex appeal of any leading man out there. We’ve seen him in New Orleans, Atlanta and a few other places, and we always go out of our way to see one of his shows. Another early evening, we spent a few hours at the National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden, listening to free live jazz while we dipped our feet into the park’s great fountain with 500 other concertgoers. Sandwiched into our sightseeing, we managed to meet with Sen. Johnny Isakson and Rep. Karen Handel in their offices to encourage them to help defeat the imported newsprint tariff that our president has initiated and which threatens the entire industry. The tariff protects the jobs in a single newsprint mill in Seattle owned by a hedge fund — roughly 250 jobs — and threatens literally thousands of jobs in every newspaper in the country. Sen. Isakson is a co-sponsor of “The Print Act” which is working its way through Congress and can potentially help. Favorites: Our new favorite museum has to be the Portrait Gallery, which we finally managed to visit on our last day. Many of the portraits were immediately recognizable. Each image, each portrait was accompanied by three or four paragraphs detailing the person’s contribution. The subjects ranged from presidents to musicians to inventors to athletes to writers and conductors. Of note, there were hundreds of portraits in this museum and it was crowded with hundreds of people — maybe several thousand — but we almost never saw a single instance where there were more than four or five people in front of any one image —with two exceptions. There were lines for Michelle Obama’s portrait and an even longer queue with folks waiting to take their picture in front of the portrait of President Obama. With quiet wonder, Christina and I watched young girls approach Michelle’s portrait, then their mother leaning over to speak quietly to their daughter when they were close. We watched a really old African American man posing with glee in front of President Obama’s portrait as his grandson recorded the frozen moment for posterity on his iPhone. Watching these visitors in the Portrait Gallery alone would have made the entire trip worthwhile, however, earlier
OPINION
NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 11
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in the week we also stumbled upon a live audience participation play being performed in the Smithsonian American History Museum. It was a reenactment of the 1963 sit-ins in the Greensboro, N.C., Woolworths which eventually led the company to end its policy of racial segregation in the South. What made the performance so special was that a large percentage of the audience were kindergarten-aged African American children whose live unscripted participation in the exchanges and questions from the two actors reminded
everyone in that large room that racial bias and prejudice is something learned — not something we are born with — as these children were such testaments to. Our host at the B&B threw a goingaway dinner for us the last day, and we joined a friendly group of local residents exchanging stories, testaments and simply “time” with each other a lovely dinner. It was the first time Gary had done something like that, but I have a feeling it will not be the last. D.C. can bring out the best in people sometimes I think. Try it.
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If you don’t have a business (in Forsyth County), you ought to. Carlos Cantu, director of Chamber Councils 12 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018
FoCo Expo unites community with businesses By KATHLEEN STURGEON kathleen@appenmediagroup.com FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. — The community gathered for networking, food and fun Aug. 9 at the annual FoCo Expo where nearly 70 local business representatives talked to the public about services they offer. The event was held at the Lanier Technical College Forsyth Conference Center and was hosted by the CummingForsyth County Chamber of Commerce. Carlos Cantu, director of Chamber Councils, said businesses come together to showcase what they do. “We want to make this a community event,” Cantu said. “We want all the families to come together with the business owners to come out and enjoy themselves. We wanted to bring businesses together, connect them to our chamber members and see what can come out of it. It’s a beautiful relationship that’s in the works.” This is the first year the event hosted nonprofits in the crowd, including
Jesse’s House, The Place of Forsyth and No Longer Bound. Cantu said the event is a good place families who are looking for a local business can come, learn who runs the businesses and potentially work with them in the future. “These types of events are a place for somebody to have a face-to-face conversation to say ‘what can I do? How can I help? I don’t have to charge you to have a conversation with you. I just want to come out and see what we can do,’” he said. “Forsyth County is a very tight community. Why not bring everyone together for an event?” The consistent growth in Forsyth County is one reason many businesses choose to operate in the community, Cantu said. “If you don’t have a business here, you ought to,” he said. One of those businesses, and the drink sponsor of the Expo, is Cherry Street Brewing, which had a table manned by owner Nick Tanner. Tanner said he wanted to be part of
The community mingled with business owners at the FoCo Expo to learn more about local trades.
Photos by KATHLEEN STURGEON/Herald
Cherry Street Brewing owners Nick and Alisa Tanner talk to the public about their business. the community because it exemplifies Cherry Street’s mission statement of “community.” “We are here for the community just as the community is here for us,” he said. “Everything we do is to enhance that. Being able to network with the local businesses is what it’s really about. If we can get together, it brings the local community together.” Cherry Street opened its first location at Vickery Village, 5817 S Vickery, in 2014, and next year they will open a second brewpub at Halcyon off Exit 12 on Ga. 400. “We believe in the project that Halcyon is,” Tanner said. “The project will do something really beneficial to our community, especially on that south side corridor.” The idea of staying close to home for
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the second location appealed to Tanner. “Atlanta is so big and there are so many communities in and around it,” he said. “For this opportunity to arise is comfortable for us. We feel good about this. We aren’t nervous, at least not yet. It’s because we have the support. Everyone in this community is so excited to see that. As time passes, the excitement is getting more. It makes us feel good and proud of what we’ve done.” He likes doing business in the county because the people look out for each other, including the chamber that always believed in Cherry Street, Tanner said. “The community here is kind of a family,” he said. “It’s very tight. It’s nice to be a part of a community where everyone wants to see it better and only do things to make it better. We’re proud of that.”
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NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 13
Tennis facility, mall makeover signal evolutionary changes The evolution of economic development is on display right now in North Fulton with two major announcements in Roswell and Alpharetta. Roswell has been given a huge gift in Geoff smith what would become Assurance Financial, gsmith@lendtheway.com the largest clay tennis center in the nation. The facility is being backed entirely by Roswell residents Vernon and Marie Krause and their foundation, The Krause Family Foundation, in honor of their daughter Angela Krause who passed away at 29 years old after a bought with cancer. The facility would include 135-courts both for tennis and pickleball and is said to attract national tournaments at all levels, as well as major tennis stars who would come to the center to train. Roswell’s economic development arm, Roswell Inc, said the economic impact to Roswell could be between $30 million and $50 million in the way of hotel stays and money being spent in local restaurants and retail outlets. Just up the road in Alpharetta, North Point Mall released plans to redevelop the mall by removing the vacant Sears store and adding 328 apartments, 30,000 square feet of retail and restaurant space, a 2.5-acre plaza with Spanish steps, a new multi-use trail system, and community gardens and bicycle rental stations. The development would transform the indoor mall to more of a mixed-use entity where the uses can play off of each other to help sustain the uses on the property. The mall’s owners, General Growth Properties, had already converted some of its retail spaces into co-working offices and was searching for ways to make the mall successful in today’s retail environment. It’s a massive redevelopment of a high-end mall that was smarting in the shadow of the newly built Avalon.
The facility would include 135-courts both for tennis and pickleball and is said to attract national tournaments at all levels, as well as major tennis stars who would come to the center to train. As someone who grew up in North Fulton, it has been interesting to watch this cascade of development and redevelopment up Ga. 400. I grew up in the Martins Landing neighborhood just east of Ga. 400 in Roswell, and just south from where the new tennis facility would go. When I was growing up there, the strip centers along Holcomb Bridge Road were kind of “the place” to be. All of the new retail development was there and folks in North Fulton went there to shop. Then in the 1990s, North Point Mall was built one exit up Ga. 400 and became the darling, drawing in not just North Fulton residents, but residents from all over the north metro area. It took away the customers and then many of the retail outlets from the east side of Roswell. It lived a good life right up until consumers’ tastes changed and indoor malls fell out of fashion. Then Avalon was built one exit up Ga. 400 from the mall and pulled away many of its customers and thus, many of its retail outlets including Apple, Gap Inc., Banana Republic and J. Crew. It’s an evolutionary tale that highlights the survival of the fittest nature of economic development and redevelopment. It highlights the fluid nature of things in that it’s impossible to maintain success without change — an economic area is either growing or dying. The mall is doing what is has to do to survive and could again become relevant as a successful ecosystem all to its own. The tennis facility in Roswell could very well be a catalyst for re-growth in an area that everyone seems to agree
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Using new technology can make huge difference Is your small business taking advantage of technology to make your employees and your operations more efficient and effective? Are you still using old technology because dick jones you haven’t had the Founder & President Jones Simply Sales time or inclination of upgrading? Many small business owners ignore new technology, and subsequently are suboptimizing what they can do. With the incredible pace of changes in technology, a majority of small business owners find themselves “behind the curve” in using new technology. They may know about it, but using it in their business requires planning and preparation, something they never anticipated.
Staying current on what is available to you is a first step. There is an abundance of information online or in printed journals that discuss new technologies and the pros and cons of implementing them. It wasn’t very long ago where you had to hire a professional to build a website for your small business. Now this can easily be done with numerous website design systems. Hiring an information technology professional can also help. Let’s face it; if you want to utilize technology in your small business and don’t know how, hire someone who does! Training is also very important for you and your employees. You can’t expect everyone to learn how to use new technology unless you invest in educating them. Adapting to new technology is critical for long-term small business success, and it won’t happen unless you make this a top priority in your business.
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desperately needs it. The tennis facility would go in Big Creek Park along Old Alabama Road and supplant a portion of the mountain biking trails that are used by bikers all over the metro area. I use them, and as a child, actually helped to make some of those trails before the
land was purchased by the city and anyone knew we were back there. Plans are to “replace” those trails by building more on undeveloped land farther east along Holcomb Bridge Road purchased by the city last year.
North Fulton’s Only On-Site Crematory
14 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
CALENDAR CANASTA
Taste of Johns Creek
Sample more than 20 local restaurants Saturday, Aug. 18, 4-9 p.m., for only $1 to $4 on the campus of Chattahoochee High School. There will be an Art Walk with shopping, live music, local entertainment, kid’s activities and taste some of the best food the Johns Creek-area has to offer. Join the fun at 5230 Taylor Road in Johns Creek. For more information, visit tasteofjohnscreek.fun. Looking to get the word out about your event? Submit it to our online calendar at ForsythHerald.com/Calendar.
EVENTS: ALPHARETTA FARM AND GARDENS
SMART RECOVERY FAMILY AND FRIENDS
What: Join to add your input to the vision, design and development for the future City of Alpharetta Park, which is expected to open in 2019. Access to the site is off of Rucker Road. When: Saturday, Aug. 18, 9-10 a.m. Where: 860 Rucker Road, Alpharetta More info: alpharetta.ga.us
What: This program uses science-based tools to provide support for those who are affected by the addictive behavior of someone close to them. Not a twelve step program. When: Monday, Aug. 20, 7-8 p.m. Where: DecisionPoint Wellness Center, 10700 State Bridge Road Suite 6, Johns Creek More info: smartrecovery.org
ESTATE JEWELRY GARAGE SALE
‘PIES, OH MY!’ COOKING NIGHT
What: Join for an exclusive estate jewelry sale and a Self-Serve Silver Station, where you pay for what your jewelry weighs. When: Saturday, Aug. 18, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Where: Brilliant Atlanta, 1144 Canton St., Suite 103, Roswell More info: facebook.com/brilliantatlanta
ROSWELL AUTHOR DONNIE KANTER WINOKUR
What: Donnie Kanter Winokur will be available to answer questions about her works and sign copies of “Chancer – How One Good Boy Saved Another.” When: Sunday, Aug. 19, 3-5 p.m. Where: Georgia Veterinary Rehabilitation and Management, 1230 Johnson Ferry Road, Marietta More info: thechancerchronicles.com
MS. SENIOR GEORGIA PAGEANT
What: Celebrate and crown a new queen for 2018! This pageant showcases the excellence of age, experience and achievements. When: Sunday, Aug. 19, 2-5 p.m. Where: Roswell Cultural Arts Center, 950 Forrest St., Roswell Cost: $15 for adults, $7 for children More info and tickets: roswellgov.com or 404-394-4200
What: Learn how to cook chicken pot pie, strawberry rhubarb pie and lemon meringue pie. Complimentary wine. Free mini-tour of Barrington Hall is included. When: Tuesday, Aug. 21, 6:30-9:30 p.m. Where: Barrington Hall, 535 Barrington Drive, Roswell Cost: $50 More info and registration: roswellgov.com
NAVIGATORS TOASTMASTERS PATHWAYS
What: Reach your personal and professional goals through Pathways, Toastmasters’ new education program. When: Tuesday, Aug. 21, 7 p.m. Where: Club House, 6300 Polo Club Drive, Cumming More info: navigators.toastmastersclubs. org
WEDNESDAY MORNING NETWORKING
What: Join for networking every Wednesday morning. When: Wednesday, Aug. 22, 9:30-10:30 a.m. Where: Perimeter Church, 9500 Medlock Bridge Road, Johns Creek Cost: $5 for members, $10 for guests More info: johnscreekga.gov or 770-495-0545
What: Canasta is a rummy-like game enjoying a resurgence today. Learn to play and join a game. New players welcome. When: Tuesday, Aug. 21, 12:30 p.m. Where: Park Place at Newtown School, 3125 Old Alabama Road, Johns Creek More info: johnscreekga.gov/parkplace
5 KEYS TO A LEADERSHIP LOOK
What: Two nationally known Executive Image Consultants will be working with you to give you that polished professional edge without breaking the budget. When: Thursday, Aug. 23, 6:45-8:30 a.m. Where: Johns Creek Presbyterian Church, 10950 Bell Road, Duluth More info: atlantamastercrafters.com
GARDEN TOUR MONDAYS
What: Enjoy a free 30-minute tour of the gardens and historic plants on the grounds of Barrington Hall. When: Every Monday, through Sept. 24, 9:30 a.m. Where: Barrington Hall, 535 Barrington Drive, Roswell More info: roswellgov.com
MOSAIC OF MARY
What: An interfaith dialogue and panel discussion with Father Ray, Rabbi Slomovitz, Ann Marie Martin and Kemal Budak to consider Mary as a woman of great faith in Judaism, Islam and Catholicism. When: Wednesday, Aug. 22, 7-8:30 p.m. Where: La Salette Hall, Catholic Church of St. Ann, 3905 Roswell Road, Marietta More infotheatlanticinstitute.org
HEALTH AND FITNESS: ZUMBA GOLD (FLEX)
What: This program combines international beats with strength training techniques to create an easyto-follow, health-boosting dance fitness program. When: Friday, Aug. 17, 10:30 a.m. Where: Park Place at Newtown School, 3125 Old Alabama Road, Johns Creek More info: johnscreekga.gov/parkplace
ALPHARETTA MAYOR’S CORPORATE CHALLENGE 5K AND BLOCK PARTY
What: Food trucks and live music begin at 5 p.m., followed by a free kids’ run and the 5K run. Funds will go to local and international charities supported by Alpharetta Rotary. When: Thursday, Aug. 23, 5 p.m. Where: Alpharetta City Hall, 2 Park Plaza, Alpharetta Cost: $30 More info and registration: mayorschallenge.com
FREE FITNESS IN THE PARK: ZUMBA
What: There will be a free group exercise class. All classes are weather-permitting and open to the public. Check the City of Roswell’s Facebook page for any cancellations. When: Saturday, Aug. 11, 9-10 a.m. Where: Town Square, 610 Atlanta St., Roswell More info: roswellgov.com
FREE OUTDOOR FITNESS – YOGA
What: Yoga moves at a slower pace, improving flexibility, muscle tone, strength and stress management through stretches, poses and relaxation techniques. When: Sunday, Aug. 19, 10 a.m. Where: Mark Burkhalter Amphitheater, 3150 Old Alabama Road, Johns Creek More info: johnscreekga.gov
FARMERS MARKETS, FOOD TRUCKS: ALPHARETTA FOOD TRUCK ALLEY
What: Alpharetta’s weekly gathering returns with rotating food trucks and music each week. Six to eight food trucks from the Atlanta area will come out to help kick off the weekend early. When: Thursdays, 5 p.m. to 9 p.m., through Oct. 11 Where: Old Roswell Street in Alpharetta’s historic district More info: awesomealpharetta.com
ALPHARETTA FARMERS MARKET
What: The Alpharetta Farmers Market features fruits, vegetables, natural meats, fresh flowers and herbs, and a variety of home goods. When: Saturdays, 8:30 a.m.-1 p.m., through October Where: Old Canton Street in downtown Alpharetta More info: alpharetta.ga.us
ROSWELL FARMERS & ARTISANS MARKET
What: Don’t miss the opening day of the Roswell Farmers & Artisans Market. Mix and mingle with friends, shop for fresh items and enjoy talking to the vendors. When: Saturday, April 14, 8 a.m. – noon Where: Roswell City Hall, 38 Hill St., Roswell More info: roswellfam.com
MUSIC, ARTS & THEATER: “OCEE ROCKS”
What: Join for a free, after-hours, live concert, featuring a special musical guest. When: Friday, Aug. 17, 6 p.m. Where: Ocee Library, 5090 Abbotts Bridge Road, Johns Creek More info: afpls.org or 770-360-8897
Sponsored Section August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | 15
Ed and Pilar Modzel stand with American Commerce Bank market president Carlos Laverde.
Funding ambition If you think borrowing from a bank these days is complicated enough, try borrowing to renovate a 40-unit apartment building in a new city without the benefit of a banking relationship. That was the challenge facing Ed and Pilar Modzel when they opted to take on renovation of a 46,000 sq.ft. commercial property in East Point earlier this year. The Modzels had relocated to Atlanta from New York, and were just getting familiar with their adopted hometown when they discovered the property by way of real estate agent Johnny Easterling. “While the units were in need of renovation, the property itself had great potential in the hands of capable managers” says Carlos Laverde, Atlanta market president for American Commerce Bank. “The Modzels were new to the area, but it was obvious that they understood the opportunity of this project and they were determined to make it work”. The Modzels had not yet struck up any sort of lending relationship when they were introduced to American Commerce Bank’s office in Johns Creek. The
bank’s lending staff was not only able to finance the project for the Modzels, its treasury services staff also outfitted the businesses’ rental office with a remote scanner to deposit tenant payments. Said Ed: “I can manage all of my finances now without ever leaving my office. In a competitive environment like Atlanta, I was pleased with the approval process at American Commerce Bank and the terms were very competitive. I was excited that we were able close the deal so quickly”. So why is this news? Because the business of banking, despite its sometimes-intimidating challenges, is still about people helping people. And at American Commerce Bank, helping customers succeed is how the bank has built its own success story. ACB offers customized lending, treasury services and market-leading deposit products. For more information about American Commerce Bank, stop by their branch at 10690 Medlock Bridge Road or visit www.AmericanCommerceBank. com.
COMMUNITY
16 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
LETTER TO THE EDITOR:
Save Big Creek Park When my family and I moved to Roswell a few years ago, Big Creek Park was one of the major draws to this city that we now love. Previously, we lived in midtown Atlanta, but the lack outdoor space drove us away. We bought a house in Roswell that is a mile from Big Creek, and easy access to the park and the greenway were major factors in our decision. As avid bikers and hikers, we treasure this serene green space. Our city council is moving forward with a proposal to turn a large portion of Big Creek Park into tennis courts, and I am writing to oppose this proposal in the strongest terms. The trails at Big Creek are a major asset to Roswell that provide not only recreation but also economic benefits. Before moving, we would regularly drive up Ga. 400 to ride at Big Creek. Rarely did we come up here without visiting multiple local businesses in the area. Like us, many people come from all over the metro area to ride our trails, and they end up buying gas, a meal, or bike parts at one of the thriving bike shops located nearby. Roswell has plenty of tennis courts, which are costly to maintain. The trails at Big Creek require no investment and are maintained by a volunteer group, the Roswell-Alpharetta Mountain Bike Association. Traffic on Old Alabama already backs up horrifically. The road can’t accommodate this large facility, and neighborhoods will suffer. Save Big Creek Park! – Adam Fajardo, Roswell
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Alpharetta City Band seeks musicians ALPHARETTA, Ga. – The Alpharetta City Band, a traditional concert band under the direction of Nicole Fallin, is seeking adult and high school musicians in Alpharetta and surrounding communities to join the group. The community band, which welcomes those of all skill levels, is seeking instrumentalists across the ensemble, but particularly in the percussion and trombone sections. No audition is required, though band members should be able to play at the high school level. Instrumentalists from across the region are invited to participate, even those who are just reuniting with their instruments after a brief or extended break. There is no fee to perform in the band. “The Alpharetta City Band has been entertaining audiences for nearly 30
years,” said Program Supervisor Don Nahser, who has managed the band for its entire history. “We are currently in the process of acquiring new percussion equipment to more effectively feature this important voice in the band.” Rehearsals are held on most Wednesdays from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at the Crabapple Government Center, 12624 Broadwell Road, Alpharetta, Ga. 30004, and performances take place throughout the year. Founded in 1989, the band is sponsored by the Alpharetta Recreation, Parks and Cultural Services Department. It welcomes members from throughout the region. For more information about the ensemble, visit https://www.facebook. com/AlpharettaCityBand/ or call Don Nahser at (770) 475-9684.
NEWS
NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 17
Ellis challenges county millage rate By CARSON COOK carson@appenmediagroup.com FULTON COUNTY, Ga. — Fulton County Commissioner Bob Ellis has called on Chairman Robb Pitts to revoke the general fund millage rate, or property tax rate, which was set at 10.2 mills in a 4-3 vote on Aug. 1. The vote was split along partisan and geographic lines, with commissioners Ellis, Liz Hausmann and Lee Morris, who represent the three northern districts, opposed to the measure. The three voiced support for a rate of 9.77 mills, the lowest rate recommended by county staff that would generate the $478 million called for in this year’s budget Ellis argues that the 10.2 rate, which is projected to generate $20 million more than the target revenue, violates a resolution passed by the board on June 20. That resolution states that it was the intent of the board to set the millage rate at a level only to generate revenue for the 2018 budget. “We lied to the public. It’s a blatant misrepresentation of what we said we were going to do on June 20,” Ellis said. By law, the county must advertise a rate and hold three public hearing in advance of setting the millage rate. When the decision to advertise was made June 20, the tax assessors were still accepting appeals. The county financial advisers had insufficient information to calculate what millage rate would be needed to generate the $478 million needed to fund the 2018 budget and therefore recommended that the county advertise the 2017 rate of 10.38 mills, knowing that it was an upper limit. At that time, Morris moved for an amendment to the resolution that stated it was the intent of the board to set a millage rate at a level only to generate the budgeted revenue. This amendment was seconded by Chairman Robb Pitts and passed 5-0 with commissioners Marvin Arrington and Emma Darnell abstaining, and the resolution passed 6-0 with Arrington abstaining. A press release published by the county advertised a rate of 10.38 mills, higher than the rate that eventually passed, but the second line stated “Legislation adopted by the Board of Commissioners also expresses its intention to set a millage rate calculated to generate only enough revenue sufficient to cover the 2018 Budget.” Ellis argues that this statement is what the public understood when they engaged in public hearings. Because the board passed a rate different than what was advertised, he has asked Pitts to
Milton City Councilman Matt Kunz “The notion of 5-year projecalso had concerns about the decision. tions and planning is a fine exer“To advertise one thing and do ancise to engage in, but what should other that is outside the bounds of the have been called for at that intent does border on an ethical issue,” meeting was what was expressly Kunz said. stated in our June 20 meeting,” Other citizens, like Johns Creek resiEllis said. dent Royce Reinecke, think this may be Morris took it a step further, arguing that the whole premise of much ado about very little. “Regarding collecting more revenue looking five year into the future Ellis Hausmann Morris than expected, the $20 million differwas unreasonable in the political ence is very small, making the difference arena. revoke the decision. between the Democrat millage rate and “Nobody knows what we’re going to “If we were going to entertain somethe Republican millage rate less than a be spending in three years or four years. thing different than what was in that fraction of 1 percent,” Reinecke said. Nobody knows what the economy is goJune 20 resolution, there would need to The Board of Commissioners will ing to do. Nobody knows what the needs be additional public hearings on that, meet on Aug. 15. Morris expects the are going to be, but more importantly, and we would need to re-advertise,” Ellis rate is unlikely to be changed, but legal nobody knows what politicians are going said. action may be taken against the county to be in office to make those decisions,” Commissioner Morris said he agreed down the line. Morris said. “wholeheartedly” with Ellis. The purHausmann expressed concerns that He added that the makeup of the pose of the June 20 amendment was to if the vote is revoked, it will delay tax board is likely to change with an election reassure the public that there would not bills and negatively affect the school in two years, and he guaranteed that the be a windfall, but in effect it misled the plan won’t be followed five years from now. district and cities that rely on the county public, he said. for tax collection. Ellis questioned a number of the “We misled the public and sup“If in fact, to do a re-do means that assumptions used to calculate the pressed the turnout at the public hearbills don’t go out until the end of Octo5-year-plan, including the rate of proings, and that’s just wrong. It’s morally ber and we find ourselves in a situation jected spending. He argued that if a wrong, and I think it’s legally challengelike we were in last 9.98 millage rate was able,” Morris said. year with putting adopted the county Hausmann sided with Ellis and Morother entities at risk, would still be on track ris, agreeing that the public was misled, our school systems to have a reserve fund but she questioned the legality of Ellis’s especially, I’m going of about $140 million, claims. to have a hard time 33 million more than “The law that applies to public hearwith that as well,” required. Ellis also ings, we followed that. We did hold three Hausmann said. pointed out that the public hearings,” Hausmann said If the millage rate county has historiAt the Aug. 1 meeting when the millcan’t be changed, cally spent less than it age rate was set, County Chief Financial Hausmann said budgets. Officer Sharon Whitmore presented she plans to push “To make the arguthree five-year projections on funding for a freeze on any ment that the county future budgets. She said the 10.2 mill revenue collected in is under some great rate – which ultimately passed – preexcess of the 2018 hardship or its resented the smoothest financial route budget. serves are shrinking that would allow the county to continue Ellis said he and we need to have lowering the millage rate, as it has for plans to continue to the past four years, while still preserving a higher millage rate push for more credso that we’re captura reserve fund. ibility in property ing excessive funds “Part of the premise for setting it at assessments, with a from the citizens at the 10.2 mills was this 5-year plan the Lee Morris market-based model this point in time is ri- Fulton County commissioner CFO put forth showing a descending and better customer diculous, and it’s never millage rate over the next four years if we service. been discussed by the start high,” Morris said. “Well, that won’t “I think the number of people who vocommission at all,” Ellis said. happen if the commission spends all this Morris and Hausmann both said they calized that they’re going to be experiencwindfall, and I’m afraid they will.” ing potential financial hardship because have been contacted by constituents Commissioners Ellis, Morris and of how much values went up for folks unhappy with the vote. Hausmann said the 5-year projections and the fact that it was our inept tax “They’re very angry. They feel like were not something the commissioners assessors operation, which is part of the they were misled. Several of them told requested and they were only given the underlying reason for that, that should me that they would have come to the figures the day before the vote. make us even more resolute in bringing public hearing,” Morris said. “I have no idea why that was brought down the millage rate,” Ellis said. Johns Creek City Councilwoman forth at that point in time,” Ellis said. Ellis also encouraged his constituents Stephanie Endres said she agrees with The documents were not published to reach out to the chairman and urge him Ellis. online along with the agenda and other to honor what he voted for on June 20. “They were honest about what they documents released to the public before Chairman Pitts did not respond to wanted the money for — they want to the meeting. They have been published repeated requests for comment. He has increase government spending — but since the meeting, but the public had no they were not honest with what they had previously stated that he thinks the vote opportunity to review the 5-year plan or on the mill levy was legal. agreed to initially,” Endres said. comment on them before the vote.
We misled the public and suppressed the turnout at the public hearings, and that’s just wrong. It’s morally wrong, and I think it’s legally challengeable.”
18 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
COMMUNITY
North Fulton Eagle scouts announced NORTH FULTON, Ga. — The Northern Ridge Boy Scout District, which includes Roswell, Alpharetta, Johns Creek and Milton, announced its newest Eagle Scouts, who passed their Board of Review on July 26. These are Scouts who passed their Eagle Board of Reviews, held at Alpharetta Presbyterian Church: • Dillon Downing, of Troop 7153, sponsored by St. Brigid Catholic Church, whose project was creating a new duck pen for Autrey Mill Nature preserve and Heritage Center; • Zachary Godwin, of Troop 1459, sponsored by St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church, whose project was constructing a reflection garden at the church; • Hasan Tauha, of Troop 12, sponsored by Muslim American Society Youth Center, whose project was constructing a floating hydroponic plant water treatment system for a retention pond located at the Roswell Fire Department Headquarters; • Grant Barron, of Troop 7747, sponsored by Fowler Park Ward of the Church of Jesus Christ of LatterDay Saints, whose project was constructing an outdoor classroom for the Roswell Chapel of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints; • William Bentley, of Troop 69, sponsored by Alpharetta First United Methodist Church, whose project was constructing a 50-foot gravel pathway for Mt. Pisgah Christian School; • Andrew Krznarich, of Troop 429, sponsored by Alpharetta Presbyterian Church, whose project was re-creating an existing trail located at Providence Park in Alpharetta; • Jose Zamorano De Miguel, of Troop 841, spon-
From top left, Dillon Downing, Zachary Godwin, Hasan Tauha and Grant Barron, and from bottom left, William Bentley, Andrew Krznarich, Jose Zamorano De Miguel and Kyle Liberatore were announced as the Northern Ridge Boy Scout District’s new Eagle Scouts on July 26. sored by St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Church, whose project was constructing four benches for Milton High School; • Kyle Liberatore, of Troop 3000, sponsored by
Birmingham United Methodist Church, whose project was constructing two picnic tables and three horseshoe pits for the American Legion Post 201.
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NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 19
A Great Rate AND a Bank You Can Love? “Alternative Math” took home the prize for best in show, applying the idea of “alternative facts” to elementary school math.
International films to headline Roswell Southern Shorts Awards By CONNER EVANS newsroom@appenmediagroup.com ROSWELL, Ga. — Ranging from shorts films featuring post-apocalyptic bunkers, the history of southern sharecropping, a pregnant transgender teen in the south and Taiwanese food superheroes, this year’s Southern Shorts Awards were diverse and inclusive. Presented at Aurora Cineplex in Roswell, Stephen P. Sherwood set up the short film festival because of his frustration with the lack of constructive feedback he had seen at other film fests. Each film at the Southern Shorts Awards is seen by at least three of their 10 judges, and each gives feedback on the film’s strength and weaknesses. More than 180 films were submitted for the spring season and only those scoring a 7.5 or higher from the judges were shown, leaving 24 up on the big screen on Aug. 4. Films were submitted from around the world including a science fiction short from Australia, a thriller from Germany and an animated short from Taiwan, “Food Man,” with heroes shaped like different snacks, including one named “Tactful Omelette.” The audience was mostly composed of filmmakers, who would offer a brief question and answer session after their short. Directors traveled from Tennessee, Virginia and California to answer questions and accept their awards. Though there were many films with political subject matter, social commentary or unexpected twists, the night was owned by two men: Derek Sitter, director, writer and star of “Tutu Grande,” and David Maddox, director and co-writer of “Alternative Math.” Sitter’s passion for filmmaking showed in his comments and questions for other directors. He also took his opportunity to tell the backstory of his own short, which won four awards including Best Thriller and Best Actor.
“Tutu Grande,” begins with a young man in a dark room strapped to a torture device, forced to face a man in a cowboy hat who begins to tell the young man how he wants to punish the young man for sexually assaulting his daughter. The short ends with a twist, as after the cowboy threatens the young man, he hits a light, revealing that this whole speech and the young man’s halfconfession took place in front of his own mother, sister and the victim. Sitter said certain lines in the film were taken from Kevin Spacey’s statements after he denied his sexual assault allegations. “The monologue just came to me during a long drive,” Sitter said. “I’m bi-polar so there’s always dark thoughts going and my brain never stops.” Maddox’s film also dealt with a hotbutton issue, but with an entirely different approach. “Alternative Math” won awards for Best Comedy, Best Actress, Best Screenplay, Best Director and Best Picture, taking home the bulk of the evening’s most precious hardware. The comedic short showed a teacher distraught with how a student, and everyone else in town, refuses to believe that “two plus two equals four.” Everyone, including parents, administration and the national media, berates the teacher for not having an open mind and forcing her views on the child, referencing the recent political practice of “alternative facts” and the increasing willingness of parents to side with their children over teachers. “You all are probably sick of hearing me talk up here,” Maddox said after receiving his fifth award and the top prize of the night. “I couldn’t have done it all without my wonderful cast and crew. With comedy you don’t even know if your script is really funny until you get good actors to read your lines.” “Alternative Math” was the last short of the festival, and its screening drew the largest audience.
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20 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
COMMUNITY
Packed crowd celebrates Old Soldiers’ Day in Alpharetta By PATRICK FOX pat@appenmediagroup.com ALPHARETTA, Ga. – Thousands packed downtown Alpharetta Aug. 4 for the 66th annual Old Soldiers’ Day Parade. Temperatures climbed to the low 80s by mid-morning, chasing most of the crowd along the parade route to the shady east side of Roswell Street. Still, no one complained after nearly a week of rain had threatened turnout for one of the city’s biggest annual celebrations. Mayor Jim Gilvin opened the formal ceremony by welcoming the thousands in attendance for assembling to honor those who shed their blood for the cause of freedom. He recounted the history of the event and what the day has come to symbolize. “It really is a historic tradition that began about 150 years ago when veterans started gathering in Alpharetta to commiserate, and a spirit of brotherhood brought them together when this was just a small farm town,” he said. “About 66 years ago, some other great veterans came together and said we need to have a celebration of veterans from all wars, and that’s when Old Soldiers’ Day formally began.” The annual event is sponsored by
The colorful Ed Isakson Alpharetta YMCA float captured first prize in this year’s Old Soldiers’ Day parade. American Legion Post 201. Keynote speaker for the 10 a.m. ceremony was Brig. Gen. Reginald Neal, director of the Joint Staff, Georgia Army National Guard, who spoke on the event’s 2018 theme: courage and valor. Neal began by recognizing the city for a tradition that honors all branches of
the military and service members. “It makes me feel good that the city and this Post see fit to honor our nation’s veterans in this manner, a tradition that started back when the 42nd Volunteer Infantry Regiment started this parade following the Civil War,” he said. “Not only have you invested the time and
effort to continue this fine tradition to recognize our country’s veterans, you’ve also given additional acknowledgement to the bravery and sacrifice of those special operations soldiers, airmen and marines who were the first to answer our nation’s call over 17 years ago following the worst attack ever on American soil.” Neal pointed out that events like Old Soldiers’ Day recognize those who served in America’s “forgotten war” in Korea. “Sixty-eight years ago, America began its campaign to assist South Korea to repel the vicious and wanton invasion from North Korea,” he said. “Once again in our nation’s history, the American fighting soldier was called upon and, in short order, held the line against tyranny.” Looking out on the hundreds and hundreds of veterans in the crowd, Neal said he is proud of his family’s history of military service to America. His grandfather served in World War I, his uncle served in World War II and Korea, and his father is a Vietnam War veteran. “As an old soldier myself, with 31 years of service, I want to reiterate that the purpose of ceremonies such as this is so much more than simply acknowledging that some nameless, faceless person or group of people served our coun-
This Weekend! August 17 th, 18 th&19 th
COMMUNITY
NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 21
Photos by Patrick Fox/Herald
Thousands line Roswell Street near downtown Alpharetta for the annual parade that stretched for close to a mile. try,” Neal said. “It is about taking the time and the effort to fully understand that those who volunteered to serve our country – and yes, they all volunteered – are real people. They are the sons, daughters, fathers, mothers, sisters and brothers. They are our neighbors.” Following the formal grandstand ceremony, visitors cleared the streets for
the mile-long procession that has grown with each year. Children amassed near the curb to pick up candy thrown from passing celebrants. In all, there were more than 100 entries in the procession, including some 20 floats, according to Sandra Johnson, chairwoman of the Float Judging Committee. Johnson said floats were judged
based on their originality, patriotism and recognition of service members. This year’s float winner was the Ed Isakson Alpharetta YMCA, which featured a fruit tree, bright yellow bunting and flowers with young women in aprons. Second place went to U.S. Submarine Veterans – Grayback Base, a perennial finalist. Third prize was awarded
to Alpharetta Youth Softball Association. Cars honked, people waved, and high school marching bands paced the route that wound all the way from Milton Avenue down Roswell Street, then onto Old Milton Parkway to the Legion Post on Wills Road. As in past years, the Legion treated visitors to free drinks and hotdogs to cap the morning’s festivities.
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22 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
COMMUNITY
Ice Cream Crankin’ takes over Roswell Square Park By CONNER EVANS interns@appenmedaigroup.com ROSWELL, Ga. — The Drake House’s biggest, and tastiest fundraiser is set for 2-4 p.m. on August 26 at Roswell Square Park. Miss Mary’s Ice Cream Crankin’ features more than 50 different ice cream booths sponsored by local businesses and community members. The Drake House Executive Director Kathy Swahn expects around 3,500 people in attendance this year, almost five times the number as their first attempt 14 years ago. The event has become so big that people begin reaching out to Swahn in January for details, and “Crankin’ Teams” will begin testing their product weeks or months in advance. “It’s like an old fashioned ice cream gathering,” Swahn said. “Very wholesome, very family-oriented, four-legged pets and strollers welcome, people literally will wander around the park for two hours eating ice cream.” The ice cream comes in all kinds of flavors including an avocado bacon fla-
Paulina Osenenko/Herald
Children participate in the popular ice cream stacking contest during last year’s Ice Cream Crankin’. vor from last year and a Guinness beer flavor in the past. Local celebrity judges, usually leaders from local churches or state representatives, take the competition seriously, Swahn said. U.S. Rep. Karen Handel
will return to judge this year as well. There are multiple, messy activities for children at the kid’s corner, including a bouncy house, face painting, and an ice cream eating contest and ice cream stacking contest.
“Picture 40 kids standing along two or three long tables,” Swahn said. “They have to put their hands behind their backs and eat ice cream out of a bowl.” The contest is also adding a prize for the most creative booth design in addition to its typical prizes for specific flavors like chocolate, vanilla and fruitbased flavors. At just $6 per ticket, the Drake House expects to make around $50,000, which constitutes a big portion of the charity’s budget. The Drake House helps provide housing, mentoring and education programs for single mother families in the North Fulton area, and this year’s Ice Cream Crankin’ is crucial for their recent expansion. “We just bought a new apartment complex at Drake House, which doubled our capacity,” Swahn said. “We have growing programs especially with youth and alumni programming.” The showrunners will hope that the rain stays away, but Swahn is confident people will show up regardless. “Weather can be a problem, but folks still come,” she said.
CITY OF ALPHARETTA NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING The following items will be heard at a public hearing held by the Planning Commission on Thursday, September 6, 2018 commencing at 6:30 p.m. in the Alpharetta City Hall Council Chambers, 2 Park Plaza, Alpharetta, Georgia. Items forwarded by the Planning Commission will be considered by the City Council on Monday, September 24, 2018 commencing at 6:30 p.m. in the Alpharetta City Hall Council Chambers, 2 Park Plaza, Alpharetta, Georgia. a. Z-18-08/CU-18-07 The Porch Special Events Facility/Matilda’s Outdoor Music Venue Consideration of a request to rezone approximately 1.87 acres from C-1 (Neighborhood Commercial) to DT-MU (Downtown Mixed-Use) to allow for ‘Recreation Facilities, Indoor & Outdoor’ for an event facility for The Porch and an ‘Amphitheatre’ for an outdoor music venue for Matilda’s. A conditional use is requested to allow both uses. The property is located at 531 South Main Street and is legally described as being located in Land Lot 645, 1st District, 2nd Section, Fulton County, Georgia. b. Z-18-05/V-18-05 Kairos Old Milton LLC/DT-LW Consideration of a request to rezone approximately 2.16 acres from O-I (Office-Institutional) and R-12 (Dwelling, ‘For-Sale’, Residential) to DT-LW (Downtown Live-Work) to allow for a 30,000 square foot office building and a 28,500 square foot office building wrapping a parking deck. A variance is requested to increase the maximum building height of the 30,000 square foot office building from 3 stories and 40’ to 3 stories and 48’. A variance is requested to increase the maximum building height of the 28,500 square foot office building from 3 stories and 40’ to 4 stories and 56’ to allow for a 3,500 square foot covered, open air restaurant use. The property is located at 2260, 2270 & 2300 Old Milton Parkway and is legally described as being located in Land Lot 748, 1st District, 2nd Section, Fulton County, Georgia. c. MP-17-06/CLUP-17-07/Z-17-20/CU-17-18/V-17-44 Greenstone Parkway 400, LLP Consideration of a request to rezone approximately 16.64 acres from O-I (Office-Institutional) to C-2 (General Commercial) in order to develop a mixed-use development consisting of 325 ‘For-Rent’ residential units, 18,000 SF of supportive office/retail uses, 450,000 square feet of office, 10,000 square foot Variety Playhouse Theatre, 6,000 square foot retail/restaurant and ancillary retail/restaurant uses. A master plan amendment to the Parkway 400 Master Plan Pod C is requested to add ‘Dwelling, ‘For-Rent’ to the list of permitted uses and changes to development standards. A Comprehensive Land Use Plan amendment is requested to change the designation of the property from ‘Corporate Office’ to ‘Commercial’. A conditional use permit is requested in order to allow ‘For-Rent’ residential use. Variances are requested to reduce multi-family and office parking requirements, reduce bicycle parking requirements and reduce requirements for electric vehicle charging stations. The property is located at the end of Amber Park Drive and is legally described as being located in Land Lot 804, 1st District, 2nd Section, Fulton County, Georgia. Note: Georgia law requires that all parties who have made campaign contributions to the Mayor or to a Council Member in excess of two hundred fifty dollars ($250) within the past two (2) years must complete a campaign contribution report with the Community Development Department. The complete text of the Georgia law and a disclosure form are available in the office of the City Clerk, 2 Park Plaza, Alpharetta, Georgia.
NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 23
24 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
Blotter: Continued from Page 2 CITY OF ALPHARETTA PUBLIC NOTICE PH-18-AB-51 PLACE City Hall Two Park Plaza Council Chambers August 27, 2018 6:30 P.M.
The woman alerted the bank about the fraud, and later received another
CITY OF ALPHARETTA PUBLIC NOTICE PH-18-AB-50 PLACE City Hall Two Park Plaza Council Chambers August 16, 2018 3:00 P.M.
PURPOSE Variance consideration Waiver of minimum distance requirement For consumption on premises alcohol license
PURPOSE Convenience Store Beer, Wine, Liquor, Sunday Sales
APPLICANT Chiringa, LLC d/b/a Chiringa 34 South Main Street, Suite 2B Alpharetta, GA 30009
APPLICANT Shree & Shree, LLC d/b/a Shree & Shree 1670 A South Main Street Alpharetta GA 30009
Owner Jonathan Travis Brown Registered Agent Kerry Stumpe
Owner: Ritaben Brahmbhatt Registered Agent: Ritaben Brahmbhatt
letter that the account had been closed. She then froze her credit. But two days later, the woman received a call from Kohl’s that someone had attempted to open an account with them using her name.
$90,000 in equipment Stolen from hospital JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — Two pieces of hospital equipment, worth $90,000 total, were listed as stolen Aug. 3. An employee with Emory Johns
Creek Hospital met with police that morning to report that a gastroscope and colonscope were both missing from the storage closet. The employee said she had last seen the equipment at 5:45 p.m. the previous day, but when she arrived at 6:30 a.m. Aug. 3, the items were gone. The hospital verified that the equipment was not checked out by anyone. The employee said that the only way to have access to the department after hours where the equipment was stored is with a key card.
In Memoriam
Marie Hughes McDowell Marie Hughes McDowell was born in New Castle, Virginia on October 25, 1932. Her early family life included residence in several small Southwestern Virginia towns where she attended elementary schools. Later the family moved to Danville, Virginia where she attended and graduated from George Washington High School. Following high school graduation, Marie attended Averett College. Marie married Cecil I. (Buddy) McDowell, Jr. on June 12, 1954. Marie and Buddy lived in Haddonfield, New Jersey prior to
moving to Richardson, Texas in 1959. They moved to Alpharetta, Georgia in 1989, where they continued to reside until moving to Lanier Village Estates in Gainesville, Georgia in 2011. Marie is survived by her loving husband of 64 years; two children Jane McDowell Keegan of Denver, Colorado and John H. McDowell of Olathe, Kansas and their spouses Ed Keegan III and Marla P. McDowell. She is also survived by two sisters Peggy Lewis and Nancy Robertson of Danville, Virginia. Her brother Charles Hughes is deceased.
ADVERTISEMENT FOR PROPOSALS CITY OF ALPHARETTA, GEORGIA FOR FIRE DEPARTMENT STRUCTURAL TURNOUT GEAR RFP 19-102 The City of Alpharetta is requesting proposal responses from Offerors experienced in working with a municipality and Fire Department personnel for the provisioning of Structural Turnout Gear and Pull-on Boots. The Request for Proposal document will be available online Thursday, August 16, 2018, at our bid posting website, https://www.ebidexchange.com/alpharetta. Interested parties are required to log in to review the RFP documents and submit any specific bid related questions. Proposals will be due on Wednesday, September 12, 2018 at 10:00 AM at Alpharetta City Hall, 2 Park Plaza, Alpharetta, Georgia 30009. For information, please contact Debora Westbrook with the City of Alpharetta Procurement Team at purchasing@alpharetta.ga.us or 678-297-6052.
NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 25
DEATH NOTICES Suk Ha Baek, 72, of Suwanee, passed away July 30, 2018. Arrangements by Roswell Funeral Home.
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Scott Bell, 49, passed away July 27, 2018. Arrangements by Northside Chapel Funeral Directors.
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Ewout Cassee, 55, of Roswell, passed away August 4, 2018. Arrangements by Northside Chapel Funeral Directors.
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Sandra Hunter, 72, of Roswell, passed away August 6, 2018. Arrangements by Northside Chapel Funeral Directors.
Ronald Richardson, 59, of Alpharetta, passed away July 29, 2018. Arrangements by Northside Chapel Funeral Directors.
Clara Nalls, 87, of Roswell, passed away July 25, 2018. Arrangements by Northside Chapel Funeral Directors.
Behzad Rozei, 55, of Alpharetta, passed away July 25, 2018. Arrangements by Roswell Funeral Home.
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Ernst Schuckmann, 89, of Roswell, passed away July 30, 2018. Arrangements by Roswell Funeral Home.
Willard Stone, 56, of Cumming, passed away July 31, 2018. Arrangements by McDonald and Son Funeral Home. Clara Watson, 83, of Cumming, passed away July 27, 2018. Arrangements by Northside Chapel Funeral Directors. Lester Miles Wolfe, 82, of Cumming, passed away August 8, 2018. Arrangements by Byars Funeral Home.
Roswell Funeral Home Green Lawn Cemetary Roswell Funeral Home Faithfully Serving Roswell Since 1839 Green Lawn Cemetary
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Faithfully Serving Families Since 1839
Roswell Funeral Home Green Lawn Cemetary
» Hiring? Pay once & we’ll run your ad until your position is filled.* » Selling Something? Pay once and we’ll run your item until it’s sold!* Faithfully Serving Roswell Since 1839
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Help Wanted
Full-time
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Bookkeeper - Full time
North Fulton Community Charities (NFCC) has an immediate position available as Bookkeeper to work with the Controller. Applicants must have 3 years’ experience with QuickBooks Desktop and Microsoft Office Suite. Salesforce a plus. NFCC is a locally supported, volunteer based organization serving a diverse population in North Fulton with emergency needs. Background check, drug screen and e-Verify required. Job description and application available or submit resume, cover letter and salary history to lszabela@nfcchelp.org Full-time ALTOBELI’S ITALIAN RESTAURANT in Johns Creek is hiring all positions, full and part-time.. Call 770-664-8055 or email resume altobeli_s@hotmail. com
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Part-time
Full-time Sr. Associate Pastor Johns Creek Korean Church, Inc. in Suwanee, GA seeks Sr. Associate Pastor who can preach sermons & supervise religious programs. Req. MA + 4-yr exp. Email resume to info@ johnscreekkpc.org
Communications/Marketing Manager: Implement comprehensive communications and public relations plan including outreach opportunities, electronic, print and branded materials; social media; speakers bureau. Requires strong oral and written skills. NFCC is a locally supported, volunteer based organization serving a diverse population in North Fulton with emergency needs. Background check, drug screen and e-Verify required. Job description and application available or submit resume, cover letter, writing sample and salary history to info@ nfcchelp.org. Donation Door Supervisor: Supervise Thrift Shop donation intake and back door volunteers. Requires heavy lifting. NFCC is a locally supported nonprofit organization serving the community of North Fulton. Background check, drug screen and e-Verify required. Job description and application available at 11270 Elkins Road, Roswell 30076 or submit resume to Tina Adams tadams@nfcchelp.org
Part-time
FRONT DESK Doctors office. C o m p u t e r experience. Pleasant team player. Positive attitude. Alpharetta/ Roswell. Resume: Thank you for reading m e d o f f i c e 1 2 3 @ gmail.com the classifieds.
15-hour per week position with flexible hours. A H/S diploma or GED equivalent is required. A degree from an accredited 2 year college is preferred. Competence in building maintenance and grounds keeping are essential. The ideal candidate will be a self-starter, have good interpersonal, computer and organizational skills. The job requires successful completion of a criminal records and child abuse background check, a valid driver’s license and the ability to perform physical tasks that include climbing ladders, lifting and carrying supplies and moving tables/chairs. Please send resume or letter with qualifications to: alpharettajobopening@gmail.com. Part-time TEACHERS APC Dayschool in Alpharetta is currently seeking dedicated 18-month teacher & music teacher for part-day classes of children 2-4 years of age. Interested applicants, please contact Wendy Curl, wendy@ alpharettapres.com. FRAME YOUR AD Do you want your ad to stand out? Ask your classified sales rep how you can enhance your in-column line ad with a
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Grant Writer: Part-time. Grant Writer will research, prepare, submit and manage grant proposals to fund NFCC programs and operations. Requires excellent writing and communication skills and proven track record securing grant awards. BA and 3 years’ experience nonprofit environment. . NFCC is a locally supported, volunteer based organization serving a diverse population in North Fulton with emergency needs. Drug free workplace, eVerify. Job description available or submit resume, cover letter, writing sample and salary history to info@nfcchelp.org
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Garage Sale
Furniture
Telecommuting Staff Attorney/GC (Part or full-time) 40 years experience in 54 countries. Save your company $$! Arrangement TBD. 706-760-6800 (leave message)
Huge Garage Sale Friday August 17 & Sat 18 8-4. 2665 Hopewell Plantation Dr. Alpharetta
HAMMOCK STAND, 15’, good condition. $50. 770-640-6250
Sales Garage Sale JOHNS CREEK Multi family; Silver Ridge Subdivision; Corner of Jones Bridge and Taylor Road 30022. Saturday, 8/18, 8am-1pm. Multi-Family Yard Sale Aug. 17-18 8AM-3PM Longlake Subdivision 1060 Ballington Dr. 30041
CUMMING/30040 Multi-church! Cumming Methodist, 770 Canton Highway. Friday 8/17, 9am-8pm, Saturday 8/18, 8am-12pm.
Bargains Building Supplies A L U M I N U M LADDER, 28’, 2 parts $100. 404-312-8719 Collectibles C H R I S T M A S DECOR: White bear 23”wX36”h, $125. 770-855-9772
MAPLE DINING ROOM HUTCH, $200. 770-753-4367 BEDROOM SUITE: Exquisite ash contemporary modern. Tallboy dresser, mirrored dresser (60” wide), headboard with side drawers, double bed $5000. 404-750-3329 CHERRY HUNT TABLE with mirror, $700. 404-889-3233 VANITY DESK: Dark oak, mirror, 3 drawers, new $50. 678-663-5953 BARSTOOLS (3) 30” cherry $300. 404-889-3233
MAIN CLASSIFIEDS continued on page 26
26 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
MAIN CLASSIFIEDS continued from page 25 Furniture
Household
Recreation
FREE-Sofa bed, queen size, good mattress. Royal blue. You haul. 812-243-1575
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MAPLE DINING 404-889-3233 ROOM HUTCH, DINING ROOM $200. 770-753-4367 TABLE, glass DINING ROOM top, cherry inlay, covered rollTABLE, glass 6 top, cherry inlay, back chairs $800. 6 covered roll- 404-889-3233 back chairs $800. YAMAHA kids’ 404-889-3233 4-WHEELER $100. OPEN HUTCH, solid 404-889-3233 cherry/brass. $400. POLARIS Kids’ 770-753-4367 4-Wheeler $100. SLEIGH BED, 404-889-3233 cherry/mahogany queen, Downsizing. STROLLERS $40. Excellent condition! 404-889-3233 Pictures on request. Musical $575. 404-788-4676 Instruments Garden/Lawn PIANO, Baby Grand: case, ‘99 John Deere Gator Elegant bench; 6x4! Automatic, matching Curtis Hard Cab warm, rich tone. Top, $1,020. Call Sacrifice $1650 obo. 678-445-3654 7706485804
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SKIS, BOOTS, POLES, womens’ INVESTORS and mens’ 7/1/2 WANTED and 9-1/2. $400. Used car dealer with 404-889-3233 8 years experience looking for investors. Cemetery Great return! Many references. G R E E N L A W N - Call/text William ROSWELL garden 404-446-6146 of Fountains, Lots 24C, 3 and 4. $7500. Instruction both negotiable. 770-475-7624 Classes Greenlawn/Roswell 2 lots, Garden of M AT H E M AT I C S : Prayers Section. Many students $5000 each. 641- advanced to 799-5529 or email Ivy league. 20 b e v e r l y L 0 6 0 2 @ years advanced yahoo.com e x p e r i e n c e , especially SAT. GREENLAWN KAIST Mathematics CEMETERY Purdue 2 great lots, Fountain B.S. Mathematics M.S. Side. Open and close graves being Your home $35/ paid for. Price $8000. hour. 404-933-7094. Email: jake4228@ pauljkim1@yahoo. com att.net
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Concrete/Asphalt
Driveway
Gutters
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WE FIX UGLY DRIVEWAYS AND PATIOS
REPAIR or REPLACEMENT Driveways, patios, sidewalks, walls. $150 off any job over $1500. Residential or Commercial. For a FREE estimate call Dave of McKemey Concrete and Hardscapes 678-914-2576. Competitive pricing. Many local references
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Air Conditioning Air Plus Co Inc. 24/7 Service Service / Installation Affordable Rates Residential / Commercial Will Beat all written estimates 30 yrs. exp. Licensed and Insured Call Steve 678-270-8108 (cell) Cleaning Services ESTATE HOME CLEAN UP Divorcing? Loved one going into senior care? Specialized detailed cleaning, packing boxes with list of items. Debris clean-up, charity donation, interior/ exterior window cleaning, pressure washing. Loving Hands by JW and Company Inc. 678463-4577. jennifer@ jwcompanyinc.com
Home Improvement
Finegan Home Improvements LLC: License $150 OFF any job # R B Q A 0 0 4932. over $1500 Remodeling, New or Repair: handyman. 31 Driveways, patios, years experience. sidewalks, walls. Basements finished, Residential or Handyman decks, screen Commercial. porches, doors, Call for FREE Kitchen, Bath: drywall, painting, estimate. Plumbing, Electrical flooring, custom Ask for Dave Drywall; Other kitchens, bathrooms. McKemey. Repairs/Installations. All insurance. 678-648-2010. Home Maintenance. Paul Finegan Professional, Senior discounts and 404-353-5611 competitive, many affordable rates! 20 local references. Electricians years experience. Pinestraw Mike 678-986-4833 RETAINING WALLS ELECTRICAL, & CONCRETE ALL CARPENTRY PINESTRAW, mulch CEILING FANS WORK & REPAIRS: Roof delivery/installation and OUTLETS. We build retaining Leaks, Wood Rot available. Firewood Michael at walls. Local, reliable, Call Repair, Siding, available. Licensed, honest, experienced. 6 7 8 - 7 5 6 - 2 0 5 9 . Deck Repairs insured. Angels of Pinestraw Call Ralph at m a n t h o n y h v a c @ and Refinishing, Earth gmail.com a n d Mulch. 678-898-7237 Painting, Doors/ 770-831-3612. Anything electrical Windows. Excellent Deck including new R e f e r e n c e s . Tree Services installs, repairs, 404-895-0260 OUTBACK DECK designs, consulting, RELIABLE HOME Yellow Ribbon INC troubleshooting & REPAIRS: Tree. Near perfect Composite decks/ wi-fi cameras for 22 years reviews and awardHardwood decks/ all your security experience. winning service. Porches by design. needs. Terry @ R e f e r e n c e s . Hands on owner. Life Happens- 770-449-4959 E l ec tri c al , Free estimates and Outback! p l u m b i n g , insured. 770Tree. Flooring If you can dream carpentry, wood com 770-744-2200 it,we can build it! rot repair, siding, and ask for Gary. I n s t a l l / 678-262-4113 painting, pressure Repairs: Carpet, OutBackDeck.net 404Cuttree. One of washing. Free Laminate, Tile, e s t i m a t e s ! the most experienced Vinyl Wood floors, 770-605-0340 and reliable tree Backsplashes, companies in North and Shower Atlanta. Perfect Home surrounds. Carpet reviews and reliable, Improvement wrinkles removed! professional, and Call today for estimate! honest service. Phillips Home Free quotes. Fully 706-429-4453 Improvement 770Tree. P H I L L I P S We offer drywall, insured. com 678-506-0006 F L O O R I N G painting, carpentry, H a r d w o o d , plumbing and Thanks for laminate, carpet & electrical. Basements tile installation and finished, kitchen and Reading The repairs. We do tile bath rehabs. All Classifieds! floors, showers, tub types flooring. Also surrounds and kitchen total home rehab Check us b a c k - s p l a s h e s . for those who have out online: Re-grouting is a rental house or also available. Call one to sell. Call 678appenmedia 678-887-1868 for 887-1868 for a free group.com free estimate. estimate
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NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 27
CADNET ADS
Reader Advisory: The National Trade Association we belong to has purchased the following classifieds. Determining the value of their service or product is advised by this publication. In order to avoid misunderstandings, some advertisers do not offer employment but rather supply the readers with manuals, directories and other materials designed to help their clients establish mail order selling and other businesses at home. Under NO circumstance should you send any money in advance or give the client your checking, license identification or credit card numbers. Also beware of ads that claim to guarantee loans regardless of credit and note that if a credit repair company does business only over the phone it’s illegal to request any money before delivering its service. All funds are based in U.S. dollars. 800 numbers may or may not reach Canada.
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28 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
2018 HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL SEASON PREVIEW
L OUT L U
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ON THE COVER: Tyron Hopper, Roswell, Linebacker, Senior Photo by Joe Parker/Herald
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August 16, 2018 | Nor thFulton.com An Appen Media Group Publication
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2018 HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
11685 Alpharetta Highway Suite 150, Roswell, GA 30076 Monday – Sunday: 8:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. For an appointment call: 770-619-3860
SEASON PREVIEW 2 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 9, 2018
Three new coaches to lead local teams By JOE PARKER joe@appenmediagroup.com NORTH FULTON/FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. — There are far fewer new head coaches in North Fulton and Forsyth County for the 2018 season compared to last year, when seven coaches took over programs. But new faces will be on the sidelines for three area schools. None of the new program leaders are new to head coach positions, and one is not new to his program. Jeff Pickren returns to lead King’s Ridge after leading the Tigers from 2008-2015. After stepping down following the 2015 season, he soon returned to fill a void left at offensive line coach. He replaces Jimmy Chupp who went 6-14 in his two years at the helm. In Pickren’s first tenure the Tigers went 23-43. Pickren also began the Mount Pisgah program. One of the state’s most experienced coaches, Frank Barden, has taken over at St. Francis. Barden has held a head coach position in the state since 1994 and has led his teams to 189 combined wins, seven region championships and a state title. After leading Pickens for two seasons,
Tenures for head coaches at current schools for 2018 season Coach School No. of seasons Jeff Pickren King’s Ridge 9 seasons (2008 – 2015, 2018) Jeff Arnette South Forsyth 9th season Tim McFarlin Blessed Trinity 8th season Craig Bennett Cambridge 7th season Al Morrell Fellowship Christian 6th season Mike Forrester Mount Pisgah 6th season Jacob Nichols Alpharetta 5th season Vince Strine Chattahoochee 5th season Louis Daniel Lambert 5th season Frank Hepler Forsyth Central 3rd season Robert Craft North Forsyth 3rd season Terence Mathis Pinecrest Academy 2nd season Michael Perry Centennial 2nd season Matt Helmerich Johns Creek 2nd season James Thomson Northview 2nd season Adam Clack Milton 2nd season Matt Kemper Roswell 2nd season Shawn Cahill West Forsyth 2nd season Terry Crowder Denmark 1st season Frank Barden St. Francis 1st season Barden took the head coach position at Cartersville and spent the next 18 seasons leading the Canes. Cartersville captured seven region titles and the 1999 state championship under Barden
and made the playoffs 11 times. In 2014 Barden left the Canes to lead Stephens County to a 29-15 overall record and three playoff appearances in four seasons.
Denmark High will be under the guidance of Terry Crowder in its inaugural season. Crowder led the Chattahoochee program for nine seasons beginning in 2004. Under his direction, the Cougars compiled a 60-40 record, captured two region championships and went 15-0 in 2010 and won the program’s only state championship. In 2013, Crowder was named the head coach at Creekview. In his five years at the helm, the Grizzlies went 31-22 and earned three trips to the state playoffs. Several new coaches from 2017 have settled in for their second year. Milton head coach Adam Clack, Centennial’s Michael Perry and Shawn Cahill of West Forsyth all led their programs to winning seasons last year. Matt Helmerich of Johns Creek, Northview’s James Thomson, Roswell’s Matt Kemper and Pinecrest Academy’s Terence Mathis will look to build off their initial seasons with their respective programs. Robert Craft and Frank Hepler, with North Forsyth and Foryth Central, will be in the third year of their tenures this year.
Two local region schedules altered for 2018 season By JOE PARKER joe@appenmediagroup.com NORTH FULTON/FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. — Region 7-AAAA and Region 7-AAAAAA teams will face updated schedules this year after playing the same string of region opponents the past two years. Two new teams will square off against Blessed Trinity in Region 7-AAAA, including Forsyth County’s Denmark High in its inaugural season. Also added to the fray is Flowery Branch which joins after playing in Class 5A for the past six seasons and is coming off a 9-3 mark in 2017. Blessed Trinity and Denmark will meet for the first time on Oct. 15. BT will start its region slate of games against West Hall. In 2016 and 2017, the two teams met in the regular season finale.
Two new teams will square off against Blessed Trinity in Region 7-AAAA, including Forsyth County’s Denmark High in its inaugural season. No new teams have been added to Region 7-AAAAAA, but when each meets is different from the past two seasons. Alpharetta and Centennial, who placed first and second in the region last season, will face off in the midseason, a departure from the past two years when they opened against each other in region play.
It’s the same story for Cambridge and Chattahoochee who will now face off in late September. Hooch begins its region schedule against its two crosstown rivals, Northview and Johns Creek. Northview and Centennial will close out their regular seasons against each other after having squared off in the midseason for the past two years. They faced off in the final week of play in 2014 and 2015. In Region 4-AAAAAAA, Roswell faces a minor alteration to its schedule and now opens region play against Cherokee. The two teams have met in the latter part of the season for the past seven sea-
sons, including the regular season finale from 2016-17. Only minor changes were in store for Region 6-A teams and no changes were made to the 5-AAAAAAA slate.
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Football Preview 2018
NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 3
Raiders left with holes to fill after graduating starters Alpharetta’s youth leaves questions for team’s outlook By JOE PARKER joe@appenmediagroup.com ALPHARETTA, Ga. — Alpharetta is coming off perhaps its best season in program history, but with the graduation of almost 30 seniors, the Raiders will look to ride the momentum of last season with a host of new faces on the sidelines. It’s a situation not unfamiliar to the Raiders. The 2014 and 2017 seasons share an uncanny amount of similarities. In both campaigns, the Raiders were seniorladen. The regular season began with a loss to Milton but included an undefeated region record and championship. Also in both seasons, the Raiders reached the second round of the playoffs. The major difference between the seasons is the Raiders bested that playoff mark with the program’s first trip to the quarterfinals last year. But with the graduation of the 2014 senior class, Alpharetta was forced to start a number of underclassmen the following year, resulting in a disappointing 5-5 season, a record the Raiders hope to avoid this year. “It was not a great season but we were highly competitive and we were in every game,” head coach Jacob Nichols said. “A few bad plays and circumstances cost us to go 5-5 instead of 7-3 or 8-2. But we’ve been here before, and our seniors were freshman at the time.” Many of those seniors will focus on maintaining Alpharetta’s defensive success of last year where the Raiders allowed an average of just 16 points per game. Returning in the trenches are senior defensive ends Jack Stanton and Jackson Michaels. Stanton compiled 48 total tackles last season and was second on the team in tackles for loss (14.5) and sacks (8.5) while Michaels had 41 tackles with five sacks. “I feel like we have the best tandem of defensive ends in this area,” Nichols said. “Both guys are trustworthy and three-year starters. I think our pass rush and our edge should be about as strong as it can be.” Another three-year starter, Reid Schulz, will lead the Raiders’ linebacker core. Schulz was third on the team in total tackles last season. While Schulz should be a mainstay at linebacker, Nichols said the Raiders have been rotating in multiple players to find
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Wide receiver Robbie Ruppel will complete his senior season with the Raiders this year. He made 17 receptions for 198 yards with two touchdowns last season. their starters but said he is “excited” about his linebacker prospects. “I think we have the most athleticism at that position as we’ve ever had,” he said. “We are also going to have them be more active than the past and more versatile.” Senior Division 1 prospect Dane Motley could also make an impact for the
Raiders at linebacker, but Nichols said Motley can play just about anywhere on the defense. “He is one of the more versatile players I’ve seen in high school football in a long time,” Nichols said. “He can play in the box, he can get out of the box and cover space in the flat and he can drop back and play safety. He is a critical
piece on defense.” Some of Alpharetta’s offensive firepower returns this year, but the Raiders will still look to first-year starters to make an impact. With the graduation of three-year starting quarterback Matthew Downing, offseason competition between senior Bailey Stahl and junior Will Gerdes will decide who leads the Raiders offense. “Both are pocket passers and bring great leadership,” Nichols said. “Gerdes has a little more of an ideal frame at 6-foot-3, and Bailey is new to the game having just started high school football last year. But the distance he has come from last summer to now is remarkable. The stakes are definitely high but the competition is good and keeps them on edge.” Much of the offensive line will also be fresh faces, with center William Wagner serving as the only returning starter. However, Nichols said the rest of the line has played a “considerable amount of time” and has made huge strides in the offseason. He also said the line has perhaps the most size the program has seen. The line will open gaps for returning running back Kevin Watkins who had a strong showing in 2017 while sharing carries with graduated senior Nolan Edmonds. “He’s a substantial part of our offense,” Nichols said. “He’s a strong runner, a great receiver out of the backfield and makes an impact with his blocking.” Alpharetta lost its four top receivers to graduation, but senior Robbie Ruppel returns after making key receptions for the Raiders last year. “[Ruppel] is an explosive player and we expect big things from him this year,” Nichols said. Senior Josh Grant, whom Nichols said is one of the most athletic players on the team, should also serve as a go-to receiver. With a host of emerging talent, Alpharetta will sport some new schemes in 2018, including an emphasis on players competing on both sides of the ball, more personnel changes throughout the game on offense and a more pressureoriented defense. As it is every season, the goal is another region title and trip to the playoffs, Nichols said. “The outlook is unsure because we are so young, and we really don’t know a lot about our region opponents, but I expect us to go out and compete every game and stay right where we are as far as on top of the region and in the playoffs,” Nichols said. “It is going to take hard work every week, but I think we are capable.”
4 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
Football Preview 2018
Blessed Trinity captured its first football state championship in 2017, defeating region rivals Marist 16-7 in the finals.
PHOTO BY JOE PARKER
Blessed Trinity poised for another state title run Titans return standouts from last year’s roster By JOE PARKER joe@appenmediagroup.com ROSWELL, Ga. — A wall within Blessed Trinity’s gym is almost completely covered with state championship banners from baseball, cross country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, softball, tennis and volleyball. This year, there will be less open space on the wall thanks to Blessed Trinity’s first football state championship in 2017. The championship came after an incredible playoff run that saw the Titans down the top-three teams in the state in Class 4A before sealing the title with a win over region rivals and previously undefeated Marist. While a popular sports adage says it is often harder to repeat a title than to win the first, BT will be loaded with much of the same talent that led them to the top last year. The offense returns almost all skilled positions, and the defense, instrumental to the Titans’ state title last year, will also feature multiple returning standouts. Three-year starting quarterback Jake Smith returns to lead the offense after passing for over 2,100 yards last season with 18 touchdowns. While he puts up big numbers offensively, head coach Tim McFarlin said the senior perhaps makes even more of an impact on defense. “He has been an excellent football player and an outstanding QB, but he’s
probably an even better safety,” McFarlin said. “One of the really incredible occurrences of last season was when we got to the playoff and had to play the top-three ranked teams in the state and, between playing safety and quarterback, he never came off the field. He was a real difference maker and one of the key reasons we were able to win the Cartersville game.” The offense also returns perhaps the state’s best running back tandem in senior Steele Chambers and junior Elijah Green. Both racked up over 1,300 yards last season and combined for 33 rushing scores. “We’re extremely fortunate to have two guys like that for us,” McFarlin said. “They really embrace [sharing carries].” McFarlin said utilizing two running backs is also beneficial for the defense with Chambers starting at linebacker. He was third on the team in tackles last season. Another two-way player, Ryan Davis, returns for his senior campaign after being the go-to receiver last season and compiling four interceptions and 32 tackles in BT’s secondary. While Davis had the lion’s share of receptions last year, junior Quinton Reese could provide more balance in BT’s passing game, McFarlin said. “Reese has really developed nicely, and his top-end speed allows us to stretch the field,” McFarlin said. “That will take a little pressure off [Davis] by having another good receiver.” The defense will continue to be under the purview of coordinator John Thompson who brought his three decades of collegiate coaching experience to the
Titans last year. “He brings a level of knowledge and intensity that is a little beyond what you see on most high school staffs and we’re very grateful to have him,” McFarlin said. The head coach is pleased with how his defense is shaping up in the offseason. “The fact is, the defense set the pace for our football program,” McFarlin said. “They were outstanding in our playoff run, and we look forward to more of that this year.” The defense’s strong suit should be the linebacker core and secondary, McFarlin said, led by UGA commit JD Bertrand at inside linebacker along with Chambers. Defensive end JR Bivens also returns after leading the team in tackles (89) and sacks (10) in his junior season. Jake Lyons joins him on the defensive line. One area where the Titans will be untested is the offensive line where just two starters return. That’s nothing new for the Titans who fielded an entirely new starting five last season. Center Jack Filipowicz and right guard Jack Jacobs return to anchor the offense with Dom Maroccio and Tad Furnish stepping in at tackle. McFalin said the starting left guard position is still open to competition. Despite dropping just one contest in their challenging non-region schedule last year (that was later deemed a Marietta forfeit due to ineligible players), McFarlin said his state title team didn’t truly begin to click until later in the season, and their tough opponents
highlighted the team’s weaknesses. The Titans will again use their non-region slate of games as a proving ground as they face four teams who had a combined record of 40-11 last season. “We’re not going to get caught up on winning or losing those games,” McFarlin said. “No one likes to lose, but we learned a lot from our two losses last year and those really paid dividends for us.” BT then faces off in a reworked Region 7-AAAA that now includes Denmark, which will field former West Forsyth and South Forsyth players, and Flowery Branch who went 9-3 last year. Of course there is also the challenge of Marist who denied BT last year’s region title before the Titans won a rematch in the state championship game. “We like the expansion,” McFarlin said. “It’s definitely growing our region in talent.” If the Titans can stay healthy and continue their strong play of last season, they could be poised for another title run. While McFarlin said last year’s state title raised expectations for this year’s squad, he and his staff will work to ensure the team is grounded and understands the effort it took to win the 2017 state trophy. McFarlin added there are too many variables to say whether or not BT can repeat last year’s success. “We’re not going to get ahead of ourselves,” he said. “In our way of thinking, we only have one game, and that is the next game. Our goal at the end of this season is to be able to look back and say we went as far as we could with what we had.”
Football Preview 2018
NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 5
G O O D LU CK TO A L L T H E T EA M S & P L AY E R S ! Listen to our podcast ‘Overtime’ for more local sports coverage NORTH FULTON/FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. — Earlier this year Appen Media Group added to its podcast selections “Overtime with Joe Parker,” which dives into the local high school sports scene in North Fulton and Forsyth County. As we enter the 2018-19 GHSA sports year, be sure to tune in for indepth discussions with players and coaches to hear the inside scoop for local high school teams. In addition to special guests, Overtime will also feature each week a recap of the biggest headlines, games and region and title races for all boys and girls sports in North Fulton and Forsyth County. Overtime is available on iTunes, Google Play, Spotify and Stitcher or you can listen online at northfulton.com/ podcasts/overtime/. Appen Media’s other podcast offerings include: Inside the Box, which delves into impactful local issues and highlights Appen’s investigative journalism wing, Black Box. Lunch Break, where aspiring foodies AJ McNaugton and Kathleen Sturgeon give their comedic take on the food industry with special guests each week. Myth Roast, with co-hosts Julia Grochowski and Lauren Telschow, who give not-so-serious retellings of their favorite myths, because “those who don’t know their myths are doomed to repeat them.” Real Estate Success with Brian Patton, where Patton, a local real estate expert, investor and author, discusses the dealings of land, investment properties and commercial building. You can also read Left Lane, where Joe Parker reviews the latest cars and dives into the car culture of north Atlanta.
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6 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
Football Preview 2018
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Defensive tackle Mark Mason compiled 45 total tackles, nine tackles for loss and two sacks in his junior season with the Knights.
Centennial looks to build off of historic season Offensive firepower returns with QB Max Brosmer By CONNER EVANS interns@appenmediagroup.com ROSWELL, Ga. — Second-year coach Michael Perry looks to improve every day after Centennial High School had one of its most successful seasons in program history and won their first playoff game in 15 years. Centennial started slow last season, dropping their first three games, but won seven straight heading into the playoffs. After their first postseason win since 2002, the Knights fell in the to Mays in a 48-41 shootout. A big part of Centennial’s success last season was a potent passing offense headlined by returning senior Max Brosmer, who has offers from Ivy League schools going into the fall. “(Brosmer) made mistakes early on but got better and better as the season progressed,” Perry said. “We had to get on him all the time at first, but now he could teach the offense to someone off the street.” Brosmer was top five in the state in passing yards last fall and will look to continue that success with a receiving core starring sophomore Julian Nixon, who already has D1 offers. They will lean heavily on him and Cal Dickie to make plays in wide receiver Blane Mason’s absence this season, Perry said. On the other side of the ball, Jack Barton and Max Able return to help lead a defense that was leaky early last year. Able led the team in tackles as a freshman, and now in his junior year, Perry says, he is a leader by example on and off the field. “Barton led the team in sacks last
season, and I expect him to do the same this year,” Perry said. “I’m looking forward to seeing him do great things.” The football team has also seen success in bringing on two-sport athletes in the past few seasons, particularly from the school’s talent-rich lacrosse team, which reached the state semi-finals in each of the past two seasons. Nicky Solomon, who will play lacrosse and football at the University of North Carolina, gave the team a spark as one of the best kickers in the state last year, a position Perry said the team still needs to fill. “I miss the heck out of Nicky Solomon,” he said. “Awesome in every way, and I’ve never seen the kid without a smile on his face.” This season, lacrosse attackman Ryan Siracusa, will try varsity football for the first time as a slot receiver. The team returns most of its offensive linemen, including Will Edwards, Matt Willbanks and Brandon McGinnis, whom Perry said will improve on their success last season. Centennial has a tough schedule early on opening against Northside Warner Robins, then traveling to rival Roswell High School. There are “no cupcakes” this year, Perry said, and that should prepare them for region play. In his second year as a head coach, Perry is more at ease, and not as much surprises him now, he said. “The expectation is to be in the present and asking ‘what are we doing right now to get better,’” he said. After last season, expectations for Centennial football will be higher than ever.
Football Preview 2018
NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 7
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Hornets focusing on future Roswell coach seeks change to team culture
By CONNER EVANS interns@appenmediagroup.com ROSWELL, Ga. — Roswell Coach Matt Kemper returns for his second season after a disappointing 3-8 campaign, where everything that could go wrong, did. Last season saw the implementation of 10 new coaches, only four returning varsity starters, a slew of injuries to key players and one of the toughest schedules in the state. A 3-8 record with a first-round playoff exit is never satisfying, but there were many factors at play in their struggles. Kemper says the progress begins with a change in culture that he’s already seen in the offseason. “At the end of last season the guys locked arms,” he said. “New leaders emerged from day one of the offseason. It was very, very tough.” His players have bought into offseason workouts more than last year, he said, as Roswell focuses on injury prevention and becoming a stronger, tougher team. Last season only 11 players could power clean 225 pounds. This year Kemper expects that number to rise to more than 40 players capable of that threshold. “We have a greater system of accountability,” he said. “They’re doing more than what’s asked, not just the minimum.”
Tripp Cooper returns from an ACL injury this year to help fill out the wide receiver core that also features Jeremy Slaughter and returning senior Ryan Pike. Kemper hopes to run a balanced offense this season, keeping the spread look and implementing more option reads, especially in the red zone. It’s still unknown who will come out on top in the quarterback race between juniors Riley Easterly and Ethan Roberts. The last three seasons, Roswell had a senior transfer starting at quarterback, but Kemper says those days are over. He is looking forward to setting a new culture and getting key players back from injury. “Easterly had just a horrible, horrible injury last year,” Kemper said. “He’s worked his way back and in some ways is even stronger than before, which is a testament to what kind of kid he is.” In the backfield, Kamonty Jett looks to be a big part of Roswell’s running game going forward as well as Sam Antona, who emerged as a leader in the offseason. Roswell brings back an offensive line with more experience, including Alek Nikolich at center. Hitting the weight room will be a top priority, Kemper said. “We never had a game last year where the offensive line said they were stronger than the other guys,” he said. Roswell’s defense still has a few gaps to fill with linebacker depth and quality cornerbacks set as top priorities going into the season. Roswell will stick with the 3-4 front, which was part of Kemper’s defensive change last year.
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8 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
Football Preview 2018
Milton raises expectations after 2017 campaign Eagles hope to build on last year’s success By JOE PARKER joe@appenmediagroup.com MILTON, Ga. — While Milton enters the season on the back of one its most successful runs in program history, secondyear head coach Adam Clack said this season will serve as indication as to whether the program is headed in the right direction. “The measure of success for last season is how we do this year,” Clack said. “It will show if we established the culture of the program that these guys can pick up and run with. We’re challenging the guys more and more each day to improve on what they’ve shown us they can do.” Clack said the team’s transition under his leadership, and multiple assistant coaches, led to a somewhat slow start last year though the Eagles won five of their first six games. But near the end of the regular season, Clack said the team began to click, and he hopes to see that momentum will continue in year two. Along with the hype surrounding one of the best season’s in Milton’s 68-year history comes a host of opportunities. For the Eagles, that includes opening the season against Archer in the Corky Kell Classic and hosting Cardinal Gibbons (Fla.) and the Freedom Bowl, which will bring together 12 top-tier programs from around the country. Their non-region schedule also includes rivalry contests with Roswell and Alpharetta and a trip to Parkview. “No game should be bigger than the next, but we want to use those nonregion games to test our guys and put them in different environments with more exposure to big games and big rivalries,” Clack said. “No matter what the win/loss column says, we will use those games to motivate us and it should make us better prepared for region games.” Milton placed second to South Forsyth in last year’s Region 5-AAAAAAA race in what Clack called one the most talented and best-coached regions in the state. “We’ll never take our region opponents for granted,” Clack said. “South Forsyth has shown they can go toe-totoe with anybody. West and Lambert have a long history of good programs, and I think North Forsyth and Central are on the rise. I think this region is getting better and better and you never know who is going to take that next step.” The next step for the Eagles is to
Photo by Joe Parker/Herald
Wide receiver and cornerback Syaire Waters returns for his senior campaign with the Eagles this year. As a junior, he had 20 receptions for 348 yards with four touchdowns and rushed for 74 yards with a touchdown. He also had 19 total tackles and an interception. continue to build off the 2017 campaign, Clack said. “This group’s task is going to be to pick up where they left off, not just to get to that line but to improve on it,” he said. “We have extremely high expectations for this squad.” Hoping to continue his standout career is returning quarterback Jordan Yates, who recently committed to Georgia Tech. The three-year starter passed for over 2,000 yards last season and rushed for 893 with 29 total touchdowns. “He can threaten defenses with the run and pass, and his numbers show he is a dynamic player,” Clack said. “But his biggest attribute is his leadership and work ethic. He is constantly pushing himself and his teammates to get better.” While Yates will be a familiar face behind center, Milton will look for new talent to emerge for the rushing attack with the graduation of last year’s leading rusher, Solomon Vanhorse.
“Right now we are trying a bunch of guys out there,” Clack said. “Josh Edwards has really stepped up and shown promise this summer. Ahmad Echols is a guy we can depend on, and we may have some guys from the defense like Jordan Davis or Joseph Charleston in. We may not have that one guy that gets a lot of the carries, but we are developing a lot of guys for our offense.” Milton’s top 2017 receiver also graduated, leaving more opportunities for Holden Shaw, Jordan Cox and Dylan Leonard. The offensive line will return just one starter from last year’s squad, but 6-foot-5, 330 lb. junior guard Paul Tchio is already fielding multiple Division 1 offers after a stellar sophomore campaign. Clack said Tchio will be a leader for the entire team and his humility and enthusiasm to play is not typical of a Power 5 recruit. Another highly touted recruit will line up defensively for the Eagles at safety,
Clemson commit Joseph Charleston. The senior is recovering from a torn labrum that kept him on the sidelines most of the offseason, but Clack said the safety gives the defense a “spark.” Offseason competition is still filling the rest of the secondary, Clack said. At linebacker, Jordan Davis returns after averaging nearly eight tackles a game last season. Milton’s front four will sport a mostly new look and also a new strategy making more substitutions on the defensive line to keep fresh bodies on the field. Clack said juniors Zander Barnett and Marcus Rangel have stood out in the offseason, but many more players will see time in the trenches. With a new season on the horizon to measure the program’s true successes, Clack said the Eagles enter 2018 with high expectations and confidence. “With that, we also know to get where we want to be we really have to bear down,” he said.
Football Preview 2018
NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 9
Hooch pins hopes on brotherhood, team play after successful 2017 campaign By JOE PARKER joe@appenmediagroup.com JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — Chattahoochee head coach Vince Strine said the 2018 Cougars will not rely on the big plays that have been so impactful for Hooch recently. Instead, this year’s squad will be a “hard hat and lunch pail” kind of team. “In the past few years we have been blessed with big play guys,” he said. “We have that big play capability this year, but we are not going to rely on that. We are going to play old-fashioned football. We’re going to run the ball, control with the offense and be fundamentally sound on defense.” Though the Cougars will have to fill gaps in many of its skilled positions, Strine said Hooch has been fortunate to return its entire offensive line. “The hardest group to bring up is the offensive line,” Strine said. “A young line can impact a lot of things, but fortunately for us, our offensive line is the most veteran group on our team.” The offensive front will be led by tackle/guard Jake Green, Billy Waters and Jax Henderson. The front five will protect junior quarterback Damon Stewart who started for the Cougars in their final five games
of 2017 after Jack Corrigan went down with a gruesome leg injury. With speed and agility, he brings both rushing and passing threats to the Hooch offense. “He’s about as quick and elusive as you can imagine, and he has a rocket of an arm,” Strine said. “I saw the light bulb go on for him in the summer, and he is stepping up into a leadership role more and more. I think that was helped by having Corrigan in front of him who was just about as good of a leader as you can have.” In addition to Stewart’s rushing ability, the Cougars will look to standout senior Max Webb at running back. Webb averaged 6.1 yards per rush and set the program’s single-season rushing record with over 1,300 yards last year. Asked about his expectations for Webb this season, Strine said Webb “just needs to be Max.” “He doesn’t need a huge hole, he’s very shifty,” Strine said. “And he has probably gotten even faster.” Hooch lost multiple receivers Strine called “home-run hitters” in Isiah Bivens and Andrew Thomas who graduated, as well as T Lee who transferred to Buford. But Strine is confident his new receiving core can be elite. Stepping up to make receptions will be seniors Jordan Coleman and Spencer
PHOTO BY Keith Major/ SportsShooters
Marcus Stephen and the Cougars earned Chattahoochee’s first winning season and first playoff berth since 2012 last year.
Anderson, 6-foot-3 sophomore Jordan Palmer and fellow sophomore Jahmal Smith. Strine said the true blue collar aspects of the 2018 squad resides in what he called a “no name defense” which will rely on strong team play instead of a few standouts. “They are going to have to work together as a unit, and they have accepted
that,” Strine said. “They’re okay with not having to rely on one or two players.” The Cougars’ defense returns Ahmad Stephens and Blake Levy on the line with Ben Lawrence, Chris White and Chris Williams at linebacker. Hooch will put on their hard hats and look to continue the program’s ascent over the past few campaigns. After winning just one game in 2015, the Cougars then went 5-5 ahead of their 7-4 record last season and first trip to the playoffs in five years. Strine said the key has been a fantastic core of coaches and, among the players, a true sense of comradeship, further cemented during the offseason when the team ran Currahee Mountain in Toccoa. “That experience has really been a bonding point for our team and what has really made us click,” Strine said. “I think we are finally at the point this year where the team has a true brotherhood.” That close-knit unit will face the pressure of improving their prospects this year. “I feel like last year was a step for our program, and we want to take that further this year,” Strine said. “What you got to see over the last couple of years is our team has embraced winning and has seen what that is supposed to look like and what it takes to get there.”
Pickren to lead King’s Ridge in return stint By JOE PARKER joe@appenmediagroup.com MILTON, Ga. — King’s Ridge will have a familiar face leading the program this season with Jeff Pickren back at the helm. Pickren has served on the Tigers’ coaching staff since the program began and was named the first head coach. After leading King’s Ridge from 2008-2015, Pickren stepped down but soon rejoined the team as offensive line coach. He is looking forward to his second tenure as head coach this season. “It’s been a seamless transition, and right now I’m enjoying coaching football as I ever have,” Pickren said. The Tigers are still searching for their first winning season and first playoff appearance in their ninth full season. Pickren said his seniors are hungry and motivated to succeed. “Our seniors have been through a lot,” he said. “They were 1-9, 4-6 and then 2-8. They really want to have some success.” The goal this season is to erase the team’s streak of losing seasons and finally take the next step into the postseason. “I feel like we have a great group of
PHOTO From King’s Ridge
Linebacker and running back Kaleb Harris returns to the Tigers for his senior season after having an impressive showing on both sides of the ball in 2017. kids, and I think that is a legitimate goal for this season,” Pickren said. In order to reach those marks, the Tigers’ offense will again run the triple option after implementing the scheme ahead of the 2017 season. Pickren said there were some growing pains with the new system, but with
a year of experience under their belts, the Tigers should be more efficient this season. “It’s one thing to tell the kids how to do something but it’s another to do it and see it firsthand,” Pickren said. “And because not a lot of teams we play see the triple option, last year we didn’t quite know what to expect from other teams in how they were going to try and stop it. Now we have a year behind us and we have a feel for how other teams will try and stop us.” Leading the offense at quarterback is Braxton Chadwick who split starting reps at the position last year. His father, Hunter, is the offensive coordinator and has implemented the triple option at other schools, giving Braxton a bevy of knowledge of the scheme. “He’s well-disciplined and is like a coach on the field,” Pickren said. Multiple rushers will get carries this season, and Pickren is looking to Julian Joseph, Evan Dyer and junior Nick Smith to lead the ground attack. Opening the running game will be an offensive line with “decent size,” Pickren said. “One of the biggest things about the
triple option is we don’t have to be the biggest or strongest up front, but we need five guys willing to play under a card table,” he said. “We want them that low.” The Tigers defense return multiple starters from the 2017 campaign, including 6-foot-2, 195 lb. senior defensive end Kaleb Harris. “He a big kid, very fast and an excellent tackler,” Pickren said. “He is one of those special athletes that you don’t really have to coach tons.” Jack Harrell also returns to the defensive front with seniors Christian Smith and William Kurtz at linebacker. Dyer will play both ways and anchor the secondary at free safety. “We will base out of a four-man front but you will see multiple looks,” Pickren said. “We are going to see a lot of teams who like to spread it out, and we have to have the ability to get in and out of multiple fronts and coverages.” The objective to begin the King’s Ridge turnaround will include formidable Region 6-A slate of games. “We’ve got to compete and do our best,” Pickren said. “I feel like we have a great group of kids and I’m excited to see how they match up.”
(Reg. 7-AAAAAA)
JOHNS CREEK
8-17 Riverwood 8-24 @Lambert 9-7 Northview* 9-14 @Johns Creek* 9-21 Pope* 9-28 @Cambridge* 10-5 Centennial* 10-12 @Alpharetta* 10-26 @Dunwoody* 11-3 North Atlanta*
(Reg. 7-AAAAAA)
CHATTAHOOCHEE
8-24 Milton 8-31 @Lanier 9-14 @Pope* 9-21 @Dunwoody* 9-28 Centennial* 10-5 @North Atlanta* 10-12 Chattahoochee* 10-19 @Northview* 10-26 Johns Creek* 11-2 Cambridge*
(Reg. 7-AAAAAA)
ALPHARETTA
(Reg. 6-A Subregion B)
KING’S RIDGE
8-24 Cherokee Bluff 8-31 @North Springs 9-7 @Forsyth Central 9-14 Dawson County 9-21 @Chestatee* 9-28 West Hall* 10-5 Blessed Trinity* 10-12 @Marist* 10-19 White County* 11-2 @Flowery Branch*
(Reg. 7-AAAA)
Denmark
8-17 @St. Pius X 8-24 South Forsyth 8-31 @Woodward Academy 9-7 Benedictine 9-21 West Hall* 10-5 @Denmark* 10-12 @Flowery Branch* 10-19 @Chestatee 10-26 Marist* 11-2 White County*
(Reg. 7-AAAA)
BLESSED TRINITY
LAMBERT
(Reg. 5-AAAAAAA)
8-17 @North Springs 8-24 @Pinecrest Academy* 9-7 Walker* 9-14 Stratford Academy 9-21 @Mount Paran* 10-5 St. Francis* 10-12 King’s Ridge* 10-19 Mount Pisgah* 10-26 @Whitefield Academy* 11-2 TBD (Region 6-A crossover)
(Reg. 6-A Subregion B)
FELLOWSHIP CHRISTIAN
8-17 @Creekview 8-31 Woodstock 9-7 @Dunwoody* 9-14 Centennial* 9-21 @North Atlanta* 9-28 Chattahoochee* 10-5 @Northview* 10-12 Johns Creek* 10-19 Pope* 11-2 @Alpharetta*
(Reg. 7-AAAAAA)
CAMBRIDGE
MILTON
(Reg. 5-AAAAAAA)
8-17 Chamblee 8-31 Cass 9-7 Denmark 9-14 @Lakeside, Atlanta 9-21 @Clarkston 10-5 @North Forsyth* 10-12 West Forsyth* 10-19 @Milton* 10-26 South Forsyth* 11-2 @Lambert*
(Reg. 5-AAAAAAA)
FORSYTH CENTRAL
8-17 Northside, Warner Robins 8-31 @Roswell 9-7 Pope* 9-14 @Cambridge* 9-28 @Alpharetta* 10-5 @Chattahoochee* 10-12 Dunwoody* 10-19 @Johns Creek* 10-26 North Atlanta* 11-2 Northview*
(Reg. 7-AAAAAA)
CENTENNIAL
10 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
Football Preview 2018
(Reg. 4-AAAAAAA) 8-24 Campbell 8-31 Centennial 9-7 @West Forsyth 9-14 @Milton 9-21 @Wheeler 10-5 Cherokee* 10-12 Lassiter* 10-19 @Walton 10-26 Woodstock* 11-2 @Etowah
(Reg. 5-AAAAAAA)
(Reg. 5-AAAAAAA)
8-17 @Sprayberry 8-24 @Blessed Trinity 8-31 Etowah 9-7 South Gwinnett 9-21 @Hillgrove 10-5 @Lambert* 10-12 Milton* 10-19 North Forsyth* 10-26 @Forsyth Central* 11-2 West Forsyth*
SOUTH FORSYTH
8-17 Cherokee 8-24 @Gainesville 8-31 Northview 9-14 @Kennesaw Mountain 9-21 @Woodstock 10-5 Forsyth Central* 10-12 Lambert* 10-19 @South Forsyth* 10-26 @West Forsyth* 11-2 Milton*
NORTH FORSYTH
8-17 @Riverside Military Academy 8-24 Providence Christian 9-14 Mount Paran* 9-21 @Mount Pisgah* 9-28 Whitefield Academy* 10-5 @Walker* 10-12 @Fellowship Christian* 10-19 Pinecrest Academy* 10-26 @St. Francis* 11-2 TBD (Region crossover game)
(Reg. 7-AAAAAA)
(Reg. 6-A Subregion B) 8-24 North Cobb Christian 8-31 Mount Pisgah* 9-7 @Lakeview Academy 9-21 @Whitefield Academy* 9-28 Walker* 10-5 @Fellowship Christian* 10-12 @Pinecrest Academy* 10-19 @Mount Paran* 10-26 King’s Ridge* 11-2 TBD (Region crossover game)
St. Francis
8-24 Lakeside, Atlanta 8-31 @North Forsyth 9-7 @Chattahoochee* 9-14 Dunwoody* 9-21 @Johns Creek* 9-28 North Atlanta* 10-5 Cambridge* 10-19 Alpharetta* 10-26 @Pope* 11-2 @Centennial*
NORTHVIEW
8-17 Wheeler 8-24 Chattahoochee 8-31 @Gainesville 9-7 @Peachtree Ridge 9-21 Lanier 10-5 South Forsyth* 10-12 @North Forsyth* 10-19 @West Forsyth* 10-26 @Milton* 11-2 Forsyth Central*
(Reg. 6-A Subregion B)
(Reg. 5-AAAAAAA)
8-17 @Camden County 8-31 Hewitt-Trussville (AL) 9-7 Roswell 9-14 @Peachtree Ridge 9-21 @McCallie (TN) 10-5 @Milton* 10-12 @Forsyth Central* 10-19 Lambert* 10-26 North Forsyth* 11-2 @South Forsyth
WEST FORSYTH
8-24 Fellowship Christian* 8-31 Mount de Sales 9-7 @Athens Christian 9-14 @Whitefield Academy* 9-21 @Walker* 10-5 Mount Pisgah* 10-12 St. Francis* 10-19 @King’s Ridge* 10-26 Mount Paran* 11-2 TBD (Region crossover game)
Pinecrest Academy
8-17 Archer (Corky Kell Classic) 8-24 @Alpharetta 8-31 Cardinal Gibbons (FL) (Freedom Bowl) 9-14 Roswell 9-21 @Parkview 10-5 West Forsyth* 10-12 @South Forsyth* 10-19 Forsyth Central* 10-26 Lambert* 11-2 @North Forsyth*
Football Preview 2018
ROSWELL
8-17 Holy Innocents’ 8-24 @Mount Vernon Presbyterian 8-31 @St. Francis* 9-7 Whitefield Academy* 9-21 King’s Ridge* 9-28 @Mount Paran* 10-5 @Pinecrest Academy* 10-19 @Fellowship Christian* 10-26 Walker* 11-2 TBD (Region crossover game)
(Reg. 6-A Subregion B)
Mt. Pisgah Christian
8-17 Fairfield Central (SC) 8-25 @St. Johns Prep (DC) 9-7 @North Atlanta* 9-14 Chattahoochee* 9-21 Northview* 10-5 Pope* 10-12 @Cambridge* 10-19 Centennial* 10-26 @Alpharetta* 11-3 @Dunwoody* NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 11
12 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
Football Preview 2018
Cambridge will remain under the direction of head coach Craig Bennett this season. Bennett has led the Bears since their program started in 2012.
PHOTO BY JOE PARKER
Cambridge to reestablish culture after disappointing season Bears somewhat inexperienced but ‘tough,’ coach says By JOE PARKER joe@appenmediagroup.com MILTON, Ga. — Cambridge head coach Craig Bennett said a strong culture had been established for the Bears program prior to last year. But that waned in the 2017 campaign with the Bears dropping their first five games and ending the season with a 4-6 record. “I hang a lot of what happened last season on my shoulders,” Bennett said. “We had a good culture, and I just kind of assumed we’d have that coming back.” With that lesson learned, the Bears look to rebound this season with a relatively inexperienced roster. “We are going to look for improvement and look to gain experience,” Bennett said. “We are still going to be a little young, but that’s okay.” The Bears will have a new starting quarterback under center with graduation of Hogan Dykes. Bennett said the
spot has been up for competition in the summer with Statton Tripp earning the nod. “We’re hoping he can do some really big things, for us,” Bennett said. “He’s an accurate quarterback, and he can do some things with his feet, too.” New starters will join Tripp in the backfield, with Phillip Michael Collins and Mike Hudson leading the rushing attack. Bennett said Collins is reminiscent of Kaelin Byrd, a 2016 graduate who was a force for the Bears’ running game. While the offensive line has a good foundation, Bennett said the front five unit is somewhat inexperienced. “You can’t coach experience,” he said. “But I’m excited about the group gelling again.” The line will have experience in Kasra Bojnordi, a four-year starter. He will also line up on the defensive front. “We’re building a good offensive and defensive line group,” Bojnordi said. “Our region has a good amount of pretty stellar D-lineman, so it’s good to have a gelled unit up front.” A key for the Bears’ offensive success returns with receiver Ridge Polk. The senior had over 970 yards receiving, over
900 kick and punt return yards and anchored the defensive backs unit. “He does about as much for the team as you possibly can,” Bennett said. “There were a lot of games last year where he played every snap offensive and defense and returned every kick. We’re trying to squeeze out all we can get from him.” Bennett said while his defense does return some talent, their experience is still limited. Josh Bodunrin will start at inside linebacker after getting reps since his freshman season. He will be joined by fellow junior linebacker TJ Mowery and senior Andrew Longo. Three-year starter Daniel Graham returns to the defensive front. “We’re going to try and grow through our scrimmages and those non-region games and see if we can get better,” the head coach said. Those non-region games include Creekview and Woodstock. Creekview downed the Bears 41-28 in last year’s season opener and Woodstock is coming off a trip to the second round of the 7A playoffs. “When you cross those lines, of course you want to win those games,”
Bennett said. “But you also want to compete and build confidence against really good football teams. We are going to prepare to do what we can against them and determine where we stand.” Despite winning four of their last five Region 7-AAAAAA games in 2017, the Bears were shut out of the playoffs after losing the head to head tiebreaker with Pope. It is a region that has been hotly contested and Bennett expects no less this season. “There’s not a week you can take off,” he said. “I think there are a lot of teams right in the pack together and that’s when you get good football. I don’t think there’s anyone that will really run away with it.” As the culture is reestablished for the Bears, Bennett said this year’s squad can be summed up succinctly — they are tough. “A lot of coaches say that and it’s kind of a buzzword, but we put our kids through a lot, and we demand they are tough,” he said. “That’s what you’re going to get when you play us. We’re going to play hard, be tough-minded and let the chips fall where they may.”
Football Preview 2018
NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 13
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Football Preview 2018
New head coach looks to build St. Francis program By JOE PARKER joe@appenmediagroup.com MILTON, Ga. — St. Francis’ football will look to new leadership in 2018 after hiring one of the state’s most experienced coaches to build the still fledgling program. Frank Barden was named the Knights’ new head coach earlier this year, bringing with him decades of coaching experience. Barden has held a head coach position in the state since 1994 and has led his teams to 189 combined wins, seven region championships and the 1999 state championship. While St. Francis’ athletics programs have found success in other sports, including multiple boys and girls basketball state titles, the football team has won just nine games in the last three seasons and has yet to earn a berth in the state playoffs. It is Barden’s goal to build the Knights into a winning program. “We would love to be good this year and next year, but we really are trying to build a program that has a strong foundation,” Barden said. “We have great kids, great parents, a great school and administration, we are hoping to feed off
PHOTO BY Bill Brown/whitelakestudio.com
St. Francis will be under new leadership in 2018 with experienced head coach Frank Barden tapped to lead to Knights. that and build this program.” In order to do so, Barden said a key will be increasing participation. The Knights will field just 25 players this year. Barden said conditioning has been a top priority in the offense with most of his team playing both ways. One player lost from last year’s squad is 2017 starting quarterback, Sam Hines, who is focusing on his basketball career.
Josh Harps-Zhu will lead the Knights’ two-back offense. Barden said the senior has done well in the offseason and has strong leadership abilities. Sean Paradise will return to the backfield after rushing for 1,533 yards and 12 touchdowns last season. “He has a lot of God-given talent and he is maturing and learning how to take that to the next level,” Barden said. Harps-Zhu will look to go-to receivers
in junior Zay Wadsworth, Jai Smith and Hunter Jones. Leading the offensive push is a more experienced unit this year that includes two of the Knights’ five seniors, center Kevin Harper and tackle Cole Reynolds. “I’m very pleased with how the offensive line is shaping up,” Barden said. “They were young last year and had to learn by going through the fire, but they have that experience coming back.” Many of the offensive lineman will also start on the defensive front, including Troy Beasley, Darron Willis and Jakwan Everson. Josh Gil and Ayden Prigoff will lead the linebackers with Harps-Zhu, Smith and Wadsworth in the secondary. Though he has yet to see much of the Knights’ region competition in action, Barden said he knows the strength of teams in Region 6-A, and it is his goal to put St. Francis in the talks of the region’s top teams. “It’s going to be a huge challenge to step up to the level those teams are,” he said. “But we want to put a good product on the field, control us, let the season play out and we’ll see what happens. We’ll give a great effort and see if we can attain some of our goals.”
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Football Preview 2018
NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 15
Pinecrest has ‘nowhere to go but up’ Paladins hungry after winless 2017 campaign By JOE PARKER joe@appenmediagroup.com CUMMING, Ga. — Second-year Pinecrest head coach Terence Mathis said there is nowhere to go but up for the Paladins after their winless 2017 season. With just five seniors on last season’s roster, a new head coach and completely new offensive and defensive schemes, the Paladins struggled through their first eight games, dropping each of the first five by over 21 points (South Forsyth’s 56-10 win was later deemed a forfeit due to an ineligible player). “We knew we had to very patient and know that we were going to grow,” Mathis said. “In the final two games of the year we lost in the last two minutes. We are going to build on that, we are not satisfied with moral victories. These guys are hungry. We have to find a way to get that winning feeling.” Mathis saw this summer the Paladins are ready to put the last campaign behind them. “We’ve had a really good off-season, and the guys are flying around and having fun,” the head coach said. “You can kind of tell when we are all on the
same page when guys are excited to go to practice.” He said there were also those who were skeptical of the changes last season, but this squad is “all in.” Senior quarterback Ryan DiFazio will continue to lead Pinecrest’s pro-style offense after starting the final two games of last season. “He has started right back where he left off last year,” Mathis said. “His football IQ is amazing and he is going to be careful with the ball.” Senior Patrick Sutherland will lead the rushing attack behind an experienced offensive line which replaces just one starter. Sutherland also lines up defensively at inside linebacker. Much of last year’s talent returns defensively, including 6-foot-2, 230 lb. defensive end Stone Brown. “He is one of those guys that causes havoc in the backfield,” Mathis said. The defensive unit will be led by a new coordinator and Mathis said his players are “playing without thinking.” “That’s what you want,” he said. “You see a defense that is sure of themselves, they fly around the field and are physical. Hopefully we can create some turn-
PHOTO BY Bill Brown/whitelakestudio.com
David Stubbs returns to the Paladins for his senior season. overs with it this year.” The Paladins will be tested early while seeking their first on-field win since November of 2016. The season opens with a region game against Region 6-A foe Fellowship Christian and a nonregion contest against Mount de Sales. Both programs reached the playoffs last season. “We won’t be taking those first two games as a guide,” Mathis said. “We have to come out of the gate fast. The
first impression is lasting.” Pinecrest will also focus on reaching the top of the 6-A standings and a return to the postseason. Mathis believes his seniors can lead the team to those goals. “This group has bought in from day one,” he said. “We have strong leadership in our seniors, they have been playing together for a long time, and I think that will play out well for us because they know and trust each other.”
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Football Preview 2018
Gladiators bulk up on experience for 2018 campaign Johns Creek returns 20 starters By JOE PARKER joe@appenmediagroup.com JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — Expectations were high for Johns Creek ahead of its 2017 campaign. The team had just captured its first region title, earned a playoff berth for the first time in five years, and was looking to a new coach with winning pedigree to lead the Gladiators rise to the forefront of 6A football. But those high expectations were quelled by a disappointing 3-7 season. And head coach Matt Helmerich said youth was a decisive factor in the unsatisfactory 2017 campaign. The Gladiators fielded just nine seniors, four of whom had never played football. “We had a lot of young kids last year, and I hate to say it, but we looked like a JV team out there at times,” Helmerich said. “We made a lot of errors that were caused just by not knowing, and youth really cost us during the season.” But with 20 returning starters who are bigger, faster, stronger and more experienced this season, Helmerich is confident in his 2018 squad. Quarterback Zach Gibson will lead the Gladiators offense for his fourth season after throwing for just under 2,000 yards and 13 touchdowns last year. “This is the first time in 17 years of coaching I’ll have a fourth-year starting quarterback,” Helmerich said. “He can draw our offense up forwards and backwards. He really does have the QB type of mind.” Another veteran in the backfield is senior running back and Dartmouth commit Nate Hope. “He’s shifty and strong, brings leadership and toughness and lets his play do the talking,” Helmerich said. Opening gaps for Hope will be a seasoned offensive line that returns six of its top-seven players from last year, including guard Evan Quinn who was named all-region in his junior campaign. “We have some experience [on the offensive line],” Helmerich said. “They got a lot of reps last year even though they were undersized and not as experienced as some of the guys they were going up against.” Though the Gladiators receiving core, which includes Matt Casey, Giovanni Dyer and Yong Ming Lee, all come in under six feet tall, Helmerich said they have speed and great hands. Johns Creek will continue to run its run-pass option scheme, but Helmerich said some of the concepts have been
PHOTO BY Keith Major/ SportsShooters
Wide receiver Yong Min Lee had 27 receptions for 275 yards with a touchdown last year. He returns to the Gladiators for his junior campaign this season. simplified, and the coaching staff and players are more comfortable with the new focuses. The defense will employ a new 3-4 scheme this season, which Helmerich said he has run since his days coaching Florida powerhouse St. Thomas Aquinas. “We’ve put in some fun blitz packages and the kids are coming from everywhere,” he said. Perhaps the strength of the team resides in its front-seven, Helmerich said. That core includes senior defensive tackle and Eastern Michigan commit Aaron Hamilton and middle linebacker John Ross Maye, who Helmerich said has grown extensively in the offseason.
In the secondary, touted Division 1 prospect Neil Ilenrey returns at safety and all-region corner Patrick Taylor is back for his senior campaign. The Gladiators will learn quickly if their added experience has provided a boon. Their two non-region games will both be played out of state against South Carolina’s Fairfield Central and St. John’s Prep (DC), one of the highestranked teams in national polls. Helmerich said he hopes those games will prepare the Gladiators for the eightgame gauntlet of Region 7-AAAAAA. “It may be a cliché, but it’s truly one game at a time in this region,” Helmerich said. “You can’t take anyone for granted.
If you take your foot off the pedal you are going to slip up in this region.” With the frustrating 2017 campaign behind them, Helmerich said there are lofty goals for the Gladiators this year. “We want to win the region championship and host some playoff games,” he said. “And every year our goal is the state championship. Last year we had that in the back of our minds but we knew we were probably a year or two away based on our youth. This year, our goal is to realistically win a state championship and that’s what we’re shooting for. Winning is a habit, but so is losing. We have to get some wins under our belt before we can take that next step.”
Football Preview 2018
NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 17
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Football Preview 2018
Foundation set for Titans to improve in 2018 Northview looks to build in Thomson’s second year By JOE PARKER joe@appenmediagroup.com JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — Northview head coach James Thomson said the foundation for the Titans under the current coaching staff was set last year, his first at the helm. Now it’s time to build off that groundwork. Despite a 2-8 record, the head coach said the 2017 campaign was a good year. “In high school football you can’t judge a season on wins and losses,” Thomson said. “We laid the foundation and we’re looking to build on that.” That starts in the summer, and now that his players know the coaching staff, it has been far easier to prepare for the regular season, Thomson said. “It’s been night and day compared to last year,” he said. “Your second year is always so much smoother. We are moving faster, we are doing more and the expectations have been set. We have had a lot of commitment from the guys, and I think this is one of the best off-seasons I’ve had as a coach.” The Titans will continue to run their
PHOTO BY Keith Major/ SportsShooters
Will Caylor returns to the Titans for his senior season after leading Northview in rushing yards last year. pro-style offense this year, and with multiple shifts and motions, Thomson said it is vital to have a quarterback who can understand the complicated system. He has found that in junior Beau Lark. “He is smart enough to know what’s
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going on and understand the system,” Thomson said. While Lark will lead the offense in his first as a starter, running back Will Caylor returns to lead the rushing attack. Caylor could also share carries with
freshman Marcus Godbey. Providing holes for the two rushers will be an offensive line mixed with returners and new starters. Thomson said the line still needs work but is coming along. Senior Mac Bolton returns at receiver after leading the Titans in receptions and receiving yards last year. Junior Travis Buchanan will also be a go-to target, Thomson said. On the defense, the Titans will be led by defensive back Christian Watson, linebacker Zach Billings, safety Collin Ferguson and defensive lineman Davon Benjamin. With a mix of new starters and returning players, Thomson has been impressed with the family-like atmosphere of his team. “We hear that from a lot of teams at camps and things like that, but ours is real,” Thomson said. “They really care about each other.” The offseason has been spent with an added emphasis on fundamentals. Thomson said there is no specific outlook for the Titans this year, the focus instead is on constantly refining their play throughout the season. “Our focus is just getting better each week,” he said. “We’re just going to be working on us.”
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Football Preview 2018
NorthFulton.com | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | August 16, 2018 | 19
Fellowship keys on developing new talent By JOE PARKER joe@appenmediagroup.com ROSWELL, Ga. — Fellowship Christian will rely on emerging talent this season after the graduation of multiple standouts from its 2017 campaign. With youth throughout its ranks, Fellowship head coach Al Morrell said the focus for the offseason has been on improving each day. “We have been focusing on ourselves and getting better at the fundamentals,” Morrell said. “I have been pleased with their commitment level.” Many of the Paladins’ new starters will reside in the trenches on both sides of the ball. The entire four-man defensive front will be first-year starters, and only one starting offensive lineman returns — guard Charlie Albee. Joining Albee will be four sophomores, including 6-foot-5 left tackle Charlie Patterson, left guard Charlie Patterson, right guard Nathan Nardone and Reed Robinson. “We lost three guys that were threeyear starters and big, thick kids,” Morrell said. “The new guys aren’t as big, but they are very coachable. We might just have a bit of a different style and focus running the same offense. Though
they aren’t game-tested yet, I’m confident they are going to do well for us.” The 2017 senior class also left gaps to fill on the defensive line, including replacing Billy McCurry who compiled 15 sacks and 25 tackles for loss last season. Backing up the line will be two sophomore inside linebackers, Caleb McClung and Nardone, who Morrell said have been “very steady” in the offseason. Though the defense will be young, Fellowship’s secondary will feature two standout returners. Senior Cameron Cochran has made the switch from outside linebacker to cornerback. Fellow senior Cameron Gill also returns as free safety after making 82 total tackles with an interception last season. “Gill is probably the best athlete on the team,” Morrell said. “He has good size and speed and really anchors our secondary.” The Paladins offense also features a standout returner in quarterback Brooks Bryant who threw for over 1,800 yards with 22 total touchdowns (18 passing, 4 rushing) in 2017. At 6-foot-3 and 160 lbs., Morrell said Bryant is not the biggest quarterback, but has surprising velocity on his throws, makes good decisions for the
PHOTO BY JOE PARKER
Fellowship quarterback Brooks Bryant will lead the Paladins’ offense this season. In his junior year, he threw for 1,826 yards and rushed for 210 yards with 22 total touchdowns.
offense and is a natural leader. Handling much of the rushing duties for the Paladins’ Wing-T offense will be Lawson Haigler, younger brother of Merrick, who led Fellowship in rushing yards last season. As a freshman, Lawson rushed for 735 yards and six touchdowns in 2017.
“He’s one of the guys we definitely need to come through,” Morrell said. Haigler will share rushing duties with fellow sophomore Murphy Reed and wingbacks Cameron Gill and Cameron Cochran. With their base offensive scheme, the Paladins field just one wide receiver, and Morrell is looking to sophomore Jordan Brewer to be the go-to target for Bryant. “He was a total JV player last year and he has done a fantastic job of coming on for us,” the head coach said. With eight sophomore starters on offense, just five returners on defense and no clear kicker emerging, Fellowship will not have much time to gain experience before being tested. The Paladins’ non-region schedule begins with Class 5A’s North Springs and includes Stratford Academy, which eliminated Fellowship in the second round of the playoffs last season. Of course, there is also the challenge of Region 6-A that includes Mount Paran, who reached the state semifinals in 2017, Mount Pisgah and a number of other talented programs. “It’s a tough region to compete in year in and year out,” Morrell said. “Our goal, being as young as we are, is to be competitive and improve each week.”
20 | August 16, 2018 | Alpharetta-Roswell Herald | NorthFulton.com
Football Preview 2018