Past Tense: Doraville refinery fire, Part 2
► PAGE 5
April 7, 2022 | AppenMedia.com | An Appen Media Group Publication | Ser ving the community since 1976
Spruill fundraiser plots new course Annual Artistic Affair seeks to broaden reach By ROSS MCWATERS newsroom@appenmedia.com DUNWOODY, Ga. – The annual Spruill Center Artistic Affair fundraiser March 25 abandoned its tradition of black ties and table service for a more accessible and informal celebration of Dunwoody’s art scene. Held in the Spruill Center for the Arts instead of the nearby Atlanta Country Club, the event represented an organization-wide push to increase the Arts Center’s reach in the community. Spruill board and guild member Beth Saxe said the organization wants to be more accessible and inviting to younger generations. Years prior, a ticket to the black-tie affair was $125 per person. This year, tickets were $75. Guests wandered between the center’s courtyard, classrooms and hallways, taking in myriad forms of lighthearted entertainment. Attendees contributed to a mural by painting squares of canvas. The finished product reads “SPRUILL,” and will hang in the center’s upper hallway. A silent and live auction preview room featured painting, pottery and other crafts. Artist and Spruill board member Leslie Cannon stood at an easel painting a landscape that was later auctioned for $850. The Spruill celebration featured whimsical and eclectic entertainment
Dunwoody leaders face public’s call to tackle problems in police operation By JEFFREY ALBERTSON newsroom@appenmedia.com DUNWOODY, Ga. — Dunwoody city leaders got an earful of criticism March 28 when residents called for reforms within the Police Department. The mayor and council attended inperson for the third consecutive meeting. Public comments over Zoom will cease at the end of March, with the expiration of the city’s emergency ordinance that permitted those watching online to speak. During the initial public comment period, three people lobbed criticism toward Dunwoody Police Chief Billy Grogan and City Manager Eric Linton over the mounting legal fees from litigation following Lt. Fidel Espinosa sexual harassment allegations and termination of former Officer Brian Bolden. Bolden was terminated on March 23 for leaking information and a mugshot of a former sergeant arrested for DUI. “Today I stand before all of you and
ROSS MCWATERS / APPEN MEDIA
Artist and Spruill Center Board Member Leslie Cannon stands with Patty Weiner, winner of the live-painted landscape scene auction. as well. A line quickly formed to sit with fortune tellers reading tarot cards in the hallway. Stationed outside in the blasting wind, four poets from Free Poems ATL wrote prose on demand, taking
their cues from guests. After roughly a minute of writing, they recited and gave the verse to the prompters. Actors
See SPRUILL, Page 6
See RESIDENTS, Page 3
PUBLIC SAFETY
2 | April 7, 2022 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody
POLICE BLOTTER 770-442-3278 | NorthFulton.com 319 N. Main Street,| AppenMedia.com Alpharetta, GA 30009 770-442-3278 770-442-3278 | TheCrier.net
319 N. Street,| Alpharetta, GA 30009 30009 770-442-3278 NorthFulton.com 319 N. Main Main Street, Alpharetta, GA PUBLISHER EMERITUS: Ray Appen
319 N. Main Street, Alpharetta, GA 30009 PUBLISHER: Hans Appen PUBLISHER EMERITUS: Dick Williams PUBLISHER EMERITUS: Dick Williams
MANAGING EDITOR: Fox PUBLISHER EMERITUS: Ray Appen PUBLISHER: HansPatrick Appen PUBLISHER: Hans Appen
PUBLISHER: Hans Appen Jim Hart GENERAL MANAGER & ADVERTISING: EDITORIAL QUESTIONS: GENERAL MANAGER & ADVERTISING: Jim Hart MANAGING EDITOR: Patrick Fox Alpharetta-Roswell Herald: MANAGING EDITOR: Patrick Fox Alpharetta: ext. 118, Roswell ext. 122 EDITORIAL QUESTIONS: Dunwoody Crier: ext. 143 EDITORIAL QUESTIONS: Alpharetta-Roswell Herald: Forsyth Herald: ext. 118 Alpharetta-Roswell Herald: Alpharetta: Johns Creekext. Herald: 118, Roswell ext. 123ext. 122 Alpharetta: ext. 118, Roswell: ext.122 Dunwoody Milton Herald: Crier: ext. ext. 139 143 123 DunwoodyHerald: Crier: 143118 Forsyth Calendar: ext. ext. 122 ext. ForsythCreek Herald: Herald: ext. 118 ext. 123 Johns Johns Creek Herald: Milton Herald: ext.ext.123 139 TO SUBMIT EDITORIAL: Milton Herald: ext.139 Calendar: ext. 122 Calendar: ext.122 News/Press Releases: NorthFulton.com/Sponsored Calendar/Events: NorthFulton.com/Calendar TO SUBMIT EDITORIAL: TO SUBMIT EDITORIAL: News/Press Releases: NorthFulton.com/Sponsored ADVERTISING QUESTIONS: News / Press Releases: AppenMedia.com/Sponsored Calendar/Events: NorthFulton.com/Calendar Calendar /Advertising: Events: AppenMedia/Calendar ext. 100 General advertising@appenmediagroup.com ADVERTISING QUESTIONS: ADVERTISING QUESTIONS: ADVERTISING QUESTIONS: Classified Advertising: ext. 119 General Advertising: Advertising: ext. ext. 100 100 classifieds@appenmediagroup.com General General Advertising: ext.100 advertising@appenmediagroup.com ext. 100 advertising@appenmediagroup.com Circulation/Subscriptions/Delivery: advertising@appenmedia.com Classified Advertising: Advertising: ext. ext. 119 143 Classified circulation@appenmediagroup.com Classified Advertising: ext. 119 donna@appenmediagroup.com classifieds@appenmediagroup.com classifieds@appenmedia.com Circulation/Subscriptions/Delivery: ext. ext. 100 100 Circulation/Subscriptions/Delivery: Circulation / Subscriptions / Delivery: ext. 100 OUR PUBLICATIONS: circulation@appenmediagroup.com circulation@appenmediagroup.com circulation@appenmedia.com Alpharetta-Roswell Herald: 28,000 circulation Johns Creek Herald: 20,000 circulation OUR PUBLICATIONS: PUBLICATIONS: OUR PUBLICATIONS: Dunwoody Crier: 18,000 circulation Alpharetta-Roswell Herald: 28,000 circulation Alpharetta-Roswell Forsyth Herald: 17,000 Herald: circulation 28,000 circulation Alpharetta-Roswell Herald: 28,000 circulation Johns Creek Herald: 20,000 circulation Johns Milton Creek Herald: Herald: 10,000 20,000 circulation circulation Johns Creek Herald: 20,000 circulation Dunwoody Crier: 18,000 circulation Dunwoody Answer Book: Crier: 40,000 18,000 circulation circulation Dunwoody Crier: 18,000 circulation Forsyth Herald: 17,000 circulation Forsyth Herald: 17,000 circulation Forsyth 17,000 circulation Milton Herald: Herald: 10,000 circulation Milton Herald: 10,000 circulation Milton circulation AnswerHerald: Book:10,000 40,000 circulation Answer Book: 40,000 circulation Answer Book: 40,000 circulation 319 N. Main Street, Alpharetta, GA 30009 319 N. Main Street, Alpharetta, GA 30009 319 N. Main Street, Alpharetta, GA 30009
AppenMedia.com THECRIER.net THECRIER.net
Honored as as Honored a newspaper newspaper a of General General of Excellence Excellence
2018 THECRIER.net
Honored as 2018 a newspaper of General Excellence
2018
2018
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.
Disturbance at hotel ends in man’s arrest DUNWOODY, Ga. — Police arrested a 44-year-old man March 26 after he allegedly grabbed a woman by the shoulder and yelled at hotel staff and customers at the AC Hotel on Perimeter Center Place. The man was at the hotel’s bar and was yelling at staff and customers as police arrived. When an officer attempted to de-escalate the situation, the man threw his personal items down “in a violent manner” and continued to yell at police and other people. The man was drinking wine and told police he had “legal weed” on his person. Hotel staff told police the man did not have a room at the hotel. The man refused to leave the hotel again, and two officers grabbed him and handcuffed him. As they arrested him, police found containers of rolled cigarettes labeled “Delta 8” on the man. One of the cigarettes tested negative for marijuana. A woman on the scene saw the arrest and told police the man had followed her around the parking lot and yelled profanities at her as she walked her dog.
By REBECCA GRAPEVINE and ANDY MILLER Georgia Health News ATLANTA — The state insurance department has levied a $5 million fine against health insurer Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, the largest penalty in the agency’s history, for violations of state law
Ame r i c a’s Favor ite Tre asu re Hu nt s ! 740.569.2800
APRIL 7, 8, 9 & 10 A N T I QU E & D E S I G N E R I T E M S
Atlanta Expo Centers - Atlanta, GA Show Hours:
ONE coupon per person. Expires: 4-11-22
ing was $548. The suspect was transported to the DeKalb County Jail on charges of felony shoplifting, possession of a Schedule II drug, possession of marijuana and obstruction of law enforcement.
Police arrest man for drugs, shoplifting
DUNWOODY, Ga. — A 28-year-old man was arrested on suspicion that he fired a gun multiple times outside his apartment building on Dunwoody Crossing March 22. When police arrived, they met with the man’s roommate, who was “visibly shaken” and trying to leave the building. The roommate advised police that the man had just moved in with him that day, showed him a semi-automatic pistol and said he wanted to try it out. The roommate confirmed that the shots had been fired outside his apartment. Police found two 9mm shell casings in the area, consistent with where the roommate said the shots were fired. Police identified the man, who did not have the gun on him and denied any involvement in the incident. The man refused a search of his car, so police had the car towed while they filed for a search warrant. Based on the roommate’s statement and multiple 911 callers reporting the gunshots, police arrested the man and charged him with reckless conduct.
DUNWOODY, Ga. — Police arrested a 25-year-old man who is suspected of attempting to steal more than $500 worth of clothing from Macy’s in Perimeter Mall on March 25 after a foot chase. The reporting officer arrived as other officers chased the man up a stairway to a parking deck. The man threw a bag containing the clothing over the railing before police caught up and handcuffed him. When police placed him in a patrol car, the man complained of chest pains but repeatedly refused medical assistance. Police searched a backpack the man was wearing and found a gram of methamphetamine and just under a gram of marijuana. The man told police the items were not his. Police also found “wet wash cloths and various lighters” in the man’s backpack. A Macy’s employee showed police video footage of the man taking the clothing and putting it in the bag he threw from the stairwell. The total value of the cloth-
New apartment resident accused of firing pistol
State hits Anthem with whopping fine
SCOTT ANTIQUE MARKETS D 2ND WEEKEN H EVERY MONT
She told police that as she attempted to walk away, the man grabbed her by the shoulder. She said she wanted to press charges. Police transported the man to the DeKalb County Jail on charges of simple battery and disorderly conduct. He resisted corrections officers’ orders and yelled at jail staff during booking, according to the report.
Thurs. 10:45am-6pm Fri. & Sat. 9am-6pm Sun. 10am-4pm
Directions: 3 miles East of Atlanta Airport, I-285 at Exit 55 (3650 & 3850 Jonesboro Rd SE)
www.scottantiquemarkets.com
involving medical providers and consumers. Insurance Commissioner John King, at a March 29 news conference at the State Capitol, cited numerous complaints in taking the agency action. The Georgia Office of Insurance was “inundated with complaints about Anthem from individuals, from doctors, hospitals and others, from all corners and across Georgia,” King said. Among the problems cited was that Anthem’s directories listed some health care providers as being part of the insurer’s network when in fact they were not participating in those health plans. Such erroneous listings can mislead patients who pick a health plan based on whether a certain doctor or hospital is in that network. Philip Mattera, director of the Corporate Research Project at Good Jobs First, a corporate and government accountability organization, said that the $5 million fine is among the top 1 percent of state government penalties against insurance companies that his organiza-
tion has tracked. In February 2020, the state insurance department issued warning letters to five insurers, including Anthem, stating that the agency found providers listed as being in-network although they were not actually participating in those networks. The letters were obtained by GHN through an Open Records Request. In the Anthem case, providers said the insurer failed to pay them promptly, state officials said Tuesday. The company also negotiated contracts with medical practices and then failed to load those providers into its system, leaving patients and doctors out in the cold, King said. “There have been instances when doctors and hospitals had to lay off staff” due to Anthem payment delays, King said. An Anthem spokeswoman, Denise Ward, said that the company “¬strives to process and pay claims as quickly and efficiently as possible in accordance
See ANTHEM, Page 12
AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | April 7, 2022 | 3
Dunwoody Preservation Trust appoints new executive director
JEFFREY ALBERTSON/APPEN MEDIA
Former Dunwoody Police Officer Austin Handle speaks during the initial public comment portion of the Dunwoody City Council meeting March 28. “It’s time for the citizens and leaders of Dunwoody to take a stand,” Handle said. Austin and two other residents criticized city leadership for issues relating to Police Chief Billy Grogan and leadership in the Police Department.
Residents: Continued from Page 1 ask the City Manager Eric Linton and each council member to ensure that whistleblowers who did nothing more than protect the citizens of Dunwoody are given a fighting chance to keep their job,” Austin Handle, a former city police officer, said. Another speaker called for resignations. “If the current leadership cannot objectively and transparently address the problems going on in this department, it is time for them to gracefully resign and allow the City of Dunwoody to hire someone who is able to do that job effectively,” community activist Lydia Singleton-Wells said. The final speaker referenced a growing chorus calling for Chief Grogan’s resignation and that the City Council is not helpless. “I know it is our city Manager Eric Linton who has responsibility for hiring and firing, but if Eric Linton does not do his job, you should fire Eric Linton,” Joe Hirsch said. “As you know we are already approaching half a million dollars in personnel costs since the Fidel incident.” In regular business items on the council agenda, city officials unanimously approved a rezoning variance and two road construction projects. Each were discussed at the March 14 meeting. The rezoning variance will permit construction of a three-story, 60,000-squarefoot medical office building at 4553 North Shallowford Road. When completed, the space expects to have 68 parking spaces and 224 additional spaces in a parking
deck. The deck was a focus of concern at the prior council meeting given its proximity to an apartment complex. A condition was added to the approved plan for the developer, Breedlove Land Planning, to add screening within the parking deck to reduce headlight glare on the complex. Council members also approved a $1.9 million construction plan meant to improve the intersection of Chamblee Dunwoody and Womack Roads, near the Dunwoody Library. The plan will add a left turn lane on Womack Road and provide for a right turn lane in the future. The plan will add a decorative mast arm signal and widen the sidewalk from Manget Way to the intersection of Nerine Circle. A $62,000 project at Brook Run Park will add a sidewalk and staircase to add a second connection from a parking lot to the Great Lawn and Amphitheater. “Funding for this project will come from the Parks and Recreations Operations Budget,” a city memo dated March 28 said. Council discussion focused on conceptual designs for the Chamblee Dunwoody Road to Roberts Drive corridor, a contract for financial advisory services and a Trees Atlanta planting program. If approved, the city would allocate $10,000 to the Trees Atlanta Front Yard Tree Planting Program. Under the agreement, Trees Atlanta will plant 40 trees on private properties in Dunwoody between Oct. 1 and Dec. 31, 2022. That averages to about $250 per tree planting. “We decided on white oak, southern red oak, willow oak, Shumard oak, nuttall oak, maple, river birch, black gum and bald cypress (trees),” Dunwoody Director of Community Development Richard McLeod said.
DUNWOODY, Ga. —Dunwoody Preservation Trust directors have appointed Dunwoody native Noelle Ross as the organization’s new executive director. Ross brings a range of talents to the growing local non-profit. A graduate of the Marist School, she holds a bachelor’s degree in music from Oberlin College and is both a composer and classical singer who often performs with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Chorus. She also holds a master’s deROSS gree in music education from the University of London Institute of Education. For the past 16 years, she has held leadership and human resources management positions where she worked with adults and children as a trainer, teacher and director of children’s choral groups. Outside of music, Ross said she is most talented in team building. “DPT has a small paid staff and relies heavily on volunteers,” said David Long, board president. “We’re growing
and changing fast and felt that Noelle’s experience as a team builder in a variety of environments made her a great fit for this newly expanded position.” In her new role, Ross reports to the board of directors. In addition to managing the staff and leading the volunteers, she is tasked with executing the board’s vision, which includes expanding its services, growing its membership and building its donor and sponsor base. As a Dunwoody native, Ross is very familiar with DPT’s activities including Lemonade Days, its largest annual fundraiser and a Dunwoody signature event held in April. “My two daughters, ages 8 and 10, are excited by the prospect of attending all five days of Lemonade Days this year,” Ross said. “And I’m looking forward to helping move DPT into its newest phase and spread its recognition throughout the community.” Ross invites anyone interested in joining, sponsoring or volunteering with DPT to contact her at the office at (770) 668-0401 or noelle@dunwoodypt.org. — Sydney Dangremond
Pernoshal Park to host Optimism Walk for Parkinson’s patients DUNWOODY, Ga. — The American Parkinson’s Disease Association’s Georgia chapter will host its fifth annual Georgia Optimism Walk at Dunwoody’s Pernoshal Park April 23. The event is part of a nationwide series of optimism walks intended to mobilize and inspire people to step up and help end Parkinson’s disease. Around 21,000 Georgians live with the disease, with around a million patients throughout the U.S. The event will include a 1.8-mile walk, though participants don’t have to participate in the walk. It will also include educational opportunities, sponsor activities and music. Funds raised at the walk will help the American Parkinson’s Disease Association provide essential support groups and exercise classes designed for people with the disease, as well as educational
conferences. “Access to the right information and support is key to living your best life, and that’s true for the person living with PD as well as care partners, friends and family,” APDA Georgia chapter President Paul Demick said. “APDA is the largest grassroots network serving people with PD and their families. The more funds we raise at each Optimism Walk, the more people we can help every day.” National corporate sponsors for the event include Amneal Pharmaceuticals and Avion Pharmaceuticals. Local sponsors include Paul Black Elder Law, Holbrook Senior Living, Paul Springs Senior Living and others. Those interested can register for the walk at apdaparkinson.org/GA or call 404-325-2020. — Jake Drukman
twitter.com/appenmedia
4 | April 7, 2022 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody
Atlanta Community Food Bank gives $455,000 to nonprofits
NEW BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT
Business Name: Sankranti Restaurant Owner: Bharat Vadlapatla Description: Sankranti is a harvest festival celebrated across India. And like many Indian celebrations, it is centered around food, family and prosperous abundance. We strive to bring the culture and abundance of Indian hospitality and celebration to each and every one of our guests, and share a true festival of food! Opened: March 2022 Phone: 470-622-7778 Address: 237 Perimeter Center Pkwy, Dunwoody, GA 30346, USA Suite #H-56 Website: https: sankranti.com/
GARAGE SALES See more garage sales in the classifieds
ALPHARETTA: 239 Woodliff Ct.; 4/8 & 4/9 - 8am-1pm. Large Moving Sale Furniture, household items, quality clothing and much more.
DEADLINE
To place garage sale ads: Noon Friday. Call 770-442-3278 or email classifieds@appenmedia.com
Your Dunwoody Neighbor & Trusted Real Estate Advisor Nicole McAluney REALTOR®
c: 678.427.8697 | o: 770.284.9900 NICOLEM@ANSLEYATLANTA.COM
7 7 0 . 2 8 4 . 9 9 0 0 | 8 0 0 0 AVA L O N B O U L E VA R D, S U I T E 2 2 0 | A L P HA R E T TA , G E O R G IA 3 0 0 0 9 Equal Housing Opportunity | Rhonda Haran, Managing Broker. All information believed accurate but not guaranteed
“My goal is to get my sellers the most equity out of their home and secure the best deal for my buyers via my expertise, network and the Ansley Advantage!”
ATLANTA — Atlanta Community Food Bank announced March 28 that it has given a total of $455,000 across more than 90 individual grants to Metro Atlanta food banks and pantries. Each grant is worth $5,000, and recipients span 21 Metro Atlanta and North Georgia counties including Fulton, DeKalb and Forsyth. Some recipients include St. Patrick’s Episcopal Church in Dunwoody, The Place of Forsyth County and YMCA of Metro Atlanta. The funds are intended to go toward crucial equipment needs to support food storage and distribution, such as fridges and freezers. Atlanta Community Food Bank has seen an increased need for food assistance as rent and the cost of living have increased on the heels of the pandemic. “We couldn’t fulfill our mission without our nonprofit partner agencies,” Atlanta Community Food Bank CEO Kyle Waide said. “Our partners are invaluable in our work to get desperately needed food to the roughly 715,000 Georgia neighbors who need assistance, and these grants will help increase their capacity to help.” The food bank estimates that nearly one in eight Georgians and one in seven children is food insecure in its service area. Recipients of the $5,000 grant include faith-based organizations, community and mobile food pantries, homeless shelters, veteran support organizations and community kitchens. Urban Recipe, a food co-op based in Fulton County, was another recipient. “This grant provides our organization
URBAN RECIPE/PROVIDED
Fulton County-based food co-op Urban Recipe works to distribute food. It is one of 90 organizations to receive a $5,000 grant from Atlanta Community Food Bank to purchase crucial equipment.
with the tools necessary to build resilient and responsive co-ops and create more opportunities for our co-ops to sustain, grow and empower the communities they support,” Urban Recipe Executive Director Jeremy Lewis said. — Jake Drukman
OPINION
AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | April 7, 2022 | 5
PAST TENSE
50 years ago-Doraville refinery fire, Part 2 Fifty years have passed since the Doraville Triangle Refinery fire. In the last Past Tense, I shared how an overfilled tank reached the pilot light of a Doral Circle home causing an exploVALERIE sion. The explosion BIGGERSTAFF followed a ruptured line back to the refinery, igniting three storage tanks. (Atlanta Constitution, April 7, 1972, “Killer gasoline fire rages into 2nd day”) Many people remember vividly April 6, 1972, and the days that followed. The explosion shook nearby homes, including that of Hoss Warbington. He could see the flames from his home 1 mile from the fire. Some people experienced being knocked out of their beds from the explosion. Braves pitcher Pat Jarvis was awakened that morning by his sister-in-law calling to say flames were in her back yard. He started driving to her house. When it was announced on radio that people were being evacuated, Jarvis started knocking on doors and helping people get out. (Atlanta Constitution, April 7, 1972, “Jarvis strikes out to awake, evacuate”) Bonnie Smith Nichols could see the fire and smoke from her family’s home at the corner of Vermack Road and Chamblee Dunwoody Road, known today as Donaldson-Bannister Farm. Gail Ferrell could see the fire from her home, the caretaker’s cottage at Murphey Candler
Park. Kathie Maybury Copeland and her family were evacuated from their Winters Chapel Road home. Jeff Glaze lived where Winters Chapel Road and Peeler Road come together, about 3 miles from the fire, and could see the thick smoke. Students on a bus on I-285, returning from a Chamblee High School boys baseball game, saw the fire, including Jill Harwood Gonyea and Charlie Bryant. Gonyea recalls, “The sky was ablaze, and we could feel the heat from it as we drove past.” Tony Martin, a Chamblee High School coach, lived about a mile from the refinery. Flames and smoke were visible from his home. Alan Wilson was attending Henderson High School in 1972 and had just started a new job at the Embry Hills Winn Dixie on Chamblee Tucker Road near I-285. Wilson recalls seeing flames from the grocery store. Memories of the fire come from people living all around Chamblee and other nearby communities. It was visible from local schools including Montgomery Elementary School and Nancy Creek Elementary. Former students saw smoke from the windows of their schools. Vivian Price Saffold recalls “hearing the forceful and amazingly calm fire chief reassure a roomful of terrified citizens” and “standing by an exhausted and tearful mayor.” The mayor of Doraville was Jesse Norman and Saffold covered the story for the DeKalb News/Sun. A list of assisting fire departments was printed in a Triangle Refineries full page ad in the June 1972 edition of the DeKalb New Era. They included nearby
FROM BOB KELLEY’S “IMAGES OF AMERICA: DORAVILLE,” ORIGINALLY TAKEN BY DEKALB FIRE AND RESCUE.
Firefighters battle the Doraville refinery fire that began on April 6, 1972. Fulton and Cobb County and 23 other Georgia fire departments. New York Fire Department of Brookside and the Holt Fire Department of Michigan also came to the aid of Doraville. Twelve days after the fire, Doraville citizens gathered at City Hall to hear what caused the fire and what measures were being implemented to prevent future fires. DeKalb County Fire Marshall Eugene Guerry said human error was
behind the overfilled tank. Measures proposed to prevent future fires included 24-hour supervision of the tanks, automatic cutoffs to prevent overfill and holding ponds beneath the tanks. (Atlanta Constitution, April 19, 1972, “Human Error Blamed for Doraville Tank Fire”) You can email Valerie at pasttensega@gmail.com or visit her website at pasttensega.com.
Resident earns Eagle Scout title DUNWOODY, Ga. — Local Chamblee High School senior Joseph “Jojo” Trent has earned the rank of Eagle Scout after years as a Boy Scout. Trent began his scouting career as a Bear with All Saints Pack 434 and graduated to Boy Scout Troop 434. He earned 47 merit badges and has worked as a staff member at National Youth Leadership Training. Trent also earned the Ad Altare Dei religious emblem through the National Catholic Committee on Scouting. For his Eagle Scout service project, Trent built a garden bed and two picnic tables in the courtyard of Kittredge Magnet School. — Jake Drukman
Your Home is Our Business Who You Choose to Sell Your Home Matters Contact Us for the Best Real Estate Experience in North Atlanta
KarenCannon.com 770.352.9659 info@karencannon.com TRENT
Dunwoody Crier 4/7/22 Crossword
PuzzleJunct
6 | April 7, 2022 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody
PET OF THE WEEK
Dave WESLEYAN MARIST SUTTON BLACK PEACHTREE CORNERS ST. PIUS X NAVY WOODWARD RED BLESSED TRINITY HOLY INNOCENTS' DUNWOODY RED WESTMINSTER 8
9-1 7-2 9-3 7-5 6-6 4-5 4-8 3-6 3-9 1-9
LAKESIDE GOLD CHAMBLEE BULLS GAC BLACK PACE RIDGEVIEW SANDY SPRINGS HOWARD GOLD HO
8-3-1 7-3-2 6-4-1 5-5 6-6 4-7-1 2-9-1
LIONS BLUE SUTTON GOLD WAR HAWKS WESTMINSTER 7 ST. PIUS X GOLD DUNWOODY BLUE WOODWARD BLACK WOOD NORCROSS 7 BLESSED TRINITY 7
9-0 10-1-1 8-1-1 5-4 5-6-1 5-6-1 4-5 4-6-1 4-8
ST. MARTIN’S DAVIS GALLOWAY LIONS WHITE NYO CARDINALS NYO GUARDIANS NYO CUBS CHAMBLEE DOGS EPSTEIN NYO PIRATES NYO ATHLETICS NYO BRAVES
8-0-1 7-2 6-2-1 7-3 5-3-2 5-6 3-6-1 4-8 3-7 2-7-1 1-9 0-9
ATLANTA CLASSICAL ACAD. DUNWOODY WHITE HERITAGE PREP DSB ASTROS HOLY SPIRIT CHAMBLEE HOUNDS BRAVES DSB BR SANDY SPRINGS 2 TOCO HILLS ATLANTA JEWISH ACAD. ST. JUDE CMCH
10-2 9-2-1 6-2 8-3-1 5-3 5-5-1 4-6 4-8 2-5-1 3-7 3-9 0-5
For the latest standings, visit DunwoodySeniorBaseball.com. Dunwoody Senior Baseball, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, operates baseball leagues and programs at the Brook Run Park Baseball Fields. (4635 Barclay Drive, Dunwoody, Dunwood GA 30338).
Snuggly Dave (ID# 45904855) wants to be your new best friend. Dave is loved by many at the shelter. He is an affectionate 7-yearold who loves to be petted and will lean into your legs for additional full body rubs. He’s a sweetie. Dave sits nicely for treats and loves long leisurely strolls where he can sniff around and enjoy the fresh air. Come meet Dave today. Don’t work from home alone; expand your family by 4 furry little feet, meet Dave and have a loving friend forever. All adoptions include spay/ neuter, vaccinations and microchip. If you would like more information about Dave please email adoption@dekalbanimalservices.com or call (404) 294-2165; all potential adopters will be screened to ensure Dave goes to a good home. How to Adopt your new best friend. 1. Browse our pets. Use the filter options to narrow your search. 2. Click the pet’s profile. 3. Click on the “Adopt Me” button to submit an adoption inquiry. To help us maintain a safe environment, we ask that you follow the directions above to submit an adoption inquiry prior to visiting our shelter. We are following COVID-19 CDC guidelines by requiring masks and limiting the number of guests in our shelters at a time. We appreciate your patience with this new process and your commitment to saving our homeless animals.
Across 1 5 8 13 14 15 16 18 19 20 21 22 24 26 29 31 33 34 36 37 38 39 40 42 43 45 46 47 48 50 52 54 58 60 62 63
1
2
3
4
13
5 14
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
15
Resting place Legal org. 18 16 17 Bud holders 20 21 19 At the Races 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 painter Milk giver 29 30 31 32 33 Sidestep 34 35 36 37 Exactly alike Salami choice 39 40 41 38 After Bronze or 43 44 45 42 space Profess 46 47 48 49 Pub game piece 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 Not as much Come to pass 58 59 60 61 62 Woolen caps 65 66 63 64 Party thrower Pinch 68 69 67 Nutritional 71 72 70 figure (Abbr.) Restrain Copyright ©2022 PuzzleJunction.com Inactive 7 Hole-making 35 Orange relative Guanabara Bay 65 Palpitated tool 67 Postal scale 36 Cretan peak city 8 Star in Lyra unit 38 Auction cries Sword 9 Stave off 68 Stately tree 39 Downwind Bustle 10 Monterey Bay 69 Chilean range 41 Supreme Diana Main impact town 70 Look of disdain 44 Field measure Charge carrier 11 Old Tokyo 71 Buddhist sect 48 Season Big bash 12 Expanse 72 Ottoman 49 Sports figure, Seep 13 Radio feature Empire VIPs briefly Griffon, e.g. 17 Folk singer Burl 51 Charleston, e.g. Duffer’s dream 21 Bargain Down 53 Outlaw Starr Vipers 23 Tool building 55 Late Scurried 25 Nullify 56 Foil relatives 1 Marsh plant Prove to be 27 Penobscot 57 Joins 2 S shaped false moldings locale 59 Swerve Hasenpfeffer, 3 Devotee 28 Token taker 61 Poke holes in e.g. 4 Nick and 30 Greek Z 63 Plea at sea Talk wildly 32 Jazz genre Nora’s pet 64 Barbarian JFK postings 5 Highlight 34 Single-masted 65 Tasseled cap Jungle denizen vessel 66 Compass pt. 6 Swine Gleam SOLUTION, Page 17
Spruill: Continued from Page 1 from the Stage Door Theatre, dressed in flamboyant and glitzy costumes, mingled throughout the party. Saxe said the 35-year tradition had always been a formal affair, including a seated dinner followed by dancing. However, when Alan Mothner was named CEO in 2020, he sought to alter the event’s tune. “He pitched this idea to the guild ladies, who are the ones who have normally done the formal deal, and we all went
for it. And this has been fun…I think it’s fabulous,” Saxe said. Ken Horvath, director of the ceramics department, said Spruill is trying to generate more buzz and activity around the center to foster support for expansion of the education center. Eight more studios are planned, and increasing public engagement will help with the organization’s bid for city partnership to bring their vision into fruition. “I really believe that it is important Solution on to get the community into the building, to see what’s going on here…having the Artistic Affair here this year allows more people to come in to see what we do and see what we need,” Horvath said.
Based on an informal poll, the casual tone for the Artistic Affair seems to have struck a chord with attendees. When Mothner spoke to the crowd seated under a large tent in the courtyard, he asked, “Should we do this event again?” His question was met with instant applause. Painter and instructor Diana Toma commented that the casual event seems welcoming to the artistic scene. “[Artists] next page like to get down and be more casual; I think this addresses the artsy community,” Toma said. Organizers said the Artistic Affair raised $80,000, including $10,000 for youth scholarships.
OPINION
AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | April 7, 2022 | 7
THE INK PENN
Celebrate Spring with Dunwoody Garden Club After a year’s hiatus, the Dunwoody Garden Club will once again host their Annual Card Party on April 26, 2022, from 10:00 am - 2:00 pm at Dunwoody Methodist Church FellowKATHY ship Hall. MANOS PENN What can you expect at the party? You’ll find tables set up for bridge or your game of choice, a luncheon, a silent auction, and a fashion show by Chico’s at Northpoint. You’re sure to recognize some of your friends and neighbors decked out for the fashion show: Pam Tallmadge, Cathy Cobbs, Carolyn Daniels, Eleanor Barber, Meredy Shortal, and last but not least me! Several businesses have stepped up to sponsor the event. The platinum sponsor is MetroDerm Center for Plastic Surgery, and the gold sponsor is Dermatology Specialist of Georgia. The City of Dunwoody is the silver sponsor and is joined by Face Haven as the bronze sponsor. The silent auction includes ‘must have’ plants, plus plenty of generous gift certificates from salons, spas, restaurants, and other local establishments. In addition to gift certificates from Budi’s Sushi, Café Intermezzo, and Capital Grille, you’ll also be able to bid on hair, nail, and spa packages from businesses like Bernadettes, Woodhouse Day Spa, and Angela Michael Skincare & Spa. And it doesn’t stop there. Look for a member knitted baby sweater, gardening paraphernalia, household items, autographed books from local authors, artwork from local artists, fine jewelry items, and much, much more! You might have expected the group to slow down their community projects because they were forced to cancel their 2021 fundraiser, but they didn’t let that hiccup get in their way. Instead, they embarked on more community outreach programs such as conducting a November food drive for the Community Action Center (CAC) and making/donating holiday decorations in December and Valentine flower arrangements in February. Members also donated $1000 for scholarships to worthy Georgia Students
and are collecting new clothing and toiletry items for The Georgia Regional Hospital and the VA Hospital. They are never short of ideas and are also collecting aluminum can tabs for the Ronald McDonald House, wine corks to be recycled, and just recently restaurantwrapped take-out utensils that will be used by an organization that feeds the homeless. And let’s not forget their primary function—beautifying our community. The Dunwoody Garden Club has four major Dig in the Dirt projects. Since 2013, this small but mighty group of 45 volunteers has maintained the flower beds at the entrance to Brook Run Park. When you see colorful seasonal flowers, it is because they devote two ‘all hands on deck days’ a year to pruning and changing out flower beds. They also partnered with the Friends of the Library to beautify the library entrance landscaping, and now they maintain this area, changing out the annuals in the spring and fall to add seasonal color. Additionally, they installed and continue to maintain the tropical plants in the library’s atrium. In 2018, they took on the beautification of Windwood Hollow Park—located just off Peeler Road. They planted hundreds of daffodil bulbs for a colorful spring showing and have also installed perennials around the park sign. Look for the tiny free library maintained by one of the members. Ticket Information • Tickets are $30 • The cutoff date is April 17 • For ticket information and an order form, visit the website – dunwoodygardenclub.com. • Mail the Ticket Order Form & Check to Dunwoody Garden Club, 4983 Lakeland Woods Court • Contact Bonnie Barton with questions - bonniebarton@bellsouth.net or 770-639-3510 Order your tickets now for this festive event. You won’t want to miss it. Award-winning author Kathy Manos Penn is a Sandy Springs resident. Find her cozy mysteries locally at The Enchanted Forest and on Amazon. Contact her at inkpenn119@gmail.com, and follow her on Facebook, www.facebook. com/KathyManosPennAuthor/.
DUNWOODY GARDEN CLUB/PROVIDED
Dunwoody Garden Club members beautify not only local parks but also their homes.
THE ROBIN BLASS GROUP SAME TEAM SAME SERVICE 404-495-8233 Robin.Blass@HarryNorman.com Lauren.Blass@HarryNorman.com ROBINBLASS.COM
twitter.com/appenmedia Harry Norman, REALTORS Atlanta Perimeter Office | 4848 Ashford Dunwoody Road, Atlanta, GA 30338 | 770-394-2131 Office
8 | Dunwoody Crier | April 7, 2022
Sponsored Section
Can the pace of home remodeling continue? Brought to you by - Remodeling Expo Center Throughout 2021 home remodeling seemed virtually unaffected by the Covid pandemic. Home sales continue to be robust, but the pace of home remodeling is even greater. New home buyers tend to remodel as soon as they move into their new home, but the remodeling craze seems to apply to everyone. “Our Kitchen and Bathroom remodeling business has experienced a 75% year over year increase” says John Hogan, president of Remodeling Expo Center, “and we don’t see any slowdown in sight”. There’s been a rapid change to supply chains in our entire economy and while some businesses are suffering, others are prospering. Demand for products and services are at record levels and businesses are required to re-think their supply chain from end to end; those businesses that creatively maneuver around the supply chain is-
PROVIDED
sues are prospering. “Last year we re-focused all of our purchasing to those suppliers with local inventory, so we get instant access to products, then we diverted custom built products to smaller, more nimble suppliers, and finally we began to inventory some items so our remodeling jobs could get started faster and eliminate job progress interruptions. These changes weren’t easy but without them we couldn’t be in the hyper-growth mode that we’re presently experiencing, says Bobbie Kohm, Vice President of Remodeling Expo Center, “Turnkey Design-Build companies, like us, keep the process very simple”. Low interest rates are going to be around for a long time and investment in our homes is likely to continue. For more information on Remodeling Expo Center (RemodelingExpo.com), contact them at their showroom at 48 King Street in Roswell or at 404-910-3969.
REAL ESTATE REPORT • Sponsored Section
AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | April 7, 2022 | 9
The Kroupa Team,
Alpharetta and Milton Real Estate Specialists Brought to you by - Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Georgia Properties Todd Kroupa and The Kroupa Team are one of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Georgia Properties’ top selling teams. Whether buying or selling a home or property, Todd Kroupa and The Kroupa Team ensure the highest level of professionalism and real estate expertise available in Alpharetta, Milton, and north metro Atlanta. Todd is passionate about his clients’ goals and aims to treat each client as if they were his only one. He and his team are experts in the local real estate market and utilize the latest technologies and marketing techniques to bring buyers and sellers together. He is committed to providing excellent customer service and building longterm relationships. Todd is a Chairman’s Circle Platinum Realtor and in the top 1% of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices agents globally. He is an Atlanta Realtor’s Association Top Producer and a BHHS designated Luxury Collection Specialist. As a licensed real estate broker in both Georgia and Florida that has record-setting home sale prices and over $200 million in recent real estate transactions, you are assured to be working with one of the industry’s top professionals. With his extensive professional and personal experience in real estate, he is the number one choice to help you buy or sell anywhere in Georgia. Todd first established himself 18 years ago among the real estate market of South Florida where he specialized in selling farms and luxury estates. He and his wife Abigail were owners and managers of a real estate office located in Wellington, Florida. Within three years, they grew their office to be one of the highest producing offices in Palm Beach County and were home to over 250 real estate professionals. Six years ago, they fell in love with the Atlanta area and made the exciting decision to sell their Florida office and move their family and business to the North Metro Atlanta region. Over the years, they have helped thousands of clients and have developed core values that drive their business. Integrity - A promise to always keep the needs of their clients at the forefront of their business and put their best interests at heart. Commitment - Fully committed to providing exceptional customer service and meeting the real estate needs of their clients. Passion - Passionate about their business and building positive long-term relationships with clients. Todd and his wife Abigail are avid equestrians and farm owners. On their days off they enjoy spending time on their equestrian property with their horses and children. Abigail is the marketing specialist and transaction coordinator for The Kroupa Team. She is also a professional dressage rider and is the current Vice President of The Georgia Dressage and Combined Training Association. For help with any of your real estate needs, call 770.910.4860 or visit ToddKroupa.com.
Todd and Abi Kroupa with their dressage mare Felicity.
PROVIDED
10 | April 7, 2022 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody
REAL ESTATE REPORT • Sponsored Section
The best time for new beginnings is now. Forever moving you. “A home is one of the most important assets that most people will ever buy. Homes are also where memories are made and you want to work with someone you can trust.” WARREN BUFFETT, CHAIRMAN | BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY INC.
www.BHHSGeorgia.com ©2022 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of Columbia Insurance Company, a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate. Equal Housing Opportunity.®
REAL ESTATE REPORT • Sponsored Section
AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | April 7, 2022 | 11
REAL ESTATE DEFINED F E ATU RED LISTIN GS
4175 MERRITT DR
CUMMING, GA 30041 | $1,799,900 Jodi Mekyten | 770.393.3200
4861 HIDDEN BRANCHES DR
ATLANTA, GA 30350 | $1,125,000 Carol Johnson | 404.697.1400
1077 OAKLAND TRACE
2300 PEACHFORD RD, UNIT 2201
154 ALEXANDER LAKES DR
DULUTH, GA 30096 | $899,000 Casey McGuirt | 678.602.2504
U
N
D
E
R
C
O
N
T
R
C
ATLANTA, GA 30319 | $715,000 Lindsay Levin | 404.667.3232
T
U
6190 BLACKWATER TRAIL
SANDY SPRINGS, GA 30328 | $1,050,000 Jodi Halpert | 404.513.5151
N
1510 MISTY OAKS DR
SANDY SPRINGS, GA 30328 | $1,250,000 Jodi Mekyten | 770.393.3200
3712 HOWELL WOOD TRAIL
A
630 GLENAIRY DR
DUNWOODY, GA 30338 | $1,500,000 Kerry Arias | 770.605.7545
D
E
R
C
O
N
T
R
A
C
ATLANTA, GA 30338 | $475,000 Jodi Halpert | 404.513.5151
T
U
4512 CHARDONNAY CT
DUNWOODY, GA 30338 | $925,000 Jodi Halpert | 404.513.5151
SALLY MOORE Senior Vice President | Managing Broker
D. 404.401.0493 | O. 770.393.3200 Sally.Moore@BHHSGeorgia.com
N
D
E
R
C
O
N
T
R
A
C
EATONTON, GA 31024 | $450,000 Amy Ilardi | 678.886.9761
T
U
6643 STERLING DR
SANDY SPRINGS, GA 30328 | $800,000 Lyssa Pietro | 770.366.7119
N
D
E
R
C
O
N
T
R
A
C
T
4801 SUMMERSET LANE ATLANTA, GA 30338 | $725,000 Alicia Lee | 770.827.9300
Local Experts.Outstanding Results. Dunwoody Office | 770.393.3200 5481 Chamblee Dunwoody Road | Dunwoody, GA 30338
BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES GEORGIA PROPERTIES ©2022 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of Columbia Insurance Company, a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate. Information deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Equal Housing Opportunity.
12 | April 7, 2022 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody
REAL ESTATE REPORT • Sponsored Section
Lemonade Days coming up! Brought to you by - Dan Griffin, Compass Realty Join Compass at The Lemonade Days Festival at Brook Run Park April 20-24. We will be hosting a booth offering special prizes and games for children and adults. The Lemonade Days Festival is the largest family event in Dunwoody each year. There are rides for the kids, food, and entertainment. Admission is free! This event is sponsored by The Dunwoody Preservation GRIFFIN Trust, a non-profit organization fostering preservation, education and community events. Compass will be giving away Apple iPad and The Big Green Egg grill. We also have a special gift for all who visit our booth. Bring your questions about the current Dunwoody real estate market. We will also provide on-the-spot home values through a computer program provided by the National Association of Realtors. We look forward to seeing you! Dan Griffin, Realtor/Associate Broker Compass, Inc. Scott Einfeldt, Realtor/Associate Broker Compass, Inc.
Anthem: Continued from Page 2 with provider agreements and applicable state laws and regulations.” She said the Georgia Office of Insurance focused on a provider database system implemented nearly seven years ago that is no longer in use. “As the department is aware, we worked diligently to address these challenges,” Ward said. “We have since migrated to a new platform with the goal of improving accuracy and transparency.” The investigation found around 78,000 separate violations, state officials said. They involve Medicare, employer health plans, and state insurance exchange plans. Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield is the state’s largest health insurer, with more than 2.5 million policyholders.
“A clear pattern has emerged,” King said. “As I traveled across Georgia, this became a running theme.” The consent decree also requires Anthem to take corrective actions to prevent future violations and respond to complaints in a timely manner. “We will hold insurers accountable when their actions are unfairly impacting Georgians,” King said. The $5 million will go to the state’s general fund, said King, a Republican. King has held the state insurance post as an appointee since 2019, due to the previously elected commissioner’s arrest and subsequent conviction on fraud charges. King is running for election to the post. Sabrina Corlette, a research professor at the Center on Health Insurance Reforms at Georgetown University, said that many problems identified in the Georgia investigation “result in the consumer holding the bag financially –
there’s nothing in there to make them whole.” “This is the insurance department doing its job,” said Corlette of the state fines. “It looks like [Anthem] has some work to do in terms of cleaning up its act.” Earlier this month, Anthem announced that it is changing its name to Elevance Health. Some state legislators stood behind King and said that they had heard similar complaints from their constituents. Laura Colbert, executive director of advocacy group Georgians for a Healthy Future, praised the state action. “For our health care system to work as intended, patients, providers, and insurance companies each have to hold up their respective ends of the bargain,” Colbert said. “When Georgians paid their health insurance premiums each month, they did their part. Blue Cross Blue Shield failed to do the same when they were slow to address members’ com-
plaints and made it difficult for members to access health care by sharing inaccurate information about which doctors were in-network.” Meanwhile, Anthem is still locked in a contract dispute with the Atlantabased Northside Hospital system. A Fulton County judge has extended a reprieve in the dispute between Northside Hospital and Anthem until April 15, delaying for a second time the need for thousands of patients to switch doctors. Northside patients who have Anthem insurance have been caught in the middle of the battle between the insurer and the hospital system for months. King said that as a Georgia consumer, he is concerned about the contract standoff, but added that his department does not have the authority to force a resolution. This article was first published on georgiahealthnews.com
AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | April 7, 2022 | 13
TIP YOUR NEWSPAPER DELIVERY PERSON With gas prices at all time highs, it has become more and more expensive for Appen Media to deliver your newspaper. We have always home delivered your newspaper for free, every week, and we intend to keep it that way. That said, it would mean the world to us if you would tip your newspaper delivery person so that they will have a little extra gas money to help with the increased expense. If you can help us help these amazing people, we promise to keep delivering high quality news to your driveway, for free, every week. Free home delivery of 93,000 homes is hard work – and we couldn’t do it without our amazing delivery folks.
How you can help:
We have set up an online depository for all contributions at www.appenmedia.com/deliverytip. 100% of every dollar you contribute will be spread out evenly between the 24 newspaper delivery people Appen Media employs. Whether you give $5 or $50, they will greatly appreciate it. If you prefer, you can also mail a check made out to “Appen Media Group C/O Newspaper Delivery Tip” to 319 North Main Street, Alpharetta, GA 30009.
14 | April 7, 2022 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody
REAL ESTATE REPORT SERVICES • Sponsored Section RELIGIOUS
eа r AT D U N W O O DY B A P T I S T C H U R C H
EASTER SUNDAY, APRIL 17
AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | April 7, 2022 | 15
JOURNEY THROUGH JERUSALEM SUNDAY, APRIL 10 | 2-6PM A 30-minute immersive experience for families. Registration required.
EASTER EGG HUNT SATURDAY, APRIL 16 | 11AM For kids in Pre-K - 5th Grade
Celebrate the Good News that Jesus is alive!
MAUNDY THURSDAY SERVICE THURSDAY, APRIL 14 | 7PM
7AM | SUNRISE BAPTISM SERVICE
A communion service to remember Jesus’ last meal.
Sports Center Parking Lot
8:30AM | TRADITIONAL SERVICE in the Chapel
11AM | MODERN SERVICE in the Worship Center
1445 M T. VER N ON R D | D UN WOODY, GA 30338
GOOD FRIDAY PRAYER EXPERIENCE FRIDAY, APRIL 15 | 7AM-7PM A self-guided prayer experience focused on Jesus’ suffering and crucifixion.
Scan for more information.
16 | April 7, 2022 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody
Expo touts Johns Creek as wedding destination By SYDNEY DANGREMOND sydney@appenmedia.com JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — Autrey Mill Nature Preserve bustled with brides, grooms and their wedding entourages March 26 for the Johns Creek Wedding Expo. The all-day event was a joint venture between the Convention and Visitors Bureau, the nature preserve and the city. Nearly 100 visitors wandered the Autrey Mill grounds for the third-ever expo to make preparations for their weddings. Scattered between the Summerour House and the Pole Barn, 18 metro-Atlanta-based vendors were on hand to speak with guests and each other, CVB Executive Director Stacey Gross said. “Each [vendor] said the event was a success for them, not only in the brides they spoke to, but also the connections and networking done amongst vendors,” Gross said. The event also showcased Autrey Mill as a wedding venue, and Johns Creek as an ideal location for nuptial events, Gross said. “The staff and board of Autrey Mill jumped at the opportunity to showcase their beautiful park that many consider a ‘hidden gem’ in Johns Creek,” Gross said. “The passion the Autrey Mill Nature Preserve board and staff have for their park is infectious, and it carried over into the preparation for the wedding expo.” Four main areas of the park were highlighted for weddings and similar events, including the Summerour House, the Pole Barn, the outdoor amphitheater and the chapel. “Each of these spaces allows for a couple to decorate as much or as little as they prefer and be surrounded by the beauty of the outdoors,” Gross said. Autrey Mill also allows brides and grooms to make use of the animals on site for their ceremonies, Gross said. One of the seven weddings Autrey Mill plans to host in the coming months will feature the preserve’s tortoise Pebbles as a ring
The staff and board of Autrey Mill jumped at the opportunity to showcase their beautiful park that many consider a ‘hidden gem’ in Johns Creek.” STACEY GROSS CVB Executive Director bearer. In preparation for the expo, Autrey Mill board members, staff, volunteers and city parks staff worked with the CVB to contact vendors, create graphics for promotion and prepare the grounds to be showcased, Gross said. Bride-to-be Ashlyn Mahar and her mother drove from Canton for the expo after seeing an ad for the event online. Mahar said she hoped to use the expo as a fact-finding mission, learning about different vendors and what they had to offer. “So, I don’t know too much about weddings, I haven’t been to too many, so it’s kind of exciting to see different vendors and what everyone offers because everyone is a little bit different,” Mahar said. Vendors included Johns Creek’s Rosa Mia, Cumming-based J & J Jazzy Jewels, the Hyatt Place hotel, Anna Christine Bridal and Sittin’ Pretty Photobooth. While Gross didn’t want to predict the future, she considered the Saturday expo to be a “great success” and said she could see another Wedding Expo entered on the Convention and Visitor’s Bureau 2023 calendar.
PHOTOS BY SYDNEY DANGREMOND/APPEN MEDIA
Autrey Mill Nature Preserve hosted the Johns Creek Wedding Expo March 26. Vendors were set up in the Summerour house and the pole barn for brides and grooms to peruse.
Sittin’ Pretty Photobooth set up in front of the Summerour House at Autrey Mill Nature Preserve for the Johns Creek Wedding Expo Saturday March 26.
Is Your Company Hiring? Submit your opening at appenmedia.com/hire
AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | April 7, 2022 | 17
In Memoriam
CLASSIFIED LINE AD RATES
Janet Poelker
Janet Poelker (78), a longtime Dunwoody resident, died peacefully March 25 from lung cancer. A native of St. Louis, Janet was the fourth of six children born to Adolph and Bertha McKeon Jacobsmeyer. She graduated from Beaumont High School in 1961, and worked at Standard Oil and Anheuser Busch in St. Louis. Janet married John Poelker, her high school sweetheart, in 1967. Together they raised three children. As a stay-at-home mom, Janet was intimately involved in every aspect of their formative years, including athletic pursuits; guiding them through their educations; teaching them to be kind and considerate to others; and working countless hours at their schools in a myriad of team mom and social coordinator roles. Janet and John moved to Atlanta from St. Louis in 1978 when John was recruited by (the former) C&S Bank. With a passion for gardening and working in the yard, Janet became a certified Master Gardener through Purdue University. She had a keen eye for design, not only in landscaping, but also home
interiors, furniture, and everything in between. Chairs were something Janet would set out to find, knowing someone in the family would have a need. Always ready with a smile, a story and a hug, Janet warmed the hearts of anyone and everyone who knew her. Preceded in death by her sisters Mary Ann Shillito, Judy Hennessey, and Lynn Jacobsmeyer, Janet is survived by her husband John, children Kathryn (Kate) Roark (Scott), John Poelker, and Mark Poelker (Bekki); grandchildren, Stella, Tess, and Charlie Roark; Hailey, William, and Audrey Poelker; and Norah Poelker; brothers Adolph and Steve Jacobsmeyer; and twenty-five nieces and nephews. A Celebration of Life Service is being planned. Contributions to the John H. and Ruth Poelker Scholarship at the University of Notre Dame, benefitting students from St. Louis, will be welcomed C/O the University of Notre Dame, Department of Development, 1100 Grace Hall, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556. Or online at https://giving.nd.edu/.
Call 770-442-3278 Flooring
MARTINEZ MASONRY
Professional Ceramic & Natural Stone Tile installations. Shower pans, leak repairs and new installations. Complete kitchen & bathroom remodeling. Basements finished.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED No money down; free estimates. References cheerfully given. 404-219-1923 Masonry
QUALITY BRICK, STONE, TILE, CONCRETE, DECKS, PARKING LOT SEALCOATING & STRIPING WORK & More... Over 25 years experience. 404-458-0060 Home Improvement
ROT-DOC
Rot Repair Technician
T N E M E C N U O N N A N A HAVE TO SHARE? Run it in the newspaper! WEDDINGS ENGAGEMENTS ANNIVERSARIES BIRTHS DEATHS To submit your announcement visit
appenmedia.com/submit
Concrete/Asphalt
Don’t waste good paint on rotten wood. Minor repairs make a major difference! Interior/Exterior Painting Pressure Washing Rotten Wood Deck Repair Free Estimates
Thurman | 770.899.1354 | www.rot-doc.com Real Estate OLDER ADULT with an extra room? Want help with expenses/ household chores? Homeshare ATL matches homeowners with mature adults seeking affordable housing. One adult must be 60+. All applicants fully screened. Must be vaccinated. Free. No personal care. jfcsatl.org/homeshareatl 770-677-9435 Moving Alpharetta 4/8 & 4/9 - 8am-1pm Large Moving Sale Furniture, household items, quality clothing and much more. 239 Woodliff Ct
Retaining Walls • Patios• Repairs
Walkways • Masonry Work
martinezmasonry281@yahoo.com
404-408-4170
Ask for Tony Martinez Concrete/Asphalt
Landscaping
Retaining Walls
Full Service LANDSCAPING Company
Brick or Wood
Contact Ralph Rucker. Many local references. Honest, punctual, professional and reasonable prices!
678-898-7237
Capable of doing your job – grading, hauling and tree service.
Ralph Rucker
678-898-7237
Part-time & Full-time
POOL TECHNICIANS WANTED Part-time & Full-time positions available. Pay is $12-$14 per hour. Hours starting at 6:30AM, Monday-Friday. Pick-up truck not required but must have your own reliable transportation. Gas allowance provided. Looking for people who enjoy working outside and are enthusiastic, dependable & punctual. Able to contribute independently or on a crew with consistently friendly attitude. Well-established commercial pool maintenance company providing service in the North Atlanta Metro area.
Call Bill: 404-245-9396
18 | April 7, 2022 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody
CLASSIFIED LINE AD RATES Call 770-442-3278
Concrete/Asphalt
A – 1 DRIVEWAY REPLACEMENT COMPANY
Specializing in DRIVEWAY REPLACEMENT
Part-time
SIDEWALKS, PATIOS, AND SLABS
Director of Open Arms Special Needs Ministry Alpharetta Presbyterian Church has an opportunity for a compassionate and energetic individual who enjoys working with special needs children, youth, and adults to direct our Open Arms ministry. Responsibilities • Lead the Promise Class (where our special needs community congregates) during Sunday morning services in worship through music, Bible lessons, crafts, and other activities. • Supervise, work with, and coordinate volunteers and staff. • Direct quarterly respite events at the church. • Work alongside the Open Arms committee and Associate Pastor to identify opportunities to sustain and grow this ministry. Hours vary but average six per week, with 3–4 hours every Sunday morning. Compensation is up to $18/hour plus 3 Sundays (weeks) of paid vacation per year. Requirements • Annual Background Check and Child Safety Training • Current American Heart Association (AHA) or American Red Cross (ARC) CPR training/certification for infants, children, and adults (or complete within 3 months of hire) • Proof of vaccination against COVID-19, since you will be working with a vulnerable population. • Degree in Special Education and experience managing staff preferred. • Age 21 years or older. Interested? Send us a letter telling us why, along with your resume: jobs@alpharettapres.com To learn more about Alpharetta Presbyterian Church, please visit us in person or at https://alpharettapres.com/.
Newspaper Delivery Routes Open We have several delivery routes open in the Alpharetta-Roswell / North Fulton area. The work is once a week and requires the following: Reliable transportation, very clean driving record (we do a record check), and professional work ethic. We prefer the ideal person to have experience delivering newspapers but that is not an absolute requirement. The delivery route is to every home in the subdivision - and is NOT subscriber based. The route can be done on your schedule - within our specific 2-3 day window - depending on which paper you deliver. We pay for all your gas, provide bags, and pay you as an independent contractor on a per home delivered basis. Call our office at 770-442-3278 to request an application. The typical route pays approximately $140 plus gas per week and takes about 4-5 hours to deliver.
Since 1974 Insured – Free Estimates
David Scott 770-493-6222 ALEX FRASER MASONRY INC. • BRICK • CONCRETE
• BLOCK • STONEWORK
Alex Fraser, President www.alexfrasermasonry.com E-Mail: afrasermasonry@aol.com Driveway
FULLY INSURED Tel: (770) 664-2294 Cell: (404) 281-0539 Garage Doors
Hauling
Dunwoody Door Lift Co.
$250 OFF NEW DRIVEWAY!
Mention this ad. Concrete driveway specialists. Driveways, Pool Decks, Patios, Walkways, Slabs. A+ BBB rating. FREE ESTIMATE. Call Rachael at 678-250-4546 to schedule a FREE Estimate. 30 years of experience. ARBOR HILLS CONSTRUCTION INC. Please note we do have a minimum charge on accepted jobs of $4,500.
The ONLY garage door company in Dunwoody!
Bush Hogging, Clearing, Grading, Hauling, Etc.
We sell, install and repair garage doors and openers. Authorized Genie Dealer serving Dunwoody since 1973.
770-393-1652
Many local references-
Call Ralph Rucker
If you can’t lift your door, let Dunwoody Door Lift it!
678-898-7237
Electricians
Belco Electric
“Family Owned Since 1972” Fast Dependable Service by Professional Uniformed Electricians
770-455-4556
Check out our new website: BelcoInc.com and follow us on:
Painters Licensed
Insured
Full Service Exterior Specialists ROOFING • SIDING CARPENTRY • GUTTERS www.PaintingPlus.com www.SidingPlus.com
770-971-1577
AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | April 7, 2022 | 19
Pressure Washing
Quality Without Compromise
ROBERT CROAWELL REMODELING Full Service Contractor
Additions • Kitchens • Basements • Bathrooms Interior/Exterior Paint • Minor Repairs • Licensed Insured
Office: 770-814-0064 Cell: 678-642-8314 Recovery
Consulting
ADDICTION RECOVERY CONFIDENTIAL
Convert your Digital Art To NFT. Ink Consulting BC: inkconsultingbc@gmail.com. Free Consultation!
It’s Time!
Trucks
warrioraddictionrecovery.com
678-310-8960 Tree Services
Handyman
Neumann’s Landscape & Tree Service: Joe Neumann 770-452-1173 or 404-644-7179.
Matthew the Handyman Carpentry, painting, drywall, plumbing. Electrical and small jobs. 404-547-2079
The Herald and Crier
FORD F-150 2004. 129,250 miles. Extended cab. Excellent condition. Asking $8500. 678-358-6413
newspapers
and thousands more online!
Miscellaneous
Budget Fabrics And Upholstery *DISCOUNT PRICES*
-FREE Design Consultation• Thousands of designer 770-396-6891 fabrics IN STOCK 770-396-6824 Mon-Fri 8-6 • Sat 8-3
AwArd winning LAndscApes
20 years of Keeping Dunwoody Green
Ogletree Enterprises
a MALTA Award Winning Firm Ken Ogletree
770.840.8884 Licensed • Insured • References
MY EXPERIENCE ACHIEVES OPTIMAL RESULTS!!!
reach 93,000 homes
Landscaping
Installation Maintenance Seasonal Color
CELEBRATING MY 41ST YEAR! THANK YOU TO ALL OF YOU!
Roofing
Pressure Washing
PRESSURE WASHING
ROOF LEAKING?
Residential & Commercial. Best service and most reasonable prices since 1999. Appen-Rated 99. Home: Driveways, Fences, Decks, Home exteriors, more. Commercial: Offices, Restaurants, Tennis Courts, Pools, Apt. Complexes, more. All Pro Pressurewash call 770-766-5566 for Mark.
Call us for roof repair or roof replacement. FREE quotes. $200 OFF Leak Repairs or 10% off New Roof. Affordable, quality roofing. Based in Roswell. Serving North Atlanta since 1983. Call to schedule FREE Quote: 770-284-3123. Christian Brothers Roofing
Tree Services
Roofing
ROOF TROUBLE? Call for FREE Quote $500 OFF* New Roof Purchase
Findlay Roofing 770-744-5700 “Appen-Rated 99”
*Cannot combine with any other discount
Roofing KETNER
DANGEROUS REMOVALS & TRIMMING FREE ESTIMATES INSURED & REFERENCES CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED NO JOB TOO BIG OR SMALL 20% OFF WITH THIS AD! griffintreeservices.com
404-234-4810
Send us your ...
Letters to the Editor Birth and Bridal Announcements Obituaries appenmedia.com/submit
CONTRACTING
* Re-Roofs, * Repairs & Painting. * * Lic/Ins. * Exc Refs. * Free Est. * 25+ Years Experience Neil Ketner 770-318-7762
20 | April 7, 2022 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody