Free clinic opens in Forsyth County
Organization converts healthcare landscape
By AMBER PERRY amber@appenmedia.com
CUMMING, Ga. — The first patient at the Forsyth Community Clinic last October came in looking for an eye exam. She got something else.
Staff couldn’t provide the exam but convinced her to stay to be processed as a new patient. When she was taken through a preliminary health screening, they found she was on the verge of a medical emergency.
Her blood pressure levels were through the roof, and they rushed her to the emergency room to receive care.
“It was less about that immediate need and just treating her as a human being and being there with her,” said Evan Shoemake, executive director of the Forsyth Community Clinic (FCC).
The first of its kind in Forsyth County, the clinic provides no-cost, non-emergent healthcare to Forsyth County residents ages 18 to 65. Those who qualify for services are uninsured and sit below 200 percent of the federal poverty level.
The clinic currently sets up shop at The Place, a nonprofit social services organization, and has serviced around five
patients so far.
Patients can receive a number of services, including basic diagnosis and treatment for hypertension, diabetes and cholesterol, eyes, ears and nose exams,
heart and lung exams, Body Mass Index screening, urinalysis and Patient Health Questionnaire depression screenings.
See CLINIC, Page 7
Cold weather wreaks havoc on water lines, local roadways
By DELANEY TARR and ALEX POPP
delaney@appenmedia.com alex@appenmedia.com
METRO ATLANTA — Georgia’s single-digit lows on Christmas weekend left many residents scrambling to stay warm and protect their plumbing while fire departments and hardware stores were overwhelmed with high demand.
In Roswell, the Fire Department received hundreds of calls during the cold snap, nearly five times as many as usual. On Christmas day alone, the department responded to 142 calls.
Roswell Fire Public Information Officer Chad Miller said he was shocked to learn many residents didn’t know to turn off their main water line when dealing with possible frozen pipes. He also said some of people’s solutions to the freezing temperatures were even more dangerous.
Miller said a structure fire
January 5, 2023 | AppenMedia .c om | An Appen Media Group Publication | 50¢ | Volume 26, No. 1 Call For A FREE Roof Analysis – 770.744.5700 Ceiling Spots • Rotting • Blistering • Buckling Spots ROOF TROUBLE? Top Rated Appen Rated BBB Angie’s List Roof Repair and Replacement $500 OFF* New Roof Purchase Cannot combine with any other offer or discount. Valid GA only. Present coupon AFTER getting quote. *Offer expires 10 days after publication 99 facebook.com/ForsythHerald WANT MORE? FOLLOW US ON
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The Forsyth Community Clinic medical staff collaborate with one another on the clinic’s opening day Oct. 29 at The Place.
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Alpharetta man killed in Forsyth County wreck
By ALEXANDER POPP alex@appenmedia.com
FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. — Forsyth County authorities said a 30-year-old Alpharetta man was killed after a headon collision in Forsyth County Dec. 24. Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office deputies responded to the area of River Club
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Cumming man arrested following high-speed chase
FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. —Forsyth County Sheriff’s deputies arrested a 22-year-old Cumming man who was reportedly clocked at 144 miles per hour in a chase with authorities on Ga. 400.
Sheriff’s Office incident reports said the chase started at about 1 a.m. Dec. 17, when a white sports car was seen traveling at high speeds with its high beams active in the area of Sanders Road in Forsyth County.
When deputies activated their patrol vehicle lights, the car allegedly accelerated away at more than 100 miles per hour and entered Ga. 400 southbound with multiple deputies in pursuit at different points along the highway.
The report said the vehicle was clocked traveling at 144 miles per hour at one point during the chase, which continued for several miles on Ga. 400.
Eventually deputies were able to spike the suspect vehicle’s wheels before it left the highway onto McFarland Parkway and the suspect vehicle was stopped with a PIT maneuver at Tidwell Drive.
The driver said he “blanked out” while
Drive and Riverhill Court in the Chattahoochee River Club Subdivision at about 11 p.m. after responding to reports of a single vehicle crash.
A preliminary investigation has determined that the driver of a 2016 Chevy Silverado had just entered the subdivision and was traveling on River Club Drive when he failed to negotiate
driving away and had “freaked out” seeing cops behind him.
The man was charged with felony fleeing, speeding, reckless driving and failure to dim lights. He was transported to the Forsyth County Jail, where he is being held under a $8,000 bond as of press time.
Austell man arrested for making death threat
FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. — Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office deputies have arrested a 27-year-old Austell man for allegedly threatening to kill a family member via text message in December.
Incident reports said a Forsyth County woman began receiving text messages from her brother Dec. 4, which stated he would kill her unless she sent him money.
The woman said the messages made her fear for her life and her family’s safety, and the entire family had blocked the suspect’s number to prevent further threatening messages.
Deputies arrested the man Dec. 8 for felony terroristic threats and battery and transported him to the Forsyth County Jail. Bail was set at $17,860.
Inmate charged in attack at Forsyth County Jail
FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. — An inmate at the Forsyth County Jail has been charged with battery for allegedly attacking another inmate, during an incident Dec. 20.
a curve in the road and crashed into a tree.
The driver, James Allen, was pronounced dead at the scene. A passenger of the vehicle was transported to a local hospital with serious injuries, Public Information Officer Stacie Miller said.
Miller said the circumstances of the wreck are under investigation.
Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office incident reports said the attack occurred at 1:15 p.m. in a housing unit of the jail, when one inmate accidentally spilled coffee on the floor, angering another inmate.
The attacker, a 27-year-old man from Austell, allegedly approached the victim from behind and struck him in the face. Reports said the incident was captured on security camera.
The suspect was charged with misdemeanor battery in addition to terroristic threat charges he was already facing.
Woman avoids scam involving jailed ‘son’
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — A woman told Johns Creek Police Dec. 15 that she answered a call from a person who said he was her son.
The caller stated he was in jail on a DUI charge and that he broke his nose, to explain why he didn’t sound like her son. He told the woman his attorney would contact her to explain how to pay his bond to get out of jail. No city jail was named, the police report said.
The woman told police she did receive a call from someone claiming to be her son’s lawyer and convinced her to start getting $28,000 for his bond.
The woman said her real son reached out to her while she was trying to get the money to pay the bond, so she realized she was being scammed.
The woman didn’t lose any money but had concerns about having given the caller her home address.
2 | January 5, 2023 | Forsyth Herald | AppenMedia.com/Forsyth PUBLIC
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Pryor reflects on years of county park development
By ALEXANDER POPP alex@appenmedia.com
FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. — For more than 26 years, Jim Pryor’s life has been almost exclusively about parks and recreation.
“I was Doogie Howser,” Pryor said. “I became a director at age 30 and I’ve been in three different locations. But this was the ultimate parks and recreation director job that I wanted.”
And as Forsyth County’s Parks and Recreation Director, Pryor has spent the last eight years spearheading countless projects and initiatives that he thinks will be enjoyed by county residents for decades to come.
But all that is about to change, when Pryor steps down from his position for a private sector job this month.
Pryor said that what he and his staff have been able to accomplish over the last decade has been nothing less than incredible, with more than $100 million in projects completed from the 2016 Forsyth County Parks Comprehensive Plan. That’s not something you find everywhere, he said.
“This is the third place I’ve been a director, and I had the opportunity to do a comprehensive plan at each one,” he said. “Most of them in 10 years, I would get maybe two projects done,” he said. “So, we finished a lot of our projects on the list and taken on a few more.”
With the comprehensive plan, Pryor said they were able to lay the foundations for what Forsyth County would need as it grew and changed, using input from community members and guidance from the County Parks and Recreation Board.
One of the most important parts of the plan, and possibly the department’s biggest accomplishment, he said, was “banking” land for future park use, like when the county held onto a large tract of land in south
Forsyth County, which will one day become Denmark Park.
“I’ve said it over and over again, especially when the commissioners were thinking about selling it,” he said. “Denmark Park is going to be Fowler Park one day … It’s going to be a big boost to our community, because of where it’s located and the growth that’s happening down here”
Even now, they are still hunting for land like the future Denmark Park site, in north and east Forsyth, which will be particularly needed when the Coal Mountain area is developed in the future and demand outweighs the capacity of their current parks.
“That’s why I did the 20-year layout of what the county is going to look like with five or 600,000 people,” he said. “So, I know where to go to get those big tracts of land right now”
With the growth Forsyth County has experienced, Pryor said they’ve also had to account for changes in what county residents need and want
from the park system, while remaining flexible for trends that might arise.
Some things, like multi-use trails, baseball and soccer fields, and tennis courts will always be in demand in any park system, he said. But who could have ever anticipated recreation trends like pickleball, which has become increasingly popular.
When trends pop up, the Parks Department has the flexibility try them out before committing to them fully. And with the growing demand for pickleball courts, he said they’ve even started to design them into parks.
“Pickleball is the newest wave of the fastest growing sport,” he said. “It’s gonna stay forever because it’s really attracted a lot of tennis players that can’t cover as much ground.”
Some things, like spaces for equestrians, ice hockey, golf, and aquatic centers, they’ve decided to leave to the private sector. It’s not because the park system couldn’t handle it and there isn’t demand for it, but because it’s not who they are.
“When you’re in public recreation, you’ve got to figure out what business you want to be in and what business you don’t want to be in,” he said. “We can’t be everything to everybody. So, lets pick what business we want to be
in and do it really well.”
Forsyth County continues work on filling and repairing gaps in the Big Creek Greenway, a 12-foot-wide nature path that consistently ranks among the most popular recreation amenities for residents. The Greenway currently runs uninterrupted from Roswell’s Big Creek Park north to Alpharetta’s Union Hill Park. Forsyth County plans to link its portion of the Greenway the final 1 mile south to Alpharetta after work is completed on the McGinnis Ferry Road widening project in the coming year or so.
Meanwhile, the county is repairing older wooden portions of its own Greenway trail, and in the past two years has opened new strips.
Pryor said he thinks the Forsyth County Park System is one of the best in the nation. But all of their successes go back to the plan county officials were wise enough to develop in 2016 and the hard work of department staff that made it a reality.
“The hardest part about leaving is leaving the actual parks and recreation team,” he said. “Even though I’ve taken a new job, I’m still gonna be living here in the county … I’ll probably out at Lanierland Park playing pickleball.”
AppenMedia.com/Forsyth | Forsyth Herald | January 5, 2023 | 3 NEWS 678-208-0774
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For the past eight years, Jim Pryor has guided the development of Forsyth County’s Parks and Recreation Department, spearheading countless projects and initiatives that he says will be enjoyed by county residents for decades to come.
Cadillac Jack: My Second Act
Sept. 29 - Even the bathrooms are bigger in Texas.
Bring in the dancing hooves, it’s the 300th episode of Cadillac Jack: My Second Act.
Do you need another reason to believe how much smarter and more refined women are than men? We’ll give you one —urinal troughs. Caddy and Donna kick us off with a little potty talk and what it means when someone walks in on you. With or without the trough.
We’ve seen the future, and it’s Harry Styles. Harry is pioneering a new way of touring and we think it’ll change the game. Find out why, and why that means that us in the major metros will be the ones hitting the road.
Music is now our PRIMARY category in Apple Podcasts, so we basically spend the entire second half of the show talking tunes. Winona, setlists and, yes, more Harry Styles.
Then a bit of housekeeping. We find out what Door 14 is, where Crossfit Chris is and how to handle a lesson in Disney kindness. All that and more on Show 300.
June 9 - How to tie a knot at the end of a rope
Top podcasts this year
Stretch your imagination for this fiery episode of the My Second Act podcast. Unfortunately for Cadillac Jack, it did NOT earn a triple E rating.
First we talk about
The Top 10 Ways to Catch Your Spouse Cheating (and the best way to get away clean). Then on an entirely unrelated note, lets just say that Donna has a thing for badges. So much so that she’s hunting for an investigation at the Alpharetta police station- or is it City Hall? Then we move on to SNL, Kim Kardashian and the real definition of BDE.
And to fulfill our designation as a semimusic podcast we take a step back in time to November 2020, to hear about the wink and why Donna was the only one who caught it. Turns out Joanna Cotten gave the show a little more of a hint than anyone realized. Tune in and hear just exactly how she slipped in the names, and clues, for an Eric Church triple album.
The Georgia Politics Podcast
Dec. 19 – 2022 Year-in-Review
And that’s a wrap, folks! On The Georgia
Politics Podcast today, the panel gets together one last time in 2022 to recount the year’s biggest story lines.
From Dobbs to midterms and Gov. Kemp and Sec. Raffesnperger, relive some of the biggest moments from 2022 and the lessons learned along the way. Is money out of control in politics? If people don’t think it is, we’re not sure when they’ll ever change their minds. The red wave didn’t happen, but was it really just a matter of bad expectations setting?
As you might imagine, there are some differing opinions on how important some of these story lines really were, or why they were important, but everyone agrees that we had plenty to talk about on The Georgia Politics Podcast and that will no doubt remain the same in 2023. Thanks everyone for another great year, and we look forward to returning to your podcast feeds in 2023 for Season 4 and our legislative preview.
Nov. 14 – Politics for Dummies – 7th Grade Civics
On The Georgia Politics Podcast today, we kick off a special series called “Politics for Dummies,” where we dive into common misconceptions or questions about how politics works in Georgia and across the country.
Craig welcomes in cohost Daelen Lowry to help kick off the series and is joined by friends of Daelen, Kenlee and Elizabeth. Together, they present questions to Craig and Daelen about politics that they think will be useful to listeners to have answered. The goal is keep the series non-partisan, informational and useful to listeners.
Topics include the structure of Georgia’s state government, the difference between primary and general elections, how to find out if you are registered to vote and what candidates will appear on your ballot, and more generally how to become a more informed and involved citizen in our electoral process.
Like what you’re listening to? Leave us a review in the Apple Podcast store or wherever you listen to podcasts. It helps us spread the word about the show and makes it easier for other people to find it.
Cadillac Jack: My Second Act and The Georgia Politics Podcast are part of the Appen Podcast Network. Listen for free at appenmedia.com/podcasts or wherever you get your shows.
4 | January 5, 2023 | Forsyth Herald | AppenMedia.com/Forsyth COMMUNITY
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Podcasting was alive and well this year at Appen Media. Here are some featured episodes from 2022
Chapter 1030 President Gary Goyette, left, presents the Member of the Year award to David Burns at the group’s annual holiday party on Dec. 6.
Burns named Member of Year for Cumming Vietnam Veterans
CUMMING, Ga. — David Burns of Cumming, a Marine Corps veteran of the Vietnam War, has been selected as Member of the Year for Cumming Chapter 1030 of the Vietnam Veterans of America.
The award was presented at the organization’s annual holiday party and awards ceremony Dec. 6 at the Cumming Recreation Center.
The selection is made by Chapter President Gary Goyette who said Burns’ work on behalf of the membership as secretary and his efforts to revitalize the chapter website made the choice elementary.
“As the official record keeper of our
organization, Dave Burns has not only kept accurate minutes of our meetings but also communicated information important to our membership in a concise and timely fashion,” Goyette said. “In addition, he has given our website a fresh look while keeping the information interesting and up to date.”
In all, about a dozen other members were recognized for their contributions to Chapter 1030 during the 2022 program year.
For more information about the chapter and its activities, visit: vva1030-cumming. com.
Forsyth Chamber plans MLK Week of Service
FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. — This year, instead of taking a day off for the annual Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, Forsyth County Chamber of Commerce officials are urging local businesses and residents to engage with a week-long service initiative in the community.
From Friday, Jan. 13 to Thursday, Jan. 19, Forsyth County residents and businesses can participate in the annual OneForsyth MLK Week of Service, completing service projects and homebased family projects to support local non-profit groups.
“The MLK Week of Service is an opportunity for residents in Forsyth County to donate their time, treasure and talent to support the organizations that serve our community,” OneForsyth Councilman Alex Holloman III said. “Making time to volunteer, individually, as a family or as a group of colleagues, during the MLK Week of Service, is a great way to engage with your community while honoring the legacy of Dr. King and furthering his dream of the ‘Beloved Community.’”
In addition to the volunteer opportunities and service projects, participants will learn more about Martin Luther King, Jr. and his legacy of service during the week. The week of service will culminate with a celebration event at the Forsyth County YMCA, 6050 Y Street in Cumming, on Jan. 19 from 1 to 3 p.m.
“All volunteers and community members are invited to attend and cheer-on the volunteers wrapping-up this week of giving back to Forsyth County,” Forsyth County Chamber officials said.
Details about the service opportunities and resources can be found at OneForsyth.org/mlk. Interested volunteers can register to participate in local service projects and even log their volunteer hours for work spent on projects not listed as an official MLK Week of Service project.
For more information on this initiative, visit www.oneforsyth.org/ mlk or e-mail the Chamber’s Vice President of Community Development, Laura Stewart, at lstewart@focochamber.org.
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started after a resident tried to heat a frozen pipe outside over a direct flame, accidentally catching their house on fire. He cautioned people against heating frozen pipes with direct flame, and said the safer method is letting warm air circulate and slowly defrost ice.
He said he hopes that people will take fire safety measures in the future to reduce a need for emergency fire responses, since the department is overwhelmed with seasonal calls.
Alpharetta, Roswell and other city officials took to social media Dec. 26, urging residents not to call the city’s emergency 911 center about burst pipes.
“Due to frigid and fluctuating temperatures over the weekend, water pipes have been bursting all around the city overwhelming the 911 system with calls for service,” Alpharetta officials said. “As we always strive to provide the highest level of service to our community, we encourage everyone who experiences a burst or leaking water pipe to first shut off the main water to their property and call
a plumber, your landlord or property manager first and NOT to call 911.”
Local plumbers were also overwhelmed— one Sandy Springs plumber announced that “due to extreme weather conditions, we’re experiencing an unusually high volume of calls.”
The calls were largely responding to water line breaks and leaks caused by frozen pipes. If the water inside of the running pipe freezes, the pressure can cause cracks and leaks in pipes, which can eventually lead to severe water damage.
It wasn’t just residential water lines affected by the cold.
Shoppers were evacuated from the Peachtree Dunwoody Road Home Depot store in Sandy Springs Dec. 26 after several pipes at the store’s entrance burst, spraying a deluge of water into the store and parking lot.
After customers were allowed back into the store about an hour later, an employee said the store had sold its entire stock of space heaters by Saturday, Dec. 24.
The Dunwoody Village Parkway Ace Hardware also saw an influx of customers. One employee said they “100 percent sold out of space heaters” and many customers bought ice melts for their frozen sidewalks.
Two Fulton County libraries are shut down until further notice due to water damage. The Milton Library and Ocee Library in Johns Creek experienced water damage to carpets, floors, and some shelves and books due to frozen pipes. There are emergency teams working on the libraries, but the Fulton County Library System does not have a reopening date.
Multiple water line breakages caused road closures in Johns Creek and Dunwoody.
On Dec. 25, part of Haynes Bridge Road in Johns Creek was closed due to a large water main break between Haynesbrook Layne and Alvin Road. The road reopened on Dec. 27 after repairs were completed.
Late into the night of Dec. 28, Dunwoody officials announced the DeKalb County Watershed Department sent out crews to fix an 8-inch water main break at 1224 Hammond Drive. After a night with little to no water pressure, repairs wrapped up early Dec. 29.
On open roads, drivers faced possible black ice, a thin coating of ice on the roads difficult to see. On Dec. 27 the Atlanta-Fulton County Emergency Management Agency reported black ice patches on less traveled roads.
Much of north Forsyth County was under a water boil advisory starting on Christmas Day, due to a frozen valve at a service pump station which caused a loss in water pressure for many homes north of Ga. 369.
Officials said the frozen valve was quickly found and fixed, and no break in the Forsyth County system was detected, but the boil advisory was kept in effect until Dec. 28.
Fulton County was not under a water boil advisory, despite social media posts suggesting otherwise. The county put out multiple statements clarifying there was no advisory for the area.
At the same time, while parts of DeKalb County were under a boil water advisory, Dunwoody officials clarified the city was not.
Sawnee EMC reported Dec. 25 that its electrical system was “stressed to its fullest extent” due to power consumption and the freezing temperatures.
In Sandy Springs, the city announced some residents on Dec. 23 were likely waking up to power outages but did not say how many people were impacted. Statewide reports showed thousands of people were left without power.
6 | January 5, 2023 | Forsyth Herald | AppenMedia.com/Forsyth NEWS
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“There’s a lot of follow-up at free clinics that I don’t think exist in regular health care,” Shoemake said.
Free healthcare
There’s often a misperception of free clinics, Shoemake said, that they only treat addicts, people with mental health issues or undocumented workers. He described two conferences with the Georgia Charitable Care Network, in which people spoke passionately about the spectrum of patients who receive services at free clinics.
“... ‘Our patients are real people. I don’t care … what boxes they check on the form. They’re just people who need help, and we’re here to help them,’” Shoemake recalled from the conference.
Shoemake, himself, earned a master’s degree and was a full-time freelance writer before his new position and didn’t care about health insurance until he needed it. With two back-toback medical emergencies, he used a free clinic.
“It just made such a difference to know that there’s somewhere I can go and not go broke,” Shoemake said.
Forsyth County is fortunate enough to have many people with higher income levels who can afford health insurance, FCC Board Chair Kristine Walden said, but the area also has a significant population of people who cannot afford basic health insurance.
“We wanted to provide a way for them to receive primary health care, for adults in need, to help either prevent illness or prevent an existing medical condition from becoming worse,” Walden said. “So many of us are only one unfortunate incident away from losing our health insurance, or no longer being able to afford it.”
Clinic days
The first clinic day took over The Place’s conference room, equipped with a large roster of volunteers and new software and computers. Patients could talk to a pharmacist and a physician assistant on screens. Nurses had their own office cubicles to allow for private treatment. Reception sat in the middle, acting as a pivot point for patients.
“...[T]o see all of them just step in on a Saturday morning at eight o’clock with no idea of what we were doing and just make it work — I was so impressed,” Shoemake said. “They smiled, they were happy and loved the
process.”
Because The Place’s donations were overflowing, stacked to the ceiling in the conference room, the second clinic day in November was in the main lobby. While The Place has little free space, the clinic’s board of directors made sure the clinic was as private and comfortable as possible.
“Everybody on the board has said that we want people to feel they’re going to a medical office that looks good and professional — not your grandmother’s closet or something,” Shoemake said.
Big plans are in store for the operation, though. By late January, the clinic should have its own spot, Shoemake said. But as of now, clinic days are scheduled for the last three Saturdays in January at The Place.
Labor of love
The Forsyth Community Clinic was inspired by an idea of pharmacist and former Board Chair Carrie Hamilton, who went on a mission to Haiti and saw the amount of good that could be done in a short time with people who were excited to serve others. Knowing neighboring counties had free clinics that were exclusive to residents, Hamilton and a few others gathered in 2018 to form the FCC Board.
The group lost a year and half due to COVID but had monthly Zoom meetings to continue preparation. They set themselves up as a nonprofit organization, forming bylaws and articles of incorporation, developed a strategic plan and figured out how to begin clinic operations, like obtaining volunteer medical professionals.
Luckily, Georgia offers Sovereign Immunity for medical volunteers when they donate their time and their skills to a free clinic, Walden said. The Georgia Volunteer Health Care program of the state’s Department of Public Health also grants continuing education credits to volunteers, which benefits medical professionals whose practices require licensing.
The board also had to hunt available grants. One paid for Shoemake’s position. They also hold fundraising efforts. The FCC recently launched its first fundraising campaign called “1K are A-Okay.”
The fundraiser, intended to track the first 1,000 patients treated at the clinic, declares the first 100 people to donate $1,000 to be part of the Founders Club. Shoemake said the cost to treat each patient is around $100, versus thousands spent in the emergency room.
“So, a $1,000 donation means, instantly, that 10 people are on a pathway to receiving health care and just a better overall quality of life,” Shoemake said.
AppenMedia.com/Forsyth | Forsyth Herald | January 5, 2023 | 7 NEWS CDAR Member SWIFT Code: GMCBUS3A Please Contact Us For More Information 770-455-4989. www.metrocitybank.com SBA Preferred Lender • CDARS Member Headquarters | 5114 Buford Highway, Doraville, GA 30340 13 MONTH CD 4.00% APY* Metro City Bank is a wholly owned subsidiary of MetroCity Bankshares, Inc, (Nasdaq: MCBS). *APY = Annual Percentage Yield. *The rate is effective as of November 21, 2022 and subject to change without notice. • Minimum $1,000 to open. • A penalty may be imposed for early withdrawal before maturity. • The rates are not offered in Opelika and Montgomery Branches. SBA Loans (Small Business Administration Loans) 770-455-4985 Residential Mortgage Loans Jimmy Song (NMLS#1218336) 770-454-1871 (Duluth Branch) Sandy Na (NMLS#983548) 770-454-1861 (Norcross Branch) Trinh Pham (NMLS#1369150) 678-672-3926 (Norcross Branch) Continued
Clinic:
also
access
of free referrals for additional
and
health services
from Page 1
Patients
have
to a network
medical, dental
behavioral
and receive follow-up services.
EVAN SHOEMAKE/PROVIDED
The Forsyth Community Clinic medical staff collaborate with one another on the clinic’s opening day Oct. 29 at The Place.
Animal hospital treats patients as individuals
By AMBER PERRY amber@appenmedia.com
DUNWOODY, Ga. — In April, Riva Wolkow took ownership of the veterinarian clinic in Dunwoody Plaza off Dunwoody Village Parkway. The old sign from when the space was corporately owned still hangs on the brick front, and another hides beneath the new Village Animal Hospital name.
The slightly wrinkled banner with large, purple bubbly letters is characteristic of the culture — down to earth and friendly — the kind of culture where humans can expect their beloved companion to be treated with compassion.
There’s a vast difference between corporate and independently owned vet practices, said Wolkow, wearing scrubs with a slicked back ponytail ready for the day ahead. Her focus is clients, patients and patient care.
“We can treat each client, each patient as individuals,” she said. “To me, I want them to be more like family as opposed to numbers.”
Wolkow splits her time between Village and Belle Isle Animal Hospital in Sandy Springs, which she opened in 2011, to make herself present and to ensure that the culture of each practice is consistent with her values. A Dunwoody resident, Wolkow’s dream was opening a clinic in her city.
Owning a vet clinic means Wolkow can do what she thinks is best. She isn’t told how to practice medicine and what meds to use. Corporations have a bad habit of pushing products onto owners, she said.
8 | Forsyth Herald | January 5, 2023
AMBER PERRY/APPEN MEDIA
See
Riva Wolkow, veterinarian and owner of Village Animal Hospital in Dunwoody, stands in the hospital’s lobby Dec. 29. Wolkow opened Village Animal Hospital in April. She also owns Belle Isle Animal Hospital in Sandy Springs, which she opened in 2011.
HOSPITAL Page 9
I’m only going to offer you what I would do for my own pet.
RIVA WOLKOW, veterinarian, owner of Village Animal Hospital
BUSINESSPOSTS
Hospital:
“I’m only going to offer you what I would do for my own pet,” Wolkow said.
At its 8 a.m. opening, reception was already busy. Like a mother to her baby, a vet tech used high-pitched speech to coddle a frightened pup on its way to the scale. The office manager, Linda Israel, sought feedback from Wolkow on patients before she stepped into her personal office space, which had a blue, padded dog mat on the floor, hair still clinging to it.
On Thursday, Dec. 29 Wolkow’s dogs weren’t around but they usually are, along with those of fellow veterinarian Ashlyn Roberts. Melanie Lucero, who was absent that day, is Village’s third vet and Wolkow’s former classmate at the University of Georgia’s vet school. There’s also five vet techs on staff.
“The staff here is awesome,” Wolkow said. “Every one of us has stayed late to do an emergency surgery.”
The lobby of Village Animal Hospital is spacious with deep purple walls. The contemporary color palette is incorporated through its three, small exam rooms, which are decorated with animal portraits. Wolkow described a renovation on the horizon — to take away from the oversized lobby and create three new exam rooms, while combining two of the existing rooms for extra space.
“I like to sit on the floor,” Wolkow said. “I like to be able to talk to the owners and have the space.”
Sometimes stuck up on the table, sitting on the floor is less scary for her patients. Wolkow also has treats — anything to make animals more comfortable.
No day looks the same at the Village Animal Hospital. That morning, Wolkow was surprised with a drop-off before her first scheduled appointment — a dog who had been vomiting the night before and had bloody diarrhea. Later in the day, she was to perform a biopsy of a mass in one dog’s mouth, “healthy” appointments in between.
“Sometimes you get a euthanasia thrown in,” Wolkow said.
A veterinarians’ days are an emotional rollercoaster. One moment, Wolkow could put a dog down for the deepest kind of sleep — something you do “for a pet” and not “to a pet” — and the next, she could be greeting a new puppy.
Every life stage is important, she said, and it’s important to be there for the clients and their pets.
“We don’t build a wall around our heart, you know, and especially those clients that you’ve had for years and years that you’ve seen as babies, and then they’re 16 years old,” Wolkow said.
“I’ve been in long enough to kind of have that whole life stage at this point in my career.”
Growing up with animals, she decided to be a vet at 3 years old. Wolkow never wanted to do anything else.
“I grew up in a family of human doctors and had no desire to do that,” she said. “I’d tease my dad – ‘If I don’t get into vet school, I’ll go to med school as my backup.’”
Now, she has two dogs — Gasper and Peter, who is on his way to be a guide dog. Gasper had the same training but is too terrified of stairs. Wolkow also has two snakes and two sugar gliders.
“[Animals] love unconditionally,” she said. “I would be lost without having dogs.”
As a veterinarian, a major issue Wolkow comes across is the lack of preventative care, especially with cats. Cats are underrepresented, she said. Oftentimes, the beginning stages of sickness in cats are too subtle to be detected. Cats get heartworms just like dogs do, Wolkow said, but for them, there’s no treatment — they’ll just die.
Clients should seek annual, if not biannual, exams, she said.
“If people would come in more often for preventative care, we’re going to catch things on bloodwork before they actually get sick,” Wolkow said.
AppenMedia.com/Forsyth | Forsyth Herald | January 5, 2023 | 9
PHOTOS BY AMBER PERRY/APPEN MEDIA
Continued
Page 8
Village Animal Hospital’s banner covers an old sign from when the space was corporately owned. The vet clinic is in Dunwoody Plaza off Dunwoody Village Parkway.
from
Village Animal Hospital has three exam rooms, but owner Riva Wolkow plans to add more and make the existing ones larger.
CALENDAR
JUST FOR FUN:
TRIVIA NIGHT
What: Whether you’re the whiz of the group or the dunce, a trivia outing is about so much more than the questions themselves. Bring your friends and test your knowledge while you drink a pint at the King George Tavern.
When: Thursday, Jan. 5, 8 p.m. Where: King George Tavern, 4511 Chamblee Dunwoody Road, Dunwoody More info: kinggeorgetavern.com
PARENTS NIGHT OUT
What: Enjoy a night out while your kids spend the evening doing fun science activities and experiments. Kids, ages 5-11, will journey through space and explore our planets and their moons, create an ice comet, make rockets and have a launching contest. Popcorn and drinks are included. Kids can bring dinner if they want.
When: Saturday, Jan. 7, 6-9 p.m. Where: Discover Science Center, 2500 Old Alabama Road, Suite 5, Roswell Cost: $30 More info: discoversciencecenter.com
SANDY SPRINGS
PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB
What: Are you interested in knowing more about photography? You can
BRING ONE FOR THE CHIPPER
What: Drop off your Christmas tree at the City of Milton’s main annual Christmas tree recycling event. During that time, you can drop off your tree on the Milton High School campus in the baseball field parking lot, which is closest to Freemanville Road. Casey Tree Experts is partnering with the city on this event and will chip all of the trees.
When: Saturday, Jan. 7, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
Where: Milton High School, 13025 Birmingham Hwy, Milton More info: miltonga.gov
learn the basic principles of correctly exposing a photograph by balancing shutter speed, aperture size and sensor sensitivity, and how each of these affect your photography by participating in the beginner session. You will also discover the modes and functions of a DSLR camera and how to use them. The instructor will attach a camera to a large display to demonstrate how a camera's settings impact your photographs.
When: Tuesday, Jan. 10, 6-6:45 p.m. Club meeting will follow.
Where: Lost Corner Preserve, 7300 Brandon Mill Rd NW, Sandy Springs More info: sandyspringsga.gov
BIRD WALK
What: Morgan Falls Overlook Park boasts several habitats, and thus a large variety of birds over the course of the year: mudflats (shorebirds, including Avocets in 2017), lake (winter ducks, nesting Bald Eagles), river, woodland, and field (sparrows). The walk will involve possibly wet grass, stairs, gently sloped pavement and unpaved trails. A scope and loaner binoculars will be available. The walk will begin at the overlook, past the playground. Register online.
When: Sunday, Jan. 15, 8 a.m.
Where: Morgan Fall Overlook Park & Dam, 200 Morgan Falls Road, Sandy Springs More info: sandyspringsga.gov
ENCHANTED WOODLAND TRAIL
What: The fairies and gnomes have been busy building whimsical houses along Chattahoochee Nature Center’s forested trails. Slow down as you search for houses made from tiny natural objects. Take notice of the beautiful and enchanting features of the winter woods.
When: Up to Feb. 28, open daily except for December 24-26 and January 1-3
Where: Chattahoochee Nature Center, 9135 Willeo Road, Roswell Cost: $15 for adults More info: chattnaturecenter.org
LEARN AND LEAD:
BRING ONE FOR THE CHIPPER
What: Drop off your Christmas tree at the City of Milton’s main annual Christmas tree recycling event. During that time, you can drop off your tree on the Milton High School campus in the baseball field parking lot, which is closest to Freemanville Road. Casey Tree Experts is partnering with the city on this event and will chip all of the trees.
When: Saturday, Jan. 7, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
Where: Milton High School, 13025 Birmingham Hwy, Milton More info: miltonga.gov
10 | January 5, 2023 | Forsyth Herald | AppenMedia.com/Forsyth
Get More News, Opinion & Events Every Friday Morning with Herald Headlines. Join for free at appenmedia.com/newsletters A NEWSLETTER FROM
7 timeless kitchen trends that will never look outdated
cabinet fronts, these functional features will never be outdated.
Built in Appliances
Between expensive appliances, custom cabinets, and costly countertops, we spend a lot of money on our kitchens. In fact, according to John Hogan, Owner of Remodeling Expo Center in Roswell GA, the median spend on a kitchen remodel was $32,000. To make sure that all of this money isn’t creating a kitchen we’ll want to update again in five years, the trick is to incorporate timeless design elements that won’t soon go out of style. By choosing kitchen features that can stand the test of time, you’ll save yourself money (and the work of remodeling) down the line.
So what are the kitchen trends that won’t make you cringe a few years from now? Skip the trendy color of the year, and follow these timeless kitchen ideas that have been loved for decades.
Neutral Paint Colors
The classic white kitchen is sometimes critiqued for being a little boring—but there’s one solid reason to opt for this color in the kitchen: It will never go out of style. According to Remodeling Expo Center, a whopping 43 percent of renovating homeowners opted for white cabinets. Not sure which shade of white to go for? Don’t worry, soft grey’s are also just as popular and combining the two work well also.
Shaker-Style Cabinets
Known for their simple design and recessed-panel doors, Shaker cabinets have been in-style for more than 100 years. Shaker cabinets are popular in farmhouse kitchens, transitional kitchens and are the perfect element to update an otherwise traditional house.
Drawer and Cabinet Organizers
I’m calling it: Organization will never go out of style. And while features like built-in baking sheet dividers and pull-out cabinet drawers haven’t been around for that long, when hidden behind unfussy, timeless
Nothing finishes off the look of a kitchen like the smooth finished look of a built-in appliance. Especially the refrigerator and the microwave. And conversely, nothing looks more outdated than a refrigerator or microwave sticking out or on the countertop. A thoughtful kitchen design should include clever and seamless appliance installation.
Natural Materials
Adding in natural materials like wood and stone will ground the space and keep it classic. If you want a timeless look, resist the urge to create an ultra-modern kitchen full of shiny stainless steel and engineered materials. Resist the feeling that “natural” equals “old” White Marble “Look” or Butcher Block
Countertops
The white marble look will always be an elegant choice for kitchen countertops, but if the maintenance and potential for staining has you worrying about its longevity, consider using quartz. For a more classic look consider butcher block. The go-to choice for farmhouse kitchens, butcher block will wear beautifully over the years and you can prepare food directly on it.
Subway Tile
Subway tile is not only versatile enough to work with many different decor styles, but you probably won’t get sick of it in five years (after all, the look’s been around for over 100 years). While it may be tempting to go with a trendy backsplash, like metallic tiles, sea glass, or bright geometric tiles, opt for something a little simpler if you want a backsplash with staying power.
To learn more, contact The Remodeling Expo Center at 404 910-3969 or stop in at 48 King Street, Roswell, GA 30075. www. RemodelingExpo.com
REAL ESTATE REPORT • Sponsored Section AppenMedia.com/Forsyth | Forsyth Herald | January 5, 2023 | 11
Sponsored Section January 5, 2023 | Forsyth Herald | 11
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Brought to you by – Remodeling Expo Center
12 | January 5, 2023 | Forsyth Herald | AppenMedia.com/Forsyth REAL ESTATE REPORT • Sponsored Section
REAL ESTATE REPORT • Sponsored Section AppenMedia.com/Forsyth | Forsyth Herald | January 5, 2023 | 13
The Manor Golf & Country Club offers spectacular luxury estates
Nestled in the heart of Milton, Georgia, The Manor Golf & Country Club offers an unparalleled lifestyle in one of Atlanta’s most sought-after locations. The exclusive high-end gated community features custom luxury homes by award-winning design and build firm Loudermilk Homes.
The Manor Golf & Country Club offers Georgia’s only Tom Watson designed championship golf course, a world class amenity package, and an exceptional country club lifestyle. The 32,000-square-foot European-style
clubhouse overlooks Manor Lake and is the perfect venue for social events and other activities. Enjoy swimming, tennis, a golf pro shop, family and fine dining, private lessons and more in one beautiful location. In addition, The Manor is also part of the Sequoia Club, which gives members access to all three premium Sequoia sister clubs within a 10-mile radius: The Manor Golf & Country Club, White Columns Country Club, and Atlanta National Golf Club.
Currently available is 1069 Kent Court, a spectacular new luxury estate situated on the 7th and 8th holes of the golf course. Situated on a 1-acre quiet and private cul-de-sac homesite,
this modern custom designed home offers breathtaking views, incredible architectural distinction, open concept living and gorgeous designer selections. Enjoy a spacious owner’s suite on the main level, five large bedrooms with en suite bathrooms and a grand gourmet chef's kitchen with custom cabinetry, a deluxe island and a professional grade Wolf appliance package. There is also a second catering kitchen and a four-car garage. Selections were planned by the professionals at Loudermilk Designs and can still be personalized with your own preferences for marble, quartz, custom cabinetry, detailed millwork, decorative tile, luxury lighting and more.
Current list price is $2,895,900.
The Manor Golf & Country Club offers additional ready-to-build homesites, award-winning schools and a popular location just minutes from historic downtown Alpharetta, Roswell and Crabapple. Enjoy the gourmet local dining and shopping of a small town plus the convenience and proximity to GA 400, Avalon and more. Homes priced from $2.6 to $8 million plus. For additional information, call 678.578.6766 or visit www.themanorhomes.com. Sales and marketing by Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Georgia Properties New Homes Division. Equal Housing Opportunity.
14 | January 5, 2023 | Forsyth Herald | AppenMedia.com/Forsyth REAL ESTATE REPORT • Sponsored Section
Brought to you by – Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Georgia Properties New Homes Division
ISTOCK
Why staging helps your home sell
Brought to
you
by – Bill Rawlings, Atlanta Fine Homes Sotheby’s International Realty
Every home has unique characteristics that make it attractive to the right buyer and unique challenges that make finding the right buyer more involved than putting a sign in the yard. Often, the appeal and function of a space hide beneath layers of cosmetic difficulty—a dated layout, fading paint or personal clutter, for example—and these things get in the way of a buyer seeing themselves living there.
As one of the most financially significant purchases any buyer will make in their lifetime, a home represents (potentially) millions of investment dollars, years of memories and thousands of hours of time. Before all that gets put on the line, buyers need to make an emotional connection to the home. They need to be able to visualize their life expanding and taking shape, fitting itself into each square foot. When done properly, staging addresses this need in several ways.
out online.
2. It demonstrates possible solutions.
Perhaps your home has a few dated features or an odd floor plan. Instead of investing in expensive renovations, staging is a cost-effective option that allows potential buyers to see past the initial drawbacks to the possibilities. It also helps depersonalize a space, removing the stamp of “someone else’s things” and creating the sense of neutral territory. Professional staging companies will bring in furniture, art and accessories that enhance your home and provide a thought process for buyers to follow as they envision themselves living there.
3. It increases the selling price.
Staging boosts your home’s perceived value and curb appeal, which translates to higher profits and less time on the market.
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1.
It enhances photography and online marketing efforts.
The drive to curate home and lifestyle purchases online means that professional photography makes a world of difference in marketing a listing, and staging ensures that you get the most mileage from that expense. Smart design choices go a long way to creating an aspirational, Instagram-worthy quality that stands
If you’re wondering whether you need to think about staging your home, ask your agent. They know the market in your area and will be able to give you an informed opinion. If you need assistance staging your home or have any other real estate needs, please contact Atlanta Fine Homes Sotheby’s International Realty at 770.442.7300. We would be happy to assist you!
Compiled and edited by Angela Valente, Marketing Copywriter/ Copyeditor
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A Confederate soldier depended on his Bowie knife
According to the Digital Library of Georgia, approximately 120,000 Georgians served in the Civil War. Casualties were very high. Between 11,000 and 25,000 Georgia soldiers died on the battlefield or in hospitals from disease and wounds.
One of the soldiers who survived and went on to become a successful farmer and landowner was John Franklin Shirley (1841-1906). Here is his story based in part on a profile written by Fred Shirley (1935-2017), who was raised on a farm that encompassed today’s Windward neighborhood, located near John Shirley’s land. Many portraits of Confederate soldiers exist on the internet. Relatively few identify the subject. Thus, John is of some historical interest since he is identified in his portrait
The photo of John shows him holding a rather ferocious Bowie knife. Numerous similar poses appear on the internet, often daguerreotype or tintype images in small foldable cases. The cases used during the Civil War were made of gutta-percha, one of the first plastic materials. It was made from a mixture of resins from Malaysian trees. It was molded and often used for daguerreotype cases.
The Bowie knife was a popular fighting weapon prior to the Civil War. It was created by blacksmith James Black for James Bowie in 1830. Bowie was a celebrated knife fighter. The knives became so popular that cutlery factories in Sheffield, England, massproduced them for export to the U.S. in the 1830s and later. Bowie was killed in the Battle of the Alamo in 1836.
John is holding a very long Dguard Bowie knife, notable for its hand guard shaped like a D. These knives chopped branches, split logs, sliced saplings, and even had their way with an occasional Yankee.
It was said the knife “must be long enough to use as a sword, sharp enough to use as a razor, wide enough to use as a paddle, and heavy enough to use as a hatchet.”
Long knives were popular with Confederate soldiers in the early days of the Civil War but were cumbersome and fell out of favor. In fact, few casualties were the result of hand-to-hand combat. These massive weapons were often made by local blacksmiths or by the soldiers themselves from old files or
It was the custom for Confederate soldiers to have
keep. Here is a photo mounted in a Civil War
left side of the frame is velvet material.
John Franklin Shirley was a Civil War soldier, and after the war was a successful local farmer. In this portrait, he is holding a long Bowie knife which was commonly used early in the war by Confederate soldiers. Because they were so unwieldly, they lost popularity later in the war.
Circa 1862
saw or scythe blades. In 1862, the State of Georgia purchased nearly 5,000 Bowie knives from fourteen different makers for distribution to Confederate soldiers.
I am intrigued by his uniform. Some regiments in Virginia had grey stripes, some in Mississippi were red, but there were no striped uniforms in Georgia that I am aware of. There was little
uniformity among uniforms, especially in the South early in the war. Confederate soldiers sometimes wore their own clothes to battle, or took uniforms from captured or killed Union soldiers, leading to confusion on the battlefield. We will probably never know why his jacket has stripes.
John enlisted as a private in Co. 1, 3rd Regiment GA State Troops in October 1861, some six months after the war began. Mustered out in April 1962, he then re-enlisted as a private in Co. G, 56th Regiment GA Infantry in May 1862 when it was first organized. Company G consisted of soldiers from Milton County.
John was born in South Carolina. He was married in 1865, at the end of the war, at age 24 to his second cousin Mary Catherine Shirley (1846-1915). They are buried in Union Hill Cemetery just over the Forsyth County line.
Fred Shirley’s profile identifies some of the battles in which John fought, including the siege of Vicksburg and the Battle of Atlanta.
During the siege of Vicksburg, John
somehow became separated from his unit. Unable to go through enemy lines to return to his unit, he walked back to Georgia evading the enemy by staying off the beaten track until he reached friendly territory. When he arrived back home, he feared he would be considered a deserter and convinced his family to hide him in the Big Creek swamp. When word arrived that Vicksburg had surrendered on July 4, 1863, John no longer felt he was a deserter because the Confederate soldiers were released if they signed certification that they would not bear arms against Union soldiers in the future.
Fred Shirley described John as “extremely ambitious as well as industrious. He had acquired over 500 acres within the first 10 years following the Civil War. Eventually, John amassed more than 1,000 acres. He built two sawmills, several homes including three tenant houses and a cotton gin. One of his houses became the headquarters of the Alpharetta Women’s Club
16 | January 5, 2023 | Forsyth Herald | AppenMedia.com/Forsyth NEWS OPINION
PRESERVING THE PAST
at 112 Cumming Street.
BOB MEYERS
Columnist bobmey@bellsouth.net
JIM FARRIS/PROVIDED
their portrait taken and mounted in small frames for their families to
era frame by Milton Historical Society Board of Directors member Jim Farris. The
FRED SHIRLEY FAMILY/ PROVIDED
Video movie rental, history from the more recent past
This image of Versatile Video brings back memories for me. I often stopped there with my children for a movie and often a video game in the 1990s and 2000s. We also rented videos and games from Blockbuster at the corner of Dunwoody Club Drive and Mount Vernon Road.
VALERIE BIGGERSTAFF
Chuck Tintle opened Versatile Video in 1981 on Chamblee Dunwoody Road. He started the business after his friend bought a VCR for $1,000 in 1980. The question at the time was where to get videos to watch on your VCR. Tintle put together a collection of 270 videos he thought people would want to rent. At first, there was a lot of empty space in the store, so he began selling General Electric VCRs and televisions in the location. Later, he would also carry video games for rent.
Chuck and Mary ran a video store where they were friendly and often knew their customers. If someone asked Chuck what he thought of a movie and if he thought they would enjoy it, he would happily give his opinion.
“Things have changed,” said Tintle as closing was on the horizon in 2008. “There are now faster ways to get movies into homes, and that’s what doing me in, the technology.” He did not believe the Blockbuster that had been around the corner for 15 years from his store was a factor.
He and Mary were planning to retire after the store closed. Both had already retired from their previous careers, Mary taught school in Fulton County for over 40 years and Chuck had retired from the Ford Motor Company. (Atlanta Constitution, Dec.27, 2008, “Technology advances hasten end of Dunwoody video store”)
Besides Blockbuster, other big names in the business were Hollywood Video and The Movie Store. Record stores also began carrying videos and games for rent. Turtle’s, Camelot, and Coconuts Records. Turtles opened a few locations that were strictly video and game rental. There were other independent stores in Atlanta and the surrounding communities.
In 1985, Castleberry’s Appliance Sales & Service in Chamblee and a new location in Lithonia advertised the addition of movie and VCR rental. Four movies for $4.
American Tape & Video had a location in Pinetree Plaza on Buford Highway and in Hammond Festival shopping center on Roswell Road in Sandy Springs.
Blockbuster at 1575 Mount Vernon Road closed in 2011 and is now the location of Piedmont Urgent Care. The other Mount Vernon location at 2526 is a Chase Bank today. Versatile Video is now the location of a State Farm Insurance office, still next door to Mellow Mushroom. That was another plus for Versatile Video, being next door to Mellow Mushroom.
If you are feeling nostalgic for Blockbuster Video, Netflix has a series where the story line revolves around the last Blockbuster Video store in the U.S.
Award-winning author Valerie Biggerstaff is a longtime columnist for Appen Media and the Dunwoody Crier. She lives in Sandy Springs. You can email Valerie at pasttensega@gmail.com or visit her website at pasttensega.com
AppenMedia.com/Forsyth | Forsyth Herald | January 5, 2023 | 17 OPINION
PAST TENSE
DUNWOODY CRIER ARCHIVE PHOTO
Versatile Video on Chamblee Dunwoody Road was open for 27 years, from 1981 until 2008.
Glass recycling opens at Ocee Park
By AMBER PERRY amber@appenmedia.com
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — Residents have flocked to the glass recycling bin at Ocee Park, contributing to more than 20,000 pounds of collected glass since the site’s opening in early October.
This is no surprise to Johns Creek Assistant to the City Manager Olivia Ammons, who said many residents were frustrated because local waste haulers no longer accept glass curbside. Glass becomes a contaminant when it breaks inside of other materials, she said, which doesn’t make fiscal sense to haulers.
Off Buice Road, Johns Creek residents can get rid of their glass soda, beer, wine and liquor bottles, juice containers and drinking glasses. Glass can be any color, and labels can be attached. But residents should be sure to remove lids and rinse the glass before drop-off.
Items not accepted include CRT (TV) glass, light bulbs, porcelain, crystal, ceramics, candle glass, vases, Pyrex or other heat-resistant glass, windows doors or windshields, paper cardboard boxes and furniture glass.
Before October, Johns Creek resident Carole Madan, aka Momma Nature, had been taking her recyclables to other areas like Forsyth County. Ocee Park is the city’s first glass recycling site. Saving the natural world for 60 years, Madan takes three to four bags every week to Waste Management in addition to the glass she drops off once a month at Ocee.
“[Glass recycling in Johns Creek] raises the expectations that we will have access to good recycling,” Madan said. “Right now, there’s a lot of doubt with different waste management companies.”
While bin use is exclusive to Johns Creek residents, Ammons said the city may look the other way to deter others from tossing recyclable glass into the trash.
“We are always pro-saving the environment,” she said at the Nov. 28 Johns Creek City Council meeting.
Ammons wanted to make sure the city harnessed glass, a “low hanging fruit.” Glass can be recycled in perpetuity, without loss in quality or chemical structure, which makes it highly sustainable.
The Johns Creek City Council identified glass recycling as a secondary priority at its January 2021 retreat, allocating money toward the initiative in the Fiscal Year 2022 budget. Ammons brought the project to life, nailing down site logistics, with the help of Johns Creek Public Works Director Chris Haggard.
The effort is part of the city’s larger
More than 20,000 pounds of glass has been collected since the recycling bin opened in early October. Pick-ups are monthly and average 10,000 pounds.
project to become a certified Green Community. Johns Creek recently received a New Leaf level certification from the Atlanta Regional Commission’s Green Communities program, which takes a minimum of 25 points and is given to previously uncertified communities.
Going from zero to 175 points at the Bronze level is like “jumping over a canyon when you just learned how to walk,” Ammons said. The ARC created the Leaf level to get cities started with some momentum.
To apply for and achieve Bronze by May 2024, she said staff is primarily working on documenting existing city initiatives, like the city’s community garden, the farmer’s market and some city ordinances and policies.
The main hurdle Ammons faced implementing recycling is figuring out a way to make it easy and accessible for people.
“When you’re able to integrate it into your everyday routine into your practices, it’s a shift in mindset,” she said.
Many people are skeptical about recycling and where the materials go, Ammons said. The glass at Ocee Park is collected by Strategic Materials, the country’s largest glass recycler, and taken to its facility in College Park to be sorted and processed for reuse.
Ammons said she understands the apprehension because a lot of materials don’t get recycled because they aren’t recycled property or because the infrastructure in the United States is “subpar at best” compared to Europe.
“Doing the best we can with what we have is paramount, right?” she asked. “Not only do we want people to recycle more, we want them to recycle properly because that will ensure that what you recycle is actually getting recycled and made into new material.”
18 | January 5, 2023 | Forsyth Herald | AppenMedia.com/Forsyth NEWS
CITY OF JOHNS CREEK/PROVIDED
CAROLE MADAN/PROVIDED
Johns Creek resident Carole Madan, aka Momma Nature, drops off glass recyclables. Ocee Park is the city’s first glass recycling site. Before October, Madan has been dropping glass off in other areas like Forsyth County.
AppenMedia.com/Forsyth | Forsyth Herald | January 5, 2023 | 19
January book events include writing classes, football recollections
By KATHY DES JARDINS CIOFFI newsroom@appenmedia.com
For anyone making a resolution to finally write their story – ideally with assistance – help is near in the new year. One of Atlanta’s preeminent authorities on the craft of writing will be teaching an eight-week course on exactly that in Roswell beginning Jan. 10.
the business of writing. Details about the 28th Atlanta Writers Conference May 5-6, which Weinstein will direct, are at atlantawritersconference.com.
Literary Events Around North Atlanta
BELUE
For readers simply in search of local inperson author events, several will be offered in January, including an evening featuring Buck Belue, star quarterback of the 1980 National Championship Georgia Bulldogs football team. Belue, a sports radio host in Atlanta, will be discussing his book, “Inside the Hedges: The Quarterback’s Journey to the National Championship,” in Alpharetta Jan. 17.
Tuesday, Jan. 10: Terri Parlato. The North Atlanta Author Series continues with Parlato discussing her debut suspense novel, “All the Dark Places.” Roger Johns, winner of the 2018 Georgia Author of the Year in the detective-mystery category, will moderate the event, and Bookmiser will have books for sale. Starts at 6 p.m. Discussion, signing. Free. Milton Branch Library, 855 Mayfield Road, Milton, 30009. 404-613-4402. bookmiser.net
gia’s 1980 National Championship football team. He will be discussing his book, “Inside the Hedges,” which is a look back at that season through the quarterback’s eyes. 6 p.m. Conversation, signing. Free. Alpharetta Branch Library, 10 Park Plaza, Alpharetta, 404613-6735. anovelidea.us.
WEINSTEIN
George Weinstein, executive director of the Atlanta Writers Club and author of six novels, will be leading “Telling Your Story: Start It, Finish It & Share It.” Offered by Seniors Enriched Living, a nonprofit interfaith organization, classes will be held at the Roswell United Methodist Church for anyone 50 and older.
Weinstein also has resources to assist writers of all ages. Since 2009, he has directed the AWC’s biannual Atlanta Writers Conference. Each event offers a host of acquisitions editors and literary agents to help members better understand
More information
Buck Belue, former UGA star quarterback, will discuss his book about the Bulldogs’ 1980 National Championship run in Alpharetta Jan. 17.
George Weinstein, executive director of the Atlanta Writers Club, will lead an eight-week writing course beginning Jan. 10 in Roswell.
Tuesdays, Jan. 10-March 7: George Weinstein. Weinstein, executive director of the Atlanta Writers Club and author of six novels, will lead “Telling Your Story: Start It, Finish It & Share It,” an eight-week interactive class for anyone 50 and older. The program is offered by Seniors Enriched Living, a nonprofit interfaith organization. 1 p.m.-2 p.m. weekly. $70. Roswell United Methodist Church, 814 Mimosa Blvd., Roswell. 770-993-6218. sites.google.com/ selroswellga.org/seniors-enriched-living/ classes/winter?authuser=0
Tuesday, Jan. 17: Buck Belue. A Novel Idea hosts an evening featuring Belue, quarterback of the University of Geor-
Saturday, Jan. 21: The Talking Book Podcast Atlanta. To celebrate the podcast’s first anniversary, several local authors will be interviewed. Refreshments, giveaways, signings. Free. 11 a.m. Johns Creek Books and Gifts, 6000 Medlock Bridge Parkway, Suite B500, Johns Creek, 770-696-9999. johnscreekbooks.com
Saturday, Jan. 21, Anju Gattani. Gattani will be discussing “Dynasties,” the debut in her “Winds of Fire” series. Conversation, signing. Free. Noon. Poe & Company Bookstore, 1890 Heritage Walk, Suite P101, Milton, 770-7975566. poeandcompanybookstore.com
To submit an author event for the upcoming month, email Kathy Des Jardins Cioffi at kathydesjardins3@gmail.com by the 15th.
Northside Hospital earns Maternal Levels of Care Verification
ATLANTA – The Joint Commission, in collaboration with the Georgia Department of Public Health, announced Dec. 29 that Northside Hospital, Atlanta, is the first in the country to re-ceive Maternal Levels of Care Verification. Northside Hospital also is the first in the state to receive a Level IV Maternal Center Designation from the state.
Northside has five acute-care hospitals in Atlanta, Canton, Cumming, Duluth and Lawrenceville and more than 250 outpatient locations across the state.
The United States has a higher maternal mortality rate than many other developed countries. Georgia is one of a handful of states to review risk-appropriate care and the first to collabo-rate on a program with an accreditation organization.
In 2022, the Georgia Department of Public Health, announced a partnership with The Joint Commission, recognizing its Maternal Levels of Care Verification program. The program, of-fered in collaboration with the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), is a verification process that involves an on-site
comprehensive review of a hospital’s maternal capabilities and policies, as well as a level of maternal care determination.
Through the partnership, hospitals may seek the optional Maternal Center Designation with The Joint Commission’s MLC Verification program.
“Early in our history a pivotal decision was made to provide the best care for mothers and newborns in Georgia at Northside Hospital,” said Melissa Sisson, who is retiring as Northside Hospital’s longtime director of women’s services and led the hospital’s certification process.
More babies are born at Atlanta’s Northside Hospital each year than at any other single hospi-tal in the United States. This position offers Northside a unique opportunity to develop excep-tional expertise in the care of women and newborns with high-risk conditions complicating their pregnancies.
“Our strategy began in earnest with the establishment of a maternalfetal medicine program, alongside a team of highly qualified obstetricians, certified midwives, nurses and staff,” Sisson said. “The designation of
Northside Hospital Atlanta as the first Level IV Maternal Center in Georgia is an achievement that validates our ability to care for the most critically-ill mothers and newborns in Georgia.”
Brian Enochs, JD, executive vice president for Business Development and Marketing, The Joint Commission, lauded Northside Hospital for its achievement.
“Georgia is leading the way in establishing levels of maternal care
designations for hospitals, and we expect more states to follow as the nation’s overall maternal mortality rates remain high,” he said. “Through the Maternal Levels of Care Verification program, we look forward to working closely with hospitals to identify areas where they may need to strengthen risk-appropriate care to match their population – helping to make care safer for mothers and their babies.”
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